Podcast appearances and mentions of sam rose

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Best podcasts about sam rose

Latest podcast episodes about sam rose

Screaming in the Cloud
Opening the  Managed NAT Gateway with Malith Rajapakse

Screaming in the Cloud

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2025 27:31


How does one manage to simplify the complexities of the NAT Gateway? In this episode of "Screaming in the Cloud," Corey Quinn interviews Malith Rajapakse, a DevOps engineer who has recently received acclaim for his blog post discussing the Managed NAT Gateway. Where AWS lacks in its documentation, Malith is a NATural at breaking things down. He's so great at it that Corey had to invite him on the show! Malith shares the story behind his popular post, his creative process, and his use of interactive diagrams and engaging content. He and Corey also discuss the challenges of documentation and making technical subjects more appealing. Thankfully, Malith has already done that in written form, so enjoy this episode as he speaks it into the world!Show Highlights(0:00) Intro(1:24) The Duckbill Group sponsor read(1:58) Malith's background before his blog post (4:21) Why Malith wrote about the Managed NAT Gateway(5:38) Corey's problems with Managed NAT Gateway and why Malith's blog post impressed him(10:05) The interactive elements of Malith's blog post and how they were made(12:21) Maltih's front-end experience(14:47) Transitioning from front-end to DevOps through JavaScript(16:20) The juxtaposition of Malith's blog post vs. AWS's official documentation(18:05) How AWS's documentation of the managed NAT gateway isn't user-friendly(22:27) Why Malith went all out for his first blog post(23:17) Corey's constructive feedback for Malith(26:05) Where you can find more from MalithAbout Malith RajapakseMalith is a Devops engineer creating visualisations at https://malithr.com/.LinksMalith's blog: https://malithr.com/Interactive AWS NAT Gateway: https://malithr.com/aws/natgateway/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/malith-rajapakse/Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/malithr.comTwitter: https://x.com/malithrajReddit: https://www.reddit.com/user/mdilraj/Sam Rose's blog: https://samwho.dev/Benjamin Dicken's blog post on IO devices and latency: https://planetscale.com/blog/io-devices-and-latencyJosh W Comeau's blog: https://www.joshwcomeau.com/Killed By Google: https://killedbygoogle.com/SponsorThe Duckbill Group: duckbillgroup.com 

Bureau Buitenland
Kamerleden in gesprek met UNRWA & Vrouwen bepalen de Poolse verkiezingen

Bureau Buitenland

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2025 24:04


Als er niet snel hulpgoederen Gaza worden binnengelaten, zullen veel inwoners sterven van de honger, waarschuwt UNRWA, de VN-organisatie die hulpverleent in het gebied. In Den Haag vond vanochtend een gesprek plaats tussen Kamerleden en de directeur van UNRWA in Gaza, Sam Rose. Danielle Hirsch, Kamerlid voor GroenLinks-PvdA, vertelt wat daar is besproken, en wat dat betekent in een tijd dat ook in Nederland steeds meer bestuurders zich uitspreken over de situatie in Gaza. (11:01) Poolse vrouwen bepalend in de presidentsverkiezingen Het kan een grote kans, óf een grote domper worden voor premier Tusk. Komende zondag gaan de Polen naar de stembus om een nieuwe president te kiezen. Als de regeringsgezinde kandidaat wint, wordt het makkelijker voor de huidige regering om haar plannen ten uitvoer te brengen. Dat gaat onder andere om het terugdraaien van strenge anti-abortuswetgeving. Maar juist rondom dat thema zijn progressieve Poolse vrouwen zo teleurgesteld in Tusk, dat ze bij deze presidentsverkiezingen dreigen weg te blijven. Over wat er op het spel staat voor Polen spreken we journalist en VPRO-collega Dore van Duivenbod.

The Inside Story Podcast
What's the latest case held against Israel at the ICJ?

The Inside Story Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2025 23:27


The International Court of Justice hears another case against Israel - in what could be a test of Israeli defiance of international law. More than 40 nations argue its ban on the UN agency for Palestinian refugees is a breach of the UN charter. So, can the world court hold Israel to account this time? In this episode: Sam Rose, Senior Acting Director, UNRWA Affairs in Gaza. Michael Lynk, Professor Emeritus, Faculty of Law, Western University. Gideon Levy, Columnist, Haaretz. Host: Folly Bah Thibault Connect with us:@AJEPodcasts on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook

That's what I call Science!
Episode 276: From Science Class to Scrubs

That's what I call Science!

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2025 27:50


In today's episode, Dr. Sam Rose opens the operating curtains to give us a glimpse into her journey of becoming a doctor. Dr Sam tells Olly and Tegan about how she went from high school to medical school to becoming a paediatric advanced trainee! She talks about the highs and the lows of becoming a doctor and what her future as a doctor for kids might look like!Show theme music: Kevin MacLeodThank you to the whole TWICS team for the incredible behind-the-scenes volunteering every week! Host: Dr Olly Dove (Insta: ols_dove)Co-host: Tegan Clark (Insta: scientist.tegan)Production: Hannah Moore (@HannahCMoore)Media & Promotion: Katya Bandow (Insta: @katyabandow)

The Inside Story Podcast
Will Israel's blockade on Gaza pressure Hamas?

The Inside Story Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2025 25:17


There are growing warnings that food supplies in Gaza will soon run out. Israel has cut off aid, risking the lives of more than two million Palestinians. Benjamin Netanyahu says he'll tighten the siege even further if Hamas doesn't accept a ceasefire extension. So, will his policy of starvation work? In this episode: Ahmad Al Najjar, Resident, Gaza. Sam Rose, Acting Director, UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian Refugees. Martin Griffiths, Director, Mediation Group International. Firas El Echi, Host, 'Here's Why' podcast. Host: Adrian Finighan Connect with us:@AJEPodcasts on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook

The Women's Football Podcast
A Cushing Blow

The Women's Football Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2025 39:34


Luke Edwards is joined by Clare McEwen and Darcey Slater as they look back at parts 2 and 3 of Man City v Chelsea, A thumping win for Man United, Leicester and West Ham on Home rolls and a record attendance in the Championship Plus February Manager of the Month for Step 3 Sam Rose of Oxford United on his award and a Clasico win for Real Madrid Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Nuus
Gaza ly erg honger

Nuus

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2025 0:16


Die Verenigde Nasies se agentskap vir Palestynse vlugtelinge, UNRWA, sê die streng Israelse blokkade van humanitêre voorrade kan ʼn hongerkrisis in Gaza veroorsaak. Meer as 50 000 Palestyne is volgens berigte dood sedert Israel se militêre aanval ná die slagting op 7 Oktober 2023 begin het. Israel het verlede week sy veldtog in Gaza hervat na ʼn skietstilstand van byna twee maande. Sam Rose van UNRWA sê elke dag sonder hulp in die streek beteken kinders gaan honger slaap, siektes versprei en tekorte neem toe:

Pod Save the World
Trump the “Peacemaker”

Pod Save the World

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2025 98:22


Tommy and Ben discuss Trump's inauguration, the tech oligarchy that was on display, foreign leaders in attendance, some of the most damaging and far-reaching executive orders from pulling out of the Paris Climate agreement to designating Mexican cartels terrorist organizations, and nomination updates on Tulsi Gabbard and Pete Hegseth. They also talk about the ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas and the debate over who gets credit for it in Washington DC, the continued agony of uncertainty for Israeli hostage families and civilians in Gaza, the failed TikTok ban, the arrest of South Korean president Yoon Suk Yeol, and a story of cancel culture coming after one man's enhancements in Italy. Then, Ben speaks to Sam Rose, Acting Director of UNRWA Affairs in Gaza, about the conditions on the ground and immediate humanitarian needs as the ceasefire takes effect. For a closed-captioned version of this episode, click here. For a transcript of this episode, please email transcripts@crooked.com and include the name of the podcast.

UOAK Presents Sekora Radio
Sekora Radio 097

UOAK Presents Sekora Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2024 61:46


UOAK Presents Sekora Radio. Episode 097 ❖ Featured tracks & more on Spotify → link.sekoramusic.com/spotify ❖ ❖ SEKORA RADIO ❖ Listen on your favourite platform → https://radio.sekoramusic.com Download & subscribe on Apple Podcasts → http://bit.ly/sekoraradio Tracklist: 1. Bound to Divide feat. Imallryt - Hope 2. Jope - Verdant 3. UOAK & CallumCantSleep - Alouma 4. dwelyr - Find Your Light (djimboh Remix) 5. Soul Engineers - Sandprints 6. Alex Pich & Blu Attic - Bhairavi 7. Kaz Benson - All That I Want (Matt Leger Remix) 8. TOMB - Mariner 9. Naws & Milesy feat. WLDFLOW3R - Horizon 10. Wilde ft Any Exit - Make Believing 11. Heard Right feat. Tailor - Your Company 12. Guy Didden & Mats Westbroek - Lifecycle 13. Sam Rose feat. WNSTN - Far Away 14. Sam Rose feat. WNSTN - Far Away (Blank Page Remix) ❖ FOLLOW UOAK ❖ Spotify → https://uoak.fanlink.tv/spotify Apple Music → https://uoak.fanlink.tv/apple Soundcloud → https://soundcloud.com/uoak Instagram → https://instagram.com/uoakmusic Youtube → https://youtube.com/uoak

RTÉ - Morning Ireland
17 killed and 32 injured in Israeli strike on school in Gaza's Nuseirat camp

RTÉ - Morning Ireland

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2024 7:55


UNRWA's Sam Rose discusses the humanitarian situation in Gaza as an Israeli strike kills at least 17 people.

