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In this illuminating episode of Build Perspectives, we bring together two mass timber industry veterans to break down the economics, challenges, and future of this growing sector. Erica Spiritos and Roy Anderson to offer invaluable insights into the nuanced world of mass timber pricing and market dynamics. Episode Highlights: Understanding the Mass Timber Performance Index: Discover how the index helps quantify costs in an industry where traditional pricing models don't apply https://masstimberconference.com/report/content/mass-timber-price-index-2024/ Debunking the "Commodity" Myth: Learn why mass timber is a value-added product rather than a commodity, despite some industry confusion Capacity Reality Check: Current manufacturers are operating at under 50% capacity - addressing the "supply stalemate" holding back wider adoption Regional Mass Timber Ecosystems: Why building with locally-available species is crucial for sustainability and market growth The Complete Value Chain: From raw lumber to fabrication services, understanding the full cost structure of mass timber projects Supply Chain Challenges: Issues with lumber thickness, moisture content requirements, and forest management policies affecting the industry Future Outlook: Predictions on vertical integration, standardization, and the breaking of the "supply stalemate" Key Quotes: "Mass timber accounts for 0.5% of softwood lumber consumption in North America - it's a drop in the bucket." "I think our climate crisis and our housing crisis together are demanding [standardization] of us." "In the next couple years... we're going to see a 25-50% increase in capacity in the United States with new facilities coming online on both coasts." Connect With Our Guests: Erica Spiritos: VP at Timber Lab and Director of Washington Mass Timber Accelerator https://www.linkedin.com/in/erica-spiritos-7b34051b/ Roy Anderson: VP at Beck Group and author of the International Mass Timber Report https://www.linkedin.com/in/royanderson1968/ Resources: Last year's 2024 Entire Mass Timber Report https://masstimberconference.com/report/ Use discount code Build-Timber to register for only $995 ($380 savings!) https://masstimberconference.com/register/ www.Nichiha.com Episode Sponsor Advanciwww.AdvancingConstruction.com - Episode Sponsor A special thanks to Craig Rawlings and Arnie Didier for connecting us and supporting this important industry conversation. Don't miss our next episode! Subscribe to Build Perspectives and leave a review - as Tim's dad always says, "You can never have too much perspective."
BOXTOROW Super Bowl Show. BOXTOROW broadcast live from Radio Row at Super Bowl LIX. Donal Ware talks with Steve Wyche of NFL Network, Roy Anderson, cornerbacks coach for the Eagles, and Kevin Braxton offensive assistant of the Chiefs. Both coaches have HBCU ties. Download or listen.
BOXTOROW Super Bowl Show. BOXTOROW broadcast live from Radio Row at Super Bowl LIX. Donal Ware talks with Steve Wyche of NFL Network, Roy Anderson, cornerbacks coach for the Eagles, and Kevin Braxton offensive assistant of the Chiefs. Both coaches have HBCU ties. Download or listen.
A national, all-volunteer small business assistance organization is celebrating its 60th anniversary this year. They stay busy in our state with free mentoring services and workshops and today we have one of their volunteers on the phone. Mike Switzer interviews Roy Anderson, chair of the Charleston chapter of SCORE.
A team of entomologists and naturalists from Northern Ireland and Germany have described a new species of beetle, previously unknown to science. The colourful insect, nicknamed the "Fence-climber Twiglet Weevil" due to its prevalence on wooden fences, was discovered in County Down by Buglife Conservation Officer Joshua Clarke, during a night-time survey in September 2022. Introducing the Twiglet Weevil After the initial discovery and additional finds, Joshua partnered with Stewart Rosell, a PhD student based at Agri-Food and Biosciences Institute, to intensively search other sites with similar habitats; their efforts uncovered numerous specimens of the mysterious weevil. It was then discovered leading Irish entomologist, Dr. Roy Anderson, had independently collected specimens as early as 2011 that remained undetermined, which were later confirmed to be the same species. To formally evaluate and describe the new species, the Northern Irish team collaborated with Dr. Peter Stüben, a leading weevil researcher at the Curculio Institute in Germany. Dr Stüben described the weevil's morphology and provided its DNA barcode, available in the journal Weevil News. "The distinct features, like the raised reddish-brown structure on its back called the scutellum, along with genetic analysis of its mitochondrial DNA, revealed this weevil was not closely related to any known Western Palearctic species," stated Dr. Stüben. The new weevil has officially been named Xenosacalles irlandikos, which loosely translates as the Irish stranger weevil, reflecting that this colourful weevil probably arrived in Ireland from somewhere else. "This discovery highlights our incomplete understanding of global invertebrate biodiversity," said Stewart Rosell. "and the challenges this creates for entomologists identifying and understanding non-native invertebrates." Joshua Clarke added "The influx of non-native species to Ireland shows no signs of slowing down. Introductions frequently occur through the importation of plants and wood products and factors like climate change may enable introduced species to gain a foothold and proliferate in new regions." He continues "This includes non-native species being described outside of their native range, such as the flatworm Marionfyfea adventor (Jones & Sluys 2016) with probable introduction from New Zealand, and Anasaitis milesae (Logunov 2024), a jumping spider with speculative origins from the Caribbean." The authors had speculated the weevil could be an accidental introduction from another part of the world, like Australia. After publication, they had been contacted by a Tasmanian entomologist and weevil enthusiast, Otto Bell, who recognised the species as a possible undescribed weevil specimen he and his twin brother Bruno Bell had collected in Victoria, Australia. "We only know of several specimens of this previously undetermined species" stated Otto Bell. Two of those specimens are available in the Tasmanian Museum & Art Gallery collections, with senior curator Dr. Simon Grove on his Facebook page saying, "these specimens were collected by Dick Bashford in 2010 on King Island as by-catch during panel traps for monitoring Ips bark beetles and remained undescribed until now", adding "we agreed Xenosacalles irlandikos is our weevil." This exciting find by the dedicated Irish entomologists working together with international expertise in Germany, and now Australia, contributes to our knowledge of the varied insects present in Ireland, and provides further insight into global biodiversity. Research is currently ongoing to confirm origins, phylogeny, and ecology. Buglife is the only organisation in Europe devoted to the conservation of all invertebrates our aim is to halt the extinction of invertebrate species and to achieve sustainable populations of invertebrates. Invertebrates are vitally important to a healthy planet - humans and other life forms could not survive without them. The food we eat, the fish we catch,...
