Podcasts about rombach

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Best podcasts about rombach

Latest podcast episodes about rombach

Hijos de la Resistencia
#279 Cómo te engaña tu cerebro (y por qué funciona)

Hijos de la Resistencia

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2025 43:32


¿Puede un placebo mejorar tu rendimiento deportivo real, incluso si no tomaste nada? ¿Qué procesos biológicos se activan en tu cuerpo solo por creer que algo funciona? Tu cerebro puede hacerte rendir más, sentir menos dolor e incluso recuperarte antes… solo con creer que algo va a funcionar. ¿Dónde está el límite entre lo fisiológico y lo psicológico? ¿Y si la mente fuera el factor olvidado del rendimiento? _____________________________________________________ Newsletter para entrenadores: https://hijosdelaresistencia.com/para-entrenadores-que-quieren-dejar-un-legado/ ————————- Accede a la web de Fanté https://bit.ly/WebFant%C3%A9 Elige lo que prefieras: 10% descuento con el código PODCASTHDLR Acceso a regalos y formación exclusiva con el código REGALOHDLR ————————- Apúntate a nuestra Newsletter aquí: https://hijosdelaresistencia.com/un-email-semanal Entrena con nosotros: https://hijosdelaresistencia.com/formulario/ Accede a La Academia https://academia.hijosdelaresistencia.com/ ____________________________________________________________ También pueden seguirnos en nuestras redes sociales https://www.instagram.com/hijosdelaresistencia_oficial/ https://www.instagram.com/ruben.espinosa_/ ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Referencias científicas 1. Beecher, H. K. (1955). The powerful placebo. Journal of the American Medical Association, 159(17), 1602–1606. 2. Moseley, J. B., O'Malley, K., Petersen, N. J., Menke, T. J., Brody, B. A., Kuykendall, D. H., Hollingsworth, J. C., Ashton, C. M., & Wray, N. P. (2002). A controlled trial of arthroscopic surgery for osteoarthritis of the knee. The New England Journal of Medicine, 347(2), 81–88. 3. Beard, D. J., Rees, J. L., Cook, J. A., Rombach, I., Cooper, C., Merritt, N., ... & Carr, A. J. (2018). Arthroscopic subacromial decompression for subacromial shoulder pain (CSAW): a multicentre, pragmatic, parallel group, placebo-controlled, three-group, randomised surgical trial. The Lancet, 391(10118), 329–338. 4. Stone, M. R., Thomas, K., Wilkinson, M., Jones, A. M., St Clair Gibson, A., & Thompson, K. G. (2012). Effects of deception on exercise performance: Implications for determinants of fatigue in humans. Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, 44(3), 534–541. 5. Beedie, C. J., & Foad, A. J. (2009). The placebo effect in sports performance: a brief review. Sports Medicine, 39(4), 313–329. 6. Waber, R. L., Shiv, B., Carmon, Z., & Ariely, D. (2008). Commercial features of placebo and therapeutic efficacy. Journal of the American Medical Association, 299(9), 1016–1017. 7. Kaptchuk, T. J., Friedlander, E., Kelley, J. M., Sanchez, M. N., Kokkotou, E., Singer, J. P., Kowalczykowski, M., Miller, F. G., Kirsch, I., & Lembo, A. J. (2010). Placebos without deception: A randomized controlled trial in irritable bowel syndrome. PLoS ONE, 5(12), e15591.

Recomendados de la semana en iVoox.com Semana del 5 al 11 de julio del 2021
#279 Cómo te engaña tu cerebro (y por qué funciona)

Recomendados de la semana en iVoox.com Semana del 5 al 11 de julio del 2021

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2025 43:32


¿Puede un placebo mejorar tu rendimiento deportivo real, incluso si no tomaste nada? ¿Qué procesos biológicos se activan en tu cuerpo solo por creer que algo funciona? Tu cerebro puede hacerte rendir más, sentir menos dolor e incluso recuperarte antes… solo con creer que algo va a funcionar. ¿Dónde está el límite entre lo fisiológico y lo psicológico? ¿Y si la mente fuera el factor olvidado del rendimiento? _____________________________________________________ Newsletter para entrenadores: https://hijosdelaresistencia.com/para-entrenadores-que-quieren-dejar-un-legado/ ————————- Accede a la web de Fanté https://bit.ly/WebFant%C3%A9 Elige lo que prefieras: 10% descuento con el código PODCASTHDLR Acceso a regalos y formación exclusiva con el código REGALOHDLR ————————- Apúntate a nuestra Newsletter aquí: https://hijosdelaresistencia.com/un-email-semanal Entrena con nosotros: https://hijosdelaresistencia.com/formulario/ Accede a La Academia https://academia.hijosdelaresistencia.com/ ____________________________________________________________ También pueden seguirnos en nuestras redes sociales👇🏻https://www.instagram.com/hijosdelaresistencia_oficial/ https://www.instagram.com/ruben.espinosa_/ ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 📚 Referencias científicas 1. Beecher, H. K. (1955). The powerful placebo. Journal of the American Medical Association, 159(17), 1602–1606. 2. Moseley, J. B., O'Malley, K., Petersen, N. J., Menke, T. J., Brody, B. A., Kuykendall, D. H., Hollingsworth, J. C., Ashton, C. M., & Wray, N. P. (2002). A controlled trial of arthroscopic surgery for osteoarthritis of the knee. The New England Journal of Medicine, 347(2), 81–88. 3. Beard, D. J., Rees, J. L., Cook, J. A., Rombach, I., Cooper, C., Merritt, N., ... & Carr, A. J. (2018). Arthroscopic subacromial decompression for subacromial shoulder pain (CSAW): a multicentre, pragmatic, parallel group, placebo-controlled, three-group, randomised surgical trial. The Lancet, 391(10118), 329–338. 4. Stone, M. R., Thomas, K., Wilkinson, M., Jones, A. M., St Clair Gibson, A., & Thompson, K. G. (2012). Effects of deception on exercise performance: Implications for determinants of fatigue in humans. Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, 44(3), 534–541. 5. Beedie, C. J., & Foad, A. J. (2009). The placebo effect in sports performance: a brief review. Sports Medicine, 39(4), 313–329. 6. Waber, R. L., Shiv, B., Carmon, Z., & Ariely, D. (2008). Commercial features of placebo and therapeutic efficacy. Journal of the American Medical Association, 299(9), 1016–1017. 7. Kaptchuk, T. J., Friedlander, E., Kelley, J. M., Sanchez, M. N., Kokkotou, E., Singer, J. P., Kowalczykowski, M., Miller, F. G., Kirsch, I., & Lembo, A. J. (2010). Placebos without deception: A randomized controlled trial in irritable bowel syndrome. PLoS ONE, 5(12), e15591.

Grandes ciclos
Grandes ciclos - G.-P. da Palestrina (XIV): Contienda cargada de emoción - 27/03/25

Grandes ciclos

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2025 58:46


PALESTRINA: Lamentaciones de Viernes Santo “In Parasceve” (24.35). Coro de la Abadía de Wstminster. Dir.: M. Baker. Vergine chiara (3.35). Vergine saggia (3.30). Vergine tale e terra (3.47). Vergine; quante lagrime (3.55). Ensemble Officium. Dir.: W. RombachEscuchar audio

Grandes ciclos
Grandes ciclos - G.-P. da Palestrina (XIII): La alta paráfrasis - 25/03/25

Grandes ciclos

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2025 58:31


PALESTRINA: Lamentaciones de Jueves Santo “In coena domini” (26.43). Coro de la Abadía de Westminster. Dir.: M. Baker. Vergine Bella (4.24). Vergine Santa (4.23). Vergine Sola (4.13). Ensemble Officium. Dir.: W. RombachEscuchar audio

Grandes ciclos
Grandes ciclos - G.-P. da Palestrina (XII): Impresión y publicación - 24/03/25

Grandes ciclos

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2025 59:32


PALESTRINA: Missa Cantantibus organis a 12 vv (Messa di Santa Cecilia) (31.34). Ensemble Officium. Dir.: W. Rombach. O beata et benedicta (7.27). Dum complerentur (5.28). Taverner Consort. Dir.: A. Parrot.Escuchar audio

Raw Tea Podcast - With Jen
Money, Mindset and Making it work with Chrissy Rombach

Raw Tea Podcast - With Jen

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2025 30:59


On this episode ofJust Maybe, we are joined byChrissy Rombach , a friend, Nurse and financial coach-- We dive deep into practical tips on how to save effectively, set up an emergency fund, and tackle debt—all while balancing the demands of a demanding career. Whether you're looking to build your savings, pay off student loans, or create a sustainable plan for the future, this episode will give you the tools to take charge of your finances. If you're a nurse or young professional looking to build a solid foundation of financial security, this episode is for you!Tune in to hear expert advice on creating a budget that works for you, managing debt in a way that feels attainable, and prioritizing savings for peace of mind.Please share, like and subscribe !!If this resonated with you and you are interested in learning more or working with Chrissy please check out her website !https://www.rombachfinancials.com/See you soon ! XoXo , Jen

Genuinely You
Gina Gardiner & Friends: Jay Rombach

Genuinely You

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2024 30:02


Welcome to the 'Gina Gardiner & Friends Show' - this episode features my guest, Jay Rombach whose theme was 'The Path of Reinvention'.

Relentlessly Resilient Podcast
Author Marybeth Rombach Nelson on taking back your ‘Personal Power' after domestic abuse

Relentlessly Resilient Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2024 37:31


Author Marybeth Rombach Nelson was in an abusive marriage. Still, it wasn’t until she had a near-death experience that she was empowered to start the process of leaving her husband for the sake of her kids and her own “Personal Power.” MaryBeth joins this episode of Relentlessly Resilient to share her journey overcoming domestic abuse, emphasizing the importance of making a plan, seeking support, and utilizing resources like personal protection orders, community organizations, as well as trusted family and friends. Now, she helps empower “wholeness and oneness” in others as host of “The Healing Soul Podcast,” a content creator, speaker, and Reiki Master. She reminds people suffering from any kind of abuse that “You always have hope and are never alone. That there is strength to be found in the resources available.”  For more information on domestic abuse, call the National Resource Center on Domestic Violence hotline at 1-800-799-7233 and the National Sexual Violence Resource Center hotline at 1-877-739-3895. And remember for your safety: If you are in danger, please use a safer computer and consider calling 911. Even though we live in challenging times, we can become ‘Relentlessly Resilient’ as we lean on and learn from one another’s experiences. Hosts Jennie Taylor and Michelle Scharf are no strangers to overcoming adversity; Michelle lost her husband to cancer, while Jennie’s husband, Major Brent Taylor, was killed in the service of our country. Their stories bond them together, and now listeners can join them weekly as they visit with others enduring challenges and who teach us how they are exercising resiliency, finding value in their grief, and purpose in moving forward.  Presented by Minky Couture, makers of the most luxurious and soft blankets with a mission to share comfort and love during the special moments of life. Listen to the Relentlessly Resilient Podcast regularly on your favorite platform, at kslpodcasts.com, kslnewsradio.com, or on the KSL NewsRadio App. Join the Resilience conversation on Facebook at @RelentlesslyResilient and Instagram @RelentlesslyResilientPodcast. Produced by KellieAnn Halvorsen.

Lunchtime Stories for Leaders
Wie sieht die Zukunft von Führung aus? | Mit Alice Rombach

Lunchtime Stories for Leaders

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2024 46:03


Warum sind die Soft Skills von heute die Hard Skills von morgen? Wie kann man Zukunftsdenken trainieren? Und mit was müssen sich Führungskräfte der Zukunft auseinandersetzen, um erfolgreich zu sein?Darüber diskutieren die Hosts Brigitte Dyck und Hanna Rentschler diesmal mit Alice Rombach, Zukunftsforscherin, Soziologin und Keynote-Speakerin. Sie berät Unternehmen zu Zukunfts- und Innovationsthemen, lehrt als Dozentin an verschiedenen Hochschulen und inspiriert dazu, bestehendes Denken zu hinterfragen.Brigitte und Alice haben sich auf einem Leadership Summit kennengelernt. In der Folge diskutieren die drei, wie sich die Rolle der Führungskräfte in der Zukunft ändert. Eine große Rolle spielt, Menschen zu mögen und führen zu wollen. Wir haben große Herausforderungen in der Gesellschaft, Lieferketten, Politik, Post-Pandemie und mehr, damit müssen sich Unternehmen und Gesellschaften auseinandersetzen. Denn Unternehmensführung bedeutet, in Zukünfte zu führen! Alice spricht dabei von Zukünften und nicht Zukunft, denn diese ist nicht linear und festgeschrieben. Herausfordernd sind dabei aktuell die Geschwindigkeit und die Komplexität. Die Art, wie Strukturen funktionieren, wird sich verändern. Leadership wird stärker projektzentriert sein und weniger über die Position ausgeübt werden. Alice beschreibt das auch als Netzwerkstrukturen und will auch Kunden mit einbeziehen. Dazu gehört hohe Reflektion, spielerisches Ausprobieren und Experimentierfreudigkeit. Doch was müssen Führungkräfte für Kompetenzen entwickeln? Sicherheit in Unsicherheiten, Selbstreflektion, Resilienz, dazu werden die Soft Skills von heute die Hard Skills von morgen.Die Hard Skills werden durch Technologie eine Verschiebung erfahren und die Soft Skills werden viel wichtiger werden, Alice gibt zu bedenken, dass wir teilweise noch nicht erahnen können, wie diese Skills aussehen werden. Es geht um einen Mix aus Emotion und Analyse. Viele Menschen leiden allerdings unter Zukunftsängsten, denn wir haben das Gefühl, dass die Technologie über uns kommt. Natürlich gibt es zurzeit Monopole, die mit bestimmten Interessen diese Technologien ausfüllen. Wir müssen uns an dieser Stelle einmischen und Verantwortung übernehmen. Sense or Nonsense: Ist die Kategorisierung in Generationen sinnvoll oder nicht? Wir haben das ja schließlich „immer schon gemacht“. Es hilft uns, in Kategorien zu denken und das Gemeinsame zu betrachten, gleichzeitig müssen wir aber Individuen sehen. Wir müssen lernen, einen guten Blick auf beides zu haben. FührungsQuickie: Flexibilität in der Sicherheit einer Community, damit diese Raum bekommen kann. Wir müssen lernen, Extremsituationen wie Schockstarre oder blinden Aktionismus abzuschwächen. Hierbei hilft Training und auch Science Fiction. Leitender Gedanke: Inspiriere, rebelliere und sei inspiriert. Das Rebellieren sieht Alice dabei als Hinterfragen. Zum LinkedIn-Profil von Brigitte Dyck Zum LinkedIn-Profil von Hannah Rentschler Zur Website von AliceZum LinkedIn-Profil von Alice Zum YouTube-Kanal Stormy Timesbe the leader in your challenging businessDAS Leadership Training für Führungskräfte mit 2-8 Jahren Erfahrung, die in stürmischen Zeiten bestehen wollen.https://brigitte-dyck.com/stormytimes/stormytimesDu willst online Wirkung zeigen? Hier gibt es 12 Videonuggets um Online eine Präsenz aufzubauen und damit jeden Kunden zu gewinnen: https://brigitte-dyck.com/videokursonlinewirkungzeigen Brigitte Dyck - Leadership Masterclass http://www.brigitte-dyck.comEinen virtuellen Espresso gefällig? Sehr gern hier: https://brigitte-dyck.com/onlinetermin Eigene Berge versetzen? brigitte@brigitte-dyck.com Kapitel:00:00:00 Intro in die Folge00:01:29 Sense or Nonsense00:03:40 Deep Dive: Zukunftsbilder00:04:56 Wie ändert sich die Rolle der Führungskräfte?00:09:30 Werbung in eigener Sache00:11:09 Führung in der Zukunft00:16:14 Netzwerkeffekte00:18:38 Führungskompetenzen00:20:05 FührungsQuickie00:23:42 Zukünfte vorstellen00:32:06 Zukunftsängste00:38:05 Kultur der Flexibilität fördern00:44:12 Leitender Gedanke

Geburtsgeschichten
159 | Lisa Rombach - Krankenhausgeburt mit Wahlhebamme, Dammschnitt, Kristellerhandgriff, Extrauterine Schwangerschaft am Uterushorn, Notfallkaiserschnitt in der 28. SSW, Neonatologie

Geburtsgeschichten

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2024 78:43


In dieser Folge erzählt Lisa Rombach von den Geburten ihrer zwei Kinder. Lisas "Mother Circle" beginnt am 21.10.24. Hörerinnen vom Geburtsgeschichten Podcast bekommen 10% Rabatt mit dem Code THEA. Lisa bietet den “Mother Circle” sowohl auf deutsch, als auch auf englisch an. Anmelden kannst du dich hier: DE: https://www.circleofnurture.com/a/2147970316/2Bn3326b ENG: https://www.circleofnurture.com/a/2147966531/2Bn3326b *** Die Shownotes findest du hier. Hier geht es zum Geburtsgeschichten Newsletter. Unterstütze den Podcast auf buymeacoffee.com/geburt Folge direkt herunterladen

INFORMATION LOCALE
09 JUILLET 2024

INFORMATION LOCALE

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2024 4:19


Sujets traités : Centre Alsace, trois fermetures de classe annulées ! L'instance, qui instruit la carte scolaire dans le Bas-Rhin s'est réunie hier. Les classes de Neuve-Église, Breitenau et Saint-Maurice, ainsi que Triembach-au Val ont pu être sauvées. Idem pour la classe de maternelle de Hilsenheim. En revanche, à Ebersheim, Marckolsheim, Villé et Wittisheim, les fermetures de classes restent maintenues. Une nouvelle réunion est prévues à la rentrée, le 3 septembre, jour de la rentrée scolaire, pour procéder aux derniers ajustements en fonction des effectifs.Colmar, quartiers d'été, c'est parti pour un été animé ! Le coup d'envoi a été donné hier soir, avec des initiations sportives et culturelles, et un concert de Hip Hop au Centre Europe. Les animations se poursuivront jusqu'au 24 août prochain, au rythme de 2 rendez-vous par semaine, chaque lundi sur la Plaine pasteur, dans le quartier Europe, et les vendredis au square  des vignes, dans le quartier Saint-Vincent de Paul, de 17h à 20h. Au programme : baptêmes de plongée, parcours vélo, initiation au graffiti, ateliers musicaux, séances de lecture pour les tous petits, jeu de loi sur le thème des droits des enfants, animations autour du sports, initiation au baseball, au basket, au handball et à la boxe etc... Les animations sont gratuites et sans inscription.Jeudi dernier, la ville de Kintzheim a célébré l'ouverture de son nouveau circuit de découverte pédestre et cyclable. Ces itinéraires ont été balisés par le Club Vosgien et offrent aux visiteurs l'opportunité de parcourir les vignes et les forêts le tout en admirant les paysages. Isabelle Ferreira, Directrice de l'Office de Tourisme intercommunale Sélestat Haut-Koenigsbourg nous en dit plus. Vous pouvez retrouver les cartes de balades ludiques et de randonnées dans les différents guichets de l'Office de Tourisme Sélestat Haut Koenigsbourg, des propos recueillis par Kristina Dermekis.La Ville de Sélestat organise, le 7 septembre prochain, sa première « Rentrée des Associations », un véritable temps d'échanges, de promotion et de valorisation du monde associatif local en un même lieu, le Centre sportif Intercommunal. C'est l'occasion, pour ces associations, d'attirer de nouveaux adhérents, membres ou licenciés.Ce rendez-vous est le fruit du regroupement de la fête du sport, du forum des associations et de Sélestat Culture. La Ville lance aujourd'hui un appel aux associations, qu'elles soient sportives, culturelles ou caritatives, afin qu'elle participent à ce nouvel événement. Le formulaire d'inscription est téléchargeable sur le site selestat.frNécrologie, l'ancien maire de Rombach-le-Franc Jean-Pierre Hestin, 67 ans, est décédé samedi d'une longue maladie. Il fut maire de Rombach-le-Franc entre 1986 et 1999, le premier président du District du Val d'argent et conseiller général de 1998 à 1999.Saisie de drogue à Bâle ! Treize kilos de kétamine et un kilo de MDMA ont été saisis dans un train en provenance de Berlin, selon le site Swissinfo. Les stupéfiants étaient dissimulés dans des boîtes de conserve, des sachets et une figurine en forme de tête de bouddha transportés par un Néerlandais. La drogue a été découverte le 2 avril. La saisie n'a été annoncée que hier pour des « raisons tactiques liées à l'enquête », précise l'Office fédéral de la douane et de la sécurité des frontières.Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

Stable Science from Dr David Marlin's Animalweb
Dr Gillian Tabor reports on the latest Equiband Pro Research

