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Welcome to the absolute peak of the “Simulated Empire.”It is June 2026, and the Russian Federation has finally achieved the ultimate geopolitical breakthrough: it has completely decoupled from the physical universe. Why fight a miserable, bloody, losing war in the Ukrainian mud when your official military command can simply decree that soldiers should pay “less attention to reality” and trust the pristine paperwork instead?In Episode 2.37 of The Eastern Border, we perform a full structural autopsy on a nuclear-armed mafia state running on pure, unadulterated vranyo. From the hollow victory laps at the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF) to the frontlines of the Zaporizhzhia steppe, the matrix is cracking wide open.Become our patron:https://www.patreon.com/theeasternborderMerch store + another option for memberships:https://theeasternborder-shop.fourthwall.com/Follow what's going on here in the very border of Eastern Europe:https://bsky.app/profile/theeasternborder.lvDownload all episodes for free on our website; pictures accompanying certain episodes can be found there as well!http://theeasternborder.lv/Car4Ukraine Eastern Border Summer Campaign!https://car4ukraine.com/campaigns/summer-sunshine-trucks-2026-eastern-borderSupport this show http://supporter.acast.com/theeasternborder. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Since the onset of digital imaging, there has been a distinctive swing toward the analogue "look," whether achieved through true analogue processes or digital simulations. The rise of AI has further muddied the waters, raising questions about what is real and what is simulacrum. I discuss all of this and more with my guest, Lev Manovich. Together, we explore what the future of photographic and artistic image-making may entail.Lev Manovich websiteLev's "Photography and Automation" TimelineLev Manovich artworkJean Baudrillard's Simulacra and Simulation
SPONSORS: - Accelerate your efficiency. Sign up for your one-dollar-per-month trial today at http://shopify.com/theories - I personally subscribe to The Economist. TOE listeners get 35% off the annual subscription. No other podcast has this! https://economist.com/TOE Roman Yampolskiy has spent two decades being right about things people wished he wasn't — and in this conversation, he's not here to scare you, but to be precise. He makes the case that AI alignment isn't merely unsolved but fundamentally under-defined: no agreed-upon values, no way to formalize them even if there were, and no mechanism for enforcing them on something smarter than its creators. His strongest argument isn't a doom scenario, it's that you cannot indefinitely control something smarter than you. FOLLOW: - Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4gL14b92xAErofYQA7bU4e - Substack: https://curtjaimungal.substack.com/subscribe - Twitter: https://twitter.com/TOEwithCurt - Discord Invite: https://discord.com/invite/kBcnfNVwqs - Crypto: https://nowpayments.io/donation/TOE - PayPal: https://www.paypal.com/donate?hosted_button_id=XUBHNMFXUX5S4 TIMESTAMPS: - 00:00:00 - Defining General Intelligence - 00:05:58 - AI Instrumental Convergence - 00:11:11 - The Orthogonality Thesis - 00:16:15 - Escaping the Simulation - 00:21:45 - Principle of Indifference - 00:27:51 - Acquired Savant Syndrome - 00:33:51 - LLM Internal States - 00:41:02 - AI Safety Impossibility Results - 00:47:16 - Public Misconceptions - 00:53:21 - Existential vs. Suffering Risks - 01:01:20 - AI Alignment Definition Crisis - 01:09:28 - Computational Irreducibility - 01:16:20 - Substrate Independence - 01:22:50 - Philosophical Zombie Critique - 01:29:57 - The Cassandra Paradox - 01:37:35 - Religion and Simulation - 01:46:03 - Digital Physics Evidence - 01:51:20 - Limits of Control LINKS MENTIONED: - Roman's Papers: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=0_Rq68cAAAAJ - Roman's Podcast: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCPIq6Bb-1iLmqyksJjy4kLQ - Roman's Twitter: https://x.com/romanyam - Roman's Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/roman.yampolskiy - AI Identity [Paper]: https://philarchive.org/archive/ZIETPO-7 - Basic AI Drives [Paper]: https://selfawaresystems.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/01/ai_drives_final.pdf - Qualia in Agents [Paper]: https://arxiv.org/abs/1712.04020 - Orthogonality Thesis [Paper]: https://nickbostrom.com/superintelligentwill.pdf - Escape the Simulation [Paper]: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/369187097_How_to_Escape_From_the_Simulation - Could This AI Be Conscious? [Article]: https://unherd.com/2026/05/is-ai-the-next-phase-of-evolution - Impossibility Results in AI [Paper]: https://arxiv.org/abs/2109.00484 - When AIs Act Emotional: https://youtu.be/D4XTefP3Lsc - Hacking the Simulation [Paper]: https://philarchive.org/rec/YAMHTS-2 - Autonomous Machine Intelligence [Paper]: https://openreview.net/pdf?id=BZ5a1r-kVsf - Hinton on Maternal Instincts [Article]: https://fortune.com/2025/08/14/godfather-of-ai-geoffrey-hinton-maternal-instincts-superintelligence/ - Singleton Hypothesis [Paper]: https://nickbostrom.com/fut/singleton - New Kind of Science [Book]: https://amazon.com/dp/1579550088?tag=toe08-20 - On AI Controllability [Paper]: https://arxiv.org/abs/2008.04071 - Universe as Numerical Simulation [Paper]: https://arxiv.org/abs/1210.1847 - Nir Lahav [TOE]: https://youtu.be/3nHiOtnnrzA - Joscha Bach [TOE]: https://youtu.be/3MNBxfrmfmI - Bas Van Fraassen [TOE]: https://youtu.be/lhpRAWxvY5s - Simulation Hypothesis [TOE]: https://youtu.be/3_lBPMc6JRY - Geoffrey Hinton [TOE]: https://youtu.be/b_DUft-BdIE - Max Tegmark [TOE]: https://youtu.be/-gekVfUAS7c - Stephen Wolfram [TOE]: https://youtu.be/FkYer0xP37E - David Chalmers [TOE]: https://youtu.be/5r9V1ryksnw More links: https://curtjaimungal.substack.com Guests do not pay to appear. #science Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