RTÉ - News at One Podcast
UNRWA's polio efforts hampered by continued violence

RTÉ - News at One Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2024 7:57


We hear from Sam Rose, Senior Deputy Director of UNRWA Affairs in Gaza.

Smart Kitchen Show from The Spoon
Sam Rose and Why She Loves Building Consumer Products

Smart Kitchen Show from The Spoon

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2024 39:59


Today's conversation is with Sam Rose, who has spent her entire career unraveling the complexities of bringing consumer products—often kitchen-related—to life. I first met Sam about eight years ago, introduced through our mutual friend, Scott Heimendinger, who was collaborating with Sam on developing a next-generation coffee grinder. But this wasn't just any coffee grinder. It was a cutting-edge, tech-forward device that could sense the freshness of the beans, use burr grinders to achieve perfect consistency, and more. In other words, it was exactly the kind of innovative kitchen gadget that intrigued me, especially as someone who organized the Smart Kitchen Summit. However, Sam's journey didn't begin with coffee grinders. Her first product was much simpler—at least from a technology standpoint—and was inspired by a personal frustration. Disgusted with a cheap silicone spatula, Sam thought, "Why don't I just make my own?" And that's exactly what she did. Throughout her entrepreneurial journey, Sam has not only mastered the art of creating and selling her own consumer products to hundreds of thousands of customers but has also developed a comprehensive set of business processes and technologies to help others do the same. To top it off, she's now investing in companies she believes she can help succeed—focusing on physical consumer products, a category that many investors shy away from. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

RTÉ - Drivetime
Aid Workers killed in Ukraine and Gaza

RTÉ - Drivetime

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2024 12:03


The International Committee of the Red Cross has confirmed that three of its staff were killed today in the Donetsk region. In Gaza UNRWA said six of its staff were killed in an Israeli air strike overnight. For reaction to these attacks on humanitarian relief groups UNRWA spokesman in Gaza, Sam Rose and Head of the Irish red cross, Deirdre Garvey.

RTÉ - Drivetime
Polio Vaccinations due to begin on Sunday in Gaza

RTÉ - Drivetime

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2024 7:14


The World Health Organization said today it has delivered 1.2m doses of the polio vaccine to Gaza. The initiative follows the reporting of the first case of the childhood disease in the territory in a quarter of a century. Sam Rose is UNRWA spokesperson.

La W Radio con Julio Sánchez Cristo
“UNRWA sigue actuando en Gaza”: director de operaciones tras orden de evacuación israelí

La W Radio con Julio Sánchez Cristo

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2024 14:55


Sam Rose, director de operaciones de la UNRWA en Gaza, se refirió en La W a la suspensión de las operaciones de ayuda de la ONU tras la orden de evacuación israelí.

Eelke Kleijn | DAYS like NIGHTS Radio
DAYS like NIGHTS 352 - Katlan Festival, Budapest, Hungary - Part 2

Eelke Kleijn | DAYS like NIGHTS Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 12, 2024 60:00


Recorded live at Katlan Festival on Saturday July 13th in Budapest, Hungary Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/katlanfestival Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/katlanfestival DAYS like NIGHTS: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/dayslikenights Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dayslikenights Web: https://www.dayslikenights.com Subscribe to the podcast RSS:
feed: https://feeds.soundcloud.com/users/soundcloud:users:1525250/sounds.rss
 . 01. Deer Jade - Cosmic Dream [Kompakt] 02. Jan Blomqvist & Rodriguez Jr. - Destination Lost (Arodes Remix) [Disconnected] 03. Sam Rose & Solanca - One Step Further [Songspire] 04. M.O.S. - Night Owls [Melody of the Soul] 05. ID 06. Hunter/Game - Stars feat. Noah Kuala (Mano le Tough Remix) [Just This] 07. Eelke Kleijn - Regenerator [DAYS like NIGHTS] 08. Martin Eyerer & Alexkid - Namibia (Big Kahuna Edit) [Sincopat] 09. ANUQRAM & Alexey Sonar - Cheerful Garden [Anjunabeats] 10. Mike Griego - Back in Trance [A Line In The Sand] 11. Vomee - Bring it Back [Siamese] 12. Simon Doty - Push The Tempo [Anjunadeep] This show is syndicated & distributed exclusively by Syndicast. If you are a radio station interested in airing the show or would like to distribute your podcast / radio show please register here: https://syndicast.co.uk/distribution/registration

Frontend First
Blog Post Club: Queueing - An interactive study of queueing strategies

Frontend First

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2024 46:27


Sam and Ryan read and discuss a fantastic interactive blog post about queueing in HTTP written by Sam Rose.Timestamps:0:00 - Intro6:57 - Queueing: An interactive study of queueing strategies9:05 - Why do we need queues?13:16 - FIFO and timing out17:55 - LIFO20:58 - Priority queues25:21 - Active queue management29:08 - Comparing queues36:32 - ConclusionLinks:Queueing: An interactive study of queueing strategiesUp and Down the Ladder of Abstraction

RTÉ - Morning Ireland
UNWRA calls on Hamas, Israel 'not to misuse' its schools

RTÉ - Morning Ireland

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2024 4:47


Sam Rose, UNRWA Director of Planning, discusses the impact of the latest bombings of Gaza which have hit some of their schools.

Hanselminutes - Fresh Talk and Tech for Developers
Computer Science Visualizations with Sam Rose

Hanselminutes - Fresh Talk and Tech for Developers

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 11, 2024 33:43


Sam Rose creates visual introductions to computer science topics. Each post takes about a month to make, and he tries to cover foundational topics in a way that's accessible to beginners. Scott chats with Sam about the how and why of making such bespoke and sophisticated blog posts.Visit Sam Rose's site!Load BalancingMemory AllocationHashingRetriesBloom FiltersNumbersQueueingBartosz Ciechanowski's Mechanical WatchAndy Matuschak

Newshour
Israeli army warns Gaza City residents to flee

Newshour

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 10, 2024 47:32


Israeli leaflets dropped across Gaza City warn inhabitants to leave in advance of a new round of urban combat. An estimated quarter-of-a-million people are still living there. We hear from Israeli spokesman David Mencer and Sam Rose from UNWRA, the UN agency for Palestinian refugees in Gaza. Also in the programme: US actor Alec Baldwin appears in court accused of involuntary manslaughter after fatal filmset shooting; and the UK's 'sugar tax' shown to sharply reduce consumers' sugar intake.(Photo: Palestinians inspect damage after Israeli forces withdrew from Shejaiya neighborhood in eastern Gaza city. Credit: REUTERS/Dawoud Abu Alkas)

RTÉ - Morning Ireland
'There is no safe place' - Gazans shocked after Israel hits UN school

RTÉ - Morning Ireland

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2024 8:41


Karin Huster, Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders, describes the situation at the hospital in Deir al-Balah Karin and Sam Rose, Director of Planning at UNRWA, on the humanitarian situation facing civilians in Gaza as the Israel/Hamas war enters its ninth month.

The Changelog
Why you shouldn't use AI to write your tests (News)

The Changelog

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2024 8:46 Transcription Available


Swizec's article on not using AI to writes tests, LlamaFs is a self-organizing file system with Llama 3, a Pew Research analysis confirmed that the internet is full of broken links, Sam Rose built a spectacular interactive study of queueing strategies & Jordan Cutler shares a real-life experience of him writing clear/readable code… and it backfiring.

Changelog News
Why you shouldn't use AI to write your tests

Changelog News

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2024 8:46 Transcription Available


Swizec's article on not using AI to writes tests, LlamaFs is a self-organizing file system with Llama 3, a Pew Research analysis confirmed that the internet is full of broken links, Sam Rose built a spectacular interactive study of queueing strategies & Jordan Cutler shares a real-life experience of him writing clear/readable code… and it backfiring.

