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I'm joined by guests Rijndael & Ben Carman to go through the list.I'm joined by guests Rijndael & Ben Carman to go through the list.Housekeeping 00:00:51 Nostr Rising 00:01:36 New COLDCARD Tutorials 00:01:40 Coinkite is opening an office in LATAM 00:01:50 Bitcoin per Share 00:01:54 Grumpy Surfer SATSCARDMajor/Urgent Vulnerability Disclosures 00:02:08 Disclosure of CVE-2024-38365 00:05:32 Disclosure of CVE-2024-35202 00:06:54 Krux BIP85 password generationx 00:07:32 Coracle unintentionally sending user session dataBitcoin • Software Releases & Project Updates 00:11:00 Electrum 00:14:31 Nunchuk Android 00:14:46 Bitcoin Keeper 00:16:49 Bisq2 00:16:58 Wasabi Wallet 00:22:32 Fully Noded 00:22:59 Krux-installer 00:23:14 BoltzExchange Client 00:23:31 Utreexo 00:23:42 Bitcoin Safe 00:27:06 Joinstr App 00:27:13 Bitkey App 00:28:30 Bitcoin Jungle Mobile 00:29:26 DATUM Gateway 00:30:28 ESP-Miner 00:30:42 Braiins Toolbox 00:30:46 Blockstream Green iOS 00:31:07 Defibi App 00:31:45 Nirvati 00:32:08 BTCmap-android 00:32:18 Kyoto• Project Spotlight 00:33:17 2140.dev 00:34:24 Localhost Research 00:34:49 Rewind Bitcoin 00:35:30 bitcoinutils.dev 00:35:46 Standalone Bitcoin Consensus Engine 00:35:54 Fabric 00:36:06 l402_middleware 00:36:19 NodeWatch 00:36:32 Bitcoind Quick 00:36:44 Chorly 00:36:53 Satoffee 00:37:00 Koinvote 00:37:14 Bitcoin Prediction Market 00:37:24 LiquiSabi 00:37:34 Coin DemoVulnerability Disclosures 00:37:42 GoldenJackal specialized toolsets for targeting air-gapped systems 00:38:03 Radiant Capital hack 00:38:25 Locate X 00:38:38 Qualcomm zero-day vulnerability 00:39:03 Research discovers flaws in five end-to-end encrypted cloud services 00:39:20 Security analysis reveals weaknesses in WeChat 00:39:34 Imprompter 00:39:46 Tails 00:39:56 Critical "use-after-free" vulnerability (CVE-2024-9680)Privacy & Other Related Bitcoin Projects • Software Releases & Project Updates 00:40:38 SimpleX 00:40:41 SideBand 00:40:48 Reticulum MeshChat 00:40:52 Tor Browser• Project Spotlight 00:40:56 Pubky CoreLightning & L2(+) • Project Spotlight 00:42:00 Simplicity & Simfony by Blockstream 00:42:09 Spark 00:44:39 Blockbuster• Software Releases & Project Updates 00:44:45 Core Lightning 00:44:54 LDK Node 00:44:58 Phoenix 00:45:01 Zeus 00:45:06 Breez SDK Core 00:45:12 Alby 00:45:15 CashuMe 00:46:11 Microbolt 00:46:18 Geyser 00:47:08 LN Markets 00:47:14 Zaprite introduces SandboxNostr • Project spotlight 00:47:20 Pokey 00:47:25 White Noise live demo 00:47:41 Nostrastic 00:49:14 AlgoRelay 00:49:22 ppe-relay 00:49:27 Search Relay 00:49:31 Flotilla 00:51:40 nosweet.net 00:51:54 Docstr 00:52:13 Translator 00:52:18 rx-nostrBoosts 00:52:39 Shoutout to top boosters @Ape Mithrandir, @tdub, @btconboard, @AVERAGE_GARY, @VonPhoto & @BrightSatsTech tip of the day 00:54:16 DeArrow 00:54:26 EarthoNews & Noteworthy • Business & Finance 00:58:48 River now offers 3.8% interest• Art 00:59:46 Bitcoin illustrator NoGood releases The art of NoGood• Funding 00:59:58 Research firm 1a1z releases on how Bitcoin Core development is funded 1:00:06 OpenSats announcements 1:00:13 Spiral announces grant renewals• Privacy 1:00:51 SimpleX publishes Wired's Attack on Privacy• Protocol 1:01:09 Libsecp256k1 adds musigLinks & Contacts:Website: https://bitcoin.review/Substack: https://substack.bitcoin.review/Twitter: https://twitter.com/bitcoinreviewhqNVK Twitter: https://twitter.com/nvkTelegram: https://t.me/BitcoinReviewPodEmail: producer@coinkite.comNostr & LN:⚡nvk@nvk.org (not an email!)Full show notes: https://bitcoin.review/podcast/episode-86