With Elliot back from Hackaday Europe, he and Al Williams had a lot to talk about with two weeks of Hackaday posts to catch up on. Not to mention the mailbag was overflowing. This week, the guys look at girlie cyberdecks, a 3D printed circuit board, and talk electric motorcycles. Is 3D printing safe? Want an accurate moon on your desk? How about modern punch cards? All of that and much more were on the menu this week. For the can't miss articles, Zoe Skyforest weighs in on file sharing on the LAN while Al Williams talks about the surprising state-of-the-art in vacuum tube tech right before the end.
Jump in with Carlos Juico and Gavin Ruta on episode 287 of Jumpers Jump. This episode we discuss: Red car theory, The Toronto accent, Predetermined theory, Monkey theory, Monkey See Monkey Do, Hantavirus theories, Virus predictions, Dog Soul theory, Origin of phrases, Affirmations & manifestations, Different languages theory, Alien Human Crossbreeds, DNA changing, Modified Humans, Cloning, Changing consciousness, Mythos Ai , The most powerful Ai created, The great reset, Living by means, Rating joy, Being grounded, Old gen, Simulated human experiences, Romanticising life, Lebron deal with the devil, Peter Thiel theory, Children stem cell research, Reverse aging tech, The Paypal mafia, Epstein's note, Epstein prison footage, Palm Beach Pete, How to beat lie detectors, Deception and much more! Thanks to our Sponsors: -Sign up for your $1 per month trial at https://www.shopify.com/jumpers -Get your free online visit at https://www.hims.com/jumpers -New customers get 40% Off with code JUMPERS at https://www.GLD.com Follow the podcast: @JumpersPodcast Follow Carlos: @CarlosJuico Follow Gavin: @GavinRutaa Check out the podcast on YouTube: https://bit.ly/JumpersJumpYT Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Alfred Crabtree, founder of Blade Repair Academy, and Sheryl Weinstein of SkySpecs join to discuss standardized technician training and risk reduction in blade repair. Sign up now for Uptime Tech News, our weekly email update 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 Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, Linkedin and visit Weather Guard on the web. And subscribe to Rosemary Barnes’ YouTube channel here. Have a question we can answer on the show? Email us! Allen Hall: Alfred and Sheryl, welcome to the program. Sheryl Weinstein: Thanks. Allen Hall: So we’re in Dunlap, Tennessee, not too far from Nashville, uh, and also close to. Chattanooga Chattanooga, and we’re in the Smoky Mountains ish region. We’re Alfred Crabtree: no, we’re, we’re, you could consider it Appalachia for sure. Sure. Okay. Uh, we’re on the, in the valley called the Seche Valley, uh, which splits the Cumberland Plateau. So we’re, we’re in a valley and we have hills a thousand feet above us here. Yeah. Either way. It’s beautiful. Joel Saxum: Yeah. It’s a great drive in here. Alfred Crabtree: Yeah. It’s a unique place. Yeah. Allen Hall: And we’re at Blade Repair Academy, which, uh, if you’re not familiar with Blade Repair Academy, you should be. Uh, because a lot of the good training that happens in the United States actually happens to play repair, repair Care blade, repair academy. Uh, yeah, it’s been a long week at uh, OMS this week and we got the introduction today. This is the first time we’ve been on site. That’s right. And, uh, we wanted to see all the cool things that are happening [00:01:00] here. And it really comes down to technician training competency. Working with blades, working with tools, knowing what you’re doing up tower when you’re on the blade, which is hard to train. It’s really hard to train, and both you and Cheryl have a ton of experience being up on blades and repairing blades and scarfing and doing all the critical features that have to happen to make blades work today. It’s a tough training regimen. There’s a lot to it and a lot of subtleties that don’t always get transferred over from teachers to students unless you have. Done it for a number of years. You wanna kind of just walk through the philosophy of Blade Repair Academy? Alfred Crabtree: Yes. The, uh, you’ve, you’ve outlined quite well some of the issues. The environment where we work is very hard to take a ti the time to put somebody through a training regimen. We’re so constrained by weather windows and then. You know, even if the weather’s nice, lightning can come, wind [00:02:00] speeds can cut off your workday. So production, production, production is what’s important. And Cheryl and