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Between the Texas data center boom - and Corpus Christi on track to become the first modern city to run completely dry - access to fresh water is a top ticket item for Texans this election year, and also going into the next Legislative session in 2027. Dr. Evgenia Spears, Water Program Coordinator for the Lone Star Sierra Club, joins us for a deep dive on the real state of our state's water supply - and in particular, how seawater desalination fits in as a possible solution. Turns out, even as desal is frequently framed as a panacea, it comes with tremendous costs, significant risks, and ethical dilemmas, especially surrounding access: is all of this about water for people, or is it for industry? It's hard to imagine a more important or existential conversation.Learn more about Dr. Spears and her colleagues at the Sierra Club Lone Star Chapter at https://www.sierraclub.org/texas.Thanks for listening! Learn more about Progress Texas and how you can support our ongoing work at https://progresstexas.org/.
American Clean Power’s Q1 report shows the weakest quarter since 2023, China plugs an undersea data center into offshore wind, and thermal imaging spots hidden blade damage. Sign up now for Uptime Tech News, our weekly newsletter on all things wind technology. This episode is sponsored by Weather Guard Lightning Tech. Learn more about Weather Guard’s StrikeTape Wind Turbine LPS retrofit. Follow the show on YouTube, Linkedin and visit Weather Guard on the web. And subscribe to Rosemary’s “Engineering with Rosie” YouTube channel here. Have a question we can answer on the show? Email us! Allen Hall: The Uptime Wind Energy podcast, brought to you by StrikeTape. Protecting thousands of wind turbines from lightning damage worldwide. Visit StrikeTape.com. And now your hosts Welcome to the Uptime Wind Energy podcast. I’m your host, Allen Hall. I’m here with Rosemary Barnes, Matthew Stead, and Yolanda Padron. And three out of the four of us, everyone except Rosie, went to Houston this past week. Matthew, you were on the floor. Yolanda, you were on the floor this week. What did you think? Matthew Stead: I think there was a few sort of common themes that I picked up. One, the obvious one which keeps coming up every time is insurance and lightning, and insurance, and all those sort of things. probably the other point that I observed was really strong supply chain. they had everyone, all the people, e- even people, building boxes. And [00:01:00] so they had boxes, transportation, cranes, really strong, supply chain. also really strong on the batteries, like the CATL batteries, et cetera, et cetera, and solar. I think that seems to be getting a bit more, a bit more, mature and more obvious. obviously blades, lots of people talk to us about blades, maybe ’cause we talk about blades. But, lightning root issues, blade bolts, those sorts of things, leading edge erosion, robotic repair, et cetera, et cetera. a bit about, add-ons like PowerCurve, were fairly visible, so that was good. but there was a lot of secret meetings in rooms away from the actual event. so that was one observation. and the other observation was perhaps not so many operators that actually [00:02:00] work on a day-to-day basis. That was my subjective impression Rosemary Barnes: Speaking of secret meetings in rooms, what were you guys doing around the time of ACP? Matthew Stead: So the Australian American Chamber of Commerce organized a special event, with two Australian companies to launch a new product, which monitors lightning and then transmits the results using satellite communications. So it was very open, but invitation only, Rose. Rosemary Barnes: I, actually, I- the comments, ’cause people are always, after our first go organizing wind O&M event in Australia, I would hear about it from people who didn’t, just chatting at, on, different wind farm sites. They didn’t know I was involved, and they’re like, “Oh, yeah, there’s a secret event now.” And it’s we did our very best to publicize this, the most that we could. It was not intended to be secret. So yeah, I’m just wondering if, people are gonna think the same if [00:03:00] they, they missed out on, your event. But how was it re- received? Do, we need more events in the US? Matthew Stead: Yes, absolutely. And I, I don’t have my pin on here, but, yeah, I do have a pin from the Australian American Chamber of Commerce Texas division, Rosemary Barnes: How was the event for you, Yolanda? Yolanda Padron: It was good. It was good. the showroom was the, or the exhibit floor was a little bit em- more empty than I thought it would be, but it was good. It was good to, to see people, to catch up with everybody. There were some really good chats happening everywhere. and I got … I don’t know about you guys, but I saw a lot more people not from the US that wanted to come in and understand the market better than I did other years, which was nice to see. Matthew Stead: Was there any new technology on the floor this year? I thought there was a new robot company, but it was actually solar cleaning. Yolanda Padron: I saw some rebranding from some companies, moving from former ties to [00:04:00] OEMs just m- moving into their own little companies and stuff. in a very interesting, PR move, a, an insurance company was raffling a motorcycle, which was really, funny for us to see. Allen Hall: Not very safe, is it? Yolanda Padron: Was Rosemary Barnes: it at least an l- an electric Yolanda Padron: motorbike? Allen Hall: Rosemary, you’re in America. Yolanda Padron: I don’t know very much about bikes, but it was big and scary for me. did I put my name in there? Yes. We’ll see how that turns out, but Rosemary Barnes: I’m always trying to win Lego sets at, events and, try to sweet talk the, the stall managers or s- stall minders into “Oh, if somebody wins and they don’t show up, could I have it?” yeah, so far unsuccessfully. Although I do have, actually you can see I’ve, I’ve got a Le- a L- Lego, in inverted commas, not Lego TM, wind turbine that we’ve just started making. So that’s a, [00:05:00] or a tower for a… that we have created. I have succeeded in getting some sort of Lego for my podcast background. Allen Hall: Are you gonna buy the Sagrada Família Lego set that just appeared? Rosemary Barnes: I haven’t. I’m not like the hugest Lego fan. I wouldn’t call myself an, what is it? AF- AFOL, adult fan of Lego? Is that what, There’s a, there’s an acronym. I’m not one. None of us are apparently. Allen Hall: Oh, I don’t know. I think we’ll buy that one. Allen, does it take 200 years to make? Probably. I think there’s around 10,000 pieces. that’s what I re- recall. It, there’s a lot of pieces. It’s built in sections. I watched had a little discussion about it. It is really complex, but we may purchase one and put it in the lobby of our shop because that cathedral is protected by strike tape, some of the ornamental features at the top. So we’ll, probably build one, but it’ll, it will take a year [00:06:00] Delamination and bondline failures in blades are difficult problems to detect early. These hidden issues can cost you millions in repairs and lost energy production. CIC NDT are specialists to detect these critical flaws before they become expensive burdens. Their nondestructive test technology penetrates deep into blade materials to find voids and cracks traditional inspections completely miss. CIC NDT maps every critical defect, delivers actionable reports, and provides support to get your blades back in service. So visit cicndt.com because catching blade problems early will save you millions Let’s talk about American Clean Power’s, first quarter 2026 market report. So the American Clean Power Association’s first quarter 2026 market report shows United States developers brought 6.4 gigawatts [00:07:00] of new clean power online in Q1, but overall capacity was down 17% year over year, the weakest quarter since 2023. Onshore wind took the hardest hit with less than 500 megawatts installed, the slowest pace since about 2018. the Department of Defense delayed approximately, 165 projects totaling 30 gigawatts and $54 billion of investment. Ken Young, the CEO of Apex Clean Energy, put it plainly, quote, “This DoD thing is real. They found a button to hit, and we got punched in the face.” Unquote. Developers won a preliminary injunction in Massachusetts federal court, but the Interior Department has pledged to appeal in regards to offshore wind. Is this gonna be a permanent setback, Matthew? You think this is gonna continue on, or will this eventually get wrapped up and wind will be back on track? Matthew Stead: If I wanted cheap power, I would be building wind, [00:08:00]battery, and solar. So I think, if people want cheap power, it, will definitely come back. That’s my view. Allen Hall: Yolanda, you see some of the development. You’re close to it in Austin, Texas. What are you seeing on the ground there? I think there’s repowering going on, but is there much in terms of new development? Yolanda Padron: There’s repowering. I think new development slowed down a little bit than this time last year, but it’s still going on, both for wind, solar, and battery, which is good. on the ground level in some of these very rural towns, this is a very important source of income for a lot of those people, regardless of political affiliation. so it’s important for some of these people to get these on their, in their land. Allen Hall: Does American Clean Power have a plan to try to address this situation? Are there any lawsuits in place or any legal action on the docket? Yolanda Padron: Not that I know of. I, know there was a, there was that lawsuit end of last year, for offshore.[00:09:00] but from American Clean Power itself, I don’t know of anything off the top of my head. Do you guys know? Allen Hall: I haven’t seen much of a roadmap from American Clean Power on this particular issue on the onshore wind. I haven’t seen much e-except but for a couple of summary pieces explaining what is happening on the ground, but n-no action to push back. And maybe there’s some lobbying going on with Congress people and, senators, but you think we would hear about some of it. I haven’t heard anything, and I’m watching pretty close. it is a little confounding because it does seem like this could be broken with one court case. Maybe not. Maybe it’s more difficult than that. Yolanda Padron: I don’t know. There’s always a lot of, yeah, there’s always a lot of lobbying going on by, not just by American Clean Power, but by a lot of these larger owners, right? A lot of them have some sort of office in DC and people coming in and out and going to meetings [00:10:00] with everybody, So I don’t know. I’m also very curious to see what goes behind the scenes for that political side of things. Allen Hall: just as a quick aside, one of the discussions I was having during the week was about AI data centers and the push for power. If gas turbines aren’t available for a couple of years and they’re gonna… the administration’s gonna push back on renewables, AI data centers are gonna have a hard time getting the power they need. I know the administration wants them to, be powered by natural gas, but that’s not possible right now. I don’t see how this ends easily. Rosemary Barnes: It seems like e- everybody’s looking into any single way that you can power a data center. There are people making serious plans to do it. There’s obviously, we’ve talked about space-based data centers before. then there was a podcast I listened to this week. Allen, you actually suggested it to me, but it’s one that comes up for me anyway, Catalyst podcast about, [00:11:00] data centers on ships. It, actually isn’t just purely about data centers on ships. It’s about, this company, and they have a ship that’s designed to fairly passively capture energy from waves of a ship out on the o- open