Mostly Technical
36: Business Dad

Mostly Technical

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2024 79:36


Ian & Aaron discuss Aaron's DHH interview, Ian's phishing fiasco, and are joined by special guest Sam Rose to talk about high effort content & a lot more.Sponsored by LaraJobs & Screencasting.com.Interested in sponsoring Mostly Technical?  Head to https://mostlytechnical.com/sponsor to learn more.(00:00) - A Rough Morning (08:26) - It's Crunch Time (13:49) - Aaron Interviewed DHH (29:16) - Try Hard Studios Update (36:09) - Laravel vs. React Video (38:45) - The DHH No Man (48:34) - High Effort Content w/ Sam Rose (01:12:54) - Are You A Neat Man? (01:15:08) - iPhone Tracking (01:17:49) - Beermosa Links:Ian's Phishing Email (on Twitter)Aaron's DHH InterviewLaravel vs. React (on YouTube)Sam Rose's websiteAn example of Sam's "high effort content" (on Twitter)

Changelog Master Feed
Why you shouldn't use AI to write your tests (Changelog News #96)

Changelog Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2024 8:46 Transcription Available


Swizec's article on not using AI to writes tests, LlamaFs is a self-organizing file system with Llama 3, a Pew Research analysis confirmed that the internet is full of broken links, Sam Rose built a spectacular interactive study of queueing strategies & Jordan Cutler shares a real-life experience of him writing clear/readable code… and it backfiring.

Power and Politics
Deadly Rafah airstrike sparks international outrage

Power and Politics

Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2024 56:05


May 27, 2024 - Israel struck a tent camp in Rafah, where thousands were sheltering. Sam Rose, director of planning for UNRWA, brings us the latest from Rafah. Plus, author Andrew Lawton tells us what his new book Pierre Poilievre: A Political Life reveals about how the Conservative Party leader would govern Canada.

RTÉ - Drivetime
Widespread condemnation of Israel after dozens killed following an Israeli airstrike in Rafah

RTÉ - Drivetime

Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2024 8:36


There has been widespread international condemnation of Isreal after dozens of people were killed yesterday following an Israeli airstrike on a refugee camp in Rafah. Sam Rose, Director of Planning with UNRWA in Gaza.

RTÉ - Morning Ireland
Estimated 810,000 people have fled Rafah in the past two weeks

RTÉ - Morning Ireland

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2024 6:29


Sam Rose, Director of Planning with UNRWA, has the latest on the humanitarian situation in Gaza as the charity estimates over 810,000 people have fled Rafah in the past two weeks.