I both come from the rope access method. And in the rope access method, 95% of the time you’re up there alone. And if you’re up there and you’re producing, you’ve got your blinders on. Speaker 2: Mm-hmm. Alfred Crabtree: And you’re not ready to share with somebody else what to do. Speaker 2: Mm-hmm. Alfred Crabtree: With the basket or platform, you can have two even three people up on Blade, but it still has all these constraints of get the job done, get the job done. There’s a lot of stress up there. And having the bandwidth to take on new information or to challenge some preconceived notions or try, that’s not the place to do it. So knowing that. Blade Repair Academy is built so that we have an environment that simulates all of the up tower stuff without being up tower. And you’re gonna have the time you need to invest in your learning without consequences. Right. So it’s a very much a [00:03:00] about creating the right environment to uptake the new information. And we have found a lot of help from. Manufacturers and suppliers in the industry to sponsor us because obviously it behooves them to have their materials in the hands of trainees. So we’re also able to help companies come up with, uh, new solutions, try new products. Speaker 2: Mm-hmm. Alfred Crabtree: New, uh, you know, what’s the best practice. For this, if you’re up on Blade and you have a way of top coating and you get a new product and your way of top coating doesn’t suit that product, well chuck it down. I’ll never touch it again. Yeah. Because I did not perform well here we can, we can give you training. We have, of course, been trained by the suppliers about what’s the best product to use, what’s the best way to go about things, and then, and then we can disseminate it. So that’s the fundamental reason why the space is. Is [00:04:00] what it is. Joel Saxum: Yeah. And I think that that’s, that’s a good segue to be honest with you, right here, right behind these doors you have a classroom. That’s right. Right. So in this facility, all composed in one, we have a classroom here we have your additive and subtractive. I liked how you said that to us when you’re giving us the tour. Uh, but we’ve got a, a grinding booth basically over here and we’ve got, um, a layup area here where you can teach. 16 people at a time. Alfred Crabtree: That’s right. Yeah. That would be max Joel Saxum: for sure. Alfred Crabtree: Yeah. Sheryl Weinstein: And in a vertical surface, so, ’cause all the stuff that you’re doing in the field, right, is always in a vertical surface. Mm-hmm. So there’s a, there is a big difference between working where gravity is sort of against you, especially with larger laminations and things like that. So being able to do your training and simulate the same, a similar way that you would work in the field is pretty critical, I would think. Allen Hall: And actually working on. Actual repairs. Simulated repairs, yeah. Mm-hmm. Now, don’t explain how you created them, because I know secret sauce. It’s a secret sauce. Yes. But I did look at the blade [00:05:00] damage. It, it looks exactly like a lightly strike. Yeah. Which a predominant amount of repairs are about, unless there’s, you know, serial defects, as Cheryl has pointed out numerous times, but. Being able to repair something that’s quasi real is critical because we’ve been to other places and the repairs are, well, I’ll take a hammer and I’ll hit this and, okay, sure you got a DA, you gotta repair that. But that’s not real. And getting, getting the people to use the tools in the right way, vertically Speaker 2: mm-hmm. Allen Hall: Is the key. Because although the, the, the article, the test sample isn’t moving around like you are up on a blade, it’s still difficult. And unless you have the proper techniques and the approaches, yeah, it’s gonna be dang near impossible. We explain some of the blade repairs that Joel and I have seen more recently is like. It’s a little rough and it shouldn’t have to be so rough because it is a skill that you have to learn and acquire over time. But you have to know the fundamentals. That’s what Blade Repair Academy is here to teach you those [00:06:00] fundamentals. Like, yes, it’s gonna take time, but if you work it this way, at least you’re gonna be successful. Alfred Crabtree: Yeah. And if you’re managing a team of employees who are doing this, it, it would be great to have the insight of what your teams. Strengths and weaknesses are, yeah, you can figure out how to deploy people, but also how to, you know, maybe fix some of those problems. Mm-hmm. Our panels that you brought up are standardized. Everyone looks exactly the same. It’s the exact same makeup, and we standardize the damage. So when somebody has to repair damage here, the core removal size is the same on everyone. That way when we’re comparing the reports, you can actually have a apples to apples comparison of the, the trainees. Outcome. Speaker 2: Mm-hmm. Alfred Crabtree: And now you, you know, in, in the model that you talked about where people will go to a, you know, their junkyard of blades and they’ll find spots on blades to put their eight guys on. Those eight people are not gonna be doing the same repair. And even if they are collecting data, what are