ocean. They’ve actually designed the shape of the hull so that it is, will actually capture energy. They choose the location of their factories very carefully, put it in the ocean where there’s already enough energy, and it just, phew, off it goes, just powers itself off to the, I think it was somewhere in the South Pacific, where there’s nice big fetches of, of water and power whatever, including data centers. But I think each ship was about a megawatt or something like that, so you’ll need a lot of them. And then wasn’t there one that you were, you wanted to bring up today, Allen, an, underwater data center? Allen Hall: The one that I think you’re talking about is Penthalassa, which has recently come out of the dark mode, and they have been working on this, in at least a couple of years from far as I can tell, [00:12:00] trying to develop data centers that… using a, system driven by not necessarily the waves. It’s not the waves, Rosemary. I think it’s more to do with the pressure, of the ocean. It’s, something to that effect, which is really interesting. but, China has, like in many things, working offshore and trying to get data centers up and running. they’ve commissioned the first undersea data center powered directly by offshore wind. The Shanghai Lingang project, built by a subsidiary of China Communications Construction, CCC, began operations off Shanghai’s eastern coast in May. Planned capacity is 24 megawatts, and the core design transmits offshore wind power directly to submerged data modules via subsea photoelectric composite cables. I’m not sure what that is, but I’ll have to dig into that deeper. And by bypassing grid routing entirely. Seawater obviously will serve as the cooling medium [00:13:00] through circulating pipes in the heat exchangers, reducing electricity consumption by about 20%. one of the local v- university professors estimates that this kind of data center model could save about 50 billion kilowatt hours annually across China’s data center fleet, equivaling, equivalent to not burning 15 million metric tons of coal per year, and that would be nice. Is there a future in offshore data centers that use the ocean to cool themselves and Plug ’em into wind turbines offshore, just get the electricity straight from the wind. Does this have growth futures, Matthew Stead: particularly in China? I love it. I think it’s absolutely fantastic, and it just means you don’t have to send them into space, because that’s a silly idea. The other point, do you remember a couple of years ago they were going to build, hydrogen electrolyzers, offshore n- next to wind turbines? So all they do is [00:14:00] just scrap the electrolyzer and then put in the data center. It’s just perfect. Rosemary Barnes: But that’s what this, ship one that I was, I listened to the podcast of, that’s their, thing. It’s just power for whatever. whatever, obviously it has to be something that’s capable of, operating on a ship environment. You’re not gonna be doing probably precision manufacturing or anything out there. But, apparently failure rates for, data center stuff is not… They’re not expecting it to be higher. Higher in some types of failures will be higher, and some will be lower, but, they think that overall it’s so much, so much cheaper. But yeah, they did also talk about doing, yeah, I don’t know, hydrogen. Is anybody, is anyone still talking about hydrogen anymore? I feel like we’re finally, not n- not doing that. Allen Hall: Rosie, I think you killed it. I’ve seen more news reports about it, where they’re not proceeding and there’s been some funding challenges, and those things are happening. Like any new technology, it’s, hard. The beginning is hard. Rosemary Barnes: But, you know that, already hyd- making [00:15:00]hydrogen the way that we make it today is something like 2% of the world’s, emissions. So it’s okay, we do need heaps of clean hydrogen for that 2%. So I’m definitely not against, some hydrogen projects happening, ’cause we’ve gotta… That’s the, same size as y- you know, nearly as much as aviation, for example. so not insignificant. Matthew Stead: Yeah, someone actually came up to us and s- I had a bit of a discussion about that, Rosie. We’ve got a bit of information to share with you about that- Rosemary Barnes: Oh, yeah … Matthew Stead: that will dispute some of your claims. we’ll share that with you Rosemary Barnes: offline. They’re not my claims. I’m merely reporting what people who are working on it say. But I, was saying to Allen, ’cause we had a big chat offline about contrails and how challenging it is to just alter an aircraft’s path to reduce them, I need to, Engineering with Rosie video on this and get an expert on and ask them all of Allen’s very informed questions. maybe I’ll get you on as a co- co-interviewer. I’m actually keen on viewer input, listener input. we’ve got a, Pardalote actually has a training course [00:16:00]coming up. I’ve been trying to organize this training so that I and my employees can learn more about blade repairs. So we have a course coming up, organizing it in collaboration with Direct Wind Services. We’ve got a great, blade repair guy who’s gonna be taking the course- It’s gonna start out with an optional day that I’ll be running about blade design, manufacturing, certification, those sorts of things. And then three days on blade repair. So we’ll go through the theory, also, hands-on stuff. So we’ll be doing grinding, we’ll be doing layups, infusions, all that sort of thing for three days in Ballarat. but the extra cool part is that I’m gonna be using this opportunity to make a video about wind turbine blade repairs, ’cause, one, I’ve been si- trying, I’ve wanted to make a video on this ever since I started my YouTube channel, six years ago. So this is the opportunity that I can take to, talk about what kinds of repairs are actually done. I think people will be really surprised to see, even in, when they’re brand new out of the factory, they still gotta do, dozens of repairs on a [00:17:00] blade before it’s ready to go out. And people will also probably be surprised at, the extent of, repair that you can do and get a blade back up to its original design intent. So I would ask, anyone listening to this that has questions about those sorts of topics, let me know, and I’ll try my best to include that in the video. ‘Cause I think it’s a topic that’s not, super well understood. Matthew Stead: Can I come along as well? Rosemary Barnes: Nice, nice segue into me advertising. So this is our first one. We’ve got, we’ve got a few spots. I think that they’re gonna very easily fill, but we are planning to run them periodically. So yeah, you can get in touch and, let me know. yeah. Anybody. You, Matt, I’ll send you over the, the information. Yolanda Padron: That’s a really good idea, Rosie, ’cause I feel like a lot of people, you either have, a really robust, understanding of blades and a really good background on it, or you’re starting fresh. And when you’re starting fresh, it’s really difficult to know what exactly you’re [00:18:00] doing. Or you know in theory, not until you go into the nitty-gritty or until you watch Rosie’s videos, do you then get a better understanding of everything that’s going on. Rosemary Barnes: Yeah. It’s, a fascinating topic. obviously that’s what I spend 90, 90%-plus of my time working on. yeah. Blade damage and blade repairs. But there’s so much, there’s so much information that would be better off if it was shared, if everybody, knew a bit more about what, what was possible, what was normal, what’s best practice. Then I think that the, O&M for blades would go a lot more smoothly. Allen Hall: We had Matt Sagala on the podcast this past week, and one of the items he was talking about, some of the basic fundamentals of repairs, the little checkpoints that need to be in place when you’re looking at a repair, and the photographs that come in a repair report and some of the details, how they get skipped. And there should be more emphasis on some of the basics, and making sure that the photos show the different layers that have been ground, where each of the plies are. [00:19:00] Something simple like that, which in a lot of good blade reports. You don’t necessarily see in all of them and Rosie, if you’re training people up and showing them what the fundamentals are, that’d be really helpful in getting that information out where you can access- where it’s accessible, like on YouTube. Rosemary Barnes: I’m always giving that, that feedback back, “Can you please at least show, an image of what it looked like before you started repairing?” Nobody ever does that, and it’s y- we have the inspection, the drone image, but, you don’t have… you had, you were right there. You had the opportunity to take the , photo from every, angle, because you wanna be able to recognize what does this damage look like the next time that we see it. What’s it gonna look like in a drone image? And, yeah, be able to… sometimes you get in there and you think that you’re just gonna be repairing a couple of layers, and it turns out to a huge, thing. like I’ve seen repair , repairs come in that, hundreds of thousands or more, to do just one repair that was totally unexpected by the person who was paying the bill.[00:20:00] the more information that you take about that repair, then the more possible it is for engineers like me to be able to, a- at least predict, okay, you’ve, you’re likely to have a big repair here, and plan for it. Allen Hall: Trying to find someone doing blade repair correctly on YouTube is hard to find. It really is. I s- you see people with grinders and things, and yeah, they’re working hard and they’re doing a job. But someone to actually walk through from beginning to end, and made it, and explained it as they did it, would be helpful to the industry. Tremendously helpful. Yolanda Padron: Just to make sure that your budget’s right, for the year. if you’re on the owner’s side, and then you think, “Oh, okay. Sure. this AI-based drone inspection told me that I need to tackle all of these, and I know that these are gonna cost me, I don’t know, X amount of dollars,” you can, take a, human pass through those images and make sure that, your expectations and your reality is, closer, just by [00:21:00] looking at Rosie’s videos. So that’ll be, really exciting. Allen Hall: Rosemary, how do people join in on your blade repair fun? Rosemary Barnes: for, first of all, get in touch if you wanna do the course, especially in Australia. we could definitely organize one. In, the US coming up, piggyback off a- another event or somewhere else. But also get in touch with me at pardaloteconsulting.com, and you can, yeah, send me a message through the contact form and let me know that you’re interested. Maybe spell pardalote, Yolanda Padron: though, for people. Rosemary Barnes: Pardaloteconsulting.com. P-A-R-D-A-L-O-T-E and then consulting. Allen Hall: As wind energy professionals, staying informed is crucial, and let’s face it, difficult. That’s why the Uptime Podcast recommends PES Wind Magazine. PES Wind offers a diverse range of in-depth articles and expert insights that dive into the most pressing issues facing our energy future. Whether you’re an industry veteran or new to wind, PES Wind has the high-quality [00:22:00] content you need. Don’t miss out. Visit peswind.com today. in this quarter’s PES Wind magazine, which you can get at peswind.com, there’s an article from Minerva Energy, ABJ Renewables, and Concept X where they have developed a product called WindView, which is an advanced inspection system using high-res optical capture with thermographic analysis for a full subsurface, inspection from rotor to tip. the system detects defects as small as three to four millimeters, which is quite small, and a- analyzes the blade structures up to about 15 centimeters, which is quite deep, so that it does seem like a pretty