Stable Science from Dr David Marlin's Animalweb

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2024 20:05


Equiband Pro Research - Latest UpdateDr Gillian Tabor reviews a recently published paper on the effects of the Equiband Pro system on gait symmetry in horses at trot.The papers discussed are:Pfau, T., Simons, V., Rombach, N., Stubbs, N. and Weller, R., 2017. Effect of a 4‐week elastic resistance band training regimen on back kinematics in horses trotting in‐hand and on the lunge. Equine veterinary journal, 49(6), pp.829-835.Ellis, K.L. and King, M.R., 2020. Relationship between postural stability and paraspinal muscle adaptation in lame horses undergoing rehabilitation. Journal of Equine Veterinary Science, 91, p.103108.Shaw, K., Ursini, T., Levine, D., Richards, J. and Adair, S., 2021. The effect of ground poles and elastic resistance bands on longissimus dorsi and rectus abdominus muscle activity during equine walk and trot. Journal of Equine Veterinary Science, 107, p.103772.Zarski, L.M., Rombach, N., Marchenko, D.A. and Rutten, L., 2024. The Equiband Pro System improves gait symmetry in horses at the trot. agriRxiv, (2024), p.20240123286.------------------------------------------Dr Gillian Tabor has reviewed the Equiband and it's use on the website - please check it all our for more information.Podcast – Equiband by Dr Gillian TaborDon't miss Dr Gillian Tabor discussing the Equiband systemWebinar – Elastic Resistance Bands – Bum Bands by Dr David Marlin & Dr Gillian Tabor-----------------------------------------To find out more about becoming a member >>> AskAnimalweb.comNot a Member? Join for as little as £6 a month or £8 on a month-by-month basis to access all the test results and have a say in what we test and investigate next. For this, you also get access to all past and future webinars, videos, podcasts, and articles, the opportunity to take part in testing and research and SOOOO much more. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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