you [00:07:00] comparing? It’s not Joel Saxum: apples to apples. Yeah. It’s not. Alfred Crabtree: So we really tried to start from the beginning, fresh with a whole new idea of how to approach this. Mm-hmm. By not being attached to an ISP, we don’t have to deal with. Oh, here, use all our leftovers. Yeah. Yeah. That’s your training budget. Yeah. Yeah. And oh yeah. We, you know, we’re an, we’re a owner operator, so yeah. Go work on that blade in the grass. Mm-hmm. That those limit what precious time we have available to train. Yeah. So this thing from the ground up is about. Making as much advance in the skillset and understanding that technician in the, in the week that they’re here. Joel Saxum: I think that was a really cool thing we touched on as well. Your, your team here as well, Cheryl. Thanks for traveling up to, to hang out with us. Offer some insights too. But you guys, because you’ve been in the people that have developed a curriculum yourself, Cheryl, your, some of your team sitting over here, uh, and, and people around the industry that have helped out with the place, you have the ability of like, okay, we have. Eight brand new technicians. Let’s make [00:08:00] sure we walk through how to measure from the trailing edge to the blade center up, mark this thing out, these kind of things all the way to some stuff that I didn’t really think about that much. Like I’ve used an angle grinder before, right? But I’ve never looked at five different ones and decided which one would be the best for my hands. Thinking about it up on the blade, how you’d handle it with your fingers, these kind of things like, I was like, man, that’s, those are real insights that you’re not gonna get to learn. Like why put someone up to let them have a whole season or a whole summer, two summers figuring out how to hold a grinder? Well, when they can learn from someone that’s been doing it for years and years and years and can teach them these things. So from advanced or from very beginners learning fundamentals to advanced training, you guys have gotta cover here. Alfred Crabtree: There’s something here to glean for everybody, and even if you are a well experienced technician, maybe what you’re gonna get most is learning how to talk the language of the new techs and the new hires who are getting the. Introductory course training. You know, our, our el our basic course is called support. It’s 40 hours [00:09:00] and it’s really about making, uh, an employee who can support a lead. And then if that person follows up with the lead training in a whatever interval of time of their choice, which is kind of another benefit here, we can train you any week of the year. That is where we start to really get this, we call it the retention vortex. Right where we layer up technician training and somebody who’s had level two now gets a level one with them. Now there’s some synergies. Now they’re getting some really efficiencies. A commonality of language, a commonality of process, you know, eliminating variables. Uh, and that’s how you’re gonna have to build new net capacity and build new teams Allen Hall: and that common language. Is really unique, but that comes from your experience in the field, mostly at rope partner, where you both really got your teeth in this industry. Speaker 2: Mm-hmm. Allen Hall: But communicating to one another correctly so you can pass along to the next crew or even explain what you did to the engineer, the. Properly [00:10:00] there is. There is a culture to it. There is a language to it, and you just don’t pick that up. By going from wind turbine to wind turbine. You pick it up in training from someone who knows how to do it. It’s really critical. Sheryl Weinstein: It’s pretty critical to have baseline training. I think it is also very important to follow it up with field experience and skills building because every blade model is different. Every repair is different. You’re always gonna encounter something that deviates from that like standard approach to your repair. You have to kind of know how to problem solve, and that kind of only comes with the field experience, but having a more standardized training to start with, it’s something that industry doesn’t really have and is really needed. I think across the board it also helps, you know. Owner operators or even OEMs kind of track their ISPs and understand what level of text do you have, what experience do they have and how, how does that differ across their different [00:11:00] levels? If we have one ISP training one way over here and another one training another way over here, and they have different sets of certifications. It’s really hard to keep that all together and evaluate it as an owner operator or an OEM, you know, using a vendor. So I think having a place like Blade Academy that’s agnostic and separate from like, you know, the actual ISP really helps to standardize that a bit more. Allen Hall: Yeah, because the key is we’re getting to, well, we’re gonna cross a hundred thousand turbines in the United States pretty quickly. Yep. Joel Saxum: Before 2030, or probably rated about 2030. Allen Hall: Right. That’s. Soon. Mm-hmm. How are we gonna manage that? And there’s a lot of new people coming into the industry, obviously. How