useful inspection tool. as we all know, just the generic, visual drone inspection can give you an idea of what’s happening on the surface, but a lot of the structural issues are deeper [00:23:00]inside the blade, so thermal inspection combined with optical inspection can give insights into some places that otherwise go unseen. And Rosemary, as a blade expert, and Yolanda too, there’s a lot that happens inside of blades, and having a- an additional tool to inspect blades and to get more understanding of what’s happening underneath the paint service could be really useful. Rosemary Barnes: Yeah, I’m always trying to recommend th- this. I haven’t got any clients that have actually used thermal imaging, to look for damages, but especially in, areas where you suspect that there are r- some repairs that haven’t been done correctly or you’re looking for early signs of a serial defect. Y- like one of the weird things with the full service agreement, actually it’s probably true with, yeah, any kind of turbine sale, is there’s this serial defect liability period, and you’ve got to hit usually, a crazy high, stupid high number, like 20%, 30% of all your blades have to have the [00:24:00] same damage within it might be a two or three-year period, not, very long. It’s better when it’s more like 20% in five years. That’s, enough time to actually catch things. But so one of the things that you’ve got to do is like you really want to catch things early in order to be able to, y- make a claim on that. And so this is one of the tools that people would have to catch things earlier, like it’s not yet visible, with a crack on the surface that– Or even, like even small cracks on the surface will fly under the radar as well because, they won’t be flagged in the inspection reports. So if you’ve got a few of something that’s looks like it might be the same, it, and you’re still within your defect, your serial defect liability period, it’s definitely worth doing something, the, some kind of NDT, and this, is one of the good options it’s actually worth spending a whole lot of money to, to try and get that in because, like the numbers are, millions and millions of dollars, maybe tens, maybe hundreds, depending on, the extent of the problem. So yeah, it’s always good [00:25:00] to be well aware of what your deadlines are and what tools are available, and this is one of the good ones. Allen Hall: Yolanda, you think it’ll open up access to carbon pultrusion inspections on blades without actually cracking the blade open? Yolanda Padron: Hopefully, yeah. in, internal inspections you can only go so far, right? And Rosie, you have a lot more experience with this in action than I do. but yeah, so I, I think it’d be really interesting to see just what, what people can get done without actually happing- having to go and carving everything out, and without having to already start a s- a, a repair that maybe you don’t have the budget to do. Allen Hall: If its speed is fast enough, I- thermal imaging can be slow at times, but from what I’ve seen, the, cameras have really improved over the last couple of years. If they have this down where you could really inspect blades quickly, it would be a tremendous help to have insights into [00:26:00] depth of damage, especially with c- I think carbon pultrusions are the one that we just don’t have a lot of oversight with, and it’s very difficult to inspect. And so if you could actually see damage to the pultrusion ahead of time, that would be a, major advantage. I, can’t imagine the insurance companies wouldn’t love this system. S- Matthew Stead: it’s interesting. Yeah, I’ve got a question. GE Vernova has a patent around some of this, technology. They’ve had it obviously for many years. But, I know one of the challenges with the GE Vernova approach was that through the day, if you’ve got ambient temperatures, it was a bit hard to pick up, the actual damage. So at least for the GE, solution, it had to be done at dusk or, when the sun wasn’t out. So I don’t know the answer to that, but is that one of the technical challenges around, when it can actually be taken? Do you need to take it when the sun’s not out? Allen Hall: Yeah, I wonder that too I’ve– The way I’ve seen it is they try to catch it at sunrise or sunset where there’s [00:27:00] a thermal gradient on the blade. However, the thermal imaging cameras is, are, cameras are so much better than they used to be. it may be possible to just do it during the daytime. Rosemary Barnes: I think the different companies are approaching it in different ways and, I’m sure that some of them can do it, like especially under direct sunlight, then that can be actually a really good way to get some, some heating. And then g- it relies– Mostly it’s relying on the fact that different materials heat up at different rates. So as long as you’ve got some sort of change in, in temperature happening, then you should be able to see. Yeah, like obviously if there’s a big, crack or a delamination, there’s some air there that’s gonna heat up differently than the composite around it. Allen Hall: Oh, sure. Yeah. Rosemary Barnes: Yeah. I think also like when cracks propagate, they are actually generating some heat at that site and you, can catch that too. But, I’m, actually not on top of it enough to know how much it’s one or the other. I think it’s mostly about, when a blade heats up, air will heat up differently to, to composite and you’ll be able to see it. that’s my limited [00:28:00] understanding anyway. Something worth more of a deep dive. I’m actually looking forward to some, hopefully some clients getting over the line to, doing some more of the, taking advantage of some of the NDT tests that are, available because it can just help you do such a better job of, management and huge risk redus- reductions too. Allen Hall: So if you haven’t seen this quarter’s PES Wind, you can download it now at peswind.com. That wraps up another episode of the Uptime Wind Energy podcast. If today’s discussion sparked any questions or ideas, we’d love to hear from you. Reach out to us on LinkedIn, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss an episode. If you found value in today’s conversation, please leave us a review. It really helps other wind energy professionals discover the show. For Rosie, Yolanda, and Matthew, I am Allen Hall, and we’ll see you here next week on the Uptime Wind Energy [00:29:00] podcast.
Today we look at John 21:1-14, the story of what happened when Jesus' disciples went fishing. © Kate Heichler, 2026. To receive Water Daily by email each morning, subscribe here. Here are the bible readings for Friday in Easter Week.
Voilà une info qui devrait faire plaisir au Kid (mon voisin d'antenne dans Stack 19h/20h) : demain sera publié le coffret QUEEN II, dont l'album original est sorti il y a tout juste 52 ans ! En 1974 (précisément le 08 mars) est donc apparu sur les ondes et les platines ce monument d'un jeune groupe qui flirtait alors avec le rock progressif, raison pour laquelle, l'extrait de ce soir a toute sa légitimité dans cette playlist. Faites vous plaisir avec ce coffret qui donne un coup de jeune à cette institution avec un nouveau mixage, mais aussi des prises alternatives de studio, du live et même le playback instrumental pour celles et ceux qui seraient tenter de jouer les Freddy amateurs ! Enfin n'oublions pas la cerise sur le gâteau, un inédit dévoilé déjà fin 2025 : "Not For Sale", bah si justement et c'est pas donné, mais quand on aime… Mais c'est un autre titre justement progressif que je vous propose et à titre personnel en ce jour particulier, "spécial dédicace". C'est avec leur 5ème album "Enigme" que j'ai découvert ce groupe international : PRoPoRTIoNS. Une bande de musiciens réunis initialement pour réaliser des tributes albums à Gentle Giant au début de ce siècle et qui sont finalement restés en liens malgré leurs dispersions sur notre (encore pour combien de temps ? ) belle planète. Alors doit on se réjouir de ces technologies qui permettent de nos jours de créer des enregistrements à distance par échange de fichiers entre la Terre d'Albion, le Canada, la Suède ou le royaume de Donald ? Sur le papier cela semble manquer de spontanéité mais en réalité ce 7ème opus "Stories Untold" est une vraie réussite, dommage qu'une représentation live soit peu probable. Un disque fort recommandé par votre modeste serviteur ! A l'inverse, ces jeunes talents originaires de Tours formés sous le noms de ELEMENTS ne se privent pas pour jouer ensemble ! D'ailleurs ils seront demain soir au BAR PIRAAT CAFE de leur ville natale, avis aux amateurs de bon rock et métal progressif. Attention, en français dans le texte ! Aperçu dans ce numéro avec un extrait de leur 1er album paru en 2023 et fort engageant : "Nouvelle Ere". Si PRoPoRTIoNS doit sa carrière aux Gentle Giant, c'est sur les bases de tribute bands de Pink Floyd qu'est né MOSTLY AUTUMN avant de publier sa propre discographie depuis 1998. Preuve de cet héritage assumé, le claviériste émérite et regretté du Floyd Rick Wright les a adoubés au début des années 2000. Si les modifications de line-up ont été importantes depuis les débuts, son fondateur Bryan Josh parvint à maintenir le cap. Sans être complètement surpris à chaque nouvelle parution, l'alchimie est toujours parfaite à mes oreilles et pour preuve le titre de bravoure et éponyme du dernier album en date, "Seawater" publié il y a un an est une véritable machine à émotions à écouter en immersion ! Ils viennent de publier leur 2ème album et je suis ravi de vous en proposer ici un nouvel extrait. "Someday" est un délice "made in France" par POLYCHROME et, comme certains de leurs illustres aînés, formé par deux frères : Simon et Maxime, renforcés par Omar, Sergio et Loïck. Extrait d'un titre idéal en mantra au réveil pour vous garantir une journée de bonheur. Je sais l'émission est diffusée le soir mais le replay est fait pour ça mais surtout procurez vous cette galette garnie de bons sons analogiques aux ambiances oniriques, vos oreilles vous diront merci. Pour être honnête je suis moins fan du son des synthés du début des 80's. A cette époque les temps sont durs pour le rock prog mais avec "Silent Knight'" nos amis canadiens de SAGA s'en sortent pourtant bien. Certes, je rêverais d'un réenregistrement de cet album avec des synthés des 70's ou d'aujourd'hui car pour le reste, tout est bon, le compos comme leurs auteurs qui nous ont livré un bel opus qu'on a toujours plaisir à réentendre. Retour sur cette véritable pièce d'orfèvrerie et de délicatesse qu'est "Looking Back Moving Forward", le nouvel album d' ELISA MONTALDO. Ah on s'y connait en Italie en matière de classe. Et en l'occurrence le terme classieux, n'est pas en la circostance un gros mot, bien au contraire : la voix, les sons, tout en finesse. Quel bonheur et quel moment de grâce dans ce monde chaotique… Merci Elisa ! Et puis cités plus haut, ce numéro se termine par un extrait du monument de PINK FLOYD : "The Wall". Nous sommes en 1979, Roger Waters fini par prendre le pouvoir sur ce qui ne sera pour le prochain opus que "son" groupe, "ses" musiciens de sessions. Ainsi il a déjà viré Rick Wright qui joue malgré tout encore sur cet album en simple salarié. Un double album pensé comme un triptyque : le disque, les concerts véritables opéra rocks tellement compliqués et cher à monter que rares et le fameux film d'Alan Parker. A nos mères, contre la guerre et contre les murs … AMAROK, Chaque jeudi, à 20h
Can 4 Volts of Electricity Replace 60 Bars of Pressure in Seawater Desalination? ilion Water Technologies is a 2025 spinout from the Physics Laboratory of the École Normale Supérieure in Paris. Their VIRO (Voltage-Induced Reverse Osmosis) technology claims to replace the high-pressure pump train in seawater desalination with an alternating electric field applied to engineered composite membranes, operating at atmospheric pressure.