Derek spoke to Dr. Roy Anderson, Ireland's leading authority on terrestrial invertebrates and author of the book Slugs of Britain and Ireland: Identification, Understanding and Control at his home in Belfast. As Roy explains, slugs are remarkable and unusual creatures, especially when it comes to reproduction.
Inspired by “Jesus the same”
Wrapping up our series on the end of all things, Roy shared our theology on the final judgment. full blog: https://www.bendchurch.org/post/a-theology-of-the-end
So. Jetzt hast du es geschafft Plor, ich bin auch beim Surrealismus gelandet. Falls man den Film dort einsortieren kann. “Eine Taube sitzt auf einem Zweig und denkt über das Leben nach” erzählt in 39 Szenen kleine Ausschnitte aus dem Leben, die sehr kondensiert und überspitzt daher kommen, ihren Bezug zur Realität aber nie gänzlich verlieren. Es geht ihm darum, wie wir unser Leben leben, sagt Roy Anderson und meint damit offenbar die Ambiguität alltäglicher banaler Situationen, die eben manchmal zwischen Absurdität, Fröhlichkeit, Traurigkeit und hin und wieder auch Grausamkeit gleichzeitig stattfinden. So weiß man auch nicht immer eindeutig, ob man lachen, weinen oder manchmal kotzen will, wenn man die Bilder Roy Andersons sieht. Klingt als würde ich eine Kunstausstellung beschreiben, aber das ist es auch. Alle 39 Bilder könnten als Standbild an die Wand gehängt werden und es wäre eine gelungene Ausstellung. Ach, wenn wir grad dabei sind, welches der Bilder dieser Ausstellung würdest du dir kaufen, wenn du könntest, Plor? Du müsstest es dir ja nicht hinhängen, denn wer hat schon gern deprimierte Scherzartikelverkäufer an der Wand hängen…?
‘Cómo acercarnos a la poesía de César Vallejo'. En esta nueva edición, Patricia del Río recrea diversos pasajes de la vida del poeta más importante del Perú y América Latina, y de los más reconocidos en el mundo. Para ello, conversa con el escritor Víctor Vich, autor de libros de poesía contemporánea, y que en esta oportunidad nos aproxima al pasado, presente y futuro que el vate peruano quiso trasmitir en los poemas que componen ‘Trilce', una de sus obras más emblemáticas por la riqueza de su lenguaje y que hoy cumple 100 años de haberse publicado por primera vez. ‘Trilce, poema por poema' (Editorial Pesopluma, 2022), es el homenaje que Víctor Vich y Alexandra Hibbert le rinden a nuestro poeta inmortal. Igualmente, Camilo Fernández Cozman, doctor en Literatura Peruana y Latinoamericana, e investigador de la poesía de Vallejo, analiza en ‘Hacia una nueva lectura de Los heraldos negros' (Fondo Editorial de la Universidad de Lima, 2022), a los personajes y los estilos de pensamiento que conforman Los heraldos negros. Por su parte, el periodista Diego Pajares recomienda las películas "Canciones del segundo piso", de Roy Anderson (película inspirada en el poema "Traspié entre dos estrellas", del libro "Poemas humanos"); y "De todas las cosas que se han de saber", documental de Sofía Velásquez sobre las raíces de Vallejo en Santiago de Chuco. Mientras que el crítico literario y gerente de Escena libre, recomienda los libros de la semana: "La mujer", de Victoria Guerrero (poesía); "Literatura anónima", de Omar Guerrero (cuentos); y "Nación Anti. Ensayos de antropología lingüística andina. Lenguaje y pensamiento quechua. Traducción cultural y resistencia", de Odi Gonzáles. (ensayo). Las canciones que complementan este especial son voces de reconocidos intérpretes que le ponen música a la poesía del vate universal: ‘Idilio muerto', por Susana Baca', ‘Confianza', por Alejandro Susti, ‘Los heraldos negros', por Ricardo Herrera; ‘A mi hermano Miguel', por Mercedes Sosa; ‘Vallejo blues', por Rafo Ráez; ‘999 calorías', por Juanito C Bueno; y ‘Heces', por Susana Baca. Conducción: Patricia del Río ||| Producción: Amelia Villanueva ||| Edición de audio: Andrés Rodríguez ||| Episodio 31 – Tercera temporada.