are we gonna train ’em up properly? How are we gonna communicate to one another? And there’s just so much movement in the industry. I. It makes it hard, I think, because weirdly enough, I think ISPs develop their own little culture about how to deal with things, and then they hop to the next company and it’s a different language. Exactly. And that needs to go away. Yeah. There’s a, Alfred Crabtree: there’s a branch of business that’s [00:12:00] OEM centric and there’s a branch of business that’s asset owner. Yeah. Post warranty. And those are really two different things. And, and there’s a veil of secrecy between one and the other. Yeah. And we kind of feel here at Blade Repair Academy that we’re like this polyglot that can talk to everybody because we don’t have, we’re not an ip You’re not competing, we’re not an O You’re not competing. Yeah, we’re not competing. But we, we, you know, we have the, we wanna provide this data as a clearinghouse. You know, we talk about certification in the non standards. Well, the way we deal with it is we’ll give you a certificate. And it’s got our brand on it. But you know, what does that mean? Yeah. What? That And $4 will get you a Starbucks the way we do it, maybe not even then. Right? The way, the way we, not four bucks Sheryl Weinstein: for Starbucks, maybe 10 Alfred Crabtree: and a half hour wait in the line. But the way you know, what we do is we provide you with a deliverable. We knew, we knew that. Okay. Our certification is, you know, ether. Speaker 2: Mm-hmm. Alfred Crabtree: But [00:13:00] this report. That everybody who comes through here generates that you can compare. Now you’re gonna have to go to work and study these reports when you get ’em as a deliverable. Speaker 2: Mm-hmm. Alfred Crabtree: As a, you know, an employer, but we we’re giving you what you need. Mm-hmm. To make some decisions about what do I have to work on, what else do we need to improve upon? Allen Hall: Yeah. Not everybody’s built for this job, but you wanna be able to suss that out. Earlier rather than later. Yeah. Right. I mean, there’s other things to do with wind turbines that don’t evolve blade repair. And if they don’t necessarily have the skillset or the comprehension to do some of these more complex things, maybe blade repair is not it. Right. But rather know that now. Yeah. Right. And the Blade Repair Academy is a place to do that because there’s a standard there, right? Mm-hmm. And I, I, as Joel has pointed out, yeah, there’s a lot of erratic training that goes on. Mm-hmm. You can’t compare student A to student Z. Blade repair academy. You can. Alfred Crabtree: We can. Mm-hmm. Right. Allen Hall: And if, if I’m an ISP, I want that. Sure. I want you to tell me [00:14:00] who’s on top and who’s kind of the middle so I can make decisions about where to deploy ’em and who and who to put ’em with. Joel Saxum: Yeah. ’cause at the end of the day, every ISP, uh, every ISP that’s trying to grow and scale effectively is trying to do that at the end of the year, right? Yeah. They’re looking through, they’re grading their technicians, finding out who’s the next lead, who’s this, who’s that? But this is a great way to do that, sort them through in a controlled setting. I mean, we sat in, in your training facility in the actual classroom here, and you walked us through some of the online, the online training platform that you have built. Some of the things the students have to do before they get here, and then kind of how you walk ’em through things, and it’s impressive. It’s good stuff, right? So when you have that combined with the both sides of blade repair, subtractive, additive, right? You get to get this, this holistic view of what that blade technician can do. Yeah. Right? And that’s, that’s one of the things you guys offer here, which I think is fantastic. Alfred Crabtree: Yeah. And we’re trying to constantly improve, you know, we’re talking with OEMs about dissemination of operating procedures or work instructions, share with us [00:15:00] work instructions. We’ll build analogs. That we can train to. Mm-hmm. And we can test off of it. We can verify skill sets. You know, we have a lot of serial flaw campaigns out there that are critical. And do we wanna unleash anybody on it or do we want to know that those people can do it? I think everybody wants to know that they can do it, whether they’re the. Technician themselves, or the person writing the checks. Speaker 2: Yeah. Mm-hmm. Alfred Crabtree: Everywhere in that loop wants to Now not everybody wants to pay for it. Yeah. But we all need it. Speaker 2: Yeah. Alfred Crabtree: And so somewhere along the line, you’re paying for it in the forms of our favorite acronym, COPQ. That’s Joel Saxum: right. Cost support, quality. You know, speaking about the idea of serial defects or known problems in the industry and how to prepare people for those, how do you prepare people for those? Well, they gotta get the experience by just. Grinding away Top coat and getting into him. I walked in here and I looked at this blade sample we have here, and I was looking at it and I go, it looks like a 48.7 C Oh yeah. Buddy walks over you like our 48.7 C I’m like, [00:16:00] man, you guys did a good job on, you know, like, so, so