Show Notes 27 February 2026Story 1: Artemis II to Test Laser-Based Communication from the MoonSource: ExtremeTech.comLink: https://www.extremetech.com/aerospace/artemis-ii-to-test-laser-based-communication-from-the-moonStory 2: New solar-powered device extracts lithium for batteries while desalinating seawaterSource: Interesting EngineeringLink: https://interestingengineering.com/energy/china-solar-device-extracts-lithium-desalinates-seawaterSee research paper here: https://www.cell.com/device/abstract/S2666-9986(25)00341-2Story 3: Paralysis treatment heals lab-grown human spinal cord organoidsSource: Northwestern University Link: https://news.northwestern.edu/stories/2026/02/paralysis-treatment-heals-lab-grown-human-spinal-cord-organoidsSee research paper here: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41551-025-01606-2Story 4: Toward regenerative bioprinting: Magnetic mixer enables scalable manufacturing of 3D-printed tissuesSource: TechXplore.comLink: https://techxplore.com/news/2026-02-regenerative-bioprinting-magnetic-mixer-enables.htmlSee research paper here: https://www.cell.com/device/abstract/S2666-9986(25)00357-6Honorable MentionsStory: How to Compute with Electron WavesSource: NewsBreak.comLink: https://www.newsbreak.com/ieee-spectrum-319637150/4454843506865-how-to-compute-with-electron-wavesStory: This Silent Wind Turbine Solves Sailing's Power ProblemSource: Yanko DesignLink: https://www.yankodesign.com/2026/01/18/this-silent-wind-turbine-solves-sailings-power-problem/Story: Army establishes new AI, machine learning career path for officersSource: US Army Website Link: https://www.army.mil/article/289843/army_establishes_new_ai_machine_learning_career_path_for_officersStory: Smart chip could slash computing energy use by up to 5,000×Source: Interesting Engineering via MSNLink: https://www.msn.com/en-us/technology/hardware-and-devices/smart-chip-could-slash-computing-energy-use-by-up-to-5-000/ar-AA1UFiIN
How Scientists Detect Ocean Life is one of the biggest challenges in ocean conservation, because we cannot protect what we cannot see, measure, or even prove exists. How Scientists Detect Ocean Life using environmental DNA asks a powerful question: what if a simple bottle of seawater could reveal more species than divers, cameras, and nets combined, and what does that mean for how we protect the ocean? Environmental DNA ocean monitoring is changing how scientists understand marine biodiversity, especially for rare, shy, or hard-to-detect species. In this episode, you will learn how tiny fragments of DNA left behind by fish can be collected, analyzed, and matched to species, revealing hidden ecosystems that were previously invisible to science. One surprising insight from this research is that eDNA often finds species scientists did not even know were present, exposing how incomplete our current monitoring really is. Ocean conservation science depends on accurate data, and this episode explores why better detection tools lead to stronger marine protected areas, smarter management decisions, and earlier warnings when ecosystems are in trouble. This story is not just about new technology, it is about hope, because knowing what lives in the ocean gives us a real chance to protect it before it disappears. Help fund a new seagrass podcast: https://www.speakupforblue.com/seagrass Join the Undertow: https://www.speakupforblue.com/jointheundertow Connect with Speak Up For Blue Website: https://bit.ly/3fOF3Wf Instagram: https://bit.ly/3rIaJSG TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@speakupforblue Twitter: https://bit.ly/3rHZxpc YouTube: www.speakupforblue.com/youtube
What if the solution to the world's most pressing problems—food scarcity, mass migration, and desertification—was hiding in plain sight? In this episode of Swiss Impact, we sit down with Karl Albrecht Waldstein, the inventor of Desert Greener and managing director of Seawater GmbH. Karl's journey began 17 years ago in Spain, witnessing the devastating effects of desertification while standing next to an "endless abundance" of seawater. Since then, he has developed a revolutionary technology that mimics the natural water cycle to turn salt water into "blank sheet" distilled water using nothing but the power of the sun. Unlike traditional reverse osmosis, which is energy-intensive and produces harmful waste, Desert Greener is a zero-emission process. It doesn't just provide water; it creates a path for Green Hydrogen and Ammonia production, potentially replacing fossil fuels for a carbon-neutral future. Join us for a profound conversation that bridges cutting-edge physics with spiritual wisdom. As Karl puts it: "We have to find a way that the seawater solves the problem, but it must be cheap or almost for free." #WaterCrisis, #DesertGreener, #Sustainability, #GreenHydrogen, #ClimateAction, #Innovation, #CleanWater, #SwissImpact, #RenewableEnergy, #Agriculture, #ZeroEmissions
AP correspondent Ed Donahue reports on deadly wave in Spain.
Hello Poison Friends! We are back with more horrible acts committed by Nazis in WWII. The focus for this episode is a series of experiments done mainly at Dachau, as far as we know from records that were recovered, and they centered around proposals put forth by the Air Force and Navy in Nazi Germany at that time. I will also go over some of the doctors and other personnel responsible for these horrors, such as Dr. Sigmund Rascher, and what eventually became of them. The High Altitude experiments involved forcing prisoners into a machine that could be sealed and allowed for serious pressure changes. The idea was to test the reaction of the human body to free fall from the heights of up to 68,900 ft. The pressure and lack of oxygen at that height would be devastating, especially when forced into a quick ascent and just dropped. However, this is what hundreds were made to experience in the chamber they were sealed in. Many died as a result.The Freezing Experiments were also torture. Prisoners were subjected to freezing water or made to stand naked in the freezing cold outside to simulate hypothermia and the like. They practiced various rewarming techniques on these victims as well. There were many deaths from these as well. We are also discussing experiments done on prisoners (some who had also survived previous experiments) in which they were starved and given seawater to drink. Those performing these experiments watched the victims suffer from severe dehydration and organ failure as a result. Trigger warning here for descriptive testimony at times 44:40-45:35, 46:52-51:27, and 56:12-59:10.Thank you to all of our listeners and supporters! Please feel free to leave a comment or send us a DM for any questions, suggestions, or just to say, "hi."Support us on Patreon:patreon.com/thepoisonersalmanacMerch-https://poisonersalmanac.com/Follow us on socials:The Poisoner's Almanac on IG-https://www.instagram.com/poisoners_almanac?utm_source=ig_web_button_share_sheet&igsh=ZDNlZDc0MzIxNw==YouTube-https://youtube.com/@thepoisonersalmanac-m5q?si=16JV_ZKhpGaLyM73Also, look for the Poisoner's Almanac TikTok- https://www.tiktok.com/@poisonersalmanacp?_t=ZT-8wdYQyXhKbm&_r=1Adam-https://www.tiktok.com/@studiesshow?is_from_webapp=1&sender_device=pcBecca-https://www.tiktok.com/@yobec0?is_from_webapp=1&sender_device=pc
Welcome to Episode #168 of Everything Under the Sun! This week the brainy and brilliant Tom Mustill chips in on whether or not whales from Antarctica could communicate with whales from Iceland?