Statistically Speaking
AI: The Future of Data

Statistically Speaking

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2024 33:54


  With the public release of large language models like Chat GPT putting Artificial Intelligence (AI) firmly on our radar, this episode explores what benefits this technology might hold for statistics and analysis, as well as policymaking and public services.  Joining host, Miles Fletcher, to discuss the groundbreaking work being done in this area by the Office for National Statistics (ONS) and across the wider UK Government scene are: Osama Rahman, Director of the ONS Data Science Campus; Richard Campbell, Head of Reproducible Data Science and Analysis; and Sam Rose, Deputy Director of Advanced Analytics and Head of Data Science and AI at the Department for Transport.  Transcript MILES FLETCHER Welcome again to Statistically Speaking, the official podcast of the UK's Office for National Statistics. I'm Miles Fletcher and, if you've been a regular listener to these podcasts, you'll have heard plenty of the natural intelligence displayed by my ONS colleagues. This time though, we're looking into the artificial stuff. We'll discuss the work being done by the ONS to take advantage of this great technological leap forward; what's going on with AI across the wider UK Government scene; and also talk about the importance of making sure every use of AI is carried out safely and responsibly. Guiding us through that are my ONS colleagues - with some of the most impressive job titles we've had to date - Osama Rahman is Director of the Data Science Campus. Richard Campbell is Head of Reproducible Data Science and Analysis. And completing our lineup, Sam Rose, Deputy Director of Advanced Analytics and head of data science and AI at the Department for Transport. Welcome to you all. Osama let's kick off then with some clarity on this AI thing. It's become the big phrase of our time now of course but when it comes to artificial intelligence and public data, what precisely are we talking about? OSAMA RAHMANSo artificial intelligence quite simply is the simulation of human intelligence processes by computing systems, and the simulation is the important bit, I think. Actually, people talk about data science, and they talk about machine learning - there's no clear-cut boundaries between these things, and there's a lot of overlap. So, you think about data science. It's the study of data to extract meaningful insights. It's multidisciplinary – maths, stats, computer programming, domain expertise, and you analyse large amounts of data to ask and answer questions. And then you think about machine learning. So that focuses on the development of computer algorithms that improve automatically through experience and by the use of data. So, in other words, machine learning enables computers to learn from data and make decisions or predictions without explicitly being programmed to do so. So, if you think about some of the stuff we do at the ONS, it's very important to be able to take a job and match it to an industrial classification - so that was a manually intensive process and now we use a lot of machine learning to guide that. So, machine learning is essentially a form of AI. MILES FLETCHERSo is it fair to say then that the reason, or one of the main reasons, people are talking so much about AI now is because of the public release of these large language models? The chat bots if you like, to simpletons like me, the ChatGPT's and so forth. You know, they seem like glorified search engines or Oracles - you ask them a question and they tell you everything you need to know.  OSAMA RAHMANSo that's a form of AI and the one everyone's interested in. But it's not the only form – like I said machine learning, some other applications in data science, where we try in government, you know, in trying to detect fraud and error. So, it's all interlinked.   MILES FLETCHERWhen the ONS asked people recently for one of its own surveys, about how aware the public are about artificial intelligence, 42% of people said they used it in their home recently. What sort of things would people be using it for in the home? What are these everyday applications of AI and I mean, is this artificial intelligence strictly speaking?  OSAMA RAHMANIf you use Spotify, or Amazon music or YouTube music, they get data on what music you listen to, and they match that with people who've been listening to similar music, and they make recommendations for you. And that's one of the ways people find out about new music or new movies if you use Netflix, so that's one pretty basic application, that I think a lot of people are using in the home.  MILES FLETCHERAnd when asked about what areas of AI they'd like to know more about, more than four in 10 adults reported that they'd like to know better how to judge the accuracy of information. I guess this is where the ONS might come in. Rich then, if I could just ask you to explain what we've been up to, what the Data Science Campus has been up to, to actually bring the power of artificial intelligence to our statistics. RICHARD CAMPBELLThanks Miles. Yeah, a few things that ONS has been doing in this very broad sphere of artificial intelligence, and it's really in that overlap area that Osama mentioned with data science, so I'd pick out a few sorts of general areas there. So, one is automation. You know, we're always keen to look at how we can automate processes and make them more efficient. It frees up the time of our analysts to conduct more work. It means that we are more cost effective. It means that our statistics have better quality. It's something we've done for years but AI offers some new opportunities do that. The other area which Osama touched on is the use of large language models, you know, we can get into the complexities of data. We can get much more out of data; we can complete tasks that would have been too complex or too time consuming for real data scientists. And this is good news, actually, because it frees up the data scientists to add real valuable human insights. Some of the places we've been using this. So, my team for example, which is called reproducible data science and analysis, and we use data science and engineering skills to develop computer systems to produce statistics where the data is a bit big, or what I tend to call a bit messy or a bit complex for our traditional computer systems. We use AI here through automation, as I mentioned, you know, really making sure that we're making systems as efficient and high quality as possible. Another thing we're interested in doing here is quite often we're doing something called re-platforming systems. So, this is where we take a system that's been used to produce our statistics for years and years and look to move it on to new technology. Now we're exploring with Osama's team the potential for AI to do a lot of the grunt work for us there to sort of go in and say, right, what is going on in this system? How is it working, how we can improve it? One other thing I'll mention, if Osama doesn't mind me treading on the territory of his team, is the Stats Chat function that we've used on the ONS website. So, this is using AI to enable a far more intelligent interrogation of the vast range of statistics that we've got, so it no longer requires people to be really knowledgeable about our statistics. It enables them to ask quite open questions and to be guided to the most relevant data.  MILES FLETCHERBecause at the moment, if you want to really explore a topic by getting into the depths of the data, into the granular data, you've really got to know what you're looking for haven't you? This again is an oracle that will come up with the answers for you and just present them all ready for your digestion.  RICHARD CAMPBELLThat's right. And I tend to think of these things as a starting point, rather than the whole answer. So, what it's enabling you to do is to get to the meat of the issue a lot quicker. And then you can focus your energy as a user of our statistics in doing the analysis that you want rather than thinking “how do I find the right information in the first place?” MILES FLETCHEROsama, that sounds like an intriguing tool. Tell us precisely how it works then, what data does it capture, what's in scope? OSAMA RAHMANSo the scope is publicly available documents on the ONS website. And there's a specific reason for that. So, these AI tools, you can have it look at the whole internet, you can have it look at subsets of data, you can point it to specific bits of data, right? And what's important for us is actually the work of the ONS, that statistics we produce are quality assured and relevant. And by providing these guardrails where you know, Stats Chat only looks at ONS published data, we have a degree of assurance that the data coming back to the user is likely to be of good quality and not based on who knows what information. MILES FLETCHERBecause when you use, to name one example, ChatGPT for example, the little warning comes back saying “ChatGPT can make mistakes, consider checking important information.” And I guess that's fundamental to all this isn't it. These tools, as intelligent as they might be, they're only as good - like any system - as the information that's going in the front end.  OSAMA RAHMANThat's absolutely correct, which is why we have these guardrails where, you know, the functionality on Stats Chat is focused on published ONS information.  MILES FLETCHERThat does mean that something that's offered by an organisation like the ONS does have that sort of inbuilt potential to be trustworthy and widely used. But of course, you might say, to have a really good tool it's got to be drawing on masses of information from right across the world. And it's interesting how, and you mentioned that it's open-source data, of course, that's most available for these tools at the moment, but you're seeing proprietary data coming in as well. And this week, as we're recording this, the Financial Times, for example, has announced that it's done a deal with one of the big AI firms to put all of its content into their database. Do you think there's scope for organisations like the ONS around the world to collaborate on this and to provide you know, really powerful tools for the world to exchange knowledge and data this way? OSAMA RAHMANSo there is collaboration going on. There's collaboration, both within government - we're not the only department looking at these sorts of tools; there's also collaboration internationally. I think the difference you know... our information on our website is already publicly available. That's why it's on the net, it is a publication. But there's a difference in situation with the FT where, you know, a lot of the FT information is behind a paywall. MILES FLETCHERYeah, it has a sort of democratising tendency that this publicly available information is being fed into these kinds of sources and these kinds of tools. That's big picture stuff. It's all very exciting work that's going on. But I'll come back to you Rich just for a second. What examples practically, because I think that the Stats Chat project is still a little way off actually being available publicly, isn't it? RICHARD CAMPBELLYeah, I think it is still a little way off. So, I think the key thing that we're doing at the moment and something we've done for years, but AI is helping is the use of automation principles. Just making things quicker. Now in a data science context, this might be going through very, very large data sets, looking for patterns that it would take an analyst a huge amount of time and probably far too much patience than they would have to find. MILES FLETCHERSo for example, in future then we might find that - and this is one issue that recurs in these podcasts - obviously about the limitations of official statistics is they tend to lag.  This is another way of making sure that data gets processed faster. And therefore, the statistics are more timely, and therefore the insights they provide are really much more actionable than perhaps they might be at the moment.  RICHARD CAMPBELLYeah, that's spot on. There's potential in there for pace of getting the statistics from the point that the data exists to getting it into published statistics. There's potential there for us to be able to combine and bring more sources together. There's also some behind the scenes stuff that helps as well. So, for example, quite often we are coding up the systems to produce new or improved versions of official statistics. And we're looking at the possibility of AI speeding up and supporting that process, perhaps for example, by giving us an initial draft of the code. Now, why does that matter for people in the public, you know, does anybody actually care? Well, what it means is that we can do things quicker and more to the point we can focus the time of our expert data scientists and other analysts in really helping people understand the data and the analysis that we're producing.  MILES FLETCHEROkay, so lots of interesting stuff in the pipeline there. But I'd like to bring in Sam now to talk about how AI is actually being used in government right now. Because in your work Sam at the Department for Transport, you've actually been working on some practical projects that have been gaining results in the real world. SAM ROSEWe have - we've been doing loads actually, and my poor team probably haven't had any time to sit still for the last 18 months or so. And I think like most ministerial departments, we're doing lots and lots of work to automate existing processes, so much like Rich has alluded to in your space, we're looking at the things that take up most of the time for our policy colleagues and looking at how we can automate those. So, for example, drafting correspondence, or automating policy consultation processes, or all of that kind of corporate memory type stuff. Can we mine big banks of data be it text or otherwise and summarise that information or generate new insights that we wouldn't have been able to do previously? But I think slightly more relevant maybe for you guys, is the stuff we're doing on creating new datasets or improving datasets. So, a few things. We're training a machine learning model to identify heavy goods vehicles from Earth observation data. And that's because we don't have a single nationally representative data set that tells us where these heavy goods vehicles park or stop outside of existing kind of service stations, and what we want to understand is where are those big areas of tarmac or concrete where they're all parking up as part of their routine journeys, so that we can look at when we're rolling out the green infrastructure for heavy goods vehicles, we're looking at where the important places that we need to put that infrastructure are. And that data doesn't exist at the moment. So we're using machine learning to generate a new dataset that we wouldn't otherwise have. MILES FLETCHERAnd how widespread are these kinds of projects across government in the UK now? SAM ROSESo I think that there are loads of different things and I wouldn't be able to speak on behalf of everybody but I know lots of different areas of government are looking at similar kind of automation and productivity projects like our kind of drafting all of the knowledge management area. I think there's things like Osama alluded to where DEFRA for example, I think they're using Earth observation data to assess biodiversity for example. So, there's lots of stuff that's common between lots of government departments, and then there's lots of stuff that's very specific to individual departments. But all along the way there's lots of collaboration and working together to make sure we're all learning continuously and where we can collaborate on a single solution that we are. MILES FLETCHERI guess one of the central public concerns about the spread of AI once again that it will cost jobs, that it will do people out of the means of making a living that they've become used to. And I guess from government's point of view, it's all about doing much, much more with the resources that we have and making government much more effective.  