‘Cómo acercarnos a la poesía de César Vallejo'. En esta nueva edición, Patricia del Río recrea diversos pasajes de la vida del poeta más importante del Perú y América Latina, y de los más reconocidos en el mundo. Para ello, conversa con el escritor Víctor Vich, autor de libros de poesía contemporánea, y que en esta oportunidad nos aproxima al pasado, presente y futuro que el vate peruano quiso trasmitir en los poemas que componen ‘Trilce', una de sus obras más emblemáticas por la riqueza de su lenguaje y que hoy cumple 100 años de haberse publicado por primera vez. ‘Trilce, poema por poema' (Editorial Pesopluma, 2022), es el homenaje que Víctor Vich y Alexandra Hibbert le rinden a nuestro poeta inmortal. Igualmente, Camilo Fernández Cozman, doctor en Literatura Peruana y Latinoamericana, e investigador de la poesía de Vallejo, analiza en ‘Hacia una nueva lectura de Los heraldos negros' (Fondo Editorial de la Universidad de Lima, 2022), a los personajes y los estilos de pensamiento que conforman Los heraldos negros. Por su parte, el periodista Diego Pajares recomienda las películas "Canciones del segundo piso", de Roy Anderson (película inspirada en el poema "Traspié entre dos estrellas", del libro "Poemas humanos"); y "De todas las cosas que se han de saber", documental de Sofía Velásquez sobre las raíces de Vallejo en Santiago de Chuco. Mientras que el crítico literario y gerente de Escena libre, recomienda los libros de la semana: "La mujer", de Victoria Guerrero (poesía); "Literatura anónima", de Omar Guerrero (cuentos); y "Nación Anti. Ensayos de antropología lingüística andina. Lenguaje y pensamiento quechua. Traducción cultural y resistencia", de Odi Gonzáles. (ensayo). Las canciones que complementan este especial son voces de reconocidos intérpretes que le ponen música a la poesía del vate universal: ‘Idilio muerto', por Susana Baca', ‘Confianza', por Alejandro Susti, ‘Los heraldos negros', por Ricardo Herrera; ‘A mi hermano Miguel', por Mercedes Sosa; ‘Vallejo blues', por Rafo Ráez; ‘999 calorías', por Juanito C Bueno; y ‘Heces', por Susana Baca. Conducción: Patricia del Río ||| Producción: Amelia Villanueva ||| Edición de audio: Andrés Rodríguez ||| Episodio 31 – Tercera temporada.
Complacency: a feeling of security, often while unaware of some potential danger, defect or the like X 28,666 7,745 Tom Burnett Psalms 90:12 Ecclesiastes 9:2 Ecclesiastes 8:15 1 Timothy 5:8 John 14:2, 2 Peter 3:10 1 Corinthians 2:29 Matthew 24:36-35 XV
Assistant Defensive Backs/Safeties coach Roy Anderson joins Gabe Henderson and Tatum Everett on Episode 153 of the Minnesota Vikings podcast. Roy opens up about transitioning into the new coaching staff, learning Ed Donatell's defensive scheme, working with the veterans while coaching up his new players and gives a glimpse into Draft night when the Vikings chose Lewis Cine with their 1st round pick. Tatum and Producer Jay Nelson also sit down to talk about all of the news leading into the 4th of July break, including: Lindsey Young's viral tweet on Brian O'Neil and the recent preseason ranking of the 2022 Vikings Secondary. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Assistant Defensive Backs/Safeties coach Roy Anderson joins Gabe Henderson and Tatum Everett on Episode 153 of the Minnesota Vikings podcast. Roy opens up about transitioning into the new coaching staff, learning Ed Donatell's defensive scheme, working with the veterans while coaching up his new players and gives a glimpse into Draft night when the Vikings chose Lewis Cine with their 1st round pick. Tatum and Producer Jay Nelson also sit down to talk about all of the news leading into the 4th of July break, including: Lindsey Young's viral tweet on Brian O'Neil and the recent preseason ranking of the 2022 Vikings Secondary.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Assistant Defensive Backs/Safeties coach Roy Anderson joins Gabe Henderson and Tatum Everett on Episode 153 of the Minnesota Vikings podcast. Roy opens up about transitioning into the new coaching staff, learning Ed Donatell's defensive scheme, working with the veterans while coaching up his new players and gives a glimpse into Draft night when the Vikings chose Lewis Cine with their 1st round pick. Tatum and Producer Jay Nelson also sit down to talk about all of the news leading into the 4th of July break, including: Lindsey Young's viral tweet on Brian O'Neil and the recent preseason ranking of the 2022 Vikings Secondary.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Join us for part 2 of our conversation with Roy Anderson of Onóra Whiskey. Co-Founder and former Notre Dame Football player, Te'von Coney, also jumps on the call.
Part 1 of our episode with Roy Anderson of Onóra Whiskey.
What conduct is becoming of disciples?