Lainie Fefferman is a composer, performer, teacher, organizer, and general proponent of new and forward-thinking music. Her most recent commissions have been from JACK Quartet, Tenth Intervention, and So Percussion. "White Fire," her electroacoustic meditation on the heroines of the Hebrew Bible has been touring internationally and is coming out as an album in 2021. She is a co-founder and director of New Music Gathering. She got her doctorate in composition from Princeton University and is a programming/performing member of Princeton-based laptop ensemble Sideband. She is currently a professor of Music & Technology at Stevens Institute of Technology and recently concluded her time as artist in residence at Nokia Bell Labs. Music: Overshare by Lainie Fefferman, performed by Ensemble Decipher Follow Lainie on Facebook and Instagram. lainiefefferman.com Co-hosts: Joseph Bohigian and Taylor Long Follow us on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter. ensembledecipher.com Contact us at decipherists@ensembledecipher.com. Decipher This! is produced by Joseph Bohigian; intro sounds by Eric Lemmon; outro music toy_3 by Eric Lemmon.
Loving the idiosyncratic and the zany, Lainie Fefferman is a composer, performer, and experimenter in the performative application of emergent music technologies. Her most recent commissions have been from Tenth Intervention, So Percussion, Make Music NY, Experiments in Opera, ETHEL, Kathleen Supové, TILT Brass, James Moore, Eleonore Oppenheim, JACK Quartet, and Dither. Her one-woman voice & electronics feminist song performance project "White Fire," an electroacoustic meditation on the heroines of the Hebrew Bible, premiered at Merkin Hall in 2016 and she has been touring it internationally ever since. She is a co-founder and director of New Music Gathering, an annual conference/festival hybrid event for the international New Music Community. She got her doctorate in composition from Princeton University and is a programming/performing member of Princeton-based laptop ensemble Sideband. She is currently a professor of Music & Technology at Stevens Institute of Technology and recently concluded her time as artist in residence at Nokia Bell Labs.The question of the week is, "How can classical musicians balance their identities as people and as musicians?" Lainie and I discuss the dichotomy of living in the classical music world during the twenty-first century, why she likes to include fun facts about herself in her biography, how she thinks about audiences during her compositional process, and how she would define a happy, healthy, and balanced musician. You can find out more about Lainie on her website, lainiefefferman.com, and on Instagram @lainiebobainie.