I made a lot of money on 48.7, you know, so to walk in here and see these different tickets that you guys have built, you know, carbon plank and different things with carbon spars and hey, we’re gonna do a carbon spa repair. We have this boom, now we can work on it. Mm-hmm. You know, and we’ll Alfred Crabtree: work with you to solve your problem in a really quick, efficient manner. Mm-hmm. You know, I think one of the things that we have is operational readiness. Most people who are training in-house flip their hat around for a couple weeks and train composites. Mm-hmm. In a limited capacity in the warehouse or at the dock at the truck during January. During January, whatever. And then they flip their hat back on and they go deal with it. And I think the hiring situation is so tough. Like working at Height, you probably need to make sure somebody can tolerate working at height. Yeah. Before you invest in composite training, I mean. You have so many things you have to juggle in your particular situation. When do I put money in this person? We get that. [00:17:00] And so we’re open all the weeks of the year. So we can do this at any time. Of course, everyone wants it in the end of first quarter. Mm-hmm. You know, right before the season starts. So we have a, you know, you have to, you gotta schedule with us, but we can really do this anytime. And so you don’t have to one and done and live with it. Speaker 2: Mm-hmm. Alfred Crabtree: You know, it. You can fit the training into your hiring schema wherever you feel fit, and you can hire people. And if there are stars, bring them in for their secondary, they’re execute their lead training whenever you want. You know, so you can, we can be very flexible and in the advanced stages we will make what you need, you know, obviously has to make business sense for us, but we’ll make blades to replicate the problems you’re facing. Sheryl Weinstein: And I think in terms of like what you were saying when you’re working on, you knows whether we wanna call them recurring issues or serial defects. A lot of it is awareness, right? It’s awareness [00:18:00] of understanding the blade structure, at least at a basic level. It’s awareness of understanding what you’re looking at. It’s, you know, we’re only gonna better inform the industry and the OEM if our technicians have a level of awareness to sort of bring up things that they see as they’re doing repairs. So if they notice that, for example, the, the fibers are misaligned, right? That could indicate that that was a wrinkle, and them having that level of communication or documentation will only help then inform the OEM. Like, is this the reason behind that problem? And so I think like. You know, with Alfred and, and the curriculum here at Blade Academy, them kind of, you know, setting a standard for how, how you know, the structure of the blade, the different types of blades you may see, whether they have carbon fiber in them, or you know, fiberglass, UD spars. Where those things are located, [00:19:00] what to be aware of as you’re removing damaged material. It’s really critical to the overall quality and just the awareness of the tech on the blade and that feedback loop that we’re lacking so much in this industry. Alfred Crabtree: Yeah, for sure. Yeah, and we have our boilerplate products that come from, you know, like, uh, Cheryl was my mentor at RP and wrote partner, and she taught me a lot and a lot of the. The, the way we do things here comes from the rope, a rope access paradigm, which, you know, actually is backward compatible because if with rope access, you’re doing things alone. Speaker 2: Yeah. Alfred Crabtree: So if we’ve have ways and, and processes that allow that to happen alone, then when you’re on a basket or a platform with an extra person, you can only benefit Yeah. That much easier. Yeah. Um, it’s where we come from, you Joel Saxum: know, and, and that’s a good point, right? Like when we’re sitting here, rip Blade Repair Academy. Alfred, you’re here. Cheryll, you’re joining us today. These are two X blade technicians that have been on all kinds of blades. They have been up and down on ropes. So it’s training by [00:20:00] trainers who have been the technicians that’s important. Who have seen the problems. Yeah, yeah. You know, who have lived, have lived that road life. We talked, you’re joking about living in hotels, right? Mm-hmm. Like that have done, gone through that, right? So you’re learning from people that aren’t just like, oh, I hate the idea of going to a university and learning HR or something, whatever, from someone who’s never done it in the real world. Yeah. You know, uh, the trainers here have done it in the real world, um, and it shows. Alfred Crabtree: Thanks, man. And you know, the other thing too is our tagline is practical and contemporary. And the thing is, I’m no longer contemporary. Like I left the field years ago. I rely on folks like Cheryl, who’s still in the, in the Blade Services game over there at Skys Specs. She’s on, she’s got a full subscription to the cereal floss that are out there. Joel Saxum: Yeah. Probably the best one in the industry, to be honest with you. Alfred Crabtree: Well, you know. Uh, I think so. I don’t know anything about