We are running an end of year survey for our listeners! Please let us know any feedback you have, what episodes resonated with you, and guest requests for 2024! Survey link here!Before language models became all the rage in November 2022, image generation was the hottest space in AI (it was the subject of our first piece on Latent Space!) In our interview with Sharif Shameem from Lexica we talked through the launch of StableDiffusion and the early days of that space. At the time, the toolkit was still pretty rudimentary: Lexica made it easy to search images, you had the AUTOMATIC1111 Web UI to generate locally, some HuggingFace spaces that offered inference, and eventually DALL-E 2 through OpenAI's platform, but not much beyond basic text-to-image workflows.Today's guest, Suhail Doshi, is trying to solve this with Playground AI, an image editor reimagined with AI in mind. Some of the differences compared to traditional text-to-image workflows:* Real-time preview rendering using consistency: as you change your prompt, you can see changes in real-time before doing a final rendering of it.* Style filtering: rather than having to prompt exactly how you'd like an image to look, you can pick from a whole range of filters both from Playground's model as well as Stable Diffusion (like RealVis, Starlight XL, etc). We talk about this at 25:46 in the podcast.* Expand prompt: similar to DALL-E3, Playground will do some prompt tuning for you to get better results in generation. Unlike DALL-E3, you can turn this off at any time if you are a prompting wizard* Image editing: after generation, you have tools like a magic eraser, inpainting pencil, etc. This makes it easier to do a full workflow in Playground rather than switching to another tool like Photoshop.Outside of the product, they have also trained a new model from scratch, Playground v2, which is fully open source and open weights and allows for commercial usage. They benchmarked the model against SDXL across 1,000 prompts and found that humans preferred the Playground generation 70% of the time. They had similar results on PartiPrompts:They also created a new benchmark, MJHQ-30K, for “aesthetic quality”:We introduce a new benchmark, MJHQ-30K, for automatic evaluation of a model's aesthetic quality. The benchmark computes FID on a high-quality dataset to gauge aesthetic quality.We curate the high-quality dataset from Midjourney with 10 common categories, each category with 3K samples. Following common practice, we use aesthetic score and CLIP score to ensure high image quality and high image-text alignment. Furthermore, we take extra care to make the data diverse within each category.Suhail was pretty open with saying that Midjourney is currently the best product for imagine generation out there, and that's why they used it as the base for this benchmark. I think it's worth comparing yourself to maybe the best thing and try to find like a really fair way of doing that. So I think more people should try to do that. I definitely don't think you should be kind of comparing yourself on like some Google model or some old SD, Stable Diffusion model and be like, look, we beat Stable Diffusion 1.5. I think users ultimately want care, how close are you getting to the thing that people mostly agree with? [00:23:47]We also talked a lot about Suhail's founder journey from starting Mixpanel in 2009, then going through YC again with Mighty, and eventually sunsetting that to pivot into Playground. Enjoy!Show Notes* Suhail's Twitter* “Starting my road to learn AI”* Bill Gates book trip* Playground* Playground v2 Announcement* $40M raise announcement* “Running infra dev ops for 24 A100s”* Mixpanel* Mighty* “I decided to stop working on Mighty”* Fast.ai* CivitTimestamps* [00:00:00] Intros* [00:02:59] Being early in ML at Mixpanel* [00:04:16] Pivoting from Mighty to Playground and focusing on generative AI* [00:07:54] How DALL-E 2 inspired Mighty* [00:09:19] Reimagining the graphics editor with AI* [00:17:34] Training the Playground V2 model from scratch to advance generative graphics* [00:21:11] Techniques used to improve Playground V2 like data filtering and model tuning* [00:25:21] Releasing the MJHQ30K benchmark to evaluate generative models* [00:30:35] The limitations of current models for detailed image editing tasks* [00:34:06] Using post-generation user feedback to create better benchmarks* [00:38:28] Concerns over potential misuse of powerful generative models* [00:41:54] Rethinking the graphics editor user experience in the AI era* [00:45:44] Integrating consistency models into Playground using preview rendering* [00:47:23] Interacting with the Stable Diffusion LoRAs community* [00:51:35] Running DevOps on A100s* [00:53:12] Startup ideas?TranscriptAlessio: Hey everyone, welcome to the Latent Space podcast. This is Alessio, partner and CTO-in-Residence at Decibel Partners, and I'm joined by my co-host Swyx, founder of Smol AI. [00:00:15]Swyx: Hey, and today in the studio we have Suhail Doshi, welcome. [00:00:18]Suhail: Yeah, thanks. Thanks for having me. [00:00:20]Swyx: So among many things, you're a CEO and co-founder of Mixpanel, and I think about three years ago you left to start Mighty, and more recently, I think about a year ago, transitioned into Playground, and you've just announced your new round. How do you like to be introduced beyond that? [00:00:34]Suhail: Just founder of Playground is fine, yeah, prior co-founder and CEO of Mixpanel. [00:00:40]Swyx: Yeah, awesome. I'd just like to touch on Mixpanel a little bit, because it's obviously one of the more successful analytics companies we previously had amplitude on, and I'm curious if you had any reflections on the interaction of that amount of data that people would want to use for AI. I don't know if there's still a part of you that stays in touch with that world. [00:00:59]Suhail: Yeah, I mean, the short version is that maybe back in like 2015 or 2016, I don't really remember exactly, because it was a while ago, we had an ML team at Mixpanel, and I think this is when maybe deep learning or something really just started getting kind of exciting, and we were thinking that maybe given that we had such vast amounts of data, perhaps we could predict things. So we built two or three different features, I think we built a feature where we could predict whether users would churn from your product. We made a feature that could predict whether users would convert, we built a feature that could do anomaly detection, like if something occurred in your product, that was just very surprising, maybe a spike in traffic in a particular region, can we tell you that that happened? Because it's really hard to like know everything that's going on with your data, can we tell you something surprising about your data? And we tried all of these various features, most of it boiled down to just like, you know, using logistic regression, and it never quite seemed very groundbreaking in the end. And so I think, you know, we had a four or five person ML team, and I think we never expanded it from there. And I did all these Fast AI courses trying to learn about ML. And that was the- That's the first time you did fast AI. Yeah, that was the first time I did fast AI. Yeah, I think I've done it now three times, maybe. [00:02:12]Swyx: Oh, okay. [00:02:13]Suhail: I didn't know it was the third. No, no, just me reviewing it, it's maybe three times, but yeah. [00:02:16]Swyx: You mentioned prediction, but honestly, like it's also just about the feedback, right? The quality of feedback from users, I think it's useful for anyone building AI applications. [00:02:25]Suhail: Yeah. Yeah, I think I haven't spent a lot of time thinking about Mixpanel because it's been a long time, but sometimes I'm like, oh, I wonder what we could do now. And then I kind of like move on to whatever I'm working on, but things have changed significantly since. [00:02:39]Swyx: And then maybe we'll touch on Mighty a little bit. Mighty was very, very bold. My framing of it was, you will run our browsers for us because everyone has too many tabs open. I have too many tabs open and slowing down your machines that you can do it better for us in a centralized data center. [00:02:51]Suhail: Yeah, we were first trying to make a browser that we would stream from a data center to your computer at extremely low latency, but the real objective wasn't trying to make a browser or anything like that. The real objective was to try to make a new kind of computer. And the thought was just that like, you know, we have these computers in front of us today and we upgrade them or they run out of RAM or they don't have enough RAM or not enough disk or, you know, there's some limitation with our computers, perhaps like data locality is a problem. Why do I need to think about upgrading my computer ever? And so, you know, we just had to kind of observe that like, well, actually it seems like a lot of applications are just now in the browser, you know, it's like how many real desktop applications do we use relative to the number of applications we use in the browser? So it's just this realization that actually like, you know, the browser was effectively becoming more or less our operating system over time. And so then that's why we kind of decided to go, hmm, maybe we can stream the browser. Fortunately, the idea did not work for a couple of different reasons, but the objective is try to make sure new computer. [00:03:50]Swyx: Yeah, very, very bold. [00:03:51]Alessio: Yeah, and I was there at YC Demo Day when you first announced it. It was, I think, the last or one of the last in-person ones, at Pier34 in Mission Bay. How do you think about that now when everybody wants to put some of these models in people's machines and some of them want to stream them in, do you think there's maybe another wave of the same problem before it was like browser apps too slow, now it's like models too slow to run on device? [00:04:16]Suhail: Yeah. I mean, I've obviously pivoted away from Mighty, but a lot of what I somewhat believed at Mighty, maybe why I'm so excited about AI and what's happening, a lot of what Mighty was about was like moving compute somewhere else, right? Right now, applications, they get limited quantities of memory, disk, networking, whatever your home network has, et cetera. You know, what if these applications could somehow, if we could shift compute, and then these applications have vastly more compute than they do today. Right now it's just like client backend services, but you know, what if we could change the shape of how applications could interact with things? And it's changed my thinking. In some ways, AI has like a bit of a continuation of my belief that like perhaps we can really shift compute somewhere else. One of the problems with Mighty was that JavaScript is single-threaded in the browser. And what we learned, you know, the reason why we kind of abandoned Mighty was because I didn't believe we could make a new kind of computer. We could have made some kind of enterprise business, probably it could have made maybe a lot of money, but it wasn't going to be what I hoped it was going to be. And so once I realized that most of a web app is just going to be single-threaded JavaScript, then the only thing you could do largely withstanding changing JavaScript, which is a fool's errand most likely, make a better CPU, right? And there's like three CPU manufacturers, two of which sell, you know, big ones, you know, AMD, Intel, and then of course like Apple made the M1. And it's not like single-threaded CPU core performance, single-core performance was increasing very fast, it's plateauing rapidly. And even these different companies were not doing as good of a job, you know, sort of with the continuation of Moore's law. But what happened in AI was that you got like, if you think of the AI model as like a computer program, like just like a compiled computer program, it is literally built and designed to do massive parallel computations. And so if you could take like the universal approximation theorem to its like kind of logical complete point, you know, you're like, wow, I can get, make computation happen really rapidly and parallel somewhere else, you know, so you end up with these like really amazing models that can like do anything. It just turned out like perhaps the new kind of computer would just simply be shifted, you know, into these like really amazing AI models in reality. Yeah. [00:06:30]Swyx: Like I think Andrej Karpathy has always been, has been making a lot of analogies with the LLMOS. [00:06:34]Suhail: I saw his video and I watched that, you know, maybe two weeks ago or something like that. I was like, oh man, this, I very much resonate with this like idea. [00:06:41]Swyx: Why didn't I see this three years ago? [00:06:43]Suhail: Yeah. I think, I think there still will be, you know, local models and then there'll be these very large models that have to be run in data centers. I think it just depends on kind of like the right tool for the job, like any engineer would probably care about. But I think that, you know, by and large, like if the models continue to kind of keep getting bigger, you're always going to be wondering whether you should use the big thing or the small, you know, the tiny little model. And it might just depend on like, you know, do you need 30 FPS or 60 FPS? Maybe that would be hard to do, you know, over a network. [00:07:13]Swyx: You tackled a much harder problem latency wise than the AI models actually require. Yeah. [00:07:18]Suhail: Yeah. You can do quite well. You can do quite well. You definitely did 30 FPS video streaming, did very crazy things to make that work. So I'm actually quite bullish on the kinds of things you can do with networking. [00:07:30]Swyx: Maybe someday you'll come back to that at some point. But so for those that don't know, you're very transparent on Twitter. Very good to follow you just to learn your insights. And you actually published a postmortem on Mighty that people can read up on and willing to. So there was a bit of an overlap. You started exploring the AI stuff in June 2022, which is when you started saying like, I'm taking fast AI again. Maybe, was there more context around that? [00:07:54]Suhail: Yeah. I think I was kind of like waiting for the team at Mighty to finish up, you know, something. And I was like, okay, well, what can I do? I guess I will make some kind of like address bar predictor in the browser. So we had, you know, we had forked Chrome and Chromium. And I was like, you know, one thing that's kind of lame is that like this browser should be like a lot better at predicting what I might do, where I might want to go. It struck me as really odd that, you know, Chrome had very little AI actually or ML inside this browser. For a company like Google, you'd think there's a lot. Code is actually just very, you know, it's just a bunch of if then statements is more or less the address bar. So it seemed like a pretty big opportunity. And that's also where a lot of people interact with the browser. So, you know, long story short, I was like, hmm, I wonder what I could build here. So I started to take some AI courses and review the material again and get back to figuring it out. But I think that was somewhat serendipitous because right around April was, I think, a very big watershed moment in AI because that's when Dolly 2 came out. And I think that was the first truly big viral moment for generative AI. [00:08:59]Swyx: Because of the avocado chair. [00:09:01]Suhail: Yeah, exactly. [00:09:02]Swyx: It wasn't as big for me as Stable Diffusion. [00:09:04]Suhail: Really? [00:09:05]Swyx: Yeah, I don't know. Dolly was like, all right, that's cool. [00:09:07]Suhail: I don't know. Yeah. [00:09:09]Swyx: I mean, they had some flashy videos, but it didn't really register. [00:09:13]Suhail: That moment of images was just such a viral novel moment. I think it just blew people's mind. Yeah. [00:09:19]Swyx: I mean, it's the first time I encountered Sam Altman because they had this Dolly 2 hackathon and they opened up the OpenAI office for developers to walk in back when it wasn't as much of a security issue as it is today. I see. Maybe take us through the journey to decide to pivot into this and also choosing images. Obviously, you were inspired by Dolly, but there could be any number of AI companies and businesses that you could start and why this one, right? [00:09:45]Suhail: Yeah. So I think at that time, Mighty and OpenAI was not quite as popular as it is all of a sudden now these days, but back then they had a lot more bandwidth to kind of help anybody. And so we had been talking with the team there around trying to see if we could do really fast low latency address bar prediction with GPT-3 and 3.5 and that kind of thing. And so we were sort of figuring out how could we make that low latency. I think that just being able to talk to them and kind of being involved gave me a bird's eye view into a bunch of things that started to happen. Latency first was the Dolly 2 moment, but then stable diffusion came out and that was a big moment for me as well. And I remember just kind of like sitting up one night thinking, I was like, you know, what are the kinds of companies one could build? Like what matters right now? One thing that I observed is that I find a lot of inspiration when I'm working in a field in something and then I can identify a bunch of problems. Like for Mixpanel, I was an intern at a company and I just noticed that they were doing all this data analysis. And so I thought, hmm, I wonder if I could make a product and then maybe they would use it. And in this case, you know, the same thing kind of occurred. It was like, okay, there are a bunch of like infrastructure companies that put a model up and then you can use their API, like Replicate is a really good example of that. There are a bunch of companies that are like helping you with training, model optimization, Mosaic at the time, and probably still, you know, was doing stuff like that. So I just started listing out like every category of everything, of every company that was doing something interesting. I started listing out like weights and biases. I was like, oh man, weights and biases is like this great company. Do I want to compete with that company? I might be really good at competing with that company because of Mixpanel because it's so much of like analysis. But I was like, no, I don't want to do anything related to that. That would, I think that would be too boring now at this point. So I started to list out all these ideas and one thing I observed was that at OpenAI, they had like a playground for GPT-3, right? All it was is just like a text box more or less. And then there were some settings on the right, like temperature and whatever. [00:11:41]Swyx: Top K. [00:11:42]Suhail: Yeah, top K. You know, what's your end stop sequence? I mean, that was like their product before GPT, you know, really difficult to use, but fun if you're like an engineer. And I just noticed that their product kind of was evolving a little bit where the interface kind of was getting a little bit more complex. They had like a way where you could like generate something in the middle of a sentence and all those kinds of things. And I just thought to myself, I was like, everything is just like this text box and you generate something and that's about it. And stable diffusion had kind of come out and it was all like hugging face and code. Nobody was really building any UI. And so I had this kind of thing where I wrote prompt dash like question mark in my notes and I didn't know what was like the product for that at the time. I mean, it seems kind of trite now, but I just like wrote prompt. What's the thing for that? Manager. Prompt manager. Do you organize them? Like, do you like have a UI that can play with them? Yeah. Like a library. What would you make? And so then, of course, then you thought about what would the modalities be given that? How would you build a UI for each kind of modality? And so there are a couple of people working on some pretty cool things. And I basically chose graphics because it seemed like the most obvious place where you could build a really powerful, complex UI. That's not just only typing a box. It would very much evolve beyond that. Like what would be the best thing for something that's visual? Probably something visual. Yeah. I think that just that progression kind of happened and it just seemed like there was a lot of effort going into language, but not a lot of effort going into graphics. And then maybe the very last thing was, I think I was talking to Aditya Ramesh, who was the co-creator of DALL-E 2 and Sam. And I just kind of went to these guys and I was just like, hey, are you going to make like a UI for this thing? Like a true UI? Are you going to go for this? Are you going to make a product? For DALL-E. Yeah. For DALL-E. Yeah. Are you going to do anything here? Because if you are going to do it, just let me know and I will stop and I'll go do something else. But if you're not going to do anything, I'll just do it. And so we had a couple of conversations around what that would look like. And then I think ultimately they decided that they were going to focus on language primarily. And I just felt like it was going to be very underinvested in. Yes. [00:13:46]Swyx: There's that sort of underinvestment from OpenAI, but also it's a different type of customer than you're used to, presumably, you know, and Mixpanel is very good at selling to B2B and developers will figure on you or not. Yeah. Was that not a concern? [00:14:00]Suhail: Well, not so much because I think that, you know, right now I would say graphics is in this very nascent phase. Like most of the customers are just like hobbyists, right? Yeah. Like it's a little bit of like a novel toy as opposed to being this like very high utility thing. But I think ultimately, if you believe that you could make it very high utility, the probably the next customers will end up being B2B. It'll probably not be like a consumer. There will certainly be a variation of this idea that's in consumer. But if your quest is to kind of make like something that surpasses human ability for graphics, like ultimately it will end up being used for business. So I think it's maybe more of a progression. In fact, for me, it's maybe more like Mixpanel started out as SMB and then very much like ended up starting to grow up towards enterprise. So for me, I think it will be a very similar progression. But yeah, I mean, the reason why I was excited about it is because it was a creative tool. I make music and it's AI. It's like something that I know I could stay up till three o'clock in the morning doing. Those are kind of like very simple bars for me. [00:14:56]Alessio: So you mentioned Dolly, Stable Diffusion. You just had Playground V2 come out two days ago. Yeah, two days ago. [00:15:02]Suhail: Two days ago. [00:15:03]Alessio: This is a model you train completely from scratch. So it's not a cheap fine tune on something. You open source everything, including the weights. Why did you decide to do it? I know you supported Stable Diffusion XL in Playground before, right? Yep. What made you want to come up with V2 and maybe some of the interesting, you know, technical research work you've done? [00:15:24]Suhail: Yeah. So I think that we continue to feel like graphics and these foundation models for anything really related to pixels, but also definitely images continues to be very underinvested. It feels a little like graphics is in like this GPT-2 moment, right? Like even GPT-3, even when GPT-3 came out, it was exciting, but it was like, what are you going to use this for? Yeah, we'll do some text classification and some semantic analysis and maybe it'll sometimes like make a summary of something and it'll hallucinate. But no one really had like a very significant like business application for GPT-3. And in images, we're kind of stuck in the same place. We're kind of like, okay, I write this thing in a box and I get some cool piece of artwork and the hands are kind of messed up and sometimes the eyes are a little weird. Maybe I'll use it for a blog post, you know, that kind of thing. The utility feels so limited. And so, you know, and then we, you sort of look at Stable Diffusion and we definitely use that model in our product and our users like it and use it and love it and enjoy it, but it hasn't gone nearly far enough. So we were kind of faced with the choice of, you know, do we wait for progress to occur or do we make that progress happen? So yeah, we kind of embarked on a plan to just decide to go train these things from scratch. And I think the community has given us so much. The community for Stable Diffusion I think is one of the most vibrant communities on the internet. It's like amazing. It feels like, I hope this is what like Homebrew Club felt like when computers like showed up because it's like amazing what that community will do and it moves so fast. I've never seen anything in my life and heard other people's stories around this where an academic research paper comes out and then like two days later, someone has sample code for it. And then two days later, there's a model. And then two days later, it's like in nine products, you know, they're all competing with each other. It's incredible to see like math symbols on an academic paper go to well-designed features in a product. So I think the community has done so much. So I think we wanted to give back to the community kind of on our way. Certainly we would train a better model than what we gave out on Tuesday, but we definitely felt like there needs to be some kind of progress in these open source models. The last kind of milestone was in July when Stable Diffusion Excel came out, but there hasn't been anything really since. Right. [00:17:34]Swyx: And there's Excel Turbo now. [00:17:35]Suhail: Well, Excel Turbo is like this distilled model, right? So it's like lower quality, but fast. You have to decide, you know, what your trade off is there. [00:17:42]Swyx: It's also a consistency model. [00:17:43]Suhail: I don't think it's a consistency model. It's like it's they did like a different thing. Yeah. I think it's like, I don't want to get quoted for this, but it's like something called ad like adversarial or something. [00:17:52]Swyx: That's exactly right. [00:17:53]Suhail: I've read something about that. Maybe it's like closer to GANs or something, but I didn't really read the full paper. But yeah, there hasn't been quite enough progress in terms of, you know, there's no multitask image model. You know, the closest thing would be something called like EmuEdit, but there's no model for that. It's just a paper that's within meta. So we did that and we also gave out pre-trained weights, which is very rare. Usually you just get the aligned model and then you have to like see if you can do anything with it. So we actually gave out, there's like a 256 pixel pre-trained stage and a 512. And we did that for academic research because we come across people all the time in academia, they have access to like one A100 or eight at best. And so if we can give them kind of like a 512 pre-trained model, our hope is that there'll be interesting novel research that occurs from that. [00:18:38]Swyx: What research do you want to happen? [00:18:39]Suhail: I would love to see more research around things that users care about tend to be things like character consistency. [00:18:45]Swyx: Between frames? [00:18:46]Suhail: More like if you have like a face. Yeah, yeah. Basically between frames, but more just like, you know, you have your face and it's in one image and then you want it to be like in another. And users are very particular and sensitive to faces changing because we know we're trained on faces as humans. Not seeing a lot of innovation, enough innovation around multitask editing. You know, there are two things like instruct pics to pics and then the EmuEdit paper that are maybe very interesting, but we certainly are not pushing the fold on that in that regard. All kinds of things like around that rotation, you know, being able to keep coherence across images, style transfer is still very limited. Just even reasoning around images, you know, what's going on in an image, that kind of thing. Things are still very, very underpowered, very nascent. So therefore the utility is very, very limited. [00:19:32]Alessio: On the 1K Prompt Benchmark, you are 2.5x prefer to Stable Diffusion XL. How do you get there? Is it better images in the training corpus? Can you maybe talk through the improvements in the model? [00:19:44]Suhail: I think they're still very early on in the recipe, but I think it's a lot of like little things and you know, every now and then there are some big important things like certainly your data quality is really, really important. So we spend a lot of time thinking about that. But I would say it's a lot of things that you kind of clean up along the way as you train your model. Everything from captions to the data that you align with after pre-train to how you're picking your data sets, how you filter your data sets. I feel like there's a lot of work in AI that doesn't really feel like AI. It just really feels like just data set filtering and systems engineering and just like, you know, and the recipe is all there, but it's like a lot of extra work to do that. I think we plan to do a Playground V 2.1, maybe either by the end of the year or early next year. And we're just like watching what the community does with the model. And then we're just going to take a lot of the things that they're unhappy about and just like fix them. You know, so for example, like maybe the eyes of people in an image don't feel right. They feel like they're a little misshapen or they're kind of blurry feeling. That's something that we already know we want to fix. So I think in that case, it's going to be about data quality. Or maybe you want to improve the kind of the dynamic range of color. You know, we want to make sure that that's like got a good range in any image. So what technique can we use there? There's different things like offset noise, pyramid noise, terminal zero, SNR, like there are all these various interesting things that you can do. So I think it's like a lot of just like tricks. Some are tricks, some are data, and some is just like cleaning. [00:21:11]Swyx: Specifically for faces, it's very common to use a pipeline rather than just train the base model more. Do you have a strong belief either way on like, oh, they should be separated out to different stages for like improving the eyes, improving the face or enhance or whatever? Or do you think like it can all be done in one model? [00:21:28]Suhail: I think we will make a unified model. Yeah, I think it will. I think we'll certainly in the end, ultimately make a unified model. There's not enough research about this. Maybe there is something out there that we haven't read. There are some bottlenecks, like for example, in the VAE, like the VAEs are ultimately like compressing these things. And so you don't know. And then you might have like a big informational information bottleneck. So maybe you would use a pixel based model, perhaps. I think we've talked to people, everyone from like Rombach to various people, Rombach trained stable diffusion. I think there's like a big question around the architecture of these things. It's still kind of unknown, right? Like we've got transformers and we've got like a GPT architecture model, but then there's this like weird thing that's also seemingly working with diffusion. And so, you know, are we going to use vision transformers? Are we going to move to pixel based models? Is there a different kind of architecture? We don't really, I don't think there have been enough experiments. Still? Oh my God. [00:22:21]Swyx: Yeah. [00:22:22]Suhail: That's surprising. I think it's very computationally expensive to do a pipeline model where you're like fixing the eyes and you're fixing the mouth and you're fixing the hands. [00:22:29]Swyx: That's what everyone does as far as I understand. [00:22:31]Suhail: I'm not exactly sure what you mean, but if you mean like you get an image and then you will like make another model specifically to fix a face, that's fairly computationally expensive. And I think it's like not probably not the right way. Yeah. And it doesn't generalize very well. Now you have to pick all these different things. [00:22:45]Swyx: Yeah. You're just kind of glomming things on together. Yeah. Like when I look at AI artists, like that's what they do. [00:22:50]Suhail: Ah, yeah, yeah, yeah. They'll do things like, you know, I think a lot of ARs will do control net tiling to do kind of generative upscaling of all these different pieces of the image. Yeah. And I think these are all just like, they're all hacks ultimately in the end. I mean, it just to me, it's like, let's go back to where we were just three years, four years ago with where deep learning was at and where language was that, you know, it's the same thing. It's like we were like, okay, well, I'll just train these very narrow models to try to do these things and kind of ensemble them or pipeline them to try to get to a best in class result. And here we are with like where the models are gigantic and like very capable of solving huge amounts of tasks when given like lots of great data. [00:23:28]Alessio: You also released a new benchmark called MJHQ30K for automatic evaluation of a model's aesthetic quality. I have one question. The data set that you use for the benchmark is from Midjourney. Yes. You have 10 categories. How do you think about the Playground model, Midjourney, like, are you competitors? [00:23:47]Suhail: There are a lot of people, a lot of people in research, they like to compare themselves to something they know they can beat, right? Maybe this is the best reason why it can be helpful to not be a researcher also sometimes like I'm not trained as a researcher, I don't have a PhD in anything AI related, for example. But I think if you care about products and you care about your users, then the most important thing that you want to figure out is like everyone has to acknowledge that Midjourney is very good. They are the best at this thing. I'm happy to admit that. I have no problem admitting that. Just easy. It's very visual to tell. So I think it's incumbent on us to try to compare ourselves to the thing that's best, even if we lose, even if we're not the best. At some point, if we are able to surpass Midjourney, then we only have ourselves to compare ourselves to. But on First Blush, I think it's worth comparing yourself to maybe the best thing and try to find like a really fair way of doing that. So I think more people should try to do that. I definitely don't think you should be kind of comparing yourself on like some Google model or some old SD, Stable Diffusion model and be like, look, we beat Stable Diffusion 1.5. I think users ultimately want care, how close are you getting to the thing that people mostly agree with? So we put out that benchmark for no other reason to say like, this seems like a worthy thing for us to at least try, for people to try to get to. And then if we surpass it, great, we'll come up with another one. [00:25:06]Alessio: Yeah, no, that's awesome. And you killed Stable Diffusion Excel and everything. In the benchmark chart, it says Playground V2 1024 pixel dash aesthetic. Do you have kind of like, yeah, style fine tunes or like what's the dash aesthetic for? [00:25:21]Suhail: We debated this, maybe we named it wrong or something, but we were like, how do we help people realize the model that's aligned versus the models that weren't? Because we gave out pre-trained models, we didn't want people to like use those. So that's why they're called base. And then the aesthetic model, yeah, we wanted people to pick up the thing that makes things pretty. Who wouldn't want the thing that's aesthetic? But if there's a better name, we're definitely open to feedback. No, no, that's cool. [00:25:46]Alessio: I was using the product. You also have the style filter and you have all these different styles. And it seems like the styles are tied to the model. So there's some like SDXL styles, there's some Playground V2 styles. Can you maybe give listeners an overview of how that works? Because in language, there's not this idea of like style, right? Versus like in vision model, there is, and you cannot get certain styles in different [00:26:11]Suhail: models. [00:26:12]Alessio: So how do styles emerge and how do you categorize them and find them? [00:26:15]Suhail: Yeah, I mean, it's so fun having a community where people are just trying a model. Like it's only been two days for Playground V2. And we actually don't know what the model's capable of and not capable of. You know, we certainly see problems with it. But we have yet to see what emergent behavior is. I mean, we've just sort of discovered that it takes about like a week before you start to see like new things. I think like a lot of that style kind of emerges after that week, where you start to see, you know, there's some styles that are very like well known to us, like maybe like pixel art is a well known style. Photorealism is like another one that's like well known to us. But there are some styles that cannot be easily named. You know, it's not as simple as like, okay, that's an anime style. It's very visual. And in the end, you end up making up the name for what that style represents. And so the community kind of shapes itself around these different things. And so if anyone that's into stable diffusion and into building anything with graphics and stuff with these models, you know, you might have heard of like Proto Vision or Dream Shaper, some of these weird names, but they're just invented by these authors. But they have a sort of je ne sais quoi that, you know, appeals to users. [00:27:26]Swyx: Because it like roughly embeds to what you what you want. [00:27:29]Suhail: I guess so. I mean, it's like, you know, there's one of my favorite ones that's fine tuned. It's not made by us. It's called like Starlight XL. It's just this beautiful model. It's got really great color contrast and visual elements. And the users love it. I love it. And it's so hard. I think that's like a very big open question with graphics that I'm not totally sure how we'll solve. I don't know. It's, it's like an evolving situation too, because styles get boring, right? They get fatigued. Like it's like listening to the same style of pop song. I try to relate to graphics a little bit like with music, because I think it gives you a little bit of a different shape to things. Like it's not as if we just have pop music, rap music and country music, like all of these, like the EDM genre alone has like sub genres. And I think that's very true in graphics and painting and art and anything that we're doing. There's just these sub genres, even if we can't quite always name them. But I think they are emergent from the community, which is why we're so always happy to work with the community. [00:28:26]Swyx: That is a struggle. You know, coming back to this, like B2B versus B2C thing, B2C, you're going to have a huge amount of diversity and then it's going to reduce as you get towards more sort of B2B type use cases. I'm making this up here. So like you might be optimizing for a thing that you may eventually not need. [00:28:42]Suhail: Yeah, possibly. Yeah, possibly. I think like a simple thing with startups is that I worry sometimes by trying to be overly ambitious and like really scrutinizing like what something is in its most nascent phase that you miss the most ambitious thing you could have done. Like just having like very basic curiosity with something very small can like kind of lead you to something amazing. Like Einstein definitely did that. And then he like, you know, he basically won all the prizes and got everything he wanted and then basically did like kind of didn't really. He can dismiss quantum and then just kind of was still searching, you know, for the unifying theory. And he like had this quest. I think that happens a lot with like Nobel Prize people. I think there's like a term for it that I forget. I actually wanted to go after a toy almost intentionally so long as that I could see, I could imagine that it would lead to something very, very large later. Like I said, it's very hobbyist, but you need to start somewhere. You need to start with something that has a big gravitational pull, even if these hobbyists aren't likely to be the people that, you know, have a way to monetize it or whatever, even if they're, but they're doing it for fun. So there's something, something there that I think is really important. But I agree with you that, you know, in time we will absolutely focus on more utilitarian things like things that are more related to editing feats that are much harder. And so I think like a very simple use case is just, you know, I'm not a graphics designer. It seems like very simple that like you, if we could give you the ability to do really complex graphics without skill, wouldn't you want that? You know, like my wife the other day was set, you know, said, I wish Playground was better. When are you guys going to have a feature where like we could make my son, his name's Devin, smile when he was not smiling in the picture for the holiday card. Right. You know, just being able to highlight his, his mouth and just say like, make him smile. Like why can't we do that with like high fidelity and coherence, little things like that, all the way to putting you in completely different scenarios. [00:30:35]Swyx: Is that true? Can we not do that in painting? [00:30:37]Suhail: You can do in painting, but the quality is just so bad. Yeah. It's just really terrible quality. You know, it's like you'll do it five times and it'll still like kind of look like crooked or just artifact. Part of it's like, you know, the lips on the face, there's such little information there. So small that the models really struggle with it. Yeah. [00:30:55]Swyx: Make the picture smaller and you don't see it. That's my trick. I don't know. [00:30:59]Suhail: Yeah. Yeah. That's true. Or, you know, you could take that region and make it really big and then like say it's a mouth and then like shrink it. It feels like you're wrestling with it more than it's doing something that kind of surprises you. [00:31:12]Swyx: Yeah. It feels like you are very much the internal tastemaker, like you carry in your head this vision for what a good art model should look like. Do you find it hard to like communicate it to like your team and other people? Just because it's obviously it's hard to put into words like we just said. [00:31:26]Suhail: Yeah. It's very hard to explain. Images have such high bitrate compared to just words and we don't have enough words to describe these things. It's not terribly difficult. I think everyone on the team, if they don't have good kind of like judgment taste or like an eye for some of these things, they're like steadily building it because they have no choice. Right. So in that realm, I don't worry too much, actually. Like everyone is kind of like learning to get the eye is what I would call it. But I also have, you know, my own narrow taste. Like I don't represent the whole population either. [00:31:59]Swyx: When you benchmark models, you know, like this benchmark we're talking about, we use FID. Yeah. Input distance. OK. That's one measure. But like it doesn't capture anything you just said about smiles. [00:32:08]Suhail: Yeah. FID is generally a bad metric. It's good up to a point and then it kind of like is irrelevant. Yeah. [00:32:14]Swyx: And then so are there any other metrics that you like apart from vibes? I'm always looking for alternatives to vibes because vibes don't scale, you know. [00:32:22]Suhail: You know, it might be fun to kind of talk about this because it's actually kind of fresh. So up till now, we haven't needed to do a ton of like benchmarking because we hadn't trained our own model and now we have. So now what? What does that mean? How do we evaluate it? And, you know, we're kind of like living with the last 48, 72 hours of going, did the way that we benchmark actually succeed? [00:32:43]Swyx: Did it deliver? [00:32:44]Suhail: Right. You know, like I think Gemini just came out. They just put out a bunch of benchmarks. But all these benchmarks are just an approximation of how you think it's going to end up with real world performance. And I think that's like very fascinating to me. So if you fake that benchmark, you'll still end up in a really bad scenario at the end of the day. And so, you know, one of the benchmarks we did was we kind of curated like a thousand prompts. And I think that's kind of what we published in our blog post, you know, of all these tasks that we a lot of some of them are curated by our team where we know the models all suck at it. Like my favorite prompt that no model is really capable of is a horse riding an astronaut, the inverse one. And it's really, really hard to do. [00:33:22]Swyx: Not in data. [00:33:23]Suhail: You know, another one is like a giraffe underneath a microwave. How does that work? Right. There's so many of these little funny ones. We do. We have prompts that are just like misspellings of things. Yeah. We'll figure out if the models will figure it out. [00:33:36]Swyx: They should embed to the same space. [00:33:39]Suhail: Yeah. And just like all these very interesting weirdo things. And so we have so many of these and then we kind of like evaluate whether the models are any good at it. And the reality is that they're all bad at it. And so then you're just picking the most aesthetic image. We're still at the beginning of building like the best benchmark we can that aligns most with just user happiness, I think, because we're not we're not like putting these in papers and trying to like win, you know, I don't know, awards at ICCV or something if they have awards. You could. [00:34:05]Swyx: That's absolutely a valid strategy. [00:34:06]Suhail: Yeah, you could. But I don't think it could correlate necessarily with the impact we want to have on humanity. I think we're still evolving whatever our benchmarks are. So the first benchmark was just like very difficult tasks that we know the models are bad at. Can we come up with a thousand of these, whether they're hand rated and some of them are generated? And then can we ask the users, like, how do we do? And then we wanted to use a benchmark like party prompts. We mostly did that so people in academia could measure their models against ours versus others. But yeah, I mean, fit is pretty bad. And I think in terms of vibes, it's like you put out the model and then you try to see like what users make. And I think my sense is that we're going to take all the things that we notice that the users kind of were failing at and try to find like new ways to measure that, whether that's like a smile or, you know, color contrast or lighting. One benefit of Playground is that we have users making millions of images every single day. And so we can just ask them for like a post generation feedback. Yeah, we can just ask them. We can just say, like, how good was the lighting here? How was the subject? How was the background? [00:35:06]Swyx: Like a proper form of like, it's just like you make it, you come to our site, you make [00:35:10]Suhail: an image and then we say, and then maybe randomly you just say, hey, you know, like, how was the color and contrast of this image? And you say it was not very good, just tell us. So I think I think we can get like tens of thousands of these evaluations every single day to truly measure real world performance as opposed to just like benchmark performance. I would like to publish hopefully next year. I think we will try to publish a benchmark that anyone could use, that we evaluate ourselves on and that other people can, that we think does a good job of approximating real world performance because we've tried it and done it and noticed that it did. Yeah. I think we will do that. [00:35:45]Swyx: I personally have a few like categories that I consider special. You know, you know, you have like animals, art, fashion, food. There are some categories which I consider like a different tier of image. Top among them is text in images. How do you think about that? So one of the big wow moments for me, something I've been looking out for the entire year is just the progress of text and images. Like, can you write in an image? Yeah. And Ideogram came out recently, which had decent but not perfect text and images. Dolly3 had improved some and all they said in their paper was that they just included more text in the data set and it just worked. I was like, that's just lazy. But anyway, do you care about that? Because I don't see any of that in like your sample. Yeah, yeah. [00:36:27]Suhail: The V2 model was mostly focused on image quality versus like the feature of text synthesis. [00:36:33]Swyx: Well, as a business user, I care a lot about that. [00:36:35]Suhail: Yeah. Yeah. I'm very excited about text synthesis. And yeah, I think Ideogram has done a good job of maybe the best job. Dolly has like a hit rate. Yes. You know, like sometimes it's Egyptian letters. Yeah. I'm very excited about text synthesis. You know, I don't have much to say on it just yet. You know, you don't want just text effects. I think where this has to go is it has to be like you could like write little tiny pieces of text like on like a milk carton. That's maybe not even the focal point of a scene. I think that's like a very hard task that, you know, if you could do something like that, then there's a lot of other possibilities. Well, you don't have to zero shot it. [00:37:09]Swyx: You can just be like here and focus on this. [00:37:12]Suhail: Sure. Yeah, yeah. Definitely. Yeah. [00:37:16]Swyx: Yeah. So I think text synthesis would be very exciting. I'll also flag that Max Wolf, MiniMaxxier, which you must have come across his work. He's done a lot of stuff about using like logo masks that then map onto food and vegetables. And it looks like text, which can be pretty fun. [00:37:29]Suhail: That's the wonderful thing about like the open source community is that you get things like control net and then you see all these people do these just amazing things with control net. And then you wonder, I think from our point of view, we sort of go that that's really wonderful. But how do we end up with like a unified model that can do that? What are the bottlenecks? What are the issues? The community ultimately has very limited resources. And so they need these kinds of like workaround research ideas to get there. But yeah. [00:37:55]Swyx: Are techniques like control net portable to your architecture? [00:37:58]Suhail: Definitely. Yeah. We kept the Playground V2 exactly the same as SDXL. Not because not out of laziness, but just because we knew that the community already had tools. You know, all you have to do is maybe change a string in your code and then, you know, retrain a control net for it. So it was very intentional to do that. We didn't want to fragment the community with different architectures. Yeah. [00:38:16]Swyx: So basically, I'm going to go over three more categories. One is UIs, like app UIs, like mock UIs. Third is not safe for work, and then copyrighted stuff. I don't know if you care to comment on any of those. [00:38:28]Suhail: I think the NSFW kind of like safety stuff is really important. I kind of think that one of the biggest risks kind of going into maybe the U.S. election year will probably be very interrelated with like graphics, audio, video. I think it's going to be very hard to explain, you know, to a family relative who's not kind of in our world. And our world is like sometimes very, you know, we think it's very big, but it's very tiny compared to the rest of the world. Some people like there's still lots of humanity who have no idea what chat GPT is. And I think it's going to be very hard to explain, you know, to your uncle, aunt, whoever, you know, hey, I saw President Biden say this thing on a video, you know, I can't believe, you know, he said that. I think that's going to be a very troubling thing going into the world next year, the year after. [00:39:12]Swyx: That's more like a risk thing, like deepfakes, faking, political faking. But there's a lot of studies on how for most businesses, you don't want to train on not safe for work images, except that it makes you really good at bodies. [00:39:24]Suhail: Personally, we filter out NSFW type of images in our data set so that it's, you know, so our safety filter stuff doesn't have to work as hard. [00:39:32]Swyx: But you've heard this argument that not safe for work images are very good at human anatomy, which you do want to be good at. [00:39:38]Suhail: It's not like necessarily a bad thing to train on that data. It's more about like how you go and use it. That's why I was kind of talking about safety, you know, in part, because there are very terrible things that can happen in the world. If you have an extremely powerful graphics model, you know, suddenly like you can kind of imagine, you know, now if you can like generate nudes and then there's like you could do very character consistent things with faces, like what does that lead to? Yeah. And so I tend to think more what occurs after that, right? Even if you train on, let's say, you know, new data, if it does something to kind of help, there's nothing wrong with the human anatomy, it's very valid for a model to learn that. But then it's kind of like, how does that get used? And, you know, I won't bring up all of the very, very unsavory, terrible things that we see on a daily basis on the site, but I think it's more about what occurs. And so we, you know, we just recently did like a big sprint on safety. It's very difficult with graphics and art, right? Because there is tasteful art that has nudity, right? They're all over in museums, like, you know, there's very valid situations for that. And then there's the things that are the gray line of that, you know, what I might not find tasteful, someone might be like, that is completely tasteful, right? And then there are things that are way over the line. And then there are things that maybe you or, you know, maybe I would be okay with, but society isn't, you know? So where does that kind of end up on the spectrum of things? I think it's really hard with art. Sometimes even if you have like things that are not nude, if a child goes to your site, scrolls down some images, you know, classrooms of kids, you know, using our product, it's a really difficult problem. And it stretches mostly culture, society, politics, everything. [00:41:14]Alessio: Another favorite topic of our listeners is UX and AI. And I think you're probably one of the best all-inclusive editors for these things. So you don't just have the prompt, images come out, you pray, and now you do it again. First, you let people pick a seed so they can kind of have semi-repeatable generation. You also have, yeah, you can pick how many images and then you leave all of them in the canvas. And then you have kind of like this box, the generation box, and you can even cross between them and outpaint. There's all these things. How did you get here? You know, most people are kind of like, give me text, I give you image. You know, you're like, these are all the tools for you. [00:41:54]Suhail: Even though we were trying to make a graphics foundation model, I think we think that we're also trying to like re-imagine like what a graphics editor might look like given the change in technology. So, you know, I don't think we're trying to build Photoshop, but it's the only thing that we could say that people are largely familiar with. Oh, okay, there's Photoshop. What would Photoshop compare itself to pre-computer? I don't know, right? It's like, or kind of like a canvas, but you know, there's these menu options and you can use your mouse. What's a mouse? So I think that we're trying to re-imagine what a graphics editor might look like, not just for the fun of it, but because we kind of have no choice. Like there's this idea in image generation where you can generate images. That's like a super weird thing. What is that in Photoshop, right? You have to wait right now for the time being, but the wait is worth it often for a lot of people because they can't make that with their own skills. So I think it goes back to, you know, how we started the company, which was kind of looking at GPT-3's Playground, that the reason why we're named Playground is a homage to that actually. And, you know, it's like, shouldn't these products be more visual? These prompt boxes are like a terminal window, right? We're kind of at this weird point where it's just like MS-DOS. I remember my mom using MS-DOS and I memorized the keywords, like DIR, LS, all those things, right? It feels a little like we're there, right? Prompt engineering, parentheses to say beautiful or whatever, waits the word token more in the model or whatever. That's like super strange. I think a large portion of humanity would agree that that's not user-friendly, right? So how do we think about the products to be more user-friendly? Well, sure, you know, sure, it would be nice if I wanted to get rid of, like, the headphones on my head, you know, it'd be nice to mask it and then say, you know, can you remove the headphones? You know, if I want to grow, expand the image, you know, how can we make that feel easier without typing lots of words and being really confused? I don't even think we've nailed the UI UX yet. Part of that is because we're still experimenting. And part of that is because the model and the technology is going to get better. And whatever felt like the right UX six months ago is going to feel very broken now. So that's a little bit of how we got there is kind of saying, does everything have to be like a prompt in a box? Or can we do things that make it very intuitive for users? [00:44:03]Alessio: How do you decide what to give access to? So you have things like an expand prompt, which Dally 3 just does. It doesn't let you decide whether you should or not. [00:44:13]Swyx: As in, like, rewrites your prompts for you. [00:44:15]Suhail: Yeah, for that feature, I think once we get it to be cheaper, we'll probably just give it up. We'll probably just give it away. But we also decided something that might be a little bit different. We noticed that most of image generation is just, like, kind of casual. You know, it's in WhatsApp. It's, you know, it's in a Discord bot somewhere with Majorny. It's in ChatGPT. One of the differentiators I think we provide is at the expense of just lots of users necessarily. Mainstream consumers is that we provide as much, like, power and tweakability and configurability as possible. So the only reason why it's a toggle, because we know that users might want to use it and might not want to use it. There's some really powerful power user hobbyists that know what they're doing. And then there's a lot of people that just want something that looks cool, but they don't know how to prompt. And so I think a lot of Playground is more about going after that core user base that, like, knows, has a little bit more savviness and how to use these tools. You know, the average Dell user is probably not going to use ControlNet. They probably don't even know what that is. And so I think that, like, as the models get more powerful, as there's more tooling, hopefully you'll imagine a new sort of AI-first graphics editor that's just as, like, powerful and configurable as Photoshop. And you might have to master a new kind of tool. [00:45:28]Swyx: There's so many things I could go bounce off of. One, you mentioned about waiting. We have to kind of somewhat address the elephant in the room. Consistency models have been blowing up the past month. How do you think about integrating that? Obviously, there's a lot of other companies also trying to beat you to that space as well. [00:45:44]Suhail: I think we were the first company to integrate it. Ah, OK. [00:45:47]Swyx: Yeah. I didn't see your demo. [00:45:49]Suhail: Oops. Yeah, yeah. Well, we integrated it in a different way. OK. There are, like, 10 companies right now that have kind of tried to do, like, interactive editing, where you can, like, draw on the left side and then you get an image on the right side. We decided to kind of, like, wait and see whether there's, like, true utility on that. We have a different feature that's, like, unique in our product that is called preview rendering. And so you go to the product and you say, you know, we're like, what is the most common use case? The most common use case is you write a prompt and then you get an image. But what's the most annoying thing about that? The most annoying thing is, like, it feels like a slot machine, right? You're like, OK, I'm going to put it in and maybe I'll get something cool. So we did something that seemed a lot simpler, but a lot more relevant to how users already use these products, which is preview rendering. You toggle it on and it will show you a render of the image. And then graphics tools already have this. Like, if you use Cinema 4D or After Effects or something, it's called viewport rendering. And so we try to take something that exists in the real world that has familiarity and say, OK, you're going to get a rough sense of an early preview of this thing. And then when you're ready to generate, we're going to try to be as coherent about that image that you saw. That way, you're not spending so much time just like pulling down the slot machine lever. I think we were the first company to actually ship a quick LCM thing. Yeah, we were very excited about it. So we shipped it very quick. Yeah. [00:47:03]Swyx: Well, the demos I've been seeing, it's not like a preview necessarily. They're almost using it to animate their generations. Like, because you can kind of move shapes. [00:47:11]Suhail: Yeah, yeah, they're like doing it. They're animating it. But they're sort of showing, like, if I move a moon, you know, can I? [00:47:17]Swyx: I don't know. To me, it unlocks video in a way. [00:47:20]Suhail: Yeah. But the video models are already so much better than that. Yeah. [00:47:23]Swyx: There's another one, which I think is general ecosystem of Loras, right? Civit is obviously the most popular repository of Loras. How do you think about interacting with that ecosystem? [00:47:34]Suhail: The guy that did Lora, not the guy that invented Loras, but the person that brought Loras to Stable Diffusion actually works with us on some projects. His name is Simu. Shout out to Simu. And I think Loras are wonderful. Obviously, fine tuning all these Dreambooth models and such, it's just so heavy. And it's obvious in our conversation around styles and vibes, it's very hard to evaluate the artistry of these things. Loras give people this wonderful opportunity to create sub-genres of art. And I think they're amazing. Any graphics tool, any kind of thing that's expressing art has to provide some level of customization to its user base that goes beyond just typing Greg Rakowski in a prompt. We have to give more than that. It's not like users want to type these real artist names. It's that they don't know how else to get an image that looks interesting. They truly want originality and uniqueness. And I think Loras provide that. And they provide it in a very nice, scalable way. I hope that we find something even better than Loras in the long term, because there are still weaknesses to Loras, but I think they do a good job for now. Yeah. [00:48:39]Swyx: And so you would never compete with Civit? You would just kind of let people import? [00:48:43]Suhail: Civit's a site where all these things get kind of hosted by the community, right? And so, yeah, we'll often pull down some of the best things there. I think when we have a significantly better model, we will certainly build something that gets closer to that. Again, I go back to saying just I still think this is very nascent. Things are very underpowered, right? Loras are not easy to train. They're easy for an engineer. It sure would be nicer if I could just pick five or six reference images, right? And they might even be five or six different reference images that are not... They're just very different. They communicate a style, but they're actually like... It's like a mood board, right? And you have to be kind of an engineer almost to train these Loras or go to some site and be technically savvy, at least. It seems like it'd be much better if I could say, I love this style. Here are five images and you tell the model, like, this is what I want. And the model gives you something that's very aligned with what your style is, what you're talking about. And it's a style you couldn't even communicate, right? There's n