In another brand new interview, Brian talks to David Denman, who played Pam's high school sweetheart and former fiancé, Roy Anderson. David talks about finding out there was such a thing as acting school, working with Kate Winslet and her Cheez Whiz, and makes a riveting case in defense of Roy. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com
In another brand new interview, Brian talks to David Denman, who played Pam's high school sweetheart and former fiancé, Roy Anderson. David talks about finding out there was such a thing as acting school, working with Kate Winslet and her Cheez Whiz, and makes a riveting case in defense of Roy. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com
I had gallery owner Bill Rey on the podcast today and we spoke for quite a while, so this will be a two-part interview. This is part two.Bill is a very interesting guy who I've known for over 20 years. He's been in the art gallery business for almost 40 years, having started when he was 18 working with a Squash Blossom Gallery in Aspen, Vail, and Denver. This is a fun interview - especially for those people who're really interested in the history of the art business, dealers, and artists alike because Bill has an encyclopedic recall of all these artists that he's worked with and the places he's gone with them. We learn about Bill's background before art and go in-depth about Bill's relationships with the likes of Jim Reynolds and Robert Lougheed (both of which are amazing Western artists).It was a very fun time and Bill's such a character that he even had a Medicine Man Gallery shirt made to wear during the podcast. That's just the kind of guy Bill is.
I had gallery owner Bill Rey on the podcast today and we spoke for quite a while, so this will be a two-part interview. This is part one.Bill is a very interesting guy who I've known for over 20 years. He's been in the art gallery business for almost 40 years, having started when he was 18 working with a Squash Blossom Gallery in Aspen, Vail, and Denver. This is a fun interview - especially for those people who're really interested in the history of the art business, dealers, and artists alike because Bill has an encyclopedic recall of all these artists that he's worked with and the places he's gone with them. We learn about Bill's background before art and go in-depth about Bill's relationships with the likes of Jim Reynolds and Robert Lougheed (both of which are amazing Western artists).It was a very fun time and Bill's such a character that he even had a Medicine Man Gallery shirt made to wear during the podcast. That's just the kind of guy Bill is.
We're Building a show, He builds everything else Roy Anderson IV stops by the studio to chat
Roy Anderson is a 50 year veteran of the local radio business in St. Louis. He grew up in North St. Louis, and began working at radio stations as a teenager. When it comes to broadcasting, Roy has seen it all!In this episode, Roy tells his story of growing up in North City, making his way into broadcasting, the legendary stations and radio personalities in STL, how the game has changed, and some of the blatant racism and barriers he overcame along the way.Roy is one of the funniest, big hearted people you will ever find. He is fascinating, and simply a joy to speak with. We are grateful to share his story with the Speak Up St. Louis community!
Welcome to Montrose Fresh, from The Montrose Daily Press. It's FridayMay 7th, and we're here with local news, events, announcements, jobs, and more that matter to us here in Western Colorado. Today - City council members voted unanimously for the appointment of J. David Reed onto the city council. Today's episode is brought to you by Elevate Internet. Whether it's for your home or your business they offer the best speeds at the best price. Right now, if you refer a friend you can get $25 off! Give them a call for more information at 844-386-8744 or visit them at www.elevateinternet.com. Now, our feature story… On May 4th, city council members voted unanimously for the appointment of J. David Reed onto the city council. Reed will be filling the vacancy left by former council member Roy Anderson for the District III seat. City Clerk Lisa DelPiccolo administered the oath of office to the new District III City Council representative. Mayor Doug Glaspell and council members Barbara Bynum and Dave Frank congratulated and welcomed Reed. Bynum thanked both candidates, Charlane Oswald and J. David Reed, for applying to the position. She said that they had some amazing applicants who all have a heart for serving Montrose. Frank said the decision wasn't an easy one. They had incredible candidates that stepped forward. Reed joined the current council members in his new seat for the duration of the meeting and thanked the city council for the vote. Affordable housing, development of employment opportunities resulting in a livable wage, crime reduction, homelessness and diversity are significant issues that Reed wants to focus on during his term. Stay up to date on this story by visiting us at montrosepress.com - Now, some local history. This week's local history is brought to you by England Fence. England Fence is family owned and operated, and they're ready to help you build your dream fence, archway, gate, or deck. Give them a call at 970-249-4430, or head over to their website englandfence.com. On a warm August evening in 1995, a group of people responded to an ad in the local paper to discuss the possibility of creating a botanic garden for the City of Montrose. From that first meeting, the Montrose Botanical Society was formed. Why? For the purpose of creating the Montrose Botanic Gardens. A fifty-year lease from the City provided three and one half acres for the gardens. - And finally, before we go we'd like to remember the life of Billie Walker. Billie died peacefully on April 8th at Montage Creek Living Center. Billie was born in 1924 in Buffalo, Oklahoma. After her parents divorced, her mother remarried and the family then moved to Pueblo. After graduation from high school in Pueblo, Billie worked at the East Army Air Base during World War II. On June 8, 1945, she married Raymond Walker. They made their home in Monte Vista. They later owned and operated a cattle ranch southeast of Monte Vista. In 1979, Ray and Billie sold their ranch in the valley, and moved to Montrose for Ray's health. They enjoyed Montrose, appreciated the wonderful weather, and made many new friends. Billie didn't know a stranger, they always became friends. Billie discovered her talent as an artist in both oils and watercolors after moving to Montrose. She received many awards for her painting and was active in the Montrose Arts Guild. She was also an active member of the Montrose County Historical Society, the Methodist Church, and Bethlehem chapter of Eastern Star. Billie also received a Civil Air Patrol medal in 2015, for her work during the war. She is survived by her children, as well as seven grandchildren, and five great grandchildren. A celebration of her life will be held at the Montrose Methodist Church later this summer. Thank you for taking a moment with us today to remember and celebrate Billie's life. - That's all for today, thank you for listening! For more information on any of these stories visit us at montrosepress.com. And don't forget to check out our sponsor, Elevate Internet. Visit them at elevateinternet.com to learn more. For more than 137 years, The Montrose Daily Press has been dedicated to shining a light on all the issues that matter to our community. Go to montrosepress.com to subscribe for just $1.99 per week for our digital edition. You'll get unlimited access to every story, feature, and special section. Thank you and remember to tune in again next time on montrosepress.com or wherever you listen to podcasts. Support the show: https://www.montrosepress.com/site/forms/subscription_services/ See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Ventiseiesima puntata della quarta stagione. Parliamo di L'amico del cuore (Amazon) Sulla infinitezza di Roy Anderson e Lei mi parla ancora di Pupi Avati (Chili). Fabio Radelli presenta Your Honor (Sky) Stanze di Cinema è la trasmissione di Ciao Como Radio dedicata a cinema, cultura e spettacoli in onda tutti i venerdì alle ore 21:00 e i sabato alle ore 19.00. A cura di Marco Albanese, Carlo Cairoli e Daniele Valsecchi.