SAM ROSEYes, absolutely. And it's not necessarily - and I think Rich mentioned this earlier - it's not necessarily about doing our jobs for us. It's about improving how we can do our jobs and being able to do more with less, I think, so freeing up the human to do the bit that the human really needs to do and enabling the technology to do their very repeatable very automatable parts of the job. And indeed, in some instances, this technology can actually do the work better than humans. So be it identifying really complex patterns and datasets, for example. Or a good example from us in transport is we've trained machine learning model to be able to look at images of electric vehicle charge point installations and be able to identify that similar or the same image that has been submitted more than once. Now that's estimated to have saved over 130 man years of time, you know, that's not a task that we would have been able to do with just humans. MILES FLETCHERAnd you would have to be pretty alert as a human and have a very high boredom threshold to process all that material yourself and spot the fraudsters. SAM ROSEYeah, well, quite. And that's, I think, a really nice example of where again, it's not taking our jobs, but it's enabling us to do something that we wouldn't have been able to do previously and improve the service that we're providing. MILES FLETCHERNow, our ability collectively, whatever sort of organisation we're involved in, our ability to make the most of AI depends on of course having the right skills, and Osama I guess this is where the Data Science Campus comes in as the government's Centre of Excellence for data science, principally, but I guess also in this context, artificial intelligence as well. What work have you been involved in to make sure that the supply of those skills and knowledge is on tap for government? OSAMA RAHMANSo firstly, I would say we are a (one) centre of excellence within government. I think you know, what's been brilliant to see since the campus was set up has been that actually more and more government departments have excellent data science, AI teams. Sam leads one at DfT. There is, of course, 10DS (or 10 Data Science) at number 10 [Downing Street]. There's a Cabinet Office team. So, there's lots of teams that now work in this area. Some of the stuff we've been doing is we have various training programmes that we have run. We have senior data masterclasses so that actually, senior leaders within government can understand better the power of data. 10DS, Sam's area, have all been running hackathons, which actually improve skills as well. So, it's no longer just us who are building capability. I think it's great to see that across government and across departments there are teams improving skills within their departments, bringing in others from outside to work with them. So, there's a lot going on there. SAM ROSEJust really quickly, it's important to think that skills are not just skills of data scientists, but skills of everybody's ability to use this kind of technology. There's a lot of work going on at the moment looking at what we need to do both internally to government, but also out there in all of our sectors to make sure that our workforce has the skills it needs to be able to more rapidly kind of adopt and be able to take advantage of all the benefits that this technology brings to us. I mean from a very personal point of view, and I don't really know all of the answers to this, but you know, I'm thinking about what actually, if large language models can help us to generate efficient code, then actually, what skills do I need in my data scientists? If it's not writing code, is it actually the analytical thinking and being able to understand how to apply these kinds of technologies? So, I think it changes what we need in the workforce that we have.  MILES FLETCHERInevitably, though, if we're talking about this kind of technology being rolled out across government and thereby increasing the power of government to know more about more people, then concerns obviously, about the ethical use of data come in...  RICHARD CAMPBELLMaybe if I can just come in on that one Miles. Using data safely and responsibly - it's built into our very DNA in ONS and across government. And our keenness to sort of learn how to do new tools new techniques is always going to be tempered by our need to ensure that we are responsibly using the data that's been entrusted to us. And I think we need to sort of strike a balance here. We need to ensure that we don't take this responsibility as an excuse to not try and adopt new technology such as AI, but it also means we have to do so with care and responsibility and to do it at an appropriate pace. The key thing, I think, for me is ensuring that we can retain control of the data that we've been entrusted with. And so, understanding what AI is doing with that data, considering what data we're giving access to it, what data is being processed, and what data is being generated. And this is really at the forefront of our minds and our collective use of this. I think our approach - and Osama touched on this earlier - is to sort of be novel and start with open source and non-sensitive data first, so that will help us learn how we can effectively use it before we go on to some of the more sensitive data that we hold. SAM ROSEWe have to have ethics and data protection at the heart of everything we do, which then does have the tendency I think necessarily to reduce the pace of our ability to roll things out a little bit. But as government we do, I think have more responsibility. We can't have those kind of oops moments that some of the big tech companies have had when they're trying to reverse engineer the data to remove bias and that you know, things like that that then fundamentally undermine the output of their models. I think when you're doing a job that affects individual people, and providing services that affect citizens then we don't really have the luxury of getting it wrong like that, and we have to try to make sure we get it right first time. So, all of the things that Richard said about starting with, you know, safer datasets and working our way up before we deploy these models is kind of fundamental to how we're going to learn and ensure that we're doing it safely and securely MILES FLETCHEROsama what's your take on the ethics question?  OSAMA RAHMANFirst of all, I would echo everything just said. You know the Statistics Code of Practice is an annex to the Civil Service Code, it applies to all of us not just statisticians - I'll point that out. It is I think, not just in the ONS, I think for analysts and data scientists and specialists across government, this is kind of built into their DNA. Central Digital and Data Office has put together guidance and circulated it across government on the safe use of AI within government. So, within government, we do take this quite seriously. And then actually in terms of the use of some of these techniques, I think pointing these tools at data and information that we know is accurate is an important starting point - so having those guardrails. If it's going to be used for decision making, then having a human in the loop is quite important to make sure that the use is ethical. So, there's a bunch of safety checks that we do put in which I think allow for us to have some assurance that the use of these tools will be safe and ethical.  RICHARD CAMPBELLI think just as one additional point is you know; this isn't a new challenge for us. It's a different flavour of a challenge that we faced in considering new technology in the past. So, we can think in fairly recent times the use of cloud technology to securely and safely store data. If we go further back the use of the Internet, go back further, again, the use of computers to hold data. And what I think we've demonstrated time and time again, is that we do approach these things responsibly and maturely. But we do find opportunities to use all of them to improve the quality of statistics and analysis and the service that we offer the public. MILES FLETCHERLooking to the future then, and this is a very fast-moving future of course, I'd like to get your takes on also where you see us in five years' time in 10 years' time with this. I mean starting with the Office for National Statistics – Osama and Rich particularly on this. How will we start to see the published statistics and the big key topics, but also the granular insights that we provide on all kinds of areas. How will we see that changing and developing do you think? Where are you going to put your money? RICHARD CAMPBELLI think predicting the future in this way is quite a dangerous game. I'm thinking back to you know, if we had this podcast in the year 2000 and we asked ‘'how would the internet form part of our working lives?' We would have predicted something which would have been quite different from the impact that it had. Saying all that I think it will make a fundamental difference to the way that we work. I see that it will be integrated in the day-to-day tasks that we do in a similar way that we used computers to speed up and change the way that we produced statistics. I think it will enable our users to far better interact and engage with data and analysis. So, it will be less of us producing a specific finalised product for them, and more for them to be able to sort of get in ask questions, probe and really, really interact. And I think lastly, it will give us more potential to work and analyse data because one thing, and I think this is really important to say, AI will give more opportunities for analysts. It won't take them away. It will give them more space, more tools to work with to produce better, more complex, more useful datasets and analysis for ONS and for its users. SAM ROSEI was just going to add that I think it will fundamentally change the nature of what we do. A little bit like Rich said, the sort of work that we do will be different, but really critically, I think in a few years' time we won't really notice that change. I was thinking that most people have forgotten that 10 or more years ago before you left the house to go somewhere new, you would have consulted your map. Whereas actually nobody, or very few people, do that anymore. So, I think we're going to forget very quickly that lots of what we will be doing will be AI driven. MILES FLETCHERSo it's a big evolutionary step forward, if not quite a revolution. Do you agree with that Osama? OSAMA RAHMANAbsolutely, because some of us have actually been using sort of transformers-based models, which is what these large language models are based on for... My team has been working with those for at least the last eight years. But I wanted to just pick up on what Rich just said. And it is an evolution right. And you can't separate the tools from the data. And one of the things we're getting now is data that is much more granular and of much higher velocity than the data we were used to. So that allows us to look at things at a more local level, at a more timely level. What I do completely agree with Rich on is actually a lot of these tools and methodologies allow the technical production of statistics to get more efficient, which then allows you to produce more statistics at a disaggregated level - at a regional level or local authority area level or looking at different sub populations. It allows us to update statistics more frequently. But then also what it allows us to do, because it's not just about the production of the statistics, it's about what those statistics actually tell you is going on. And I think it allows the people we have at the ONS and other government departments to spend more time on the real value added which is “what does this mean?”  MILES FLETCHERIt's interesting if you're researching a particular topic, it must be good to sort of evolve your methodology quickly and to refine your processes on the run as it were to explore a particular topic. One thing of course we need in statistics is consistency of methodology and approach. Does that limit do you think, either of you, the ability for statistics to get more insightful to get more germane to issues because we have to stick to accepted methodologies to provide that consistency over the long run? RICHARD CAMPBELLI don't think it does Miles. I mean, you're right there. There's always a challenge for us in that, that consistency is really important, that comparability in a time series. Equally, users do want us to look for improvements, more detail, whether that's granularity or whatever else. And actually, we've got a really good successful track record of both maintaining the consistency of our statistics, while at the same time introducing new and improved methods. We do it with GDP. We do it with inflation, we do it with population, it's something that we do time and time again. And, actually, I think automation AI offers up some really exciting opportunities here in terms of methods that can be applied. There's actually an element of it, which will help us in the understanding and documentation and consistent application of the methods as well. It's perhaps one of the less – if you don't mind me using the word - “sexy” applications of AI but using it to ensure that our documentation is absolutely spot on and done quickly. To ensure that we are applying methods really quickly and consistently. I think AI offers us potential to do that even better. MILES FLETCHER“Sexy” in the particular way that we refer to progress in data science. RICHARD CAMPBELL Yes, quite. OSAMA RAHMANCan I just come in on this? And it's possibly worth using a specific example of putting out statistics on prices. In the old days you'd basically have people going out into the field, and that's where you'd find a basket of goods, and using pen and paper would collect prices. Now where a lot of national statistical organisations are going to is actually getting scanner data, because most things when you pay for them nowadays in many parts of the world, it's scanned first, electronically rather than rung up through a cash register of some sort. So, scanner data provides a lot of information about what is being purchased, and at what price it's being sold at various retail outlets. And so, you have this data which again is much more granular and has much higher velocity then price data you can collect through surveys, and you know, how you integrate that into the production of pricing statistics and other economic statistics is really, you know, a really interesting question and work that a lot of national statistical organisations are working on. So, there's still the basic methodology remains the same. It's you know, kind of defined a basket of goods, but you expand the scale of the basket, we'll get prices on at what each of the elements are those baskets are being sold at, and then produce a price measure an inflation measure, right. But these tools and the increasing quantity of data allow us to do that. But you know, the basic methodology is kind of the same, but actually the increase in this data allows us to do that in kind of a different way. It's an evolution. MILES FLETCHERIt does all suggest though, that perhaps the survey might finally be replaced - the big social surveys that the ONS runs. Do you think that the surveys days are numbered, therefore because of AI?  RICHARD CAMPBELL No. OSAMA RAHMAN No. [LAUGHTER] MILES FLETCHER A resounding no. RICHARD CAMPBELLThat was a resounding no, and it's not a pre-rehearsed one. And maybe I'll just take us back Miles. So, if we went back about the best part of 10 years, everyone was talking about big data. You know, the days of a survey was gone. What we needed was these big, complex, sometimes quite messy data sources that were collected for a variety of other reasons, and that we could utilise those to sort of answer all of the statistical questions that we had. Now, what we found out actually is that yes, these data sources can give us a lot of potential; data science is helping us make the most of them; AI is helping us make even more from them. What we also learned though, is that they work best when they're complementing the surveys, rather than trying to replace. Think of it a bit as horses for courses. Actually, though, I want to give an example of where AI might be able to help us improve the response rates on surveys. So, AI might be able to help respondents navigate through some of the surveys, helping them understand what it is that they're being asked. Helping them answer a bit more efficiently. So that might actually remove a barrier that some people, some businesses have to respond to surveys. So, you never know we might see a bit of an uptick in response rates with a bit of AI's help.  OSAMA RAHMANAnd I think the other thing I would add is what surveys are particularly good at is getting information on the extremes of the distribution. It's great if you think everything's going to be generated through digital footprints data and online services, but actually not everyone... some people... apparently dumb phones are coming back into fashion. Or there are groups that you know, for whatever reason, are not picked up in other forms of data. And actually, surveys are really important for accessing, getting information about hard to reach groups at the end of the distribution. MILES FLETCHERI think that's kind of reassuring that for all the promise of AI in this brave new world, that we hope won't be a dystopian future, but whether it will deliver all those things that we've been talking about in terms of better insights, faster statistics, and all that. It's still good to hear though, isn't it, that there is no substitution from speaking to real human beings directly.? OSAMA RAHMANI agree entirely. MILES FLETCHERWell, that's it for another episode of Statistically Speaking and, in summary, I suppose the use of AI feels like a natural evolution with a number of potential benefits, and potentially huge benefits, but with its adoption we need as always to be thoughtful and ethical. So, thanks to all our guests: Sam Rose, Osama Rahman, and Rich Campbell, and of course, thanks to you as always for listening. You can subscribe to future episodes of this podcast on Spotify, Apple podcasts and all the other major podcast platforms. You can also follow us on X - formerly known as Twitter - via the @ONSfocus feed. I'm Miles Fletcher and from myself and producer Steve Milne. Until next time, goodbye.  ENDS