ACTUALITES - AZUR FM
Rombach-le-Franc : Une deuxième édition pour le marché de Noël de la commune

ACTUALITES - AZUR FM

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2023 1:59


Les festivités de Noël se poursuivent dans le Val d'Argent. Ce samedi 02 et ce dimanche 03 décembre, celles-ci seront célébrées dans la commune de Rombach-le-Franc, avec un petit marché de Noël accompagné d'un concert, samedi à 17h30. Dimanche, c'est ensuite une marche au profit de la cause du Téléthon qui sera proposée. On en parle avec Jean-Luc Fréchard, maire de la commune.  Le lien vers notre article complet : https://www.azur-fm.com/news/rombach-le-franc-une-deuxieme-edition-pour-le-marche-de-noel-de-la-commune-1839 

Rechtsprechung-News
Nr. 100: Interview mit Dr. Rombach (Richterin am BGH und Einheitlichen Patentgericht)

Rechtsprechung-News

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2023 27:04


auf: examenerfolgreichshop.myshopify.com perfekte Geschenkideen von Juristen für Juristen (einfach auf den Link jetzt klicken / direkt in deinen Browser eingeben / kopieren) und so den Podcast jetzt unterstützen. Abonnieren und weiter empfehlen! Instagram: rechtsprechung_news Website: www.rechtsprechung-news.webnode.com Jura; Urteil; Rechtsprechung; News; Referendariat; Rechtswissenschaften; Prozess; Recht; Gericht; Gesetz; Klage; Rechtsanwalt; Staatsexamen; Paragraf; Jurist; Examen; StEx; Rechtsreferendariat; Anwalt; Ref; Examen Erfolgreich Shop; Paragraph; Referendar; Justiz; Bundesverfassungsgericht; Rechtsreferendar; Richter; law; Justiz; Jurastudent; Jurapodcast; Staatsanwalt; Rechtswissenschaft; ExamenErfolgreichShop; Verurteilung; Polizei; Beamte; Polizist; Klage; Kläger; Beklagte; Klausur; Erstesexamen; Assessorexamen; Erstesstaatsexamen; Repetitor; Repetitorium; Assessor; Zivilrecht; BGB; BGH; Bundesgerichthof; Landgericht; Oberlandesgericht; OLG; LG; Amtsgericht; AG; ZPO; Strafrecht; StGB; Strafgesetzbuch; Strafe; StPO; strafbar; Bewährung; Beschlagnahme; Prozess; Interview; Einheitliches Patentgericht; Senat; Richterin; Tipps; Patentrecht; Patent; Karlsruhe; Mannheim;

Hard Times - The Colony
Who I am is what I do at my job - Jay Rombach

Hard Times - The Colony

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2023 10:16


El episodio de hoy es una entrevista a Jay Rombach, ex Senior Executive Human Resources @Director Royal Caribean. Hard Times es un podcast donde entrevistamos Entrepreneurs y Mentores (Startups y de Carrera Profesional). For more episodes follow us on: Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@thecolony1480/videos Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/3F347Ip5GCw5hK64NpH28E?si=c22293d6d7ee4b59 Website: ⁠https://thecolony.me⁠

Quilt Buzz
Episode 091: Thomas and Marion of @carrefour_patchwork

Quilt Buzz

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2023 32:53


0:26 - European Patchwork Meeting0:31 - Alsace, France0:44 - European Patchwork Meeting0:51 - Alsace, France0:55 - Germany 0:57 - Switzerland1:02 and 3:14 - European Patchwork Meeting3:19 - Alsace, France4:54 - Make Memories, Photo art quilts with Lauren Austin4:58 - Lauren Austin5:01 - Belgium5:03 - Nathalie Leturcq5:20 - Alsace, France5:27, 5.30, 5.40, 5.46, 5.50 - Sainte-Marie-aux-Mines5:52 - Amish movement in France6:06 - Switzerland6:24 - Jakob Ammann6:27, 6:30 and 7:09 - Sainte-Marie-aux-Mines7:33 - Jacques Légeret7:39 - Sainte-Marie-aux-Mines10:15 - Ukraine10:17 - Natalia Lashko10:25 - Sainte-Croix-aux-Mines10:33 - Ukrainian Russian War10:35 - Ukraine10:43 - Natalia Lashko11:05 and 11:06 - Strasbourg11:31 - Ukraine12:44, 13:10, 14:09 - Four villages in Val d'Argent: Sainte-Marie-aux-Mines Sainte-Croix-aux-Mines, Lièpvre, Rombach-le-Franc14:17 - Sainte-Marie-aux-Mines14:17 - Rombach-le-Franc14:31 - Four villages in Val d'Argent: Sainte-Marie-aux-Mines Sainte-Croix-aux-Mines, Lièpvre, Rombach-le-Franc18:37 - Alsace, France19:08 - Always there: African American quilts exhibition19:13 - International Quilt Museum of the University of Nebraska19:18 - National African American Quilters Guild19:22 - Lauren Austin19:23 - Beverly Smith19:23 - Aliyah Bonnette21:42 and 22:01 - The European Patchwork Meeting 2023 International Contest, Tribes 22:31 - Carolyn L. Mazloomi22:32 - Susan Vogel22:33 - Daisy Aschehoug (listen to episode 89 to learn more about Daisy and her work)25:51 - Carrefour Européen du Patchwork Instagram (@carrefour_patchwork)27:00 - Fraser Smith27:01 - Sheila Frampton Cooper27:04 - Republic of Sakha27:20 - Kazakhstan27:48 - Where's Waldo?28:14 - Always there: African American quilts exhibition28:22 - Four villages in Val d'Argent: Sainte-Marie-aux-Mines Sainte-Croix-aux-Mines, Lièpvre, Rombach-le-Franc28:35 - Rombach-le-Franc28:59 - Nathalie Leturcq30:10, 30:41, 30:45 - Alsace, France30:49 - Colmar30:54 - Ballon de Von Regional Nature Park31:18 - Beverly Smith (@quiltbev)31:18 - Lauren Austin (@blackgirlart1959)31:30 - Debra Milkovich (@debbiedoesquilts)31:34 - Hawaii Follow Carrefour Européen du Patchwork:Instagram - @carrefour_patchworkhttps://www.patchwork-europe.eu/en/Follow Us:Amanda: @broadclothstudio https://broadclothstudio.com/Wendy: @the.weekendquilter https://the-weekendquilter.com/Quilt Buzz: @quilt.buzzhttps://quiltbuzzpodcast.com/Intro/Outro Music:Golden Hour by Vlad Gluschenko

Quilt Buzz
Episode 089: Daisy of @warmfolk

Quilt Buzz

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2023 30:48


Show Notes:0:47 - Alabama1:18 - North Carolina (NC) State University 1:19 - Raleigh1:28 and 1:51 - Norway1:55 - Louisiana State University (LSU) in Baton Rouge2:06 - Louisiana2:13, 2:23 and 2:27 - Norway2:54 - Janome3:12 and 3:28 - Step up, step down converter3:50 - South Carolina 4:14 - Rebecca Bryan4:16 - Netherlands4:19 - Janome4:26 - Step up, step down converter5:21 and 5:26 - Mary Lou Weidman5:23 - Idaho6:09 - i-spy five inch square quilt 6:32 - Craftsy7:43 - Swoopies class with Daisy 7:44 - QuiltCon8:39 and 8:44 - Adobe Illustrator9:43 - Elisa back porch templates 9:49 - Daisy's QuiltCon 2016 or 2017 curve quilt 10:34 - Quilting with curves, 20 Geometric Projects by Daisy Aschehoug 10:57 - Baton Rouge13:35, 13:44, 14:11, 14:14, 14:46, 15:15, 15:19, 15:24, 15:40. 15:48 - Laser cutter14:00 - Spinning Tradition quilt by Daisy15:08 - Oslo15:49 - AutoCAD15:51 - Adobe Illustrator15:52, 15:56, 16:02, 16:06 - Lightburn15:55 - Adobe Illustrator16:07 and 16:12, 16:29, 16:48, 18:25 18:31 - Laser cutter19:56 - Retreats with Daisy20:17 - North Carolina20:35 - Amsterdam21:25 and 21:30 - Amsterdam retreat21:37 and 22:03 - Alsatian Patchwork Conference (European Patchwork Meeting)22:08 - Art Quilt Associates22:10 - Daisy's first solo exhibition at the 2021 European Patchwork Meeting 2021 (scroll to bottom of blog post)22:19 - Giant Nested Curves workshop with Daisy22:19 - Many Nested Curves workshop with Daisy22:31 - Susan Vogel22:31 - Carolyn L. Mazloomi22:53 - Alsace Valley23:05 - Four villages the European Patchwork Meeting is held at: Sainte-Marie-aux-Mines, Sainte-Croix-aux-Mines, Lièpvre, and Rombach-le-Franc24:51 - Haribo25:06 - Giant Nested Curves workshop with Daisy25:08 - Quilting with Curves by Daisy Aschehoug25:13 - Quilt Modern Curves and Bold Stripes by Heather Black and Daisy Aschehoug25:16 - Heather Black25:19 - Quilting with Curves by Daisy Aschehoug25:25 - Ladybird Curve quilt by Daisy 25:25 - Spinning Tradition quilt by Daisy25:34 - Fortune quilt by Daisy25:34 - Curved Double Star by Daisy25:43 - Offcut in Bern, Switzerland25:54 - Offcut26:00 - Offcut in Basel, Switzerland26:27 - Circular leather thimble dots26:27 - Needle puller28:09 - Rebeka Lambert28:09 - Alexis Deise28:09 - Erick Wolfmeyer28:09 - Heidi Parks (listen to episode 37 to learn more about Heidi) 28:09 - Amanda Nadig29:10 - Rebeka Lambert (@rebeka.lambert)29:13 - Louisiana29:22 - Alexis Deise (@alexisdeise)29:38 - Jennifer Candon (@jennifercandon)Follow Daisy:Instagram - @WarmFolkhttps://warmfolk.com/en-usFollow Us:Amanda: @broadclothstudio https://broadclothstudio.com/Wendy: @the.weekendquilter https://the-weekendquilter.com/Quilt Buzz: @quilt.buzzhttps://quiltbuzzpodcast.com/Intro/Outro Music:Golden Hour by Vlad Gluschenko

DOK
Durchs mystische Val Müstair nach Südtirol (Staffel 1, Folge 3)

DOK

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2023 50:12


Die Engadin-Meran-Linie führt durch zwei Länder, sie verbindet die Schweiz mit Italien. Erst schiebt sich das Postauto über den Ofenpass, an den östlichsten Zipfel der Schweiz, dann geht es durch das mystische Val Müstair, bevor man das Ziel, den Bahnhof von Mals, im mediterranen Südtirol erreicht. Auf seiner Reise legt das Postauto rund 1000 Höhenmeter in eineinhalb Stunden zurück. Unterwegs spricht man Schweizerdeutsch, Rätoromanisch, Südtirolerisch. Es geht nicht nur über einen Pass, sondern auch durch ein entlegenes Tal voll ursprünglichem Charme, vorbei am Unesco-Welterbe «Kloster St. Johann». Die Gegend ist in vielerlei Hinsicht besonders: So zählt ein Teil der Strecke zum Unesco Biosphärenreservat «Engiadina Val Müstair». Von der Ofenpasshöhe windet sich das Postauto die Serpentinen herunter ins Tal. Am östlichsten Zipfel der Schweiz lebt man naturverbunden, wie Gisella und Luciano Beretta, die hier eine kleine Brennerei in Tschierv GR betreiben. Nur wenige Kilometer weiter kracht und klappert es an der Postautoroute. Im 300-Seelenort Santa Maria GR steht eine der letzten Handwebereien der Schweiz. Nur ein paar Meter weiter fliesst der Rombach, der sich wie eine Lebensader parallel zur Postautoroute durchs Tal schlängelt; auch vorbei am Unesco-Welterbe «Kloster St. Johann». Nimmt man das Postauto, das direkt vor dem Kloster hält, so erreicht man nach knapp einem Kilometer das Südtirol.