More than 20 miles of gigantic wall, out in the ocean, are hoping to defend Jakarta, Indonesia's capital and Southeast Asia's biggest mega-city, from rising seawater. Also, US foreign direct investment in Africa has surpassed China's for the first time since 2012. And, New Delhi and Islamabad were both hit with bombs, killing at least 20 people between them, and both Indian and Pakistani officials are trying to find out the exact cause of the explosions. Plus, the genre-bending American band Deerhoof releases its first single, “Immigrant Songs,” a playful take on a serious issue.Listen to today's Music Heard on Air. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices
Now on air: Prog & Roll Radio Show 0:51 EREWAN Greetings from Slumberland 5:07 Soul is the Key (2025) MOSTLY AUTUMN Be Something 4:43 Seawater (2025) ARJEN ANTHONY LUCASSEN Dr. Slumber's Blue Bus 4:03 Songs no One Will Hear (2025) THE CERES PHENOMENON Trapped and Uneasy 4:12 The Ceres Phenomenon (2025) EDENYA Back From The […]
Steve Oldham is CEO of Captura. Captura develops Direct Ocean Capture (DOC) technology that removes CO₂ from seawater, triggering the ocean to draw more CO₂ from the air to rebalance. With CO₂ concentrations ~150× higher in seawater than air, Captura's closed-loop process uses electrodialysis to create acid and base on site—no added chemicals, no waste—and can run largely on off-peak renewable energy. Oldham, former CEO of Carbon Engineering, contrasts DOC with DAC, discusses MRV and crediting, deployment pathways (onshore, barges, vessels), his company's pilot progress in Hawaii, and why pragmatic scale-up and licensing partnerships matter for gigaton carbon removal. Episode recorded on Aug 28, 2025 (Published on Sept 30, 2025)In this episode, we cover: [02:17] Steve's path from Carbon Engineering to Captura[05:30] How Direct Ocean Capture actually works[09:10] Closed-loop design with no waste products[10:14] Using electrodialysis to split acid and base[13:12] Deployment options: onshore plants, barges, vessels[14:39] Running on off-peak and curtailed renewables[16:30] Measuring and crediting carbon drawdown[21:53] Balancing CO₂ use vs. permanent storage[25:22] Policy gaps like 45Q for ocean removal[35:15] Captura's Kona pilot built in 70 days[37:33] First commercial project expected in Europe Enjoyed this episode? Please leave us a review! Share feedback or suggest future topics and guests at info@mcj.vc.Connect with MCJ:Cody Simms on LinkedInVisit mcj.vcSubscribe to the MCJ Newsletter*Editing and post-production work for this episode was provided by The Podcast Consultant
DREAM THEATER Bend the Clock 7:25 Parasomnia (2025) PATTERN-SEEKING ANIMALS In My Dying Days 4:42 Friend of all Creatures (2025) MOSTLY AUTUMN Why do We Remember all the Rain 4:53 Seawater (2025) KARMAKANIC Cosmic Love 5:00 Transmutation (2025) GHOST OF THE MACHINE The Days that Never Were 6:00 Empires Must Fall (2025) NEIL YOUNG Sail […]
Story 1: Scientists use quantum machine learning to create semiconductors for the first timeSource: LiveScience.comLink: https://www.livescience.com/technology/computing/scientists-use-quantum-machine-learning-to-create-semiconductors-for-the-first-time-and-it-could-transform-how-chips-are-madeResearch Paper: https://advanced.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/advs.202506213Story 2: How used EV batteries could help fuel the AI boomSource: CBS NewsLink: https://www.cbsnews.com/news/used-ev-batteries-artificial-intelligence/Also See: https://www.crusoe.ai/Also See: https://www.redwoodmaterials.com/Story 3: Carbon-Negative Building Material Made from Seawater and CO2Source: TechnologyNetworks.comLink: https://www.technologynetworks.com/applied-sciences/news/carbon-negative-building-material-made-from-seawater-and-co2-397532Story 4: Researchers develop a biosensor based on light and AI for early diagnosis of cancerSource: MedicalXpress.comLink: https://medicalxpress.com/news/2025-07-biosensor-based-ai-early-diagnosis.htmlResearch Paper: https://advanced.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/advs.202503257Honorable MentionsStory: Worcester Polytechnic Institute Researchers Develop Cleaner, Scalable Process to Recycle Lithium-Ion BatteriesSource: WPI News WebsiteLink: https://www.wpi.edu/news/wpi-researchers-develop-cleaner-scalable-process-recycle-lithium-ion-batteriesResearch Paper: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S2405829725003848Story: pFIBRE Launches Scalable Biodegradable Films to Replace Single-Use PlasticsSource: ThePackHub.comLink: https://thepackhub.com/innovation-news/pfibre-launches-scalable-biodegradable-films-to-replace-single-use-plastics/Story: Scientists Create Living Plastic Alternative - And it's edible, too!Source: Futurism.comLink: https://futurism.com/scientists-living-plasticAlso See: https://www.sciencealert.com/scientists-create-biodegradable-plastic-alternative-thats-literally-aliveStory: Nth Cycle is bringing critical metals refining to the U.S. - the company is already producing nickel and cobalt from battery scrap in OhioSource: MIT NewsLink: https://news.mit.edu/2025/nth-cycle-brings-critical-metals-refining-0627Also See: https://nthcycle.com/
John Maytham chats to Dr Lize Barclay from Stellenbosch University on the development of a new kind of plastic that dissolves in sea water. Seen as a new way to curb sea pollution Presenter John Maytham is an actor and author-turned-talk radio veteran and seasoned journalist. His show serves a round-up of local and international news coupled with the latest in business, sport, traffic and weather. The host’s eclectic interests mean the program often surprises the audience with intriguing book reviews and inspiring interviews profiling artists. A daily highlight is Rapid Fire, just after 5:30pm. CapeTalk fans call in, to stump the presenter with their general knowledge questions. Another firm favourite is the humorous Thursday crossing with award-winning journalist Rebecca Davis, called “Plan B”. Thank you for listening to a podcast from Afternoon Drive with John Maytham Listen live on Primedia+ weekdays from 15:00 and 18:00 (SA Time) to Afternoon Drive with John Maytham broadcast on CapeTalk https://buff.ly/NnFM3Nk For more from the show go to https://buff.ly/BSFy4Cn or find all the catch-up podcasts here https://buff.ly/n8nWt4x Subscribe to the CapeTalk Daily and Weekly Newsletters https://buff.ly/sbvVZD5 Follow us on social media: CapeTalk on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CapeTalk CapeTalk on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@capetalk CapeTalk on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ CapeTalk on X: https://x.com/CapeTalk CapeTalk on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@CapeTalk567 See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Time Artist Title Duration Album Year 0:00:00 ProgPhonic 190 Into 0:39 0:00:39 Mostly Autumn Let's Take a Walk 8:57 Seawater 2025 0:10:50 David Minasian / Justin Minasian All In 6:18 The Sound of Dreams 2020 0:17:08 Huis Memories 8:34 Neither In Heaven 2016 0:30:21 Finally George Listen 5:57 Painter 2025 0:36:18 Finally George Sunrise 4:44 […]
Grilled and fully SEA-soned! Our hosts Chefs Brian and Paul react to Guga Foods' wild experiment of soaking and grilling steaks with actual sea water, are the results mouthwatering or too salty to handle? Let's Heat Things Up! Check Out Our Youtube Channel @SYWGFPodcast and remember to like and subscribe! SEND US CLIPS soyouwannagetfat@gmail.com PATREON https://www.patreon.com/chefbriantsao JOIN DISCORD! Discord https://discord.gg/WdM7tGTHhG MERCH https://downrightmerchinc.com/collections/chef-brian-tsao FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL MEDIA https://www.instagram.com/sywgfpodcast https://twitter.com/sywgfpodcast https://www.tiktok.com/@sywgfpodcast https://www.facebook.com/SYWGFpodcast FOLLOW CHEF BRIAN TSAO! Instagram https://www.instagram.com/chefbriantsao Facebook https://www.facebook.com/ChefBrianTsao Twitter https://twitter.com/chefbriantsao FOLLOW FRENCHY https://www.instagram.com/lechefpaul https://www.instagram.com/lerivagenyc https://shop.lerivagenyc.com VISIT THE WEBSITE! https://soyouwannagetfat.com/ Follow Mission Sandwich Social https://www.instagram.com/missionsandwich/ Executive Producer: Madelyn Grimes / YEA Media Group Editor: Joshua Burns / YEA Media Group If you are interested in advertising on this podcast or having Brian & Frenchy as guests on your Podcast, Radio Show, or TV Show, reach out to podcast@yeanetworks.com. 0:00 - Intro 1:51 - Catching Up 3:42 - Lights Out 6:00 - Far Away Fireworks 8:03 - Our Mailbox Is Empty 10:14 - A Special Sandwich 14:35 - Guga Makes Sea Water Steaks 37:53 - Not So Current News 45:52 - Clips For Frenchy 51:38 - Outro Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoicesSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Existential Dread and Seawater, MCP, Cloudflare, ESxi, QR Codes, Salt Typhoon, Aaran Leyland, and More on this episode of the Security Weekly News. Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/swn for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/swn-495
Existential Dread and Seawater, MCP, Cloudflare, ESxi, QR Codes, Salt Typhoon, Aaran Leyland, and More on this episode of the Security Weekly News. Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/swn-495
Existential Dread and Seawater, MCP, Cloudflare, ESxi, QR Codes, Salt Typhoon, Aaran Leyland, and More on this episode of the Security Weekly News. Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/swn for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/swn-495
Existential Dread and Seawater, MCP, Cloudflare, ESxi, QR Codes, Salt Typhoon, Aaran Leyland, and More on this episode of the Security Weekly News. Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/swn-495
A new discovery with Bronze Age treasure - Meteorite Iron used to create items before the iron age, Japanese scientists invent plastic that dissolves in water and a new discovery that could have a profound impact on brain health. Strange Metal From Beyond Our World Spotted in Ancient Treasure Stash : ScienceAlertBronze Age 'treasure' was crafted with extraterrestrial metal | Live Science This Plastic Dissolves in Seawater and Leaves Behind Zero MicroplasticsSugar shield restored: The breakthrough reversing brain aging and memory loss Contact the show: coolstuffcommute@gmail.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The Magic of Mixing Soda Cans, Seawater, and Coffee. That story and more on H2O Radio's weekly news report. Headlines: The European Union unveiled an Ocean Pact to protect the seas, which was swiftly criticized by six major environmental organizations. Hurricanes can stir up dramatic changes in the deep ocean. A recipe for zero-emissions fuel? Soda cans, seawater, and caffeine.