F1 Explains
LIVE in Miami with Guenther Steiner

F1 Explains

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2024 37:11


At the Miami Grand Prix, F1 Explains went live on-stage with former Haas Team Principal and Miami GP Ambassador, Guenther Steiner. F1 Explains listeners Joan from Florida, Amanda from Tennessee and Nick from Washington D.C. asked Guenther questions about the life of an F1 Team Principal and whether Steiner's office door survived being smashed by Kevin Magnussen. Special thanks to Sam Rose, Carla Corbet, Lyndsey Fairburn, Lindsay Krushner, Jamil Russell-Lewis + Jason Gol Watch F1 live in 2024 Tickets for the US Grand Prix in Austin, the Las Vegas Grand Prix and the rest of the 2024 F1 season are available now at tickets.formula1.com Catch up with our other episodes F1 car setup - with Fernando Alonso + Aston Martin Race suits, boots + underwear: what F1 drivers wear - with PUMA F1 brakes - technology + technique - with Brembo + Jack Doohan The job of an F1 Team Principal - with Aston Martin's Mike Krack Why F1 teammates are friends + foes - with Valtteri Bottas + Zhou Guanyu How Formula 2 + Formula 3 prepare drivers for F1 - with Oscar Piastri F1 Academy - with Susie Wolff + Lia Block The F1 race start - with Mick Schumacher + strategist Bernie Collins Behind the scenes on Drive to Survive - with Exec Producer James Gay-Rees Why F1 pre-season testing matters - with Mercedes, McLaren + Alpine How F1 teams build their new cars - with Aston Martin Technical Director Dan Fallows More Official F1 Podcasts For in-depth interviews with F1's biggest names, listen to F1 Beyond The Grid  For race previews and reviews, head over to F1 Nation

UOAK Presents Sekora Radio
Sekora Radio 062

UOAK Presents Sekora Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2024 60:38


UOAK Presents Sekora Radio. Episode 062 ❖ Featured tracks & more on Spotify → sekora.fanlink.tv/spotify ❖ ❖ SEKORA RADIO ❖ Listen on your favourite platform → https://radio.sekoramusic.com Download & subscribe on Apple Podcasts → http://bit.ly/sekoraradio Tracklist: 1. Datskie - Lone Particle  2. Sam Rose, WNSTN - Far Away  3. ARIV3 - No Time 4. Eonia, W:SPACE - Patterns of Everything 5. Xix99 - Enough 6. Alex Pich - Atlantis 7. Blu Attic, Jujh - Departure 8. Deeparture, Noana - Island (feat. WILHELMINA) 9. dwelyr - Homesick 10. Eugene Becker - Hello Sophia  11. Tim van Werd, Banaati, Chris Howard - Waiting For You 12. Soul Engineers - Autumn ❖ FOLLOW UOAK ❖ Spotify → https://uoak.fanlink.tv/spotify Apple Music → https://uoak.fanlink.tv/apple Soundcloud → https://soundcloud.com/uoak Instagram → https://instagram.com/uoakmusic Youtube → https://youtube.com/uoak

The Holistic Heart Podcast
Episode 43: Yoga and Mental Health

The Holistic Heart Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2024 25:57


We're putting extra focus on community connection at HH for the months of April-June, and thought it would be great to have some guests on the podcast from our very own HH community to share their brilliance. In this episode, Sammy and Kristen are joined by HH clinician and certified yoga teacher, Sam Rose for a chat about the ways that yoga can support mental health and well-being.

RTÉ - Morning Ireland
Over one million displaced Palestinians now sheltering in Rafah

RTÉ - Morning Ireland

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2024 7:53


Sam Rose, Director of Planning at UNWRA, has the latest updates on the humanitarian crisis in Gaza following a recent visit to Rafah.

Aspen Public Radio Newscast
Friday, April 5

Aspen Public Radio Newscast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2024 11:11


On today's newscast: Roaring Fork Outdoor Volunteers and Pitkin County are both accepting applications for paid youth internship programs, Aspen city councilor Sam Rose is working with the Aspen School District to meet its staff housing needs, backcountry first responders and LGBTQ+ youth issues are on the docket for Aspen Film's Shortsfest this weekend, and more.

No Vacancy Colorado
Season. 6, Episode 19: Ice Cream Social & Revolutionary Sandwiches

No Vacancy Colorado

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2024 42:02


On today's episode presented by Seed Money Consulting, we sit down with Sam Rose of RoseBud Ice Cream to talk all things Spring. Local ice cream, distributed across the country & looking to expand!! We chat all things MW lifestyle and Rocky Mountain hardwork. Before we chat with Sam, we talk about a sandwich Kip can't shut up about.. also a smidge of March Madness, protesting My Neighbor Felix & Pizzeria Leopold can't catch a break! A car ran into their restaurant & they need the communities help!All that and some shit talking along the way. Tune in & Tell A Friend!

UOAK Presents Sekora Radio
Sekora Radio 052

UOAK Presents Sekora Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2024 58:58


UOAK Presents Sekora Radio. Episode 052 ❖ Featured tracks & more on Spotify → sekora.fanlink.to/spotify ❖ ❖ SEKORA RADIO ❖ Listen on your favourite platform → https://uoak.fanlink.to/sekoraradio Download & subscribe on Apple Podcasts → http://bit.ly/sekoraradio Tracklist: 1. Sam Rose (feat. WNSTN) - Far Away 2. Rezident - Only For A Moment 3. Soul Engineers - Sandprints 4. Nora En Pure - Arbora 5. Matt Leger (feat. Anita Tatlow) - More Than A Dream (dwelyr Remix) 6. Mees Salomé - All Of You feat. ALLKNIGHT 7. Eugene Becker - Hello, Sophia 8. WSPACE & Eonia - Patterns of Everything 9. TOMB - Reliance 10. Jay Newman - You Saved Me 11. Alande - How You Feel 12. Holen & Garlington - Glow ❖ FOLLOW UOAK ❖ Spotify → https://uoak.fanlink.to/spotify Apple Music → https://uoak.fanlink.to/apple Soundcloud → https://soundcloud.com/uoak Instagram → https://instagram.com/uoakmusic Facebook → https://facebook.com/uoakmusic Twitter → https://twitter.com/uoakmusic Discord → https://discord.gg/XGrfQb5u8Y Youtube → https://uoak.fanlink.to/youtube Beatport → https://uoak.fanlink.to/beatport

Cultivating Conservation
Episode Two: Sam Rose Phillips on ethics, impact and the stories we tell ourselves in wildlife filmmaking

Cultivating Conservation

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 8, 2024 44:02


Dear friend and fellow film maker Sam Rose Phillips is a photographer, documentary filmmaker, and poet based in Yuułuʔiłʔatḥ Territory, what is currently known as Ucluelet, British Columbia. She focuses her lens on human-wildlife stories and their significance to coastal communities. Sam specializes in off-grid, remote storytelling from land and on the water, spending the first 5 years of her career as a one-woman film crew. She is currently directing her first feature-documentary about the nuances of coexisting with wildlife. Show Notes: - http://www.samrosephillips.com

Independent Thinking
Is Gaza on the brink of disaster?

Independent Thinking

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2023 32:35


Bronwen Maddox speaks with New York Times journalist Steven Erlanger about President Biden's trip to Israel and the prospects of an Israeli ground invasion of Gaza. Joining them are Sam Rose from UNRWA and  Dr Elham Fakhor from our Middle East and North Africa programme. Don't miss our expertise: President Biden's Middle East visit reveals the challenges for US diplomacy Israel has the capacity to significantly damage Hamas with a ground offensive  MENA countries should lead the way de-escalating the Israel–Hamas war Presented by Bronwen Maddox. Produced by John Pollock. Sound by Matthew Docherty.