ACTUALITES - AZUR FM
Rombach-le-Franc : Une soirée aux couleurs et saveurs irlandaises pour la Saint-Patrick

ACTUALITES - AZUR FM

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2023 2:00


Ambiance irlandaise dans le Val d'Argent ! L'association Les Branchés, en partenariat avec le comité des fêtes et la mairie de Rombach-le-Franc invite le public à se mettre au vert pour fêter la Saint-Patrick. Bières irlandaises, concert et bal folk sont au programme de cette soirée animée par le groupe Irish Stream. Sylvain, membre de l'organisation, nous en dit plus sur cet événement.  Le lien vers l'article complet : https://www.azur-fm.com/news/rombach-le-franc-une-soiree-aux-couleurs-et-saveurs-irlandaises-pour-la-saint-patrick-1303 

BRF - Podcast
Sport: Philipp Rombach nach dem Spiel Union Kelmis gegen Givry

BRF - Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2022


AZUR FM
INFOS LOCALES DU 19 OCTOBRE 2022

AZUR FM

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2022 4:38


Sujets traités :  Lundi soir s'est tenu le conseil communautaire du Pays Rhin-Brisach. Alors qu'un point fiscal était soulevé, avec l'objectif de mettre en place plus de solidarité intercommunale, le débat a éclaté. Le Président de la communauté de communes a soumis la proposition d'une nouvelle répartition du fonds national de péréquation. Un fonds qui consiste à prélever des ressources chez certaines intercommunalités pour le reverser à d'autres plus pauvres. Le Pays Rhin-Brisach est prélevé par l'Etat d'1.9 millions d'euros. Le comcom prend en charge 520 000 euros, le reste est réparti entre les communes. Fessenheim et Biesheim se sont proposées pour soulager la communauté de communes à hauteur de 32 000€. Paul Bass, maire de Durrenentzen, a voté contre et empêché la mise en place de ce geste, une action qui a énervé l'ensemble de l'assemblée. Les explications de Gérard Hug, Président de la Communauté de Communes du Pays Rhin-Brisach. Paul Bass, quant à lui, trouve « risible ces 32 000 euros ». Il plaide pour un pacte fiscal, qui imposerait la même taxe foncière à toutes les communes, et un pacte financier, qui mettrait les richesses en commun pour les redistribuer. Mauvaise nouvelle du côté du Groupe hospitalier Sélestat-Obernai. Le nombre d'hospitalisation dues au COVID-19 est en forte hausse, alors même qu'une décrue semblait amorcée depuis le début du mois. Hier, 35 patients étaient hospitalisés au sein du GHSO : 25 à Sélestat, dont 2 en unité de soins critiques, et 10 à Obernai. Si le groupe hospitalier espère que cette hausse n'est qu'épisodique, elle impacte tout de même le taux d'occupation des lits. Il n'envisage pour autant pas d'ouvrir une deuxième unité covid pour le moment. Pendant les vacances de la Toussaint, la Ville de Colmar propose deux stages multisports à destination des enfants de 8 à 11 ans. Le premier stage débute dès lundi, il se tiendra jusqu'à vendredi. Escalade, accrobranche, tennis ou encore randonnée sont au programme de ces 5 jours. Les frais d'inscriptions sont de 6 euros, il faudra compter 18 euros de plus pour la sortie accrobranche, mardi, dont le déplacement se fait en bus. Les inscriptions se font à la mairie. Pour plus d'informations, vous pouvez téléphoner au 03 89 20 67 93. Toujours à Colmar, les travaux de réseaux d'eau et d'assainissement continuent. C'est au tour des rues de l'Orme, de l'Erable et du Marronnier d'en subir les conséquences. Lundi, un alternat avec feux tricolores a donc été mis en place à l'intersection de la rue du Ladhof et la rue de l'Orme. Alors même que Colmar connait une période faste pour les chantiers de voirie, ceuxci devraient durer 9 semaines, jusqu'au 23 décembre. Les trois rues concernées sont fermées à la circulation, sauf pour les riverains. Le stationnement y est dorénavant interdit et ce pour toute la durer des travaux. Dans le Val d'Argent, le transport à la demande est à nouveau en service. La convention avait été votée le mois dernier par les élus de la Communauté de communes, elle a été signée avec le prestataire la semaine dernière. Pour le moment, le transport à la demande n'est accessible que les mardis et vendredis, sauf jours fériés, de 8 à 18h. Il faut réserver son transport au plus tard la veille, auprès des Ambulances Bertrand de Sainte-Marie-aux-Mines. Le trajet est de 3€ et doit se faire sur le le territoire des quatre communes de la vallée : Sainte-Marie-aux-Mines, Sainte-Croix-aux-Mines, Lièpvre et Rombach-le-Franc. Les murs des Tanzmatten vont trembler ce week-end ! Proposé par l'association Zone 51, le festival Rock Your Brain revient à Sélestat pour une neuvième édition automnale. Ce vendredi 21 octobre, c'est une soirée métal qui vous sera d'abord proposée. Elle sera suivie d'une programmation plutôt punk le samedi, dès 15h15. Giada Pasini, chargée de communication chez Zone 51,...

INFORMATION LOCALE
19 OCTOBRE 2022

INFORMATION LOCALE

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2022 4:38


Sujets traités :  Lundi soir s'est tenu le conseil communautaire du Pays Rhin-Brisach. Alors qu'un point fiscal était soulevé, avec l'objectif de mettre en place plus de solidarité intercommunale, le débat a éclaté. Le Président de la communauté de communes a soumis la proposition d'une nouvelle répartition du fonds national de péréquation. Un fonds qui consiste à prélever des ressources chez certaines intercommunalités pour le reverser à d'autres plus pauvres. Le Pays Rhin-Brisach est prélevé par l'Etat d'1.9 millions d'euros. Le comcom prend en charge 520 000 euros, le reste est réparti entre les communes. Fessenheim et Biesheim se sont proposées pour soulager la communauté de communes à hauteur de 32 000€. Paul Bass, maire de Durrenentzen, a voté contre et empêché la mise en place de ce geste, une action qui a énervé l'ensemble de l'assemblée. Les explications de Gérard Hug, Président de la Communauté de Communes du Pays Rhin-Brisach. Paul Bass, quant à lui, trouve « risible ces 32 000 euros ». Il plaide pour un pacte fiscal, qui imposerait la même taxe foncière à toutes les communes, et un pacte financier, qui mettrait les richesses en commun pour les redistribuer. Mauvaise nouvelle du côté du Groupe hospitalier Sélestat-Obernai. Le nombre d'hospitalisation dues au COVID-19 est en forte hausse, alors même qu'une décrue semblait amorcée depuis le début du mois. Hier, 35 patients étaient hospitalisés au sein du GHSO : 25 à Sélestat, dont 2 en unité de soins critiques, et 10 à Obernai. Si le groupe hospitalier espère que cette hausse n'est qu'épisodique, elle impacte tout de même le taux d'occupation des lits. Il n'envisage pour autant pas d'ouvrir une deuxième unité covid pour le moment. Pendant les vacances de la Toussaint, la Ville de Colmar propose deux stages multisports à destination des enfants de 8 à 11 ans. Le premier stage débute dès lundi, il se tiendra jusqu'à vendredi. Escalade, accrobranche, tennis ou encore randonnée sont au programme de ces 5 jours. Les frais d'inscriptions sont de 6 euros, il faudra compter 18 euros de plus pour la sortie accrobranche, mardi, dont le déplacement se fait en bus. Les inscriptions se font à la mairie. Pour plus d'informations, vous pouvez téléphoner au 03 89 20 67 93. Toujours à Colmar, les travaux de réseaux d'eau et d'assainissement continuent. C'est au tour des rues de l'Orme, de l'Erable et du Marronnier d'en subir les conséquences. Lundi, un alternat avec feux tricolores a donc été mis en place à l'intersection de la rue du Ladhof et la rue de l'Orme. Alors même que Colmar connait une période faste pour les chantiers de voirie, ceuxci devraient durer 9 semaines, jusqu'au 23 décembre. Les trois rues concernées sont fermées à la circulation, sauf pour les riverains. Le stationnement y est dorénavant interdit et ce pour toute la durer des travaux. Dans le Val d'Argent, le transport à la demande est à nouveau en service. La convention avait été votée le mois dernier par les élus de la Communauté de communes, elle a été signée avec le prestataire la semaine dernière. Pour le moment, le transport à la demande n'est accessible que les mardis et vendredis, sauf jours fériés, de 8 à 18h. Il faut réserver son transport au plus tard la veille, auprès des Ambulances Bertrand de Sainte-Marie-aux-Mines. Le trajet est de 3€ et doit se faire sur le le territoire des quatre communes de la vallée : Sainte-Marie-aux-Mines, Sainte-Croix-aux-Mines, Lièpvre et Rombach-le-Franc. Les murs des Tanzmatten vont trembler ce week-end ! Proposé par l'association Zone 51, le festival Rock Your Brain revient à Sélestat pour une neuvième édition automnale. Ce vendredi 21 octobre, c'est une soirée métal qui vous sera proposée. Elle sera suivie d'une programmation plutôt punk le samedi, dès 15h15. Giada Pasini, chargée de communication chez Zone 51, nous en dit plus. Retrouvez toutes les informations pratiques et la billetterie sur automne.rockyourbrainfest.com Propos recueillis par  Solène Martin. 

ACTUALITES - AZUR FM
Val d'Argent : Une 27ème édition haute en couleur pour le Carrefour Européen du Patchwork

ACTUALITES - AZUR FM

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2022 2:00


Rendez-vous incontournable dans le Val d'Argent, le Carrefour Européen du Patchwork revient du jeudi 15 au dimanche 18 septembre pour une 27ème édition dans les quatre communes du territoire, à Sainte-Marie-Aux-Mines, Sainte-Croix-Aux-Mines, Lièpvre et Rombach-le-Franc. Pas moins de 46 expositions, réparties sur 17 lieux différents, mais également de nombreux cours et deux séminaires seront proposés au public. Sans compter un grand espace commercial, qui sera également établi. Cette nouvelle édition s'annonce très colorée, avec pour invités d'honneur les pays hispanophones. Thomas Bellicam, directeur du salon, est venu nous présenter le programme de cette année.  Le lien vers l'article complet : https://www.azur-fm.com/news/val-dargent-une-27eme-edition-haute-en-couleurs-pour-le-carrefour-europeen-du-patchwork-927 

Marketing Fast Track
Jay Rombach - How to Reinvent Yourself After an Unexpected Career Disruption

Marketing Fast Track

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2022 18:26


Are you struggling after a career disruption? It can be tough to pick up the pieces after an unexpected event throws your life off course. But don't worry, you're not alone. In this episode of Cash In On Camera, Jay Rombach shares his own career reboot story and offers his framework for reinventing yourself to get started on your new path! Watch the full LIVE video interview on Sheryl's YouTube channel here: https://youtu.be/9A9gsTl_B9M --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sherylplouffe/message

INFORMATION LOCALE
11 MARS 2022

INFORMATION LOCALE

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2022 4:18


Sujets traités :  - Le COVID-19 fait à nouveau parler de lui ! La situation se tend au sein du Groupe hospitalier Sélestat-Obernai où 32 patients étaient hospitalisés hier, c'est le double de la semaine dernière. 18 se trouvent à Sélestat, dont un en unité de soins continus et 14 sont en Soins de Suite et de réadaptation à Obernai, un service où un cluster est apparu. Un autre cluster est signalé au sein de l'hôpital intercommunal du Val d'Argent, avec neuf personnes contaminées. Enfin, les clusters découverts la semaine dernière à l'Unité de soins longue durée et à l'Ehpad des maisons du Dr Oberkirch, à Sélestat, persistent : on compte 30 cas contre 25 jeudi dernier. Les visites y sont toujours suspendues. - Une séance focalisée sur le débat d'orientations budgétaires. Les élus de la Communauté de Communes du Ried de Marckolsheim se sont réunis mercredi soir, pour la deuxième fois de l'année. Les investissements à venir étaient au cœur de l'ordre du jour. Les précisions de Frédéric Pfliegersdoerffer, président de la Communauté de Communes. Ce conseil communautaire a aussi été marqué par l'actualité. Les élus de la Communauté de Communes ont voté en faveur d'un versement d'une subvention à la hauteur de 15 000 euros en solidarité avec l'Ukraine. Cette séance s'est conclue par des interrogations, venant de plusieurs élus, par rapport à la diminution du nombre de levées des poubelles grises, qui passera de 36 à 18 en 2023. Des propos recueillis par Solène MARTIN. Retrouvez notre article complet sur notre site internet azur-fm.com, rubrique actualité locales. - Puisqu'on évoquait les actions de solidarité envers le peuple Ukrainien, le Paradis des Sources à Soultzmatt, vient lui aussi, d'envoyer hier matin, un 38 tonnes chargé de produits de première nécessité, direction l'Ukraine. L'équipe annonce dès à présent qu'un second véhicule, voire un troisième pourrait partir sous peu. - Un électricien blessé par la chute d'un poteau, hier peu après 13 h 20, dans un champ en contrebas de la route de la Hingrie à Rombach-le-Franc. Il s'agit d'un agent d'Enedis. L'homme, âgé de 33 ans, était monté sur un poteau lorsque celui-ci a subitement cédé. Ses collègues lui ont prodigué les premiers secours avant d'être pris en charge par les pompiers de Sainte-Marie-aux-Mines et l'équipe du SMUR de Sélestat. L'hélicoptère de la gendarmerie a transporté la victime en urgence relative à l'hôpital de Colmar. - Justice à présent, le gérant d'un bar à chicha de la région colmarienne a été condamné hier pour travail dissimulé, vente frauduleuse d'alcool mais aussi de tabac sans les autorisations nécessaires. En 2016, le bar a fait l'objet d'un contrôle. Trois kilos et demi de tabac à narguilé ont été saisis, et trois infractions avaient déjà été consignées depuis le 2015 : « vente frauduleuse de tabacs fabriqués sans qualité de débitant de tabac », vente d'alcool sans autorisation préfectorale, et travail dissimulé. Le tribunal correctionnel a condamné l'entreprise à 3000 € d'amende avec sursis, et le gérant à la même peine. - On reste à Colmar, avec ce voisin exhibitionniste et harceleur, condamné hier au Tribunal Correctionnel de Colmar. C'est un véritable calvaire qu'a décrit une habitante du quartier Europe. Presque quotidiennement, le voisin indélicat lançait des insultes, des propos obscènes, mais aussi des détritus, et des excréments... La victime a indiqué que lorsqu'elle allait le voir pour tenter d'avoir une explication, l'homme baissait son pantalon et s'exhibait. Déjà condamné par le passé pour violences conjugales et atteinte sexuelle sur une personne mineure, le parquet a requis six mois de prison ferme, sans aménagement de peine. Absent à son procès, l'homme a été condamné à cent-vingt jours-amende à 5€ chacun, c'est-à-dire que chaque jour non payé doit être passé en détention. Il devra également indemniser la principale victime au titre de son préjudice moral. 

AZUR FM
INFOS LOCALES DU 11 MARS 2022

AZUR FM

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2022 4:18


Sujets traités :  - Le COVID-19 fait à nouveau parler de lui ! La situation se tend au sein du Groupe hospitalier Sélestat-Obernai où 32 patients étaient hospitalisés hier, c'est le double de la semaine dernière. 18 se trouvent à Sélestat, dont un en unité de soins continus et 14 sont en Soins de Suite et de réadaptation à Obernai, un service où un cluster est apparu. Un autre cluster est signalé au sein de l'hôpital intercommunal du Val d'Argent, avec neuf personnes contaminées. Enfin, les clusters découverts la semaine dernière à l'Unité de soins longue durée et à l'Ehpad des maisons du Dr Oberkirch, à Sélestat, persistent : on compte 30 cas contre 25 jeudi dernier. Les visites y sont toujours suspendues. - Une séance focalisée sur le débat d'orientations budgétaires. Les élus de la Communauté de Communes du Ried de Marckolsheim se sont réunis mercredi soir, pour la deuxième fois de l'année. Les investissements à venir étaient au cœur de l'ordre du jour. Les précisions de Frédéric Pfliegersdoerffer, président de la Communauté de Communes. Ce conseil communautaire a aussi été marqué par l'actualité. Les élus de la Communauté de Communes ont voté en faveur d'un versement d'une subvention à la hauteur de 15 000 euros en solidarité avec l'Ukraine. Cette séance s'est conclue par des interrogations, venant de plusieurs élus, par rapport à la diminution du nombre de levées des poubelles grises, qui passera de 36 à 18 en 2023. Des propos recueillis par Solène MARTIN. Retrouvez notre article complet sur notre site internet azur-fm.com, rubrique actualité locales. - Puisqu'on évoquait les actions de solidarité envers le peuple Ukrainien, le Paradis des Sources à Soultzmatt, vient lui aussi, d'envoyer hier matin, un 38 tonnes chargé de produits de première nécessité, direction l'Ukraine. L'équipe annonce dès à présent qu'un second véhicule, voire un troisième pourrait partir sous peu. - Un électricien blessé par la chute d'un poteau, hier peu après 13 h 20, dans un champ en contrebas de la route de la Hingrie à Rombach-le-Franc. Il s'agit d'un agent d'Enedis. L'homme, âgé de 33 ans, était monté sur un poteau lorsque celui-ci a subitement cédé. Ses collègues lui ont prodigué les premiers secours avant d'être pris en charge par les pompiers de Sainte-Marie-aux-Mines et l'équipe du SMUR de Sélestat. L'hélicoptère de la gendarmerie a transporté la victime en urgence relative à l'hôpital de Colmar. - Justice à présent, le gérant d'un bar à chicha de la région colmarienne a été condamné hier pour travail dissimulé, vente frauduleuse d'alcool mais aussi de tabac sans les autorisations nécessaires. En 2016, le bar a fait l'objet d'un contrôle. Trois kilos et demi de tabac à narguilé ont été saisis, et trois infractions avaient déjà été consignées depuis le 2015 : « vente frauduleuse de tabacs fabriqués sans qualité de débitant de tabac », vente d'alcool sans autorisation préfectorale, et travail dissimulé. Le tribunal correctionnel a condamné l'entreprise à 3000 € d'amende avec sursis, et le gérant à la même peine. - On reste à Colmar, avec ce voisin exhibitionniste et harceleur, condamné hier au Tribunal Correctionnel de Colmar. C'est un véritable calvaire qu'a décrit une habitante du quartier Europe. Presque quotidiennement, le voisin indélicat lançait des insultes, des propos obscènes, mais aussi des détritus, et des excréments... La victime a indiqué que lorsqu'elle allait le voir pour tenter d'avoir une explication, l'homme baissait son pantalon et s'exhibait. Déjà condamné par le passé pour violences conjugales et atteinte sexuelle sur une personne...