Anton Dolin is a dear old friend of mine. Coincidentally he's also the biggest Russian film critic and author. He's one of the nine critics to vote on the Screen International's jury award at the Cannes Film festival. Anton's the author of a dozen books on film and directors (Dogma 95, Jarmusch, Roy Anderson and other auteurs), as well as the editor-in-chief of the bi-monthly 'The Art of the Film' magazine. The man is well-read and well-watched. So I grilled him on the trials and tribulations of the critic's job, the best way to enjoy a film festival and why does he have this ONE STRANGE CHOICE OF A FILM in his top-10 list of the greatest films ever shot. Recorded in the lockdown over an instagram-live, excuse the quality of the sound! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/openfilmmakerstalk/message
Our friend Mickey had a simple question about audio mixing. The answer isn't quite so simple, and led us to have a full on film stuff episode about the ways that making films for mobile devices isn't the same as making films for televisions, computers, or projectors. We talk all about it in this episode, including: audio mixing, screen real estate, and why you should never watch Maze Runner on a plane. Extra special thanks to Mickey for inspiring this one! • Frequency distributions on recent iPhones are surprisingly good https://www.reddit.com/r/audiophile/comments/5kdvnv/iphone_7_plus_audio_measurements/ • We talk about Christopher Nolan's most recent sound mix issues, which have come to light again with the release of Tenet. https://www.theguardian.com/film/2020/nov/16/tenet-up-listen-christopher-nolan-interstellar-sound-mixing • Roy Anderson's films came up too, particularly his use of background action and detailed framing that's best left to a large screen size https://youtu.be/bLCtJkGKefU • The Dead Girls Detective Agency is one of Snap's originals, one of the only examples of made-for-vertical programming out there https://story.snapchat.com/p/cb699648-66fd-4483-8269-8b3c1511951d/5888840593047568 • We also alluded to a vertical music video we loved. We meant YELLE's Interpassion https://youtu.be/Neqp_R-xAYs • Screen real estate isn't just a film concept. It's also used in website design. One Utah Valley University class had a quick primer on graphic safe spaces and dynamic screen real estate http://desource.uvu.edu/dgm/2740/IN/steinja/lessons/04/l04_02.html?m=1 • Also John Wick! We love John Wick and think it's one of the greatest action movies ever made, from the actual fight choreography to the subtitle styling. Apparently other people also love it as much as we do https://www.reddit.com/r/JohnWick/comments/g6b2m0/john_wick_subtitles/ • If you make videos with subtitles, you should definitely read up about captioning standards. The one we follow is CEA-608, which we export to .scc files and upload straight to YouTube.
Andy Dobson was born in London and moved to live in Scotland before starting school. He spent the next fifteen years becoming a keen birdwatcher and bibliophile. He commuted daily from a small village on the edge of the Highlands to Glasgow High School. His family moved to Essex in 1970 and he completed school at King Edwards VI Grammar School, Chelmsford where he spent a lot of time measuring a museum collection of bird eggs and trying to quantify changes in their shape and size. He went to Imperial College, London University as a Botanist and emerged as a Zoologist in 1976, he then went to Oxford to for his PhD on “The Mortality Rates of British Birds”. During his time as a graduate student, he worked as a sous-Chef at the Cherwell Boathouse Restaurant, this generated a lifetime interest in food and its production. He was then a post-doc back at Imperial with Roy Anderson working on the population dynamics of host-parasite relationships, work which led him to Princeton to work on combinations of all of the above with Bob May. He was hired at the University of Rochester in 1987 and after three years returned to Princeton in 1990, he's lived there as a member of the Ecology and Evolution faculty ever since. Andy's research focuses on the role that infectious diseases play in the dynamics of wild animal and plant populations and how this modifies the structure of food webs. Thinking about how to develop mathematical models for these problems takes him to Serengeti, Yellowstone, Panama and along the coast of California. He also works on assorted problems in conservation biology and models for animal social systems and how these interact with the dynamics of different pathogens. This work is based on the wolf population in Yellowstone, but gains insights from the lion studies in Serengeti and a long-term fascination with primate social systems. Andy has published and edited several books: “Conservation and Biodiversity”, “Population Dynamics of Diseases in Natural Populations”, and “Unsolved Problems in Ecology.” He has been an external Faculty member at the Santa Fe Institute since 2011. Increasingly his time there will be spent writing a series of books that provide introductions to the scientific systems he has studied: “Serengeti Lives”, “Parasite Lives”, “Yellowstone Lives”. He is part of the SFI “Arrow of Time” working group that is examining “Timescales and Immunity”. Andy Dobson http://dobber.princeton.edu/
Autor: Nicodemus, Katja Sendung: Kultur heute Hören bis: 19.01.2038 04:14
Host Bret Amundson discusses the border closure effect on Canadian outfitters with Roy Anderson from the Saskatchewan Commission of Professional Outfitters, Trevor Montgomery from Trevor Montgomery, and Ron Bonneau from Alumarine Boats and Tru North RV and Marine. Please support our sponsors. Learn how you can be a sponsor here: ON X HUNT | LAKE OF THE WOODS TOURISM | TAZIN […] The post Show #14: Finding Fins – Canadian Outfitter Survival appeared first on Sporting Journal Radio.