Saturday Live
Rory Cellan-Jones, Amanda Hone, Sam Talo (aka El Sam), Rose Matafeo, Bethany Handley...in nature

Saturday Live

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2023 60:26


Radio 4's Saturday morning show brings you extraordinary stories and remarkable people.

Heaven With Randy Podcast
EP. 94 - Geneticist Meets Jesus After Deadly Disease & Discovers How God Became Man by Unlocking the Code

Heaven With Randy Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2023 70:51


Esteemed geneticist, Dr. Sam Rose served as a visiting scientist at Columbia University in New York City and pursued research at Rutgers Medical School to study the mysteries of genetic recombination - creating new life. He contracted a deadly and untreatable disease from his studies that lead to what doctors called an inevitable death; medicine could not treat the disease. While in the hospital, this man who was raised in a Hindu family in India met Jesus. From that encounter Jesus told Dr. Rose that he would be healed. Subsequently, Dr. Rose embarked on a genetic study to uncover the mysteries linking science with the Divine - Dr. Rose unlocked the genetic code proving how God became flesh and blood to save humanity. In this remarkable interview, Randy Kay asks Dr. Rose how the genetic code proves that Jesus was indeed God incarnate, the Immanuel. You won't want to miss this fascinating discussion and discovery!

Radio Record
Martin Garrix @ Record Club #448 (13-04-2022)

Radio Record

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2023


01. Sam Rose feat. WNSTN - Behind 02. LOVD - Kashyyyk (GRIDD Remix) 03. Pakkio Sans - Plan B [SONGSPIRE RECORDS] 04. obli - Another Man [FOREIGN FAMILY COLLECTIVE] 05. Hel_sløwed - Flight 643 [AFTR HRS] 06. Malcolm Zeller - Space Trip Master 07. Ship Wrek x Disco Lines - Misbehave [ARMADA] 08. Martin Garrix & Matisse & Sadko - Won't Let You Go feat. John Martin (Eleganto Remix) [STMPD RCRDS] 09. Justin Mylo - Darkest Before The Dawn feat. Jordan Shaw & Money For Nothing (Jeonghyeon Remix) [STMPD RCRDS] 10. Dyro - Lucid [STMPD RCRDS] 11. Alesso x Ty Dolla $ign - Caught A Body [GEFFEN/UMG] 12. ZOOTAH & Mingue - Cherry Pop [STMPD RCRDS] 13. Space Ducks - Basic [STMPD RCRDS] 14. MorganJ - 4U [HELDEEP] 15. Firebeatz - Back In Control [STMPD RCRDS] 16. Breathe Carolina - Sick [SPINNIN] 17. ARTY feat. Jonathan Mendelsohn - Lightning Strikes [ARMADA] 18. Martin Garrix & JVKE - Hero (DubVision Remix) [STMPD/SONY]

The Martin Garrix Show
The Martin Garrix Show #448

The Martin Garrix Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2023 60:00


The Martin Garrix Show #448Tracklist - http://1001.tl/k2lfcmMix 11. Sam Rose feat. WNSTN - Behind 2. LOVD - Kashyyyk (GRIDD Remix) 3. Pakkio Sans - Plan B [SONGSPIRE RECORDS]4. obli - Another Man [FOREIGN FAMILY COLLECTIVE]5. Hel_sløwed - Flight 643 [AFTR HRS]6. Malcolm Zeller - Space Trip Master 7. Ship Wrek x Disco Lines - Misbehave [ARMADA]8. Martin Garrix & Matisse & Sadko - Won't Let You Go feat. John Martin (Eleganto Remix) [STMPD RCRDS]9. Justin Mylo - Darkest Before The Dawn feat. Jordan Shaw & Money For Nothing (Jeonghyeon Remix) [STMPD RCRDS] Mix 210. Dyro - Lucid [STMPD RCRDS]11. Alesso x Ty Dolla $ign - Caught A Body [GEFFEN/UMG]12. ZOOTAH & Mingue - Cherry Pop [STMPD RCRDS]13. Space Ducks - Basic [STMPD RCRDS]14. MorganJ - 4U [HELDEEP]15. Firebeatz - Back In Control [STMPD RCRDS]16. Breathe Carolina - Sick [SPINNIN]17. ARTY feat. Jonathan Mendelsohn - Lightning Strikes [ARMADA]18. Martin Garrix & JVKE - Hero (DubVision Remix) [STMPD/SONY]A weekly selection of tracks that I love to listen to at home or play out at a party. New episodes uploaded weekly.

Your Unity
Episode #421 with Contagious

Your Unity

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2023 118:00


Your Unity #421 with Contagious Recorded Live in Adelaide, Australia 31/03/2023 01. Sam Rose feat. WNSTN - Behind (Extended Mix) [Sommersville Records] 02. ZOYA, Milkwish - Silent Shore (Extended Mix) [Black Hole Recordings] 03. Mat Zo - Shut Up (Extended Mix) [Anjunabeats] 04. ORNICAN - More Of You (Original Mix) [Intricate Records] 05. Lipless, Tobias Bergson & Mary Leay - Where Will I Be (Extended Mix) [Enhanced Recordings] 06. Taglo, Zara Taylor - Impatient (Extended Mix) [AVA Deep] Premium Pick 07. Simon Doty, Tailor, My Friend - Follow Me (Extended Mix) [Anjunadeep] 08. Matt Fax & Hugo Cantarra - Vibration (Extended Mix) [Enhanced Recordings] 09. deadmau5 - luxuria (ov) (Tinlicker Remix x Choir To The Young Believers - Hollow Talk : Contagious Mashup) 10. P.O.S - Let You Go (Extended Mix) [Anjunabeats] 11. Anyma - The Answer (Extended Version) [Afterlife Records] 12. Kasablanca - In Sequence (Extended Mix) [Anjunabeats] 13. Blake.08 - Supermonster (Extended Mix) [Anjunadeep] 14. Simon Doty - Have You Ever? (Extended Mix) [Anjunadeep] 15. Volaris - Sphere (Extended Mix) [Purified Records] 16. Steve Brian - Cali (Extended Mix) [Enhanced Progressive] 17. Maor Levi & Magnificence - Let You Go (Extended Mix) [Anjunabeats] 18. Andrew Bayer - Bottle Top Trance (Extended Mix) [Anjunabeats] Prestigious Pick 19. Oliver Smith - Pressure (Original Mix) [Anjunabeats] 20. Andrew Bayer & Asbjorn - Equal (Andrew Bayer and Alex Sonata & TheRio Extended Mix) [Anjunabeats] 20. SØNIN - Affection (Extended Mix) [Anjunabeats] 21. Armin van Buuren & Maor Levi - Divino (Extended Mix) [A State Of Trance] 22. ilan Bluestone - Spheres (Original Mix) [Anjunabeats] 23. Above & Beyond, Richard Bedford - Sun & Moon (ilan Bluestone Extended Remix) [Anjunabeats] 24. Tom Staar - Bora (Original Mix) [Axtone Records] Spector Selector 25. Estiva - Via Infinita (Extended Mix) [Colorize]

Voyage of Discovery by Sebastian Davidson
Voyage of Discovery 212

Voyage of Discovery by Sebastian Davidson

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2023 60:00


Characteristic electronic favorites and true musical interests. Instagram: instagram.com/sebastiandavidsonmusic Email: hello@sebastiandavidson.com Web: www.sebastiandavidson.com Subscribe and rate on Apple Podcasts: podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/voya…on/id1450307758 Submit music to: hello@sebastiandavidson.com 1. SONIDO - Middle of the Garden 2. Vincenzo - The Witching Hour 3. RAINE & LAR - Who You Are 4. Tribu Oro - Kambo 5. Sam Rose ft. WNSTN - Behind 6. Franz Matthews - As I Am (Vhyce Remix) 7. BIG AL - Drones 8. NOCUI - As Long As It Takes 9. Vincenzo - Extrasolar 10. Joseph Ray - Give Me A Reason 11. Keinemusik - Pussy Powre (DESIREE Remix) 12. Verdane - In The Detail

Slimming World Podcast
189: Time To Celebrate

Slimming World Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2022 81:10


What are you proud of this year? Join Anna and Clare plus a few friends of the podcast to celebrate 2022! Because you deserve to celebrate your weight loss so far NOW, not just when you reach your target! Thanks to our wonderful guests Harriet Peacock, Sam Rose, Jason Dury and Matt Symons! Presented by Clare Savory and Anna Mangan.  Produced by ASFB Productions.  Slimming World Podcast is sponsored by Slimming World. Please note: The info we share is based on our personal weight loss experiences. Always check with your consultant or a health professional when following a weight loss plan.

time to celebrate slimming world sam rose matt symons asfb productions
Breaking Down Patriarchy
Breaking Down Patriarchy and Modern-Day Witchcraft - with Kari

Breaking Down Patriarchy

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2022 44:48


In the 21st century, witchcraft is trending. TikTokers, for example, sharing witch-based content, have amassed over 20 billion views under the hashtag “witchtok” and, as the trend grows, major retailers (including Sephora, Urban Outfitters, and many more) have eagerly started selling mystical crystals, spell books, and other witchy paraphernalia hoping to cash in on this growing faith movement. And yet all of this still leaves us with the question: who exactly are these self-professed witches? Some of you may even be wondering, is witchcraft actually real? To help cut through misinformation and shine a light directly on what witchcraft looks like today, we decided to go straight to the source and fortunately found Kari - a present-day, practicing witch - who was willing to sit down with our podcast's editor, Sam Rose, for a conversation about ritual, history, stereotypes, and the self-identified witches who still walk among us.  Kari (she/her) is a student of Jungian psychology, an active member of the Hyperian movement, and has been a practicing witch for over 40 years.