Now on air: Prog & Roll Radio Show 0:51 BEN BELL Northern Star 2:19 Fragments & Fantasies (A Piano Interlude) (2025) JETHRO TULL Puppet and the Puppet Master 4:05 Curious Ruminant (2025) EDENYA Princess of the Light 3:12 The Secret Destination You are Looking for (2025) MOSTLY AUTUMN Be Something 4:43 Seawater (2025) KARMAKANIC Gotta […]
https://youtu.be/UWOAjs7ruGIMatt and Sean talk about desalination efforts deep under the ocean, and how it may play a part in solving water shortages. Don't get salty before taking a listen.Undersea cables article: https://www.mentalfloss.com/article/60150/10-facts-about-internets-undersea-cablesIn response to “water we gonna do about it?”https://youtu.be/NNEgUPKxk7A?si=nMxEfpJitt_gU2QH&t=55Watch the Undecided with Matt Ferrell episode, How Deep Sea Water is Now Drinkable https://youtu.be/Bu_IcFpEkg0?list=PLnTSM-ORSgi7uzySCXq8VXhodHB5B5OiQ(00:00) - - Intro & Feedback (21:25) - - Deep Ocean Desalination Discussion YouTube version of the podcast: https://www.youtube.com/stilltbdpodcastGet in touch: https://undecidedmf.com/podcast-feedbackSupport the show: https://pod.fan/still-to-be-determinedFollow us on X: @stilltbdfm @byseanferrell @mattferrell or @undecidedmfUndecided with Matt Ferrell: https://www.youtube.com/undecidedmf ★ Support this podcast ★
Now on air: Prog & Roll Radio Show 0:51 BEN BELL Northern Star 2:19 Fragments & Fantasies (A Piano Interlude) (2025) PATTERN-SEEKING ANIMALS Down the Darkest Road 4:35 Friend of all Creatures (2025) MOSTLY AUTUMN If Only for a Day 6:37 Seawater (2025) MIHRAX Unknown Yet 4:33 ROX (2025) IQ No Dominion 6:25 Dominion (2025) […]
Drinking water from the ocean might seem tempting with all that water around, but there's a big problem – it's salty, really, really salty! Ocean water contains about 35 grams of salt per liter, and our bodies can't handle that much salt. When we drink salty water, it actually dehydrates us because our kidneys have to work overtime to filter out the excess salt. Desalination, a process to remove salt from seawater, is used in some places to make it drinkable, but it's expensive and energy-intensive. Plus, the leftover salty brine can harm marine ecosystems when released back into the ocean. Read more: https://brightside.me/articles/why-ca... #brightside Animation is created by Bright Side. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Music from TheSoul Sound: https://thesoul-sound.com/ Listen to Bright Side on: Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/0hUkPxD... Apple Podcast - https://podcasts.apple.com/podcast/id... ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Our Social Media: Facebook - / brightside Instagram - / brightside.official Tik Tok - https://www.tiktok.com/@brightside.of... Snapchat - / 1866144599336960 Stock materials (photos, footages and other): https://www.depositphotos.com https://www.shutterstock.com https://www.eastnews.ru ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- For more videos and articles visit: http://www.brightside.me Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Welcome to season three of Come Heck or Hot Water (formerly Fahrenheit 140)! As changes in climate put strains on our natural resources, we've decided to take a deep dive into one possible solution for resilience and long-term sustainability. Join our hosts, Robert and Carrie, for an overview of seawater desalination. In this episode, Dr. Robert E. Mace explains the ins and outs of this agent of resilience. Got a question for Robert and Carrie? Submit it here! First up, we have a big announcement: New name, slightly different format, same great content (00:29) Season 3 Overview (03:28) Today's Guest: Dr. Robert E. Mace Carrie Thompson re-introduces Dr. Robert E. Mace (04:35) Today's Keywords: (06:37) Desalination: The process of removing “stuff” dissolved in water. Brine Concentrate: The salty waste byproduct of desalination. Brackish Groundwater: Water in aquifers that is not fresh. PFAS: Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substance, aka “forever chemicals” Freshwater: Generally defined as water with less than 1,000 parts per million of “stuff” dissolved in it. Today's Pop Quiz: Where can our listeners submit a question to the podcast? A) the link at the bottom of the e-newsletter B) the link in our show notes C) email us directly at meadowscenter@txstate.edu D) All of the above Dr. Robert Mace takes us inside seawater desalination: The State of Freshwater: Dig into the factors impacting freshwater resources around the globe. (11:13) Resilience and Reliability: We need to find “a lot more water,” so where can we find it? (14:46) De-STUFF-ication: The history, process, and methods of seawater desalination. (16:53) What's the whine about the brine? Explore the issues around the waste byproduct of the desalination process at home and at scale. (19:33) Powering the Process: The energy and economic realities of seawater desalination. (24:12) Who gets the water? If there's no or low water...does it go to people or the environment? (27:43) And... DON'T MISS OUT! Next Episode: Join Robert and Carrie for a discussion with IDE Technologies about desalination efforts underway in Israel and Texas. (30:24) Episode Links and Resources: Texas Desalination Association Submit a question to the pod! Theme song: Come Heck or Hot Water by Robert E. Mace We want to thank pixabay.com for providing the sound effects. For more information about the Meadows Center, visit meadowscenter.txst.edu.
Jerry spoke to Marianne Beasley of the North Kerry Environmental Forum.
For today's Weird Wednesday episode, two smelly flowers bloom on opposite sides of the planet, the mother who was mistakenly declared dead, Greece's pool plan to help with droughts, and escaped research monkeys are found after two months on the run. Plus, on This Day in History, Edgar Allen Poe's poem "The Raven" is published for the first time. Corpse flower: Plant with 'deadly' stench pulls huge crowds for rare bloom in Sydney | Offbeat News | Sky News Visitors flock to New York botanic garden for a whiff of a flower that smells like a rotting corpse | AP News Rare and Stinky 'Corpse Flower' Blooms Draw Thousands of Visitors to Gardens in New York and Sydney | Smithsonian Woman 'surprised' after being declared dead | US News | Sky News How a typo led to a Maryland woman being declared dead – NBC4 Washington Hotels on Greek islands could soon fill swimming pools with seawater in drought fight | World News | Sky News Greece panic as hotels may be forced to fill pools with seawater amid worsening droughts | World | News | Express.co.uk Last 4 escaped monkeys are captured in South Carolina after months on the loose | AP News Monkeys who escaped from South Carolina facility captured, police say | USA Today TDIH: The Raven Summary On Edgar Allan Poe's “The Raven” The Raven by Edgar Allan Poe | Summary, Analysis & Symbolism LitCharts: The Raven Summary Screenwriting Lessons from Edgar Allan Poe How to Write a Poem Like Edgar Allan Poe's ‘The Raven' Spark Notes: The Raven Plot Summary The Philosophy of Composition Edgar Allen Poe's “The Raven” Summary & Meaning Contact the show - coolstuffcommute@gmail.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Cuauhtemoc Villa is an educator and pioneer in the regenerative community who not only teaches, but SHOWS people how to unlock the power of healthy, clean soils using Effective Microorganisms (EM), Bokashi and Bio-Char. Cuauhtemoc has nearly 20 years of experience preparing EM with an ability to help YOU UNDERSTAND why it is a miracle in regenerative agriculture.Topics Discussed:What is Effective Microorganisms (EM) and How Do You Make It?How can EM be used in bio-remediaton of soils and waterways?What is Bio-Char and Why Is It Important?How Do You Make Bio-Char?What Kind of Information does the Carbon in Bio-Char Hold and Transfer?Questions Asked:What rate of Sea Water is used to re-mineralize RO?How Do I Make EM at Home?Is RO Water considered "Clean Water" or lifeless water in your opinion?Do You Like to add anything additional to your bokashi after ferment?When worms get that purple sheen, is that the abundance of Purple Non-Sulphur Bacteria (PNSB)?Can you explain Super Ceramics powder?When you use molasses, should you put it in hot water before using it?How can I remove viroids in my soil?Is any wood OK for making biochar?What are the best woods to use for biochar?Could there be any benefits to making bio-char with driftwood as opposed to other woods?What is a DIY Terra Preta compost pit?How much bio-char would you suggest using in worm and insect bins like isopods?Support this FREE show by supporting these amazing small-businesses:http://www.okcalyxxshop.comhttp://www.rubberduckyisopods.comhttp://www.MIBeneficials.com
In this episode of MUM, host Ellen Wong engages in an open-hearted discussion with death laborer and author meital yaniv. The conversation centers around their book, 'Bloodlines,' which explores the impact of the Israeli apartheid regime through the lens of meital's personal experiences and ancestral history. Topics include the deep-seated trauma and unaddressed grief carried by generations, the indoctrination within Israeli society, and meital's own life experience as an ex-israeli/ex-zionist. Ellen and meital emphasize the importance of compassion, the practice of grief, and the global implications of dismantling militarized identities for collective healing.About Guest: meital yaniv (b. 1984, Tel-Aviv, occupied Palestine) is learning how to be in a human form. they do things with words, with moving and still images, with threads, with bodies in front of bodies, with the Earth. They are a death laborer tending to a prayer for the liberation of the land of Palestine and the lands of our bodies. they keep Fires and submerge themselves in Ocean and Sea Water often. yaniv is learning to listen to the Waters, birdsongs, caretakers, and ancestors as they walk as a guest on the home and gathering place of the Cahuilla-ʔívil̃uwenetem Meytémak, Tongva-Kizh Nation, Luiseño-Payómkawichum, and Serrano-Yuhaaviatam/Maarenga'yam. yaniv is the author of bloodlines. They make offerings through true name collective.About the book “Bloodlines”: Bloodlines is an epic and intimate dive into the israeli apartheid regime from the perspective of an ex-israeli/ex-zionist soldier. Born into a sephardic and ashkenazi lineage of in/famous war heroes and pillars for the state of israel, meital yaniv traces their paternal family narrative from surviving the Holocaust of the second world war to migrating to Palestine and their subsequent indoctrination as zionist colonizers and defenders of the state of israel. yaniv directs our attention to the cycles of history and how genocide not only repeats but grows monstrously in the crevices of state belonging. Through a bold and radical poetics that unsettles language and definition, they foreground vulnerability while traversing the nuance of voice and inner forms of address. yaniv unravels the coordinates of belonging to write in the fissures of israeli identity. bloodlines is an invitation to contemporary israelis to unstitch the military uniform from their bodies and to reckon with their atrocities against generations of Palestinian lives and livelihoods. It is also a demand that the ongoing catastrophes in Palestine end now. With uncompromising courage and in lucid manifestation, yaniv urges israelis to join them in drowning in the wounds of their ancestors as well as the wounds they've inflicted, and in so doing, bring the state of israel and israeli identity to "a loving and caring death.”The prayer of bloodlines is to bring the israeli identity and state to a loving and caring death.Meital's Links & Offerings:IG: @bloodlines_bookOne-on-one Energy and Death work offerings through: https://www.truenamecollective.comUpcoming gatheringsOctober 11-13 Yom Kippur in Ukiah, CAOctober 18-20 Writing workshop and grief circle at Mendocino Art Center, CAAbout MumWe are on Youtube! Subscribe to our channel.MUM is produced by Ellen Wong and edited by Stepfanie Aguilar. Your support allows us to continue creating this podcast. If you enjoy this episode, please take a moment to rate and review. Keep this conversation alive by bringing it to your communities.Follow Mum on Instagram @mumthepod.If you are interested in working privately with Ellen, visit tripwithellen.com to learn more about her Death/Birth program and her spirit medicine solo retreats. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit tripwithellen.substack.com/subscribe