Host Bret Amundson discusses the border closure effect on Canadian outfitters with Roy Anderson from the Saskatchewan Commission of Professional Outfitters, Trevor Montgomery from Trevor... The post Show #14: Finding Fins – Canadian Outfitter Survival appeared first on Fish Hunt Forever.
This week on Sporting Journal Radio, how is the Canadian border closure affecting U.S. anglers and hunters? What impact is that having on outfitters north of the border? Do they think the border will open before 2021? We ask all these questions and more with Roy Anderson, CEO of the Saskatchewan Commission of Professional Outfitters, Trevor […]
Covid-19 ve karantina hayatımızı, fikirlerimizi nasıl değiştirdi? Artık haz odaklı yaşamdan uzaklaşacak mıyız? Roy Anderson'dan insanın halleri ve var oluş krizi üzerine biricik bir film... İnsanları Seyreden Güvercin... Sinematografi ve biçem duyguyu aktarmada nasıl etkilidir? Epizodik anlatım... Ölümün karşısındaki her şey güçsüzdür... Var oluşsal çıkmazların bizi küçük düşürdüğü durumlar...Ve Oscarları silip süpüren Guguk Kuşu... Delilik ve normallik üzerine bir sohbet... Foucault'tan alıntılarla deliliğin tarihi... Otorite, akıl ve ruh sağlığının bozulmasına mı yol açıyor? Son olarak... Mükemmelliyetçilik narsizm midir? Vasat ve mükemmel sayılan arasında yaptığımız seçimler... Hepsi ve daha fazlası Klaket'in yeni bölümünde. Klaket'in yeni bölümü her salı 15.30'da radYU'da. https://radyu.yasar.edu.tr
12.12.19 #RolandMartinUnfiltered: Further impeachment hearings for Trump, Josh Planos joins the show to discuss College Football and the lack of Black Coaches in higher-up positions and Roy Anderson joins us later to discuss the history and legacy of Marcus Garvey. #RolandMartinUnfiltered partner: 420 Real Estate, LLC To invest in 420 Real Estate’s legal Hemp-CBD Crowdfunding Campaign go to http://marijuanastock.org
Roy Anderson is a stunt man in Hollywood who made a film about Nanny, Jamaica's national hero. Jamaican Diaspora - www.JamaicanDiaspora.com --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/jamaican-diaspora/support
Episode 3: Design Thinking — engineering a better supply chain Episode three is all about design thinking. Roy Anderson interviews Ron Volpe to go deep into what design thinking is and how it applies to the supply chain. So, what is “Design Thinking?” And how does it fit in with the supply chain? To understand the role of design thinking in the supply chain, you first have to recognize that in business, “the road is littered with products and services that nobody needs.” And often the reason those products failed is because the creators were designing the products based on what they thought the market wanted, rather than what the people actually wanted to buy. Design thinking is about designing products, services and processes, always with the end-user in mind. When you apply design thinking to the supply chain, you have to think of every stage of the process, from “farm to table.” And your ultimate objective has to be designing it for the end user. Is the process of design thinking a quick exercise or a long term process? Generally, there are three steps for crafting a solution with design thinking: empathy, ideation, and experimentation. So when you apply design thinking to the supply chain, rather than thinking, “well, this is what we think somebody wants, and this is how we think the supply chain would work,” you can do something called “walking the supply chain.” That means going from a manufacturing plant to a distribution center to a store so you can understand the full journey of each product. Understanding that supply chain journey helps build empathy around both what your customers and partners are looking for. And even more importantly, it gives you a better understanding of how your end users are using your product. Another way to gain insights is through analogous observations. That means finding industries that have unique forecasting challenges, visiting a company in that industry, and looking for analogous processes that you could take back into your own organization. One example is with the forecasting challenges on short shelf-life products. So consider the Los Angeles Times. If you think about newspapers, once they make the number of newspapers they’re going to make, that's it, they either sell them or they don't sell them. So understanding how many papers to circulate and where to distribute them is really critical. If you’re in a completely different industry than newspapers, but still have challenges forecasting short shelf-life products, then understanding how the Los Angeles Times manages the challenge in forecasting might be something you’d want to adopt. **How do you apply what you’ve learned from other industries to your own? ** Every workshop should have a challenge statement, and every analogous observation should be built and designed to relate to your particular challenge statement. It forces you to seek out the tools and craft to build a sustainable supply chain rather than just focusing on the product you’re selling. Supply chain people want to learn more about supply chain innovations. And learning from other industries becomes not just a way to learn more, but it becomes a way to develop alliances with other industries and companies. People love the workshops and analogous observations. You get the excitement of learning new ideas and getting inspired by other industry innovations. But the challenge is taking your learnings, developing prototypes, and committing to agree on the things you’re going to do in the next 30 days to pilot your learnings. The hard work is continuing to have your teams together focusing on those changes after the really exciting workshop. One way to do that is to create teams from both companies to keep the relationship alive and manage the creation of those ideas over an entire year. Carrying it forward for a year requires stamina and buy-in and a dedication to see it through. Is it difficult to keep the good ideas in practice without losing momentum? The