serial flaw, but it’s, it’s input from the rest of the industry that’s gonna allow this to continue. Otherwise, we’re gonna be, you know, [00:21:00] a 10-year-old standard that isn’t relevant anymore and that’s not what we want to do. So, outreach like Cheryl and I are talking about, Hey, what is it in your product line that should be in our product line? And I want to talk to OEMs and, uh. Owner operators, you know, what is it? What are your pain points? What in your fleet is needing attention? And of course, we’re gonna do all this with the business case, right? Mm-hmm. Like we wanna take LEP products and place them head to head and give a two day clinic or seminar to stakeholders, to purchasers. You know, we wanna give our, our two, our five day course condensed into two days. Where people who are stakeholders who are making decisions about where to place technicians, they should get out here and gr and grind a little bit and get a little empathy for their position. Hard work. The hard work of the Sheryl Weinstein: hard work that it is. Yeah. And then kind of understand Alfred Crabtree: from another side where the [00:22:00] communication breakdown is. ’cause it’s, it’s not all the texts, right? Mm-hmm. You know, they have a, you gotta understand how heavily loaded they are, you know, when they’re in the field. Mm-hmm. Um, so we’re, we’re at the place now where we’re really looking to do some outreach and talk to, uh, regulatory bodies that are starting to come up with standards, right? Like the IEC group met and pro produce a draft standard and they’re gonna work on the repair standard. And that’s a, a little bit of a ways away, but I can’t sit around and wait for, for standards to come to me. So we got this thing started. If you build it, they will come. You guys came, you know, Cheryl came and, um. We we’re really proud of where we’re at, but at the same time, it’s like, okay guys, the rest of the industry, now we’re here. Now you need to know, now you need to take advantage of us. Mm-hmm. And help tell us what you need. So I think the Sheryl Weinstein: LEP thing is a really good call out because I do see a lot of customers questioning what do I choose? How do I know [00:23:00] what to choose? Absolutely. Should my vendor be telling me what to choose? And that’s what happens in many cases, is that the ISP just kind of tells the owner operator. This is what you should use. Well, why, and, and what, you know, how have we ever really sized up like one against the other? Like in any true, I don’t know, study? No. And a lot of the, a lot of the like. Those different types of LEP, the, the companies that you know have these, they don’t have a lot of good documentation on showing like how their products stand up. I mean, it’s kind of, it’s more theory based than anything. I mean, they put ’em through rain erosion tests and whatever, but. It’s, I feel like that’s a tough space. It’s also a very, like, um, a very tough scope of work to have high quality at. So more training around it is necessary. You know, repair companies don’t wanna use their high skilled repair techs for the LEP because they need them for the more complex repairs [00:24:00] yet. The LEP is so susceptible to quality issues, and if you’re gonna pay an extreme amount of money to, you know, put the LEP to fix your erosion, put the LEP on blades, hope for a performance improvement, and then it fails in a year. I. That’s no help to anybody. So these different products, they also come with different price points. Like, can we really value the shell over the coating? I, I just find that this is a tough space. And so doing something like that and doing more training around LEPI think is probably pretty important. Yes. You know, unless the robots are gonna take it over and then, well, even then, I think it’s the only app. Allen Hall: The application, that’s the variable there. And not having people trained up for that particular LEP product is a huge problem because it’s super risky. You’re risking all that money and time and having to do it all over again and removing LEP that has been improperly applied. It’s a nightmare. [00:25:00] Nightmare. Total nightmare. You don’t want that to happen. And I’ve seen sites where that’s happened, getting technicians. Trained properly for the right material and doing that here up in Tennessee is, is the right approach. It’s risk reduction, which is what the industry is in right now. Risk reduction. Alfred Crabtree: Yeah. Yeah, we, we’ve beliefs. That’s a great way to put it. You know, if you hire somebody. We were talking earlier how there are like two models. One is like the New York Yankees, where you’re going to be buying all the expensive free agents. You can poaching people from other, you know, trying to get experienced talent. You’re paying a premium for them, but you aren’t gonna know until halfway through that season how that person is performing. Yeah. You know, that is a lot of. That was, that is a lot of variability that you could control. Mm-hmm. And in a seasonal business, those weeks are really multiplied by two or three. Right. In terms of like the impact on your revenue and your opportunity to make money. It’s risk reduction, like Alan was saying. Yeah. It’s Allen