Visitblackforest - der Schwarzwald Podcast
Schwarzwaldgeflüster mit Selina Haas

Visitblackforest - der Schwarzwald Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 3, 2022 13:38


Selina Kreyer, geb. Haas, wuchs in einem Uhrmacher-Familienbetrieb mit langer Tradition auf. Seit 1894 wurden bei Rombach und Haas die weltberühmten Kuckucksuhren gefertigt. Was ihr und ihrem Mann als neue Chefs wichtig ist für das Design der Zukunft, darüber spricht sie im Podcast.

AZUR FM
INFOS LOCALES DU 18 JANVIER 2022

AZUR FM

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2022 4:03


Sujets traités :  - Faire de Chalampé le champion européen du nylon. Emmanuel Macron s'est rendu hier dans le Haut-Rhin où le président de l'entreprise allemande BASF, actionnaire majoritaire du site d'Alsachimie, a annoncé un investissement de 300 millions d'euros. La société souhaite y construire une nouvelle unité de production avec une soixantaine d'emplois à la clef. Le Président de la République en a aussi profité pour parler de plus de 4 milliards d'euros d'investissements étrangers à venir en France, dont une partie sera bénéfique à l'Alsace, au total 10 000 emplois seront créés. En fin d'après-midi, le chef de l'Etat est ensuite allé à Strasbourg pour assister à l'hommage rendu à David Sassoli, ancien président du Parlement Européen, décédé récemment. Il sera de nouveau en Alsace dès demain matin, à Strasbourg, dans le cadre de la présidence française du conseil de l'union européenne. A cette occasion, il prononcera un discours au sein de l'hémicycle du Parlement Européen. L'après-midi, Emmanuel Macron sera vers Haguenau, au camp d'Oberhoffen pour y présenter ses vœux aux militaires. Le discours est prévu à 19h. - L'Alsace doit-elle sortie du Grand Est ? Le 22 décembre dernier, Frédéric Bierry, le président de la collectivité européenne d'Alsace a présenté cette grande consultation citoyenne à destination de tous les Alsaciens, qu'ils y vivent ou en soient originaires. On l'écoute. Cette consultation touchera à sa fin dans un peu moins d'un mois et les personnes souhaitant y répondre peuvent le faire en ligne sur le site www.alsace.eu/participation, par voie postale en récupérant le bulletin dans le magazine de la CEA distribué ce mois-ci, ou de manière physique, en se rendant dans les points d'accueil de la collectivité. - Dans le même temps, une tribune en faveur de la création d'une région Alsace parue ce dimanche dans les DNA et l'Alsace. Elle a été signée par soixante jeunes, âgés de 18 à 35 ans, aux horizons différents et parcours variés. C'est la première fois qu'un tel engagement des jeunes voit le jour en Alsace, accompagnant la consultation lancée par la CEA. Pour les signataires, dont plusieurs exercent des mandats locaux ou sont engagés politiquement, représentant un large panel du spectre politique de la gauche à la droite, la dissolution du Grand Est dépasse le seul cadre alsacien, car elle pose aussi la question de l'avenir de la Lorraine et de la Champagne-Ardenne. Plus généralement, elle remettrait en cause l'ensemble du découpage de 2016 ayant créé des grandes régions. - Accident hier matin à Rombach-le-Franc. Un sexagénaire a été blessé suite à une chute, après s'être fait faucher par des grumes suite à un abatage d'arbre. Plusieurs secours se sont rendus sur place suite à cet accident de bucheronnage, notamment des pompiers spécialisés montagne ainsi que des gendarmes du peloton de montagne de Horod, arrivés par les airs. La victime a été transportée par hélicoptère jusqu'à l'hôpital de Colmar. - Malgré une interdiction d'entrer en contact avec sa mère, il sera de nouveau jugé pour des violences. Les faits ont eu lieu jeudi dernier à Logelheim, lorsque le quinquagénaire, déjà condamné deux fois pour avoir frappé sa mère de trente ans son aînée, a été interpelé après que la victime a prévenu un autre enfant de nouvelles violences. Interpelé samedi par les gendarmes, il a été placé en détention et aurait dû être jugé hier, mais un problème technique a repoussé l'audience à demain. Il devra rester en détention en attendant son jugement. - Accident mortel hier après-midi à Pulversheim. Un homme âgé d'environ 80 ans a été percuté par un poids-lourds transportant du fioul. Il s'est ensuite retrouvé coincé sous les roues du véhicule et les secours dépêchés sur place ont dû avoir recours à une cellule de désincarcération lourde pour l'extraire. Malgré les soins prodigués, ils n'ont pas réussi à réanimer la victime. Une enquête a été ouverte pour connaitre les...

INFORMATION LOCALE
18 JANVIER 2022

INFORMATION LOCALE

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2022 4:03


Sujets traités :  - Faire de Chalampé le champion européen du nylon. Emmanuel Macron s'est rendu hier dans le Haut-Rhin où le président de l'entreprise allemande BASF, actionnaire majoritaire du site d'Alsachimie, a annoncé un investissement de 300 millions d'euros. La société souhaite y construire une nouvelle unité de production avec une soixantaine d'emplois à la clef. Le Président de la République en a aussi profité pour parler de plus de 4 milliards d'euros d'investissements étrangers à venir en France, dont une partie sera bénéfique à l'Alsace, au total 10 000 emplois seront créés. En fin d'après-midi, le chef de l'Etat est ensuite allé à Strasbourg pour assister à l'hommage rendu à David Sassoli, ancien président du Parlement Européen, décédé récemment. Il sera de nouveau en Alsace dès demain matin, à Strasbourg, dans le cadre de la présidence française du conseil de l'union européenne. A cette occasion, il prononcera un discours au sein de l'hémicycle du Parlement Européen. L'après-midi, Emmanuel Macron sera vers Haguenau, au camp d'Oberhoffen pour y présenter ses vœux aux militaires. Le discours est prévu à 19h. - L'Alsace doit-elle sortie du Grand Est ? Le 22 décembre dernier, Frédéric Bierry, le président de la collectivité européenne d'Alsace a présenté cette grande consultation citoyenne à destination de tous les Alsaciens, qu'ils y vivent ou en soient originaires. On l'écoute. Cette consultation touchera à sa fin dans un peu moins d'un mois et les personnes souhaitant y répondre peuvent le faire en ligne sur le site www.alsace.eu/participation, par voie postale en récupérant le bulletin dans le magazine de la CEA distribué ce mois-ci, ou de manière physique, en se rendant dans les points d'accueil de la collectivité. - Dans le même temps, une tribune en faveur de la création d'une région Alsace parue ce dimanche dans les DNA et l'Alsace. Elle a été signée par soixante jeunes, âgés de 18 à 35 ans, aux horizons différents et parcours variés. C'est la première fois qu'un tel engagement des jeunes voit le jour en Alsace, accompagnant la consultation lancée par la CEA. Pour les signataires, dont plusieurs exercent des mandats locaux ou sont engagés politiquement, représentant un large panel du spectre politique de la gauche à la droite, la dissolution du Grand Est dépasse le seul cadre alsacien, car elle pose aussi la question de l'avenir de la Lorraine et de la Champagne-Ardenne. Plus généralement, elle remettrait en cause l'ensemble du découpage de 2016 ayant créé des grandes régions. - Accident hier matin à Rombach-le-Franc. Un sexagénaire a été blessé suite à une chute, après s'être fait faucher par des grumes suite à un abatage d'arbre. Plusieurs secours se sont rendus sur place suite à cet accident de bucheronnage, notamment des pompiers spécialisés montagne ainsi que des gendarmes du peloton de montagne de Horod, arrivés par les airs. La victime a été transportée par hélicoptère jusqu'à l'hôpital de Colmar. - Malgré une interdiction d'entrer en contact avec sa mère, il sera de nouveau jugé pour des violences. Les faits ont eu lieu jeudi dernier à Logelheim, lorsque le quinquagénaire, déjà condamné deux fois pour avoir frappé sa mère de trente ans son aînée, a été interpelé après que la victime a prévenu un autre enfant de nouvelles violences. Interpelé samedi par les gendarmes, il a été placé en détention et aurait dû être jugé hier, mais un problème technique a repoussé l'audience à demain. Il devra rester en détention en attendant son jugement. - Accident mortel hier après-midi à Pulversheim. Un homme âgé d'environ 80 ans a été percuté par un poids-lourds transportant du fioul. Il s'est ensuite retrouvé coincé sous les roues du véhicule et les secours dépêchés sur place ont dû avoir recours à une cellule de désincarcération lourde pour l'extraire. Malgré les soins prodigués, ils n'ont pas réussi à réanimer la victime. Une enquête a été ouverte pour connaitre les circonstances de l'accident. - Un concert pour fêter la nouvelle année à Colmar. C'est une représentation surprise, proposée par l'orchestre symphonique du Conservatoire à rayonnement départemental de Colmar, sous la direction d'Olivier Caro. Rendez-vous demain à 20h au Cercle Saint-Mathieu, l'entrée est libre. Passe sanitaire et masque seront obligatoires pour assister à ce concert.

Sichtweisen
Leseprobe - Wenn Fähigkeiten alles bestimmen

Sichtweisen

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2021 21:31


Kennen Sie den Begriff Ableismus? Der Begriff leitet sich von dem englischen Wort ableism bzw. able ab, also „fähig“. Er bezieht sich auf Denkmuster über Fähigkeiten. Diese Denkmuster gehen häufig von äußeren Merkmalen aus. Sie wirken nicht immer auf den ersten Blick negativ, sondern können auch freundlich daherkommen – und trotzdem falsch sein. Am Lehrstuhl für Soziologie und Politik der Rehabilitation, Disability Studies von Prof. Dr. Anne Waldschmidt an der Universität Köln wird zu Ableismus in Bezug auf Menschen mit Behinderung geforscht. Im folgenden Interview mit Ute Stephanie Mansion spricht Fabian Rombach über die Tragweite von Ableismus in Gesellschaft und Politik. Rombach ist wissenschaftlicher Mitarbeiter am Lehrstuhl von Prof. Dr. Waldschmidt.

Experience Darden
Experience Darden #129: Josh Rombach (Class of 2022), Piiq | A Beverage Concept from Ancient Rome By Way of Sonoma

Experience Darden

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2021 40:39


In this episode of the podcast, we continue our spotlight on student founders with a conversation with Josh Rombach (Class of 2022). Josh has recently launched a business focused on bringing piquette wine to the masses, Piiq. What is “piquette”? As the Piiq website notes, piquette dates back to Roman times, and it is an effervescent, sparkling wine. We talk with Josh about Piiq's origins, how the Batten Institute and the Darden community have helped him in the early days of his venture and how Piiq is navigating the pandemic. Josh also offers reflections on his decision to pursue an MBA, what led him to Darden and more.

AZUR FM
INFOS LOCALES DU 15 OCTOBRE 2021

AZUR FM

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2021 4:03


Sujets tarités :  - Les écoliers haut-rhinois peuvent aussi tomber le masque. Une semaine après les enfants scolarisés dans le bas-rhin, ceux habitant dans le sud de l'Alsace pourront dès lundi, ne plus avoir besoin de porter le masque en classe. Chose possible grâce à l'amélioration de la situation sanitaire dans le territoire. En effet, il fallait que le taux d'incidence y soit inférieur à 50 nouveaux cas de coronavirus pour 100 000 habitants durant plus de cinq jours consécutifs. En revanche, collégiens, lycéens et enseignants devront continuer à le porter. - Jean-Marc Reiser sera jugé par la cour d'assises haut-rhinoise. Le renvoi de cette affaire devant cette juridiction a été confirmé ce matin par la chambre d'instruction de la cour d'appel colmarienne. L'homme est mis examen pour l'assassinat de Sophie le Tann, une étudiante strasbourgeoise qui avait été portée disparue en septembre 2018. Jean-Marc Reiser continue de nier la préméditation ainsi que l'intention d'homicide. Il est tout de même maintenu en détention, la cour ayant confirmé le non-lieu partiel quant aux chefs d'accusation de séquestration et d'enlèvement. - Le tour de France revient en Alsace. Après douze années d'absence, l'épreuve féminine du tour partira de Paris le 24 juillet avant d'arriver à la super planche des belles filles le 31 au bout de huit étapes. Trois d'entre elles se disputeront en Alsace, dont l'avant dernière, qui partira le 30 de Sélestat avec une arrivée au Markstein. Une 7e étape qui devrait être décisive dans le classement avec trois ascensions qui vont piquer les jambes, le Petit Ballon, le Platzerwasel et le Grand Ballon. - Reprise de la chasse dans le Val d'Argent. Attention si vous avez prévu d'aller vous balader dans le secteur ce week-end, plusieurs battues auront lieu dans trois des quatre communes de la comcom. Pour votre sécurité, il convient de bien respecter la signalétique mise en place par les chasseurs aux limites des lots de chasse concernés. Porter des vêtements fluorescents afin de ne pas être confondus avec du gibier peut également aider. Des battues auront lieu sur les bancs communaux de Sainte-Marie-aux-Mines, Sainte-Croix-aux-Mines, Lièpvre et Rombach-le-Franc. - La semaine du goût s'achève. A Colmar, comme chaque année depuis plusieurs éditions, le marché couvert s'associe avec le CFA Marcel Rudloff, formant aux métiers de l'hotellerie restauration, afin de proposer plusieurs animations aux écoliers de la commune. Les précisions de Pascal Sala, président du marché couvert, qui en a profité pour faire d'une pierre deux coups, en inaugurant quatre fresques hier soir. Chaque fresque représente un aspect important du marché couvert : auguste bartholdi, les bateliers de la Lauch, une vache vosgienne et les produits locaux alsaciens et enfin la scène off du marché couvert, qui propose un concert chaque premier vendredi du mois. - En parlant de concert, la semaine prochaine, à la salle Arthuss de Wintzenheim, Matskat se produira. Malory Rinaldo, qui s'occupe de la programmation de la structure, nous présente la formation. Le concert aura lieu le mercredi 20 à 20h à la salle Arthuss de Wintzenheim. Réservations au  03 89 79 60 17 ou bien par mail à arthuss@maitie-wintzenheim.fr. Plus d'informations sur le www.ville-wintzenheim.fr

INFORMATION LOCALE
15 OCTOBRE 2021

INFORMATION LOCALE

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2021 4:03


Sujets tarités :  - Les écoliers haut-rhinois peuvent aussi tomber le masque. Une semaine après les enfants scolarisés dans le bas-rhin, ceux habitant dans le sud de l'Alsace pourront dès lundi, ne plus avoir besoin de porter le masque en classe. Chose possible grâce à l'amélioration de la situation sanitaire dans le territoire. En effet, il fallait que le taux d'incidence y soit inférieur à 50 nouveaux cas de coronavirus pour 100 000 habitants durant plus de cinq jours consécutifs. En revanche, collégiens, lycéens et enseignants devront continuer à le porter. - Jean-Marc Reiser sera jugé par la cour d'assises haut-rhinoise. Le renvoi de cette affaire devant cette juridiction a été confirmé ce matin par la chambre d'instruction de la cour d'appel colmarienne. L'homme est mis examen pour l'assassinat de Sophie le Tann, une étudiante strasbourgeoise qui avait été portée disparue en septembre 2018. Jean-Marc Reiser continue de nier la préméditation ainsi que l'intention d'homicide. Il est tout de même maintenu en détention, la cour ayant confirmé le non-lieu partiel quant aux chefs d'accusation de séquestration et d'enlèvement. - Le tour de France revient en Alsace. Après douze années d'absence, l'épreuve féminine du tour partira de Paris le 24 juillet avant d'arriver à la super planche des belles filles le 31 au bout de huit étapes. Trois d'entre elles se disputeront en Alsace, dont l'avant dernière, qui partira le 30 de Sélestat avec une arrivée au Markstein. Une 7e étape qui devrait être décisive dans le classement avec trois ascensions qui vont piquer les jambes, le Petit Ballon, le Platzerwasel et le Grand Ballon. - Reprise de la chasse dans le Val d'Argent. Attention si vous avez prévu d'aller vous balader dans le secteur ce week-end, plusieurs battues auront lieu dans trois des quatre communes de la comcom. Pour votre sécurité, il convient de bien respecter la signalétique mise en place par les chasseurs aux limites des lots de chasse concernés. Porter des vêtements fluorescents afin de ne pas être confondus avec du gibier peut également aider. Des battues auront lieu sur les bancs communaux de Sainte-Marie-aux-Mines, Sainte-Croix-aux-Mines, Lièpvre et Rombach-le-Franc. - La semaine du goût s'achève. A Colmar, comme chaque année depuis plusieurs éditions, le marché couvert s'associe avec le CFA Marcel Rudloff, formant aux métiers de l'hotellerie restauration, afin de proposer plusieurs animations aux écoliers de la commune. Les précisions de Pascal Sala, président du marché couvert, qui en a profité pour faire d'une pierre deux coups, en inaugurant quatre fresques hier soir. Chaque fresque représente un aspect important du marché couvert : auguste bartholdi, les bateliers de la Lauch, une vache vosgienne et les produits locaux alsaciens et enfin la scène off du marché couvert, qui propose un concert chaque premier vendredi du mois. - En parlant de concert, la semaine prochaine, à la salle Arthuss de Wintzenheim, Matskat se produira. Malory Rinaldo, qui s'occupe de la programmation de la structure, nous présente la formation. Le concert aura lieu le mercredi 20 à 20h à la salle Arthuss de Wintzenheim. Réservations au  03 89 79 60 17 ou bien par mail à arthuss@maitie-wintzenheim.fr. Plus d'informations sur le www.ville-wintzenheim.fr 

Transformed Sales
How to Achieve 3x Sales Growth Within 18 Months with Chris Rombach

Transformed Sales

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2021 33:41


In this episode of the Science of Selling STEM, I'll be sitting down with Chris Rombach, the VP of Sales and Marketing at Asahi Kasei Bioprocess America, a leading developer of systems for pharmaceutical manufacturing and bioprocessing applications. Chris has held various leadership and sales management roles in leading B2B companies providing processing equipment to the Bio-Pharmaceutical industry through his 30-year career.  He offers solutions that unlock efficiencies, improve safety and drive productivity in drug manufacturing. He will highlight the value of continuous learning in sales and talk about why a salesperson must first learn everything about the product they want to sell before they start selling it. He will also teach us what it really takes to kill it in technical sales so make sure you stay tuned and take notes. See you on the inside!  On Today's Episode of the Science of Selling STEM: How getting into sales at a young age led him into Bio-Pharmaceutical system and equipment sales (01:07) The satisfaction of selling practical solutions to common problems that pharmaceutical companies have (03:45) Being promoted to a sales manager role and what the experience was like (07:35) Understanding your sales team and build trust with them so you can help them succeed (08:41) Why educating customers about the product you sell is very critical in the sales process (09:45) Taking a greater level of professional management into Asahi Kasei Bioprocess America and the autonomy that comes with it (11:24) Learning to listen and learn before making any sales moves (15:25) Planning and prioritizing ideas and activities within a sales team (18:54) How to drive behavior to get the desired sales results (21:26) Re-implementing Salesforce to make their business more predictable and growing the business 299.6% (24:08) Success derived from multiple people pulling and pushing in the same direction (26:55) Understanding CRMs and how you want to use them before choosing the one to implement (30:06) Connect with Chris Rombach: https://www.linkedin.com/in/chrisrombach/ (Chris on LinkedIn) Connect with Wesleyne Greer: https://transformedsales.com/ (Wesleyne's Website) https://www.linkedin.com/in/wesleynegreer/ (Wesleyne on LinkedIn) https://web.facebook.com/wesleynegreer (Wesleyne on Facebook) https://twitter.com/wesleynegreer (Wesleyne on Twitter) Rate, Review, Learn, and Share Thanks for tuning into The Science of Selling STEM! If you enjoyed this episode and want to learn even more about what it takes to transform your sales, don't forget to tune into our other episodes and share your favorite episodes on social media! Join The Science of Selling STEM community onhttps://www.facebook.com/WesleyneGreerCEO ( Facebook), https://twitter.com/WesleyneGreer (Twitter),https://www.linkedin.com/in/wesleynegreer/ ( LinkedIn) and https://www.transformedsales.com/ (visit my website) for even more content, information, and resources.

Alongside Spiteful Podcast
Ep 39 ...For real. With an interview with The We Are Network's Bob Rombach

Alongside Spiteful Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2021 62:07


Hey Everybody!Brand new episode for the first time in a while. Thank you for sticking with us!Today Brian, Andy, and Adam discuss the current sports world. Then the episode is concluded with an interview between Adam and Bob Rombach from https://www.thewearenetwork.com/ to discuss the latest piece Adam wrote on http://www.alongsidespiteful.com.You can find us on our website. Or we're all over social media. Let us know what you think, and what you want to hear more or less of!Make sure to catch a listen of Two Schmucks One Pod where you find your podcasts!