Alternatives to Exceptions Multiple return values in failures can be helpful - Represent a process as an object “Download Provisionment” - This is a really interesting idea…. “MessageSend.new” - would actually handle a lot of the issues in the SMS interface concept we've been talking through. “It's tempting to raise an exception every time you get an answer you don't like. But exception handling interrupts and obscures the flow of your business logic. Consider carefully whether a situation is truly unusual before raising an Exception.” Diagnostics- don't fail SO aggressively early that you don't capture the diagnostics. Examples of when to not "fail fast": test suites Sometimes you just need a way to proceed through steps and have the system tell you what parts succeeded and what parts failed Sideband data When communication failures without resorting to exceptions, we need a sideband: a secondary channel of communication for reporting meta-information about the status and disposition of a process. Multiple return values hehe, this reminds me of stuff I do in javascript ruby supports multiple return values in the form of array splatting. in JS, you could do this with destructuring def foo result = 42 success = true [result, success] end result, success = foo puts "#{success ? 'succeeded' : 'failed'}; result #{result}" Or you can use an open struct def foo OpenStruct.new(:result => 42, :status => :success) end Output parameters Caller-supplied fallback strategy if we're not sure we want to terminate the execution of a long process by raising an exception, we can inject a failure policy into the process def make_user_accounts(host, failure_policy=method(:raise)) # ... rescue => error failure_policy.call(error) end def provision_host(host, failure_policy) make_user_accounts(host, failure_policy) end policy = lambda { |e| puts e.message } provision_host("192.168.1.123", policy) Picks JP: https://github.com/xotahal/react-native-motion https://github.com/fram-x/FluidTransitions https://github.com/callstack/react-native-testing-library John: Slack Video Calling + Collaboration
General Amateur Radio Exam part 6. Selecting a frequency. AM, FM and Sideband demonstration. Impedance. 01:08:03
General Amateur Radio Exam part 6. Selecting a frequency. AM, FM and Sideband demonstration. Impedance. 01:08:03
The pianist and composer Conrad Tao seemed remarkably relaxed when he sat down at the Yamaha to perform his Café Concert at WQXR. The calm demeanor might seem at odds with the heavy load Tao has been carrying. Having recently given a recital to a packed house at Le Poisson Rouge, on Tuesday, he inaugurates the Unplay Festival, a three-day event that he is organizing at Powerhouse Arena, a bookstore and art space in Dumbo, Brooklyn. Also on Tuesday, Tao releases "Voyages," his full-length debut album on EMI, a collection of his own music as well as pieces by Rachmaninoff, Ravel and Meredith Monk. By no coincidence, he also turns 19 that day. Tao is the first to acknowledge the “incestuous cross-promotion” in the way events came together. “It happens,” he said, with a wry smile. “I must acknowledge that.” But after several years on the concerto-and-recital circuit – and now a student in the Juilliard-Columbia double-degree program – Tao is also at a point where he wants to explore bigger ideas around classical music and its place in society. Tao has had a considerable past decade. A native of Champagne, Illinois, he gave his first recital at age four. At nine, he and his parents moved to New York and he began studying piano in Juilliard’s pre-college division with Yoheved Kaplinsky. Around the same time, he began composition lessons with Christopher Theofanidis, an in-demand composer who now teaches at Yale. Tao signed with professional management and, by age 16, orchestras were calling, including the Philadelphia Orchestra, the San Francisco Symphony and Detroit Symphony. Awards also poured in, including eight Ascap Morton Gould Young Composer Awards; a 2012 Gilmore Foundation Young Artist Award; and a U.S. Presidential Scholar in the Arts recognition. Tao has studied the violin, has written pop songs and is currently working on a commission for the Dallas Symphony Orchestra, about the 50th anniversary of JFK's assassination, slated to premiere in November. Yet Tao clearly isn’t content with the post-prodigy treadmill and admits to a restless, oppositional streak. The Unplay Festival he said “is about what does music and do musicians occupy. I was interested in how I could find performers who are engaging in this act of ‘unplaying’ insofar as they’re dismantling certain basic traditional ideas of what it means to be a classical performer.” Those performers will include Sideband (an ensemble using laptops and speakers), the violinist Todd Reynolds, the Face the Music Ensemble, Iktus Percussion and ThingNY, a multimedia ensemble. Programs will explore ideas of genre-blurring and the use of technology in performance (Tao himself has written music for piano and iPad). "Since so much of the intellectual process of music is unlearning what you take for granted to be true a lot of this is about applying this to my own practice of being a performer," Tao said of the festival's title. Planning the festival has taken Tao some 18 months, during which time he's had to juggle his studies at Columbia, where he is pursuing a concentration in ethnicity and race studies. “It’s a lot,” he said. “Sometimes it’s easy to justify because I really love everything I’m doing and sometimes it’s harder. It is ultimately about galvanizing all these different things.” Video: Amy Pearl; Audio: George Wellington; Text & Production: Brian Wise
In this episode we discuss the basics of using CB Radios. We also compare the Cobra 148 GTL SSB with the Uniden PRO510XL CB radio. The post TWRS-15 – An Introduction to CB Radios appeared first on Buy Two Way Radios.