Nanne Kennedy has her feet firmly planted in the soil of midcoast Maine. Growing up on a farm near the ocean, she could smell the salt air and small local factories, and she started saving in her “future farm fund” when she was 12. Eminently practical, she looked for ways that her farm could make her a living. “I'm a New England Yankee, and self reliance is really important,” she says. “So it's always been a critical theme to me that, yes, you do the right thing, but it sure as heck has to make economic sense in a way that is good today, but good forever.” Raising sheep could offer multiple sources of income, but the available finewool sheep were poorly suited to her climate. Studying in New Zealand, she grew interested in Polwarth sheep, which combine finewool and longwool genetics. Nanne imported genetic material from New Zealand and set about establishing the breed in the United States, seeking sheep with dense, fine fleeces; long staples; excellent parasite resistance; and sound feet. After decades of careful breeding, her flock has exceeded her expectations for wool and healthy animals. To increase the value of her wool, Nanne learned to dye yarn. Once again seeking an economic and environmental solution, she developed a unique system using seawater to provide the salts and sunshine to warm the dyepaths. Seacolors Yarns are what Nanne calls bioregional, produced within 5 hours of Meadowcroft Farm. Like many farmers, Nanne works on a variety of projects at the same time. The popular Maine blankets she developed in partnership with other small textile manufacturers have hit a snag with the retirement of the napping machine used in finishing, but she partners with local knitters and crocheters to offer unique handmade sweaters. She runs a short-term farmstay and also offers educational opportunities for aspiring shepherds. She vends at farmer's markets and hosts fiber art classes. At least, that's some of what she was doing when we spoke. By the time you hear this interview, who knows what Nanne Kennedy will have dreamed up to benefit her animals, ecosystem, and regional economy? Links Visit Nanne Kennedy's farm, yarn store, and other projects at GetWool.com (https://getwool.com/meadowcroft/sheep-doula/). Learn about the dye process for Seacolors Yarn (https://getwool.com/yarn/seacolors/) and buy it online (https://getwool.com/yarn/). Meadowcroft Farm raises Polwarth sheep (https://getwool.com/meadowcroft/animals/). Naturally colored roving is available on the Seacolors Wool website (https://getwool.com/roving/). Watch a video of Meadowcroft Farm, Polwarth sheep, and Nanne in the video The Science of Soft (https://vimeo.com/714278628). Stay in the farm's Airbnb (https://getwool.com/cuckoos-nest-air-bnb/), or stay longer with a Small Ruminant Residency (https://getwool.com/meadowcroft/small-ruminant-residency/) or Sheep Doula Apprenticeship (https://getwool.com/meadowcroft/sheep-doula/). This episode is brought to you by: Treenway Silks is where weavers, spinners, knitters and stitchers find the silk they love. Select from the largest variety of silk spinning fibers, silk yarn, and silk threads & ribbons at TreenwaySilks.com (https://www.treenwaysilks.com/). You'll discover a rainbow of colors, thoughtfully hand-dyed in Colorado. Love natural? Treenway's array of wild silks provide choices beyond white. If you love silk, you'll love Treenway Silks, where superior quality and customer service are guaranteed. You're ready to start a new project but don't have the right yarn, or you have the yarn but not the right tool. Yarn Barn of Kansas can help! They stock a wide range of materials and equipment for knitting, weaving, spinning, and crochet. They ship all over the country, usually within a day or two of receiving the order. Plan your project this week, start working on it next week! See yarnbarn-ks.com (https://www.yarnbarn-ks.com/) to get started. Sustainability and regenerative ranching have been a way of life for the ranches of Shaniko Wool Company for decades. They are the first “farm group” in the U.S. to achieve certification to the rigorous international Responsible Wool Standard and NATIVA Regenerative. Shaniko ranches raise Merino/Rambouillet sheep in the Western United States, delivering a fully traceable wool supply that gives back to the Earth and its ecosystems. To learn more, and discover Shaniko's yarn partners, visit ShanikoWoolCompany.com. (https://www.shanikowoolcompany.com/) The Adirondack Wool and Arts Festival is the perfect way to spend a weekend surrounded by over 150 craft vendors in Greenwich, New York. Discover a curated group of vendors featuring the best of wool and artisan crafters. Throughout the weekend enjoy workshops, free horse drawn wagon rides, free kids' crafts, a fiber sheep show, and a sanctioned cashmere goat show. Join us September 21 & 22, 2024, and every fall! For more information visit adkwoolandarts.com. (https://www.adkwoolandarts.com/)
(2:48) - A recipe for zero-emissions fuel: Soda cans, seawater, and caffeineThis episode was brought to you by Mouser, our favorite place to get electronics parts for any project, whether it be a hobby at home or a prototype for work. Click HERE to learn more about how hydrogen fuel cell vehicles stack up against batteries and what the future of sustainable transportation looks like! Become a founding reader of our newsletter: http://read.thenextbyte.com/ As always, you can find these and other interesting & impactful engineering articles on Wevolver.com.
GC13, Soren, and David discuss the sixth episode of Delicious in Dungeon, Court Cuisine and Boiled in Seawater. Well, it's back to the lengthy episode names. But no matter how you think the paintings work (can you digest them?), at least Chilchick got some major screentime while matching wits with one of his archnemeses. And … Continue reading
Brought to you by TogetherLetters & Edgewise!In this episode: Google Olympics ad sparks new ire over generative AIDelta CEO says CrowdStrike-Microsoft outage cost the airline $500 millionCyberattack hits blood-donation nonprofit OneBloodThere is no fix for Intel's crashing 13th and 14th Gen CPUs — any damage is permanentIntel Will Cut Over 15,000 Jobs Amid Struggles to Turn Itself AroundID Scanners Can Change How Your Local Bar Treats You—and Whether It Lets You InAmazon is legally responsible for recalling dangerous products sold on its site, agency findsUS court blocks Biden administration net neutrality rulesCourts Close the Loophole Letting the Feds Search Your Phone at the BorderMIT Engineers Create Hydrogen Fuel From Soda Cans, Seawater, and CaffeineYou can (and should) stop charging your phone when it hits 80 percentWeird and Wacky: Stop Destroying VideogamesA Swiss Town Banned Billboards. Zurich, Bern May Soon FollowWear This AI Friend Around Your NeckI Regret to Inform You That Elon Musk Has Accepted Nicolas Maduro's Fight...
Trace returns to find out if humans could take the green stuff from plants and make enough energy to live. meanwhile, Julian tries to understand if a wild idea would solve anything… Anything at all?QUESTIONSJulian: “What if you filled the grand canyon with ocean water? Would that solve anything?” from RomanTrace combines two questions: “What if humans performs photosynthesis?” from Danielle, with “How would society function if we were photosynthetic?” from WilliamDo you have an absurd question? Maybe it's silly idea you had, a shower thought about the nature of reality, or a ridiculous musing about your favorite food? If you want an answer, no matter the question, tell us!SPONSOR: BRILLIANT
An exciting new way to produce hydrogen, and consequently, clean energy – discovered at MIT and Weird Wednesday has boneless wings that can contain bones in Ohio, a dog returns home after 9 years, and a bedpan collection that no one wants. Plus, on This Day in History – bottomless Rum for all! Black Tot Day is celebrated in the Royal Navy. A Recipe for Zero-Emissions Fuel: Soda Cans, Seawater, and Caffeine (goodnewsnetwork.org) Chicken wings advertised as 'boneless' can have bones, Ohio Supreme Court decides | AP News Gizmo the dog went missing in Las Vegas in 2015. He's been found alive after 9 years | AP News Collection of 163 unique bedpans fails to sell at auction - UPI.com Watch: Man pulls three planes while walking on his hands - UPI.com Reasons Why the Royal Navy Bribed Sailors With Booze | Smithsonian (smithsonianmag.com) Black Tot Day - Learn the History of Rum Rationing and Navy Rum (alwaystheholidays.com) Contact the show - coolstuffcommute@gmail.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
A rather bizarre incident recently occurred in the South China Sea off the coast of the Philippines. On June 17th, the Chinese Coast Guard clashed with Philippine naval vessels en route to resupplying a stranded Philippine ship on a formation known as the Second Thomas Shoal. This desolate shoal is very much in the territorial waters of the Philippines, but China nonetheless claims it as Chinese sovereign territory. The Chinese have routinely harassed Philippine ships in the area, but on June 17th, the Chinese Coast Guard attacked the Philippine naval vessels with water cannons, swords, and axes in the most violent incident of its kind in years. This kind of escalation risks drawing in the United States due to the longstanding Mutual Defense Treaty between the United States and the Philippines, which obliges the US to come to the defense of the Philippines. This has the potential to draw the US and China into direct conflict. My guest today is Prashanth Parameswaran, founder of the ASEAN Wonk newsletter and fellow at the Wilson Center. We kick off by discussing what exactly happened during the June 17th incident before having a broader conversation about the dynamics in which this territorial dispute in the South China Sea draws the US and China closer to conflict--and how to escape that trap.