The Leading, Language and Literature Podcast
Chris Gertz-Rombach - Marketing Consultant - LA

The Leading, Language and Literature Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2021 47:13


Chris is a social media marketing expert operating out of Los Angeles. He runs highly strategic Facebook and Instagram ad campaigns for small and big businesses alike and was someone I was seeking to interview after considering my current approach to teaching advertising somewhat out of date. I was also keen to learn about how the marketing industry has evolved and what this means for our students' futures and privacy whilst online.  We discuss: Chris' experience in the job to date; Whether social media advertising has eclipsed TV or other forms of mass media advertising; Which brands or companies are most innovative or considered industry leaders when it comes to their campaigns; New techniques or considerations that have evolved with the proliferation of social media advertising; Whether rumours about big data and its relationship with advertising is something kids should learn about in school; And finally, what Chris thinks the future holds for advertising. Thanks again to Chris for giving up his time to discuss the ever changing landscape of marketing and the impact it will inevitably have on future generations.  If you'd like to stay up to date on the latest podcast, feel free to subscribe via Apple or Spotify or follow me on Twitter (@chrisjordanhk) Links:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w9ogzVyTtcw (Guinness advert (1999)) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hq2SlCja3zo (Old Spice x Terry Crews ads) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iX8GxLP1FHo (The Great Hack documentary)

Killer Casting
019: Ma Rainey's Black Bottom

Killer Casting

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2021 80:10


Lisa, Brian and Dean are joined by two very special guests to discuss the amazing tour de force that is Chadwick Boseman's final performance, but which also features knockout performances from a killer ensemble cast. Chiming in with great insight are two professors who are both experts and authors in the field; Dr. Monica White Ndounou is an Associate Professor of Theater and the founding Executive Director of The CRAFT Institute which convenes The International Black Theatre Summit and administers the Pay-It-Forward All-Career Level Mentorship Program along with various initiatives designed to create culturally inclusive ecosystems throughout the world of arts and entertainment by transforming formal training and industry practices while promoting equitable access.  She is also the past President of the Black Theatre Association (BTA) (2016-2018), Vice President of Advocacy for the Association for Theatre in Higher Education (ATHE) (2019-2021) and serves on the board of The August Wilson Society.  She is a founding member of the National Advisory Committee of The Black Seed, a national strategic plan to create impact and thrivability for Black theater institutions and initiatives.https://www.rutgersuniversitypress.org/shaping-the-future-of-african-american-film/9780813562551  ******************************************* Laurence Glasco is Associate Professor of History at the University of Pittsburgh. Since coming to the University of Pittsburgh’s History Department in 1969, he has focused on African American history, both locally and globally. A graduate of Antioch College, Dr. Glasco received his Ph.D. in History from the State University of New York at Buffalo. Professor Glasco has studied the history of Black Pittsburgh for the past decade or so. He researched and narrated the recent exhibition on slavery in early Pittsburgh, “Free at Last?” and has extensively written about Black Pittsburgh history for exhibits at the Heinz History Center and a variety of publications. Dr. Glasco has made an intense study of the Pittsburgh upbringing and childhood experience of August Wilson to reveal how the playwright developed his characters, gained inspiration for his stories, and cultivated his craft as one of the most celebrated African-American playwrights in the world. What can we glean about ourselves from the life and writings of Pittsburgh’s own playwright? Editor, The WPA History of the Negro in Pittsburgh (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2004) Legacy in Bricks and Mortar: African-American Landmarks in Allegheny County (with Frank Bolden and Eliza Smith) (Pittsburgh History and Landmarks Foundation, 1995) “Race, Caste and Untouchability: Lessons from India” (Sanskriti 1993)  “National Versus Racial Identity: Juan Gualberto Gomez of Cuba and W.E.B. Du Bois of the United States,” in Wolfgang Reinhard and Peter Waldmann, Nord und Süd in Amerika (Rombach,1992)  “The Life Cycles and Household Structures of American Ethnic Groups,” Journal of Urban History (1975) How's that for some heavy hitters kids ?  Enjoy!  

Mordloch
Folge 8 - Mord im Forsthaus Rombach

Mordloch

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2020 34:12


In Folge 8 behandeln wir zum ersten Mal einen ungelösten Fall. Jule erzählt von einem Zehnfachmord im Schwarzwald aus dem Jahr 1945, der bis heute nicht gelöst werden konnte. Vielleicht haben wir aber die Möglichkeit in 25 Jahren mehr über den Fall zu erfahren. Instagram: https://instagram.com/mordloch_podcast?igshid=10sfqgkpfk67r Mordloch-Podcast E-Mail: mordloch.podcast@gmail.com

AZUR FM
INFOS LOCALES DU 23 SEPTEMBRE 2020

AZUR FM

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2020 3:46


Sujets traités :  - Les hommages pleuvent après la mort de Gilbert Meyer. L’ancien maire de Colmar s’est éteint lundi à l’âge de 78 ans. Marcel Bauer, le maire de Sélestat, garde le souvenir d’un grand homme à la personnalité marquante avec qui il avait pu travailler et entretenait de bonnes relations. Eric Straumann, successeur de Gilbert Meyer à la mairie de Colmar a annoncé hier matin ouvrir un livre du souvenir où les colmariens, qui doivent se sentir orphelin selon le premier élu, pourront partager leurs sentiments. Il se trouvera dans le hall de la mairie. Les Colmariens sont invités à s’y rendre masqués et avec leur propre stylo. Eric Straumann a également annoncé que depuis hier, et pour une semaine, les drapeaux de la ville de Colmar seront en berne pour saluer la mémoire de son ancien maire. - Yves Hemedinger est arrivé en tête du premier des législatives partielles pour le canton Colmar Neuf Brisach dimanche. Avec 45,4%, il possède une avance confortable sur l’écologiste Frédéric Hilbert qui sort avec 23,53% des voix. Pour l’ancien premier adjoint de la ville de Colmar, rien n’est encore joué. Toute cette semaine Yves Hemedinger continuera donc de faire campagne en allant à la rencontre des électeurs pour glaner plus de voix et espérer moins d’abstention pour le second tour qui aura lieu ce dimanche 27 septembre. - Dramatique accident, hier après-midi, à Rombach-le-Franc. Une nacelle sur chenilles a basculé. Deux ouvriers se trouvaient à bord. L’un d’eux, 55 ans, a été tué sur le coup. L’autre, 51 ans, a été transporté dans un état grave à l’hôpital Pasteur de Colmar. Les deux hommes, originaires des Vosges, travaillaient pour une société mandatée par Enedis pour l’entretien d’une ligne de 20.000 volts. Les gendarmes de Sainte-Croix-aux-Mines ont ouvert une enquête pour déterminer les causes de l’accident. - Sur le front de la pandémie, le taux d’incidence continue d’augmenter en Alsace. Selon le dernier bilan de l’Agence Régionale de Santé, il est de 61,8 dans le Bas-Rhin contre 50,6 la semaine dernière. 61,8 nouveaux cas pour 100 000 habitants. La préfète, Josiane Chevalier, a annoncé hier matin qu’à partir de demain jeudi, les rassemblements de plus de dix personnes sur l’espace public seront interdits en soirée à Illkirch, Schiltigheim et dans certains quartiers de Strasbourg. Aucune mesure n’est prise contre les bars et les restaurants. Josiane Chevalier doit rencontrer dans la journée les professionnels du secteur pour établir un contrat de confiance autour du strict respect des mesures sanitaires. - Enfin ce week-end Azur FM fêtera ses 25 ans d’existence ! Au programme, une émission spéciale avec les anciens animateurs samedi soir et dimanche, une journée d’animation à découvrir aux studios de Sélestat, c’est au 101 route de Colmar. Une émission Tissu associatif et lien social organisée le matin, et l’après-midi, des visites de la radio seront organisées pour vous faire découvrir comment se fabrique une émission de radio, une météo ou un journal d’information. En raison des normes sanitaires, les visites se feront par groupe sur réservation par mail à contact@azur-fm.com Programme complet : https://azur-fm.com/page/portes-ouvertes-azur-fm-fete-ses-25-ans-32 

INFORMATION LOCALE
23 SEPTEMBRE 2020

INFORMATION LOCALE

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2020 3:46


Sujets traités :  Les hommages pleuvent après la mort de Gilbert Meyer. L’ancien maire de Colmar s’est éteint lundi à l’âge de 78 ans. Marcel Bauer, le maire de Sélestat, garde le souvenir d’un grand homme à la personnalité marquante avec qui il avait pu travailler et entretenait de bonnes relations. Eric Straumann, successeur de Gilbert Meyer à la mairie de Colmar a annoncé hier matin ouvrir un livre du souvenir où les colmariens, qui doivent se sentir orphelin selon le premier élu, pourront partager leurs sentiments. Il se trouvera dans le hall de la mairie. Les Colmariens sont invités à s’y rendre masqués et avec leur propre stylo. Eric Straumann a également annoncé que depuis hier, et pour une semaine, les drapeaux de la ville de Colmar seront en berne pour saluer la mémoire de son ancien maire. Yves Hemedinger est arrivé en tête du premier des législatives partielles pour le canton Colmar Neuf Brisach dimanche. Avec 45,4%, il possède une avance confortable sur l’écologiste Frédéric Hilbert qui sort avec 23,53% des voix. Pour l’ancien premier adjoint de la ville de Colmar, rien n’est encore joué. Toute cette semaine Yves Hemedinger continuera donc de faire campagne en allant à la rencontre des électeurs pour glaner plus de voix et espérer moins d’abstention pour le second tour qui aura lieu ce dimanche 27 septembre. Dramatique accident, hier après-midi, à Rombach-le-Franc. Une nacelle sur chenilles a basculé. Deux ouvriers se trouvaient à bord. L’un d’eux, 55 ans, a été tué sur le coup. L’autre, 51 ans, a été transporté dans un état grave à l’hôpital Pasteur de Colmar. Les deux hommes, originaires des Vosges, travaillaient pour une société mandatée par Enedis pour l’entretien d’une ligne de 20.000 volts. Les gendarmes de Sainte-Croix-aux-Mines ont ouvert une enquête pour déterminer les causes de l’accident. Sur le front de la pandémie, le taux d’incidence continue d’augmenter en Alsace. Selon le dernier bilan de l’Agence Régionale de Santé, il est de 61,8 dans le Bas-Rhin contre 50,6 la semaine dernière. 61,8 nouveaux cas pour 100 000 habitants. La préfète, Josiane Chevalier, a annoncé hier matin qu’à partir de demain jeudi, les rassemblements de plus de dix personnes sur l’espace public seront interdits en soirée à Illkirch, Schiltigheim et dans certains quartiers de Strasbourg. Aucune mesure n’est prise contre les bars et les restaurants. Josiane Chevalier doit rencontrer dans la journée les professionnels du secteur pour établir un contrat de confiance autour du strict respect des mesures sanitaires. Enfin ce week-end Azur FM fêtera ses 25 ans d’existence ! Au programme, une émission spéciale avec les anciens animateurs samedi soir et dimanche, une journée d’animation à découvrir aux studios de Sélestat, c’est au 101 route de Colmar. Une émission Tissu associatif et lien social organisée le matin, et l’après-midi, des visites de la radio seront organisées pour vous faire découvrir comment se fabrique une émission de radio, une météo ou un journal d’information. En raison des normes sanitaires, les visites se feront par groupe sur réservation par mail à contact@azur-fm.com Programme complet : https://azur-fm.com/page/portes-ouvertes-azur-fm-fete-ses-25-ans-32 

Behind the Beak
Behind the Beak #17 - Mackenzie Rombach

Behind the Beak

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2020


Former Gamecock volleyball standout Mackenzie Rombach, who was playing her rookie year with the ProWin Volleys TV Holz out of Saarbrücken, Saarland, Germany, joins Tyler Brown to discuss how her first pro season was cut short by COVID-19, getting back to the United States and what she's doing to stay busy during the pandemic.

Behind the Beak
Behind the Beak #17 - Mackenzie Rombach

Behind the Beak

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2020


Former Gamecock volleyball standout Mackenzie Rombach, who was playing her rookie year with the ProWin Volleys TV Holz out of Saarbrücken, Saarland, Germany, joins Tyler Brown to discuss how her first pro season was cut short by COVID-19, getting back to the United States and what she's doing to stay busy during the pandemic.

The First Year
Schiedsverfahrensrecht - Im Interview RAin Annett Rombach

The First Year

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2020 37:12


Mit Frau Annett Rombach, LL.M, Rechtsanwältin und Schiedsrichterin aus Frankfurt am Main, habe ich mich in dieser Episode über das Schiedsverfahrensrecht, "typische" Fälle der Sportgerichtsbarkeit, den Wert eines LL.M-Auslandsstudiums und Dos and Dont's in Bewerbungsgesprächen unterhalten. Viel Spaß beim Zuhören!

Podcast Orange – meinsportpodcast.de
#64 | Rot-Weiße Leidenszeit

Podcast Orange – meinsportpodcast.de

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2020 99:44


Der 54. Geburtstag wird bei den Anhängern und Mitgliedern des FC Rot-Weiß Erfurt in schlechter Erinnerung bleiben. Mitten im anspruchsvollen Insolvenzverfahren verkündet Insolvenzverwalter Rechtsanwalt Volker Reinhardt die voraussichtliche Einstellung des Spielbetriebs. Dabei waren wenige Monate zuvor der erfolgreiche Abschluss des Ausgliederungsprozesses sowie der Gewinn von drei Investoren verkündet worden. In der Zwischenzeit steht fest, dass die Ausgliederung der RWE-Spielbetriebs-GmbH gescheitert ist. Ganz offensichtlich gilt dies auch für den im Sommer 2018 verkündeten #NEUANFANG. Über die Ursachen der aktuellen schwierigen Situation beim Thüringer Traditionsverein diskutieren wir in der 64. Ausgabe des PODCAST ORANGE mit FCRWE-Blogger Fedor Freytag, BILD-Sportjournalist Michael Windisch und DFB-Stützpunkttrainer Marco Zelle. Die Gäste Fedor FreytagPersönlich: Anhänger von Rot-Weiß Erfurt seit frühen KindertagenBlogger seit 2011Pseudonym Fedor Freytag (https://stehblog.de/2014/02/21/interview-mit-fedor-freytag-fussballvereine-sind-hysteriegemeinschaften/)Zitat: Danke für alle Sympathiebekundungen und guten Wünsche. Das weiß ich wirklich zu schätzen. Kontakt: www.stellungsfehler.de / https://twitter.com/FedorFreytag Michael WindischPersönlich: Kreismeister-Titel im Tischtennis 1990Journalist: Start bei verschiedenen Regionalzeitungen und Magazinen, und machte erste Schritte beim Radio; seit 2005 Sportreporter bei BILD bzw. BILD Thüringen; Schwerpunktthemen: Fußball, hier vorrangig Carl Zeiss Jena und Rot-Weiß Erfurt. Außerdem fühlt sich der Thüringer natürlich im Wintersport und im Motorsport zu Hause.Zitat: Bei RWE habe ich meine ersten richtigen journalistischen Schritte gemacht leider auch in tiefe Fettnäpfchen. Ich bin trotzdem immer gerne zu Rot-Weiß gefahren, weil ich meinen Job liebe und es tatsächlich in den allermeisten Momenten viel Freude gemacht hat. Kontakt: https://twitter.com/MichaWindisch Marco ZellePersönlich: Unterstützung des FCRWE als kleiner Sponsor; Bestrebungen der Etablierung einer FF-Abteilung bei FCRWESportler: Spieler: Fußballer beim SV Germania Ilmenau; Trainer beim SV Germania Ilmenau; 1. FFV Erfurt (bis 2017); aktuell: Trainer am DFB-Stützpunkt in ErfurtKontakt: https://www.facebook.com/mazelle69 / https://tfv-erfurt.de/talentfoerderung/stuetzpunkte/uebersicht/kfa-erfurt-soemmerda/stuetzpunkt-erfurt / www.leitner-zelle.de Die Chronik der Leidenszeit 02.10.2017: Erfurt trennt sich von Stefan Krämer Der FC Rot-Weiß Erfurt hat die Konsequenzen aus der sportlichen Talfahrt gezogen und Trainer Stefan Krämer mit sofortiger Wirkung freigestellt. Nach zuletzt drei Niederlagen am Stück und dem damit verbundenen Abrutschen auf den letzten Tabellenplatz sah sich der Verein nun zum Handeln gezwungen. Es ist schade, dass wir den Weg mit Stefan Krämer nicht fortsetzen können. Aber am Ende geht es um die Zukunft des Vereins, der über allem steht, sagt Präsident Rolf Rombach. Das Training sowie die Spiele werden von David Bergner, dem bisherigen sportlichen Leiter des Nachwuchsleistungszentrums beim RWE, betreut. Der Ex-Profi hat in der Vergangenheit regelmäßig die Gegnerbeobachtung für den Drittligisten vorgenommen und kennt somit sowohl die Liga als auch die Mannschaft sehr gut. Darüber hinaus ist Bergner im Besitz der für die 3. Liga erforderlichen Fußball-Lehrer-Lizenz. https://www.rot-weiss-erfurt.de/Aktuelles/Aktuelle-News/Erfurt-trennt-sich-von-Trainer-Kraemer.html Kommentar auf liga3-online.de: Klar, wenn eine Mannschaft aus elf Spielen nur neun Punkte holt und dementsprechend den letzten Tabellenplatz belegt, hat ein Trainer sicherlich auch seine Aktien daran. Doch die entscheidenden Fehler wurden an anderer Stelle gemacht und zwar bereits vor Saisonbeginn. Rot-Weiß Erfurt ist unter den aktuellen Rahmenbedingungen kaum überlebensfähig in der 3. Liga, die Kaderzusammenstellung sorgt (notgedrungen) für eine Gratwanderung. Zitatestellungsfehler.de am 4. Aug. 2017: Stefan Krämer ist ein großartiger Trainer. #fcrweStefan Krämer am 2. Okt. 2017: Es war mir eine Ehre in der rot weißen Republik Trainer zu sein.passt auf Euch auf!Michael Windisch am 17. Jan. 2018: Ich denke oft an Stefan Krämer. Super Typ!Michael Windisch am 13. Aug. 2018: Insolvenz hätte @ROTWEISSERFURT zwar sicher auch so angemeldet, aber ich bin mir sicher, dass Stefan Krämer RWE sportlich gerettet hätte!stellungsfehler.de am 20. Mai 2019: Hier war noch nie jemand Trainer, der seine Arbeit so ehrlich und eloquent erklären konnte wie Stefan Krämer. Well played, @1_FCM!stellungsfehler.de am 22. Dez. 2019: Lieber Stefan Krämer, wir hier wussten Sie wirklich zu schätzen. Ok, Kohle ist immer noch keine da (aber auch keine verrückten Russen), und die Liga hat allenfalls einen spröden Charme. Zipsendorf und so, Sie wissen schon Aber der Dom strahlt so schön wie immer. Na? #FCRWE 17.10.2017: RWE-Vizepräsident Thomas Kalt ist zurückgetreten Thomas Kalt: Es stimmt, dass ich in einem Schreiben an den Aufsichtsrat am Donnerstag, den 12.10.2017, meinen sofortigen Rücktritt aus dem Vorstand erklärt habe. Ich habe dabei aber auch angeboten, mein Amt weiter bis zum 30.11.2017 (und damit unmittelbar bis vor die nächste, ordentliche Mitgliederversammlung) auszuüben, um dem Aufsichtsrat für eine Neubesetzung zeitliche Handlungsmöglichkeiten einzuräumen. Umso überraschter war ich, dass mich bereits einen Tag später die Thüringer Allgemeine mit dem Inhalt meines Schreibens konfrontierte.Der Grund meines Rücktrittes liegt in dem seit Monaten belasteten Verhältnis zwischen Vorstand und Aufsichtsrat.Ich bedauere diesen (für mich notwendigen) Schritt außerordentlich, da die Zusammenarbeit mit unserem Präsidenten Rolf Rombach nicht nur gut, sondern hervorragend war! In den nun nahezu fünf Jahren des gemeinsamen Weges war unser gemeinsames Wirken jederzeit von gegenseitigem Respekt und Anerkennung geprägt. Es hat sehr viel Spaß gemacht und es war mir eine Ehre, an der Seite eines so großen Kämpfers, für RWE zu agieren. Auch in meinem Urlaub stehe ich mit Rolf Rombach in täglichem Kontakt. Ich kann nur hoffen, dass die aktuellen Ereignisse rund um den Verein Rolf Rombach nicht weiter zermürben und er den Club noch lange in der Position als Präsident erhalten bleibt. Jedem RWE-Fan und Kritiker muss bewusst sein, dass es den Verein ohne Rolf Rombach schon lange nicht mehr geben würde. Wer jetzt diese Position gefährdet, spielt mit der Überlebensfähigkeit des Vereins. Das darf nicht unterschätzt werden! https://www.rot-weiss-erfurt.de/Aktuelles/Aktuelle-News/Persoenliche-Erklaerung-von-Thomas-Kalt.html 20.10.2017: Wiederansetzung der Mitgliederversammlung Nachdem der Aufsichtsrat eine für Anfang November terminierte außerordentliche Mitgliederversammlung abgesagt hatte, da es angesichts der aktuellen sportlichen und finanziellen Situation Wichtigeres gäbe, setzte Präsident Rolf Rombach diese nun wieder an. Verein: Es sollen im Rahmen der außerordentlichen Mitgliederversammlung am 4. November die Chancen und Möglichkeiten einer Ausgliederung der Profiabteilung diskutiert werden. Das steht in keinem Widerspruch zu den Wünschen des Aufsichtsrates, sondern unterstützt diese vielmehr. Rolf Rombach: Eine Absage der Mitgliederversammlung durch den Aufsichtsrat ist zudem laut Paragraf 11 der Satzung nicht möglich. Rot-Weiß Erfurt: Machtkampf hinter den Kulissen 01.11.2017: BILD: Entlassung des Präsidenten Rolf Rombach durch den Aufsichtsrat Dr. Peter Kästner in der Thüringer Allgemeinen: Der Aufsichtsrat habe sein satzungsmäßiges Kontrollrecht nicht mehr wahrnehmen können. Die Präsidiumsmitglieder Sandro Günther und Dr. Claus Worschech erklären: Für den Aufsichtsrat teilte heute deren Vorsitzender Dr. Peter Kästner mit, dass Präsident Rolf Rombach unter Berufung auf die Satzung entlassen sein soll. Diese Information wurde per Fax und ohne Nennung von Gründen mitgeteilt. Aus Sicht des Präsidiums ist kein wichtiger Grund erkennbar, der eine Entlassung des Präsidenten rechtfertigt. Deshalb wird das Präsidium das Vorgehen des Aufsichtsrats umgehend gerichtlichüberprüfen lassen. https://www.rot-weiss-erfurt.de/Aktuelles/Aktuelle-News/Praesidium-reagiert-auf-Entlassungsschreiben-fuer-Rolf-Rombach.html 02.11.2017: BILD: Frank Nowag als Interimspräsident Nach der Abberufung von RWE-Boss Rolf Rombach (64) durch den Aufsichtsrat wurde Donnerstag Frank Nowag (Vorstand von RWESponsor Keyweb) zum Interimspräsidenten, bis zur Mitgliederversammlung am 1. Dezember, ernannt. Nowag in der BILD: Mit Blick auf die Versammlung müssen wir alle Unterlagen vollumfassend und transparent vorliegen haben. Da geht es um Kredit und Darlehensverträge oder Miet- und Spielerverträge. Alles das, was mit der wirtschaftlichen Situation des Vereins zu tun hat. Und das wurde uns einfach vorenthalten. Das führte dann zu einer Hinhaltetaktik, und diesen Stand haben wir immer noch. Der Steuerberater hatte z.B. klar die Anweisung, uns diese Unterlagen nicht auszuhändigen. Die Situation war für uns ein­fach nicht mehr hin­nehm­bar. Wir konnten unsere Kontrollfunktion nicht mehr wahrnehmen. https://www.bild.de/regional/leipzig/rotweisserfurt/hierkommtderneuerweboss53735082.bild.html 04.11.2017: Rombach wehrt sich gegen Abberufung und drängt zurück Der Insolvenzanwalt Rolf Rombach: Ich habe beim Amtsgericht Erfurt eine Einstweilige Verfügung beantragt. Es geht mir nicht um den Posten, sondern um die Art und Weise der Abberufung. Nach zwölf Jahren aufopferungs­voller Arbeit finde ich es unwürdig, durch ein Fax nach Dienst­schluss benachrichtigt zu werden. https://www.bild.de/sport/fussball/3-liga/rombach-will-sich-einklagen-53750780.bild.html Es kann nicht ansatzweise von einem Grund gesprochen werden. Der erklärte Grund ist konstruiert, sagte Rombach am Freitag auf einer Pressekonferenz, bei der auch der Steuerberater des Vereins, Ralf Krings, Auskunft zur wirtschaftlichen Situation gab. Rombach wird durch den Aufsichtsrat mangelnde Auskunftspflicht vorgeworfen. Er habe in Vorbereitung der Mitgliederversammlung ...Du möchtest deinen Podcast auch kostenlos hosten und damit Geld verdienen? Dann schaue auf www.kostenlos-hosten.de und informiere dich. Dort erhältst du alle Informationen zu unseren kostenlosen Podcast-Hosting-Angeboten.