critical component is getting senior leadership to buy-in. Without senior leadership buy-in from both organizations, you’re not going to get momentum to finish the task. The reality is senior leadership for both organizations need to agree and commit to saying, “I'm in it for the long haul.” Because if they’re not, it’s just a fun exercise to do for two or three days. The greatest buy-in you get is when you’re able to launch new ideas faster than you would in any other way. And the second boost in buy-in is when your solutions that you’re generating are more innovative solutions. So how does someone like a chief supply chain officer really benefit from a design thinking process? One benefit is to develop new ideas, get them launched faster, and drive innovation within the supply chain. The other benefit that comes out of this is that the relationship is infinitely better between the two organizations working together. You should be able to answer: who's the end consumer you’re designing for? Why is it better if that person ends up with a better product and a better process, and how can you work together to make this a deliverable? Start thinking about designing your supply chain as if your supply chain was an end-user product. If you think about designing for your end user, you start thinking differently about your relationship with the supply chain. What’s the biggest concern for people thinking about implementing design thinking? Design thinking has a messy aspect to it, and finance doesn’t want to be messy. It's sometimes a little harder to get the finance team to get outside of the box and be okay with the fact that you’re going to fail fast so you can succeed faster. It's certainly good to recognize that the way a finance team approaches this kind of process might be slightly different, but it's still very valuable to have finance as a part of the process. Subscribe to our podcast to hear more about the challenges and innovations in the supply chain wherever you get listen to podcasts.
The burning question: why is it called “procurement” anyway? It used to be called “buying,” then it was called “purchasing,” then “procurement.” For awhile it turned into “supply chain management,” but it’s also been called “strategic sourcing.” Confused yet? There’s no need to be, because whatever you call it, it’s always been about buying what your company needs. And while we’ve been quick to change titles, we’ve unfortunately been slow to adapt to new innovations. Does everyone actually hate procurement? No. What it comes down to is departmental silos and lack of communication. One department might see the results of procurement and be disappointed with them, without understanding the underlying restraints and methodology that go into procurement’s purchases. In other words, everyone’s a procurement professional, but not everyone is in the profession. Think about it like this: when you buy a car, or a refrigerator, or even your groceries, you’re doing the work of a procurement professional. But buying for a company with thousands of people and internal customers vastly increases the complexity of purchasing. The definition of quality Procurement spends a lot of time deciding what is the right product to buy. Sometimes they default by saying, “it’s all about quality,” but that’s a little more complicated than it seems at surface level. For instance, why would one person buy a Honda Civic and another buy a Mercedes Benz 300 series? They’re both quality cars, but their qualities are different. Procurement has to know if the quality of the product is meeting the quality standards of the customer. The definition of quality is always different depending on whom you ask, and it can be very difficult to define depending on your internal customer. Determining what your internal customers’ specifications are for quality is one of procurement’s most important jobs. The paradox of choice Another aspect of procurement is what goes into deciding how many choices to give internal customers. A classic article, “The Paradox of Choice” stipulates that the more choices you give customers, the more likely they are not to purchase anything at all. That can be true with your internal customers as well. Roy Anderson, Tradeshift’s Chief Procurement Officer, uses an example of a company that saw its spend skyrocket on spiral-bound notebooks in August and September—not because their employees needed spiral bound notebooks for work, because their children were going back to school. In this example, what the employees were ordering through procurement was not helping the company in any way. The once and future procurement: one tool vs. apps The old way procurement solved problems was by trying to get a single tool in front of the whole organization, then forcing everyone to use it. The problem with this approach is that employees have diverse and specialized needs so the tool that might work for one department could be wholly inadequate for another. The future of procurement is much more customer-centric: you need a suite of tools that meet the needs of diverse internal customers. The power of an app enabled network is that it lets people use applications that are unique to their requirements. The result is better solutions for your company, your suppliers, and more digital activity to generate data to do analysis on. Free for you: advice from the procurement pros The first piece of advice from Roy is to listen carefully to your internal customers. You can’t understand what they need unless you are willing to devote attention to them. When you do that, you can do a better job of balancing between the needs of the whole organization and the needs of your internal customers. Roy’s second piece of advice is to communicate clearly with your internal customers. They need to understand why changes are happening and why it’s important to streamline processes, add accuracy, and get digital data. Without communicating how that can help deliver better services, it will just cause internal confusion and consternation.