Lagrange Point
Episode 492 - Finding hidden objects in the early universe

Lagrange Point

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2022 16:26


How can you find objects that are hard to see in the depths of space? There is plenty of gas in a galaxy, but trying to see a cloud amongst all those starts is not easy. The further back in time you look in the history of the universe, the colder and darker it gets. How do you figure out the structure of the earliest galaxies and their cold gas? A black hole roaming across a galaxy sounds like bad sci fi horror, but may have been found. How can you spot a black hole without any frame of reference? Detecting a roaming black hole is tricky but not impossible. Kieran A. Cleary, Jowita Borowska, Patrick C. Breysse, Morgan Catha, Dongwoo T. Chung, Sarah E. Church, Clive Dickinson, Hans Kristian Eriksen, Marie Kristine Foss, Joshua Ott Gundersen, Stuart E. Harper, Andrew I. Harris, Richard Hobbs, Håvard T. Ihle, Junhan Kim, Jonathon Kocz, James W. Lamb, Jonas G. S. Lunde, Hamsa Padmanabhan, Timothy J. Pearson, Liju Philip, Travis W. Powell, Maren Rasmussen, Anthony C. S. Readhead, Thomas J. Rennie, Marta B. Silva, Nils-Ole Stutzer, Bade D. Uzgil, Duncan J. Watts, Ingunn Kathrine Wehus, David P. Woody, Lilian Basoalto, J. Richard Bond, Delaney A. Dunne, Todd Gaier, Brandon Hensley, Laura C. Keating, Charles R. Lawrence, Norman Murray, Roberta Paladini, Rodrigo Reeves, Marco P. Viero, Risa H. Wechsler. COMAP Early Science. I. Overview. The Astrophysical Journal, 2022; 933 (2): 182 DOI: 10.3847/1538-4357/ac63cc Casey Y. Lam, Jessica R. Lu, Andrzej Udalski, Ian Bond, David P. Bennett, Jan Skowron, Przemek Mroz, Radek Poleski, Takahiro Sumi, Michal K. Szymanski, Szymon Kozlowski, Pawel Pietrukowicz, Igor Soszynski, Krzysztof Ulaczyk, Lukasz Wyrzykowski, Shota Miyazaki, Daisuke Suzuki, Naoki Koshimoto, Nicholas J. Rattenbury, Matthew W. Hosek Jr., Fumio Abe, Richard Barry, Aparna Bhattacharya, Akihiko Fukui, Hirosane Fujii, Yuki Hirao, Yoshitaka Itow, Rintaro Kirikawa, Iona Kondo, Yutaka Matsubara, Sho Matsumoto, Yasushi Muraki, Greg Olmschenk, Clement Ranc, Arisa Okamura, Yuki Satoh, Stela Ishitani Silva, Taiga Toda, Paul J. Tristram, Aikaterini Vandorou, Hibiki Yama, Natasha S. Abrams, Shrihan Agarwal, Sam Rose, Sean K. Terry. An isolated mass gap black hole or neutron star detected with astrometric microlensing. Accepted to APJ Letters, 2022 [abstract] Kailash C. Sahu, Jay Anderson, Stefano Casertano, Howard E. Bond, Andrzej Udalski, Martin Dominik, Annalisa Calamida, Andrea Bellini, Thomas M. Brown, Marina Rejkuba, Varun Bajaj, Noe Kains, Henry C. Ferguson, Chris L. Fryer, Philip Yock, Przemek Mroz, Szymon Kozlowski, Pawel Pietrukowicz, Radek Poleski, Jan Skowron, Igor Soszynski, Michael K. Szymanski, Krzysztof Ulaczyk, Lukasz Wyrzykowski, Richard Barry, David P. Bennett, Ian A. Bond, Yuki Hirao, Stela Ishitani Silva, Iona Kondo, Naoki Koshimoto, Clement Ranc, Nicholas J. Rattenbury, Takahiro Sumi, Daisuke Suzuki, Paul J. Tristram, Aikaterini Vandorou, Jean-Philippe Beaulieu, Jean-Baptiste Marquette, Andrew Cole, Pascal Fouque, Kym Hill, Stefan Dieters, Christian Coutures, Dijana Dominis-Prester, Clara Bennett, Etienne Bachelet, John Menzies, Michael Alb-row, Karen Pollard, Andrew Gould, Jennifer Yee, William Allen, Leonardo Andrade de Almeida, Grant Christie, John Drummond, Avishay Gal-Yam, Evgeny Gorbikov, Francisco Jablonski, Chung-Uk Lee, Dan Maoz, Ilan Manulis, Jennie McCormick, Tim Natusch, Richard W. Pogge, Yossi Shvartzvald, Uffe G. Jorgensen, Khalid A. Alsubai, Michael I. Andersen, Valerio Bozza, Sebastiano Calchi Novati, Martin Burgdorf, Tobias C. Hinse, Markus Hundertmark, Tim-Oliver Husser, Eamonn Kerins, Penelope Longa-Pena, Luigi Mancini, Matthew Penny, Sohrab Rahvar, Davide Ricci, Sedighe Sajadian, Jesper Skottfelt, Colin Snodgrass, John Southworth, Jeremy Tregloan-Reed, Joachim Wambsganss, Olivier Wertz, Yiannis Tsapras, Rachel A. Street, Daniel M. Bramich, Keith Horne, Iain A. Steele. An Isolated Stellar-Mass Black Hole Detected Through Astrometric Microlensing. Accepted to APJ, 2022 [abstract]  

Breaking Down Patriarchy
Breaking Down Patriarchy and the Gender Binary - with Sam Rose Preminger & Domi Shoemaker

Breaking Down Patriarchy

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2022 83:32


As new generations increasingly have the knowledge and social acceptance to explore their identities, the number of openly transgender people in our world—especially transgender youth—is rapidly rising. Yet despite these recent spikes— the transgender community is still comparatively small: making up roughly 0.6% of the global population. As a result, many cisgender people (meaning those of us whose gender aligns with the one we were assigned at birth) have little to no lived experience interacting with transgender people. What we're exposed to instead is whatever our media, political, and social leaders choose to tell us about them, resulting in a perilous gap between actual transgender people and a series of cultural stereotypes. This gulf in our understanding not only endangers the trans population, it harms all of us, discouraging marginalized demographics from working together, making it even more difficult for us to dismantle oppressive structures, and denying cisgender people the chance to love their trans neighbors. Fortunately, some transgender people are stepping forward to help bridge this divide, sharing their personal stories, dispelling dangerous myths, and helping us envision a more egalitarian future for all. On today's episode I'm happy to say we'll be joined by two such voices: Sam Rose Preminger and Domi Shoemaker Sam Rose Preminger (they/them) is a trans-nonbinary, Jewish writer and publisher. They hold an MFA from Pacific University, serve as the Editor-in-Chief of NAILED Magazine, and are a contributing editor at Lightship Press and Write Bloody Publishing. Their poetry has appeared in numerous publications online and in print. Their debut collection of poems —'Cosmological Horizons' — is forthcoming from Kelsay Books (Summer 2022). They live in Portland, OR, where they've acquired too many house plants. www.sampreminger.com Domi J Shoemaker (they/them) is an Idaho-born gender flexer who founded the quarterly reading series, Burnt Tongue, after cutting teeth in Tom Spanbauer's Dangerous Writers workshop. While finishing an MFA in Writing in 2015, author Lidia Yuknavitch asked Domi to help her create the Corporeal Writing Seasonal Workshop Series. With a resounding yes, Domi is now the Corporeal Writing Seasonal Workshop Co-Facilitator. Domi has published at [PANK], Nailed Magazine, Unshod Quills, Gobshite Quarterly, and has a story in the anthology, The Night and The Rain and The River, from Forest Avenue Press. They were recently featured in the literary radio theatre podcast, Storytellers Telling Stories. www.domishoemaker.com