Does your dog love to spend the day at the beach? If so, remember…
Send us a Text Message.In this conversation, Andrea and Rudy discuss various topics related to pools and pool maintenance. They talk about cleaning pools in a tornado, the use of seawater in cruise ship pools, the conversion of pools to bromine pools, and the use of yellow out and chloramines. They also touch on the topic of cities lying about water treatment methods. Overall, the conversation covers a range of pool-related subjects and provides insights into pool maintenance practices. In this conversation, Rudy and Andrea discuss the importance of pool safety and the various layers of protection that can be implemented. They cover topics such as fences, door alarms, pool covers, AI cameras, and swim lessons. They emphasize the role of pool professionals in promoting safety and selling safety products to customers. The conversation also touches on the issue of non-compliant main drain grates and the need for VGBA compliance. Overall, the conversation highlights the significance of prioritizing pool safety to prevent accidents and drownings.TakeawaysCleaning pools in extreme weather conditions can be challenging and may require additional precautions.Seawater is used in cruise ship pools, and the pools are drained and refilled with seawater every night to prevent the growth of bacteria.Bromine pools are created by adding sodium bromide to the water, which is not attracted to cyanuric acid and can be more effective at killing algae.Yellow out is a product that converts pools to bromine pools by creating chloramines, which are not attracted to cyanuric acid.Cities may use different water treatment methods, such as chloramination, to disinfect drinking water, but these methods can have their own challenges and potential health risks. Pool professionals play a crucial role in promoting pool safety and preventing accide AquaStar Pool ProductsThe Global Leader in Safety, Dependability, & Innovation in Pool Technology.POOL MAGAZINE Pool Magazine is leading up to the minute news source for Swimming Pool News and Pool Features. OuBLUERAY XLThe real mineral purifier! Reduce your pool maintenance costs & efforts by 50%the 'How to Get Rid of Algae' handbookThe most comprehensive guide on algae prevention and remediation you will ever own. CPO Certification ClassesAttend your CPO class with Rudy Stankowitz!Online Pool ClassesThe difference between you and your competition is what you know!Jack's MagicIf you know Jack's you'd have no stains!RaypakRaypak, leading the evolution of environmental efficiency and sustainability in pool heaters.Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the Show.Thank you so much for listening! You can find us on social media: Facebook Instagram Tik Tok Email us: talkingpools@gmail.com
In this session, Remy talks about his trip to Melbourne, Australia! While down under he noticed a lot of local fish stores and hobbyists use natural seawater for their reef tanks. ICP-ANALYSIS - http://icp-analysis.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The ladies are on location at the beautiful Gurneys Montauk Resort and Seawater Spa in Montauk in a spectacular ocean-front cottage with special guest cohost, Ted Sullivan, Chief Marketing Officer at Zartico. The three enjoy the beautiful views and delicious expertly mixed cocktails at the luxurious Gurney's. And of course we are teaming up with Gurney's to give away THREE amazing prizes. (Details below) The three also talk about some interesting Long Island data, travel experiences, Easter mishaps (trigger warning for kids who believe in the Easter Bunny), and other Easter and Spring happenings this weekend. Plus Ted spills some celebriTEA about his famous comedian neighbor in London. Gurney's Montauk Resort & Seawater Spa:The only luxury year-round resort in the Hamptons situated directly on the beach. The perfect family friendly Easter weekend getaway: enjoy brunch, movie nights, a live DJ at the Regent cocktail lounge, fitness classes and Camp Gurney's Kids Club.gurneysresorts.com/montaukGIVEAWAY ALERT:Prize 1: A one night stay at Gurney's Montauk in an ocean view room (valid mid-week only, summer will be blacked out) (approx. $1,000+ value) Prize 2: A Spa Day including a 60-minute massage at the Seawater Spa, 1 Bathhouse session, +access to fitness classes & indoor pool ($500+ value) Prize 3: Dinner for 2 at Scarpetta (up to $250)Follow @longislandteapodcast @gurneysresorts and @discoverlongisland on Instagram to see how you can enter to win!*will never ask you to click a link, enter your credit card or register on any external website*Winner will be contacted by verified @discoverlongisland Instagram with blue check!Zartico:Makers of the first Destination Operating System®, Zartico harnesses and streamlines complex data to provide a full spectrum of data science, benchmarking, and analytical services for use in marketing, community development, and sustainability efforts.https://www.zartico.com/Easter Egg Hunts on March 30th:* Adventureland Egg Scramble * Montauk Chamber of Commerce 8th Annual Eggstravaganza Egg Hunt* The Shoppes at East Wind- Easter Celebration at The Shoppes* Greater Port Jefferson Chamber of Commerce- 2024 Port Jefferson Easter Parade & Egg Hunt* Waterdrinker Family Farm - Golden Egg Hunt at Manorville FarmEaster Brunches on March 31st:* Gurney's Montauk in Montauk* Northport Hotel in Northport* Besito at all locations * LI Aquarium in Riverhead* Inn at Fox Hollow in Woodbury* Teller's in Islip* Bayberry in Islip* East Wind Long Island in Wading River* The Meadow Club in Port Jefferson* The Waterview at Port Jefferson Country Club* Southampton Inn in Southampton* Baiting Hollow Farm Vineyard in Baiting Hollow* Oheka Castle in HuntingtonASK US ANYTHING!DM us on Instagram or email us at spillthetea@discoverlongisland.com. Tell us what you want to hear! Whether it is Long Island related or not, the ladies are here to spill some tea with you!WATCH US:And SUBSCRIBE on YouTubehttps://www.youtube.com/DiscoverLongIslandNYFOLLOW US:Follow The Long Island Tea podcast on TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter @LongIslandTeaPodcastWRITE TO US:Email spillthetea@discoverlongisland.com if you are interested in collaborating with us, need some "uncorked advice"or if you just want to say “How you doin?”RATE AND REVIEW US:Be sure to leave us a 5 star rating and review wherever you're listening, and screenshot your review for $5 off our Merch!WEAR US:Shop Long Island merch at shop.discoverlongisland.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Welcome to The Times of Israel's Daily Briefing, your 20-minute audio update on what's happening in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world. Today is day 73 of the war. Military reporter Emanuel Fabian joins host Amanda Borschel-Dan for today's podcast. Fabian delves into how the IDF is reacting to the accidental killing of 3 Israeli hostages in Gaza on Friday and what IDF Chief Herzi Halevi is saying. Yesterday, the IDF revealed the largest-ever Hamas attack tunnel discovered by the military, in the northern Gaza Strip, close to the Erez border crossing with Israel, but not inside Israeli territory. Just how big is this tunnel? Were we not in a ground offensive in Gaza, the tit-for-tat retaliation between Israel and Hezbollah would be taken more seriously. What has been seen in and out of Lebanon and Syria recently? Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin is expected in Israel today and may announce efforts to stymie Yemen's Houthi rebel group, which is targeting shipping in the Red Sea. The Times of Israel confirmed that Israel's reported attempt to pump seawater into the vast network of tunnels beneath Gaza was a success. Fabian fills us in. For the latest updates, please look at The Times of Israel's ongoing live blog. Discussed articles include: Live blog December 18, 2023 Halevi to troops, after 3 hostages killed: IDF doesn't shoot people waving white flag IDF uncovers largest-ever Hamas attack tunnel, near northern Gaza border crossing Gallant warns Hezbollah amid frequent attacks from Lebanon, IDF retaliatory strikes Syria says two soldiers hurt, ‘material losses' caused by alleged Israeli airstrike IDF trial of flooding Hamas tunnels with seawater proves successful, ToI told THOSE WE HAVE LOST: Civilians and soldiers killed in Hamas's onslaught on Israel THOSE WE ARE MISSING: The hostages and victims whose fate is still unknown Subscribe to The Times of Israel Daily Briefing on iTunes, Spotify, PlayerFM, Google Play, or wherever you get your podcasts. IMAGE: Israeli soldiers are seen in a tunnel that the military says Hamas terrorists used to attack the Erez crossing in the northern Gaza Strip, December 15, 2023. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
U.S. officials are reporting that Israel is flooding Hamas' network of tunnels. The Biden administration says it can't be sure that all hostages are out of harm's way as a top U.S. ally calls for a ceasefire. Also breaking, Ukraine's president is in Washington pleading for aid. Are his hopes of getting a deal dead? Plus, Trump is selling his mug shot as trading cards along with pieces of the suit he wore that day. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
#Gaza: #Ukraine: Seawater pumped into the "Gaza Metro." Colonel Jeff McCausland , USA (retired) @mccauslj @CBSNews @dickinsoncol https://www.telegraph.co.uk/world-news/2023/12/06/israel-hamas-war-hostages-latest-news/ 1920 Galilee
Tonight: The show begins in Gaza where the IDF is flooding the Gaza Metro with seawater to force the Hamas gangsters to surrender without shooting and casualties. From the UAE with Putin to the South of France, from the University of Pennsylvania to the unemployed millions in the brittle #PRC, from Troy to Taiwan to India, from Boca Chica to Ingenuity on Mars. Much attention to the 0ill-educated elite campuses. 191