In the last decade procurement operations have primarily focused on purchasing effectiveness: improving the skill sets of their staff, developing good negotiators, driving strategic sourcing activity, utilizing e-procurement tools to get deeper penetration and more control of spend (a center-led solution). In this Podcast, Roy Anderson, a GoProcure Investor shares insight and profile characteristics of the next generation procurement executive. Read the article here
Efni Lestarinnar í dag: Á þessu ári eru hundrað ár liðin frá því að hinn áhrifamikli skóli Bauhaus var stofnaður í Weimar í Þýskalandi. Þar var lögð áhersla á að sameina margar greinar, arkitektúr, hönnun og iðngreinar. Stofnandi skólans var þýski arkitektinn Walter Gropius og var hann starfræktur í þremur borgum á árunum 1919 til 1933, og hafði mikil víða um heim. Í Lestinni í dag verður fjallað um sögu, hugmyndafræði og áhrif Bauhaus, gestir þáttarins verða þau Harpa Þórsdóttir, safnstjóri Listasafns Íslands, og Aðalsteinn Ingólfsson, listfræðingur. Norræn kvikmyndahátíð hefur göngu sína í Norræna húsinu í dag og stendur yfir til sunnudags. Þema hátíðarinnar í ár er húmorískur realismi og sænski kvikmyndaleikstjórinn Roy Anderson. Fjallað verður um Anderson í þætti dagsins og rætt við Arnbjörgu Mariu Danielsen, dagskrárstjóra Norræna hússins. Og á laugardaginn verða tuttugu ár liðin frá útgáfu plötunnar Things Fall Apart, allt sundrast - sem er krúnudjásnið í höfundarverki rappsveitarinnar The Roots - og Lestin fagnar því af lífs og sálar kröftum. Platan sækir titil sinn í bók nígeríska höfundarins Chinua Achebe og var tekin upp í Electric Lady-hljóðveri Jimi Hendrix, og stendur fyllilega undir sögulegu vigtinni sem því fylgir. Davíð Roach Gunnarsson fræðir hlustendur um Things Fall Apart og The Roots í Lestarferð dagsins. Umsjón: Anna Gyða Sigurgísladóttir og Eiríkur Guðmundsson.
Procurement professionals are seeing dramatic shifts in the workforce as large numbers of Baby Boomers retire. Young professionals are wondering how to handle the big changes their organizations are going through while picking up the slack. Roy Anderson shares his wealth of experience on what it takes to hit the ground running and start executing immediately upon being hired. ALL SHOW NOTES AND LINKS AT: negotiations.ninja/podcast
Ania Catherine is an artist and choreographer based in Los Angeles. Her work merges movement, film, and performance art and has been shown internationally at the British Film Institute, Art Basel Hong Kong, Peacock Theatre (London), LA Center for Digital Art, Agora Collective (Berlin), Forum des images (Paris), Dansmuseet (Stockholm), International Meeting on Screendance (Valencia, Spain), among others. She holds a master's degree from the London School of Economics, and through bodies explores the intersections of performance and her academic research in gender, sexuality, representation, and politics. In addition to her personal practice, she works internationally performing, choreographing, speaking, directing, and teaching. Topics Discussed In This Episode: Growing up in Orange County in California Gender and sexuality How “slow cinema” has influenced her work Films by Roy Anderson and Chantal Akerman Creating work that’s personal Misrepresentations of sexuality How she met her wife Surrounding yourself with people who project positive energy www.artistdecoded.com @artistdecoded
Imagine your SCM team as an orchestra, where the chief procurement officer is the conductor. As in any good orchestra, the conductor needs to bring in the right instruments, the right technologies and the right music, to create the optimal sound. It is a significant effort to bring in all the right players at the right time, to make that work. A CPO, running SCM, is responsible for elements of success such as the budget, head count, and the appropriate skill sets to exceed the corporate expectations, and drive the value proposition. Podcast by Roy Anderson
Roy Anderson, host of Locked on Saints, joins the show to make the selection at 11 for New Orleans the our mock draft and has insight on new 49ers RB Tim Hightower. The list of prospects visiting with the Niners pre-draft continues to grow, and a new rumor linking the Browns to Trubisky with the No. 1 pick. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Roy Anderson discusses his experience in the procurement environment and how one should measure procurement value. Visit our website at www.goprocure.com and contact us today!
I think this road test is too tough Sunday. Lack of pass rush will hurt. Saints perspective from Roy as well. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Will red-hot rookie Michael Thomas remain the No. 1 receiver in New Orleans? Will Mark Ingram get his feature back job back? Roy Anderson of Locked On Saints joins the show to help answer the team's most pressing fantasy football questions going into Week 10 and beyond. Also, Vinnie breaks down the Browns-Ravens game and provides the injury updates you need to know for the weekend. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Tonight, Jake Winters with our weekly movie review on Roy Anderson’s A Pigeon Sat on a Branch Reflecting on Existence. The third entry in the absurdist comedy “Living Trilogy.” Afterwards, we have the “Community Calendar” by Peter Svizeny and well as “News Beyond the Headlines” brought to us by Saif Hassan
Tonight, Jake Winters with our weekly movie review on Roy Anderson’s A Pigeon Sat on a Branch Reflecting on Existence. The third entry in the absurdist comedy “Living Trilogy.” Afterwards, we have the “Community Calendar” by Peter Svizeny and well as “News Beyond the Headlines” brought to us by Saif Hassan
Senior Testimonies from Hattie Corbett '15 & Roy Anderson '15
Hattie Corbett '15 & Roy Anderson '15 | Covenant College Seniors