BuchZeichen
Bücher, die das Innenleben ausleuchten

BuchZeichen

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2020 27:35


Familien funktionieren oft nach einer verborgenen inneren Mechanik. Es waren mitunter interne Konflikte, die in Grossbritannien den Brexit befeuert haben. Und: Viele Wörter tragen eine unbekannte Geschichte in sich, die sich oft bis in längst vergangene Epochen zurückverfolgen lässt. Der SRF-Literaturstammtisch diskutiert aktuelle Bücher, die sich in ganz unterschiedlicher Weise auf die Suche nach dem Innenleben begeben, sei es der Sprache oder von sozialen Gefügen. André Perler stellt «Vom Leben der Wörter» von Klaus Bartels vor, eine Sammlung von packenden Geschichten von Wörtern, deren verschlungene Wege bis in die Antike zurückreichen. Der Liebesbrief «Dear Oxbridge» der deutschen Autorin Nele Pollatschek analysiert frech ihre turbulente Liebesbeziehung zu Grossbritannien, das kurz vor dem Brexit steht, und zeigt das Eigenleben dieser verwirrenden Insel, auf der alles ein bisschen anders ist als auf dem Kontinent. Franziska Hirsbrunner bringt «Duell» des guatemaltekisch-amerikanischen Autors Eduardo Halfon mit, die intensive Geschichte einer Familie und ihrer Geheimnisse – und das auf nur etwas über hundert Seiten. Buchhinweise: Klaus Bartels. Vom Leben der Wörter. Wortgeschichten aus der «Neuen Zürcher Zeitung». Rombach, 2019. Nele Pollatschek. Dear Oxbridge. Liebesbrief an England. Galiani, 2020. Eduardo Halfon. Duell. Hanser, 2019.

Comedy & Camping with Aubree Sweeney
S1.E8 Comedy & Camping w/Aubree Sweeney - Eric Rombach

Comedy & Camping with Aubree Sweeney

Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2019 12:49


Veteran and Nebraska native, Eric Rombach joins Aubree Sweeney on this week's episode of "Comedy & Camping". Eric currently serves as Junior Vice Commander at the Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 10727. Aubree and Eric talk about working together on the upcoming comedy benefit at the post on May 17th and all of the really AMAZING community programs the VFW has coming up this summer - locally and nationally. After graduating from Bellevue West, Eric joined the United States Army in August, 1996. During his 20 years in the US Army, he was stationed at Fort Hood, TX from 1997 – 2001, Rose Barracks in Vilseck, Germany from 2001-2005, Fort Hood, TX from 2005-2009, Fort Bliss, TX from 2009-2012, and Fort Carson, CO from 2012-2016. During his time in the Army he deployed to Kuwait in 1997, Kosovo from October 2002 till May 2003, deployed to Iraq in February 2004 till February 2005, assisted in relief operations after Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans in September 2005, deployed to Iraq in October 2006 till January 2008, deployed to Afghanistan in March 2012 till December 2012, and Afghanistan again in February 2014 till August 2014. Since retiring from the Army in 2016, Eric has returned to Bellevue. He's currently a Logistics Analyst for Serco, Inc contracted to support the United States Strategic Command at Offutt Air Force Base, in Bellevue, NE. Eric recently received his Bachelors of Science at Bellevue University. On behalf of all of us, I'd like to THANK Eric for his service and THANKS to all of you listening who have served or are serving and your families. If you're in the Bellevue area, pick up your tickets to the show at Post 10727, before it sells out!This episode was recorded at VFW Post 10727 in Bellevue, NE.For more information or to become a member at your local VFW: www.vfw.org For upcoming events at Post 10727: Find them on Facebook.Find Aubree at: Aubree Sweeney - Official Facebook Instagram YouTube

AZUR FM
INFOS LOCALES DU 23 AVRIL 2019

AZUR FM

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2019 3:51


Sujets traités : 25 hectares de végétation détruites par un incendie hier sur les hauteurs de la station du lac blanc à Orbey, à l'origine de l'incendie, un randonneur de 35 ans qui avait renversé sont réchaud alors qu'il préparait son café - 3 bléssés dan sun accident hier après-midi à Zellwiller, une voiture qui circulait sur l'A35 en direction de Strasbourg a fait une sortie de route et est tombée dans un bassin de rétention d'eau - L'acte 24 des gilets jaunes se prépare pour ce samedi - Le journaliste Gaspar Glanz sera jugé le 18 octobre pour outrage sur personne dépositaire de l'autorité publique, dans une vidéo diffusée sur youtube on le voit faire un doigt d'honneur aux forces de l'ordre après avoir été poussé par les policiers - journée ''école morte'' aujourd'hui à lièpvre et Rombach-le-franc - Pole emploi tient une permanence aujourd'hui à la médiathèque de sélestat de 14h à 16h pour aider les personnes à surfer sur son site - Mack media va s'installer à plobsheim, elle produit les films projectés au parc d'attractions ''Europa Park''

INFORMATION LOCALE
23 AVRIL 2019

INFORMATION LOCALE

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2019 3:51


 Sujets traités : 25 hectares de végétation détruites par un incendie hier sur les hauteurs de la station du lac blanc à Orbey, à l'origine de l'incendie, un randonneur de 35 ans qui avait renversé sont réchaud alors qu'il préparait son café - 3 bléssés dan sun accident hier après-midi à Zellwiller, une voiture qui circulait sur l'A35 en direction de Strasbourg a fait une sortie de route et est tombée dans un bassin de rétention d'eau - L'acte 24 des gilets jaunes se prépare pour ce samedi - Le journaliste Gaspar Glanz sera jugé le 18 octobre pour outrage sur personne dépositaire de l'autorité publique, dans une vidéo diffusée sur youtube on le voit faire un doigt d'honneur aux forces de l'ordre après avoir été poussé par les policiers - journée ''école morte'' aujourd'hui à lièpvre et Rombach-le-franc - Pole emploi tient une permanence aujourd'hui à la médiathèque de sélestat de 14h à 16h pour aider les personnes à surfer sur son site - Mack media va s'installer à plobsheim, elle produit les films projectés au parc d'attractions ''Europa Park'' 

One Rental At A Time
25 Years Old, 7 Units, 3 Markets All In 1 Year ft. Brad Rombach

One Rental At A Time

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2019 38:13


Learning about Brad's story is amazing as he is doing everything right. He is earning money, living below his means and buying assets. He will be financially free by the time he is 30 no question. I can't wait to see what he does next

State Bar of Michigan: On Balance Podcast
State Bar of Michigan NEXT Conference 2018: A Spotlight On Access To Justice

State Bar of Michigan: On Balance Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2018 17:25


Michigan attorneys Tom Rombach and Odey Meroueh discuss limited scope and access to justice initiatives in their state. In this episode of On Balance from the NEXT Conference 2018, Rombach, a former State Bar of Michigan president, shares with host Robert Mathis about Michigan Supreme Court rules that provide guidance regarding limited scope representation. Meanwhile, Meroueh highlights efforts by the Detroit Bar Association to promote pro bono opportunities to its members, especially those in solo and small-firm category. Odey Meroueh is the founding partner of Meroueh & Hallman LLP in Michigan. Tom Rombach is a past president of the State Bar of Michigan and the owner of the Law Offices of Thomas C. Rombach in Michigan.

Heilpraktikerschule
Renate Rombach im Interview mit Attila Budai 30.08.18

Heilpraktikerschule

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2018 39:37


Die Heilpraktikerin und Dozentin Renate Rombach arbeitet mit dem Emotionscode. Um diesen zu nutzen, bedient sie sich der Methode des bioenergetischen Austestens. Im Gespräch mit Attila Budai lässt sie ihn und die Zuhörer direkt spüren, wie das eigene Unterbewusstsein auf unterschiedliche Reize reagiert. Außerdem erfährt man, was passiert, wenn Gefühle nicht ausgelebt werden können und vom Körper als negative Emotion eingelagert werden und wie diese mithilfe des Emotionscodes wieder abgelöst werden können – bei Mensch und Tier.

Knowing Animals
Episode 62: Hearing and Smelling Animals in Literature with Sune Borkfelt

Knowing Animals

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2018 24:06


In this episode of Knowing Animals I am joined by Sune Borkfelt who is a PhD Fellow at School of Communication and Culture, Aarhus University, Denmark. Today we will discuss Sune’s forthcoming book chapter ‘Sensing Slaughter: Exploring the Sounds and Smells of Nonhuman Literary Encounters’, which will appear in a book edited by Jessica Ullrich and Alexandra Böhm, and which will be part of Rombach’s Cultural Animals Studies.   This episode of Knowing Animals is brought to you by AASA. AASA is the Australasian Animal Studies Association. You can find AASA on Facebook here: https://www.facebook.com/AASA-Australasian-Animal-Studies-Association-480316142116752/. Join AASA today!

New Books in German Studies
Margarete Fuchs, “The Moving View: The Gaze in the Modern German Literature” (Rombach Verlag, 2014)

New Books in German Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2018 20:39


In her new book Der bewegende Blick: Literarische Blickinszenierungen der Moderne (Rombach Verlag, 2014)—The Moving View: The Gaze in the Modern German Literature—Margarete Fuchs, a postdoc at the Philipps University of Marburg, examines the role of gaze and looking within modern German literature. By studying various important authors, such as Heinrich Mann, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Siegfried Kracauer and Walter Benjamin she uncovers several dimensions of the gaze. For example, she points at the modernist feelings of crisis— identity crisis, language crisis, crisis of anonymity, and loneliness and links all this with gaze. On the one hand, gazes might offer a solution by establishing social connectedness, but on the other hand, gazes can also be used for gaining power over other people. Interestingly, both of these dimensions and even further aspects can be found within modernist literature.   Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books Network
Margarete Fuchs, “The Moving View: The Gaze in the Modern German Literature” (Rombach Verlag, 2014)

New Books Network

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2018 20:51


In her new book Der bewegende Blick: Literarische Blickinszenierungen der Moderne (Rombach Verlag, 2014)—The Moving View: The Gaze in the Modern German Literature—Margarete Fuchs, a postdoc at the Philipps University of Marburg, examines the role of gaze and looking within modern German literature. By studying various important authors, such as Heinrich Mann, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Siegfried Kracauer and Walter Benjamin she uncovers several dimensions of the gaze. For example, she points at the modernist feelings of crisis— identity crisis, language crisis, crisis of anonymity, and loneliness and links all this with gaze. On the one hand, gazes might offer a solution by establishing social connectedness, but on the other hand, gazes can also be used for gaining power over other people. Interestingly, both of these dimensions and even further aspects can be found within modernist literature.   Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in Literary Studies
Margarete Fuchs, “The Moving View: The Gaze in the Modern German Literature” (Rombach Verlag, 2014)

New Books in Literary Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2018 20:39


In her new book Der bewegende Blick: Literarische Blickinszenierungen der Moderne (Rombach Verlag, 2014)—The Moving View: The Gaze in the Modern German Literature—Margarete Fuchs, a postdoc at the Philipps University of Marburg, examines the role of gaze and looking within modern German literature. By studying various important authors, such as Heinrich Mann, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Siegfried Kracauer and Walter Benjamin she uncovers several dimensions of the gaze. For example, she points at the modernist feelings of crisis— identity crisis, language crisis, crisis of anonymity, and loneliness and links all this with gaze. On the one hand, gazes might offer a solution by establishing social connectedness, but on the other hand, gazes can also be used for gaining power over other people. Interestingly, both of these dimensions and even further aspects can be found within modernist literature.   Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

BodyMindSpirit RADIO
In Touch Interviews w Marybeth Rombach Nelson & Her New Book!

BodyMindSpirit RADIO

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2017 57:00


In Touch Interviews with Marybeth Rombach Nelson. 7-8 p.m.  Author, Intuitive and Reiki Master, Marybeth Rombach Nelson joins to discuss her new book, “One Universal Source & You: Manifest The Life You Want Today.” Learn how to vibrate with the Universal source to manifest your life right now! You are a blank slate and you are capable of all things. Tapping into Universal Source-you by raising your vibration to match that which you want to manifest. Allow yourself to be the empowered soul that you are. Embrace self-affirmation and being you, your real self with respect and dignity. In reading this book you will become attuned to Universal Source.  Go to amazon.com/books to own your own copy and make sure to listen live!  For more information please go to bodymindspiritradio.com,  www.spiritualintuitivemb.com or email at marybeth@spiritualintuitivemb.com.

BodyMindSpirit RADIO
In Touch Interviews w Marybeth Rombach Nelson & Her New Book!

BodyMindSpirit RADIO

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2017 57:00


In Touch Interviews with Marybeth Rombach Nelson. 7-8 p.m.  Author, Intuitive and Reiki Master, Marybeth Rombach Nelson joins to discuss her new book, “One Universal Source & You: Manifest The Life You Want Today.” Learn how to vibrate with the Universal source to manifest your life right now! You are a blank slate and you are capable of all things. Tapping into Universal Source-you by raising your vibration to match that which you want to manifest. Allow yourself to be the empowered soul that you are. Embrace self-affirmation and being you, your real self with respect and dignity. In reading this book you will become attuned to Universal Source.  Go to amazon.com/books to own your own copy and make sure to listen live!  For more information please go to bodymindspiritradio.com,  www.spiritualintuitivemb.com or email at marybeth@spiritualintuitivemb.com.

BodyMindSpirit RADIO
In Touch Interviews with Marybeth Rombach Nelson and her book "On Angels Wings"

BodyMindSpirit RADIO

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2015 60:00


In Touch Interviews 1-2 p.m. Marybeth Rombach Nelson will join us to discuss her book, “On Angels Wings- Angelic Interventions” She will also discuss: near death experiences, how angels help intervene in your life, how to feel an angel's presence, how to talk to your personal angels, and what are their message, upcoming classes and more!

Artblog Radio
From the vault: Two founders of Fjord

Artblog Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2015


“It’s possible here in Philly” Lindsay Chandler and A.J. Rombach moved to Philadelphia after graduating from art school (Lindsay, from RISD, and A.J. from Boston University).  They didn’t know each other before moving here but became friends through their network of artist friends.  The two artists helped co-found Fjord space on Frankford Ave. last Spring, […]

Artblog Radio
From the vault: Two founders of Fjord

Artblog Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2015


“It’s possible here in Philly” Lindsay Chandler and A.J. Rombach moved to Philadelphia after graduating from art school (Lindsay, from RISD, and A.J. from Boston University).  They didn’t know each other before moving here but became friends through their network of artist friends.  The two artists helped co-found Fjord space on Frankford Ave. last Spring, […]

Artblog Radio
Fjord members Lindsay Chandler and A. J. Rombach on curating and Citywide – an Artblog Radio podcast

Artblog Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2013 17:07


“It’s possible here in Philly” Lindsay Chandler and A. J. Rombach moved to Philadelphia after graduating from art school (Lindsay, from RISD, and A.J. from Boston University).  They didn’t know each other before moving here but became friends through their network of artist friends.  The two artists helped co-found Fjord space on Frankford Ave. last […]

Artblog Radio
Fjord members Lindsay Chandler and A. J. Rombach on curating and Citywide – an Artblog Radio podcast

Artblog Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2013 17:07


“It’s possible here in Philly” Lindsay Chandler and A. J. Rombach moved to Philadelphia after graduating from art school (Lindsay, from RISD, and A.J. from Boston University).  They didn’t know each other before moving here but became friends through their network of artist friends.  The two artists helped co-found Fjord space on Frankford Ave. last […]

Promigeflüster
Promigeflüster 245 - Christian Wolff

Promigeflüster

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2012


Christian Wolff absolvierte die renommierte Berliner Max-Reinhardt-Schule und wurde danach in kürzester Zeit zu einem der beliebtesten Jungfilmstars der 50er Jahre. Auch auf der Bühne konnte der Schauspieler schon früh seine Vielseitigkeit unter Beweis stellen. In den 70er-Jahren begann Christian Wolffs TV-Karriere mit Serien wie "Derrick", "Hamburg Transit" oder "Nesthäkchen", aber auch mit Courths-Mahler-Verfilmungen und Ende der 80er-Jahre mit der ZDF-Vorabendserie "Forsthaus Falkenau". Doch auch während und nach seiner Zeit als Förster Rombach stand Christian Wolff immer wieder vor der Kamera. Daneben arbeitet er im Hörspielund im Synchronstudio. So lieh der Schauspieler berühmten Kollegen wie beispielsweise Pierre Brice, Alain Delon und Anthony Perkins seine Stimme.