Hall: all risk, right? Yeah. And the, [00:26:00] the way that the industry is moving and the pace at which is moving right now, risk reduction starts to move to the top five years ago. We do a lot of risky things because we’re making money. Interest rates are low and, but today we cannot afford to do that. And if you watch the industry change right now, it is gonna be more focused than ever in having proper technicians on site that they complete the job that they were intended to do. Precisely, accurately, and once, not twice. Once. Yeah. And that is gonna be the marker of the, whether this industry grows or not. Mm-hmm. And that’s why Blade Repair Academy is needed so much. Now, Alfred, how do you interface with the ISPs, OEMs, and the operators in terms of getting people out here? How do they, how do they push that button and say, Alfred, I’m gonna send you 40 technicians next week. How does that, how does that go? I don’t quite have that down Alfred Crabtree: yet. But, uh, you know, it, we talked earlier, it’s a small world. You know, blade repair is small. There [00:27:00] we mentioned if you, there’s a hundred people in the industry you need to know and then you’ve covered it. Um, our, I think we’ve been, we’ve been kind of riding this new wave of like, oh, who’s this new kid on the block? And, and we can kind of be quiet and still are mysterious. And I pop up at a conference and host a round table or whatever. Uh, so far. It’s mainly been our personal network, which is large enough in this gig to, to get people in. ISPs are much more likely to do it small is ISPs are much more likely to do it. Owner operators, they’re trying to build their training centers. They have a little different, that’s a different model though. It’s a different model. Um, they’re, they’re tougher to get. So primarily it’s been ISPs. We have definitely a, a, a curriculum for new hires, right? We call it support, but we’re [00:28:00] reluctant to go sell that to the street or to the public. Like, Hey, enter the industry here, because we don’t quite yet have that, you know, guarantee that people will recognize our certificate and. Use it to hire people. I don’t quite have that system in place. However, I have so much interest from the Department of Labor to support us in creating an occupation. They want us to build apprenticeship programs. We need corporate sponsor, we need a big employer or to to buy in, and then we can create an apprenticeship program. Then we can find public money for people to get some support to get into a new, a new industry. So, well, they Allen Hall: need to come out here. They need to come out to Dunlap. And visit the facilities, talk with you, understand what the philosophy is, see it up close. There’s a lot of them have been to other places. Sure. And see what the differences are here. And, and that’s gonna be the decision maker. They’re gonna see what the product walking out the door is and [00:29:00] go into the classroom and, and get the grinder, right? Yes. Get, get your hands dirty a little bit. Yeah. And realize, yes, this is what I was looking for to begin with. I just couldn’t find it. And I found it here in Tennessee. Alfred Crabtree: Yeah, I, I think you’re right. And, and we, we are slowly, you know, bringing people in that we know, like the reason why y’all are here and some other folks have visited us this week is because o and m was in Nashville. And I was like, come on, come on. We’re only two hours away. We’ll buy you lunch. Come on. Pretty place. Yeah. You have to see this place to understand it because we are sort of, you know, outsiders, right? I mean, we’re, we’re from the, the industry, but we’re not. We’re not a spinoff of any company. We’re not a division of an ISP. We’re totally organic and unique in a, in a part of the world that doesn’t have any wind. So, yeah. Uh, but once you get here, you get it. The economics make sense. You know, we couldn’t do what we’ve done anywhere else as cheaply as we’ve done, which means we feel like we’re super value rich for what you’re paying and for the amount of time that you’re spending [00:30:00] here. Allen Hall: Oh, 100%. Uh. Let’s give the ISPs, the OEMs and the operators, uh, where to go. What’s the website? Where can they find you on LinkedIn? Alfred Crabtree: We’re at blade repair academy.com. Uh, we’re located in Dunlap, Tennessee. We’re on Blade Repair Academy at LinkedIn. I’m Alfred Crabtree. You can find me there. Uh. Allen Hall: Yeah, that’s where you need to go because that’s how the process starts. If you want to have high level technicians that really know how to work on composites and are working with real materials on simulated, but. Pretty realistic damage. Yeah. Weirdly realistic. Yeah. Secret sauce. And to get some sort of validation and to kind of get graded. Mm-hmm. And so you have a, a, a sense of how they’re doing. You’re going to have to go to Blade Repair Academy. You need to get out to Tennessee and you better check it out because I, Alfred, I gotta be honest, this place is gonna get crazy busy [00:31:00] and I’m gonna have. ISPs calling me saying, can you get a hold of Alfred and get me inside? Can you get me in? No, I can’t because it’s Alfred’s deal and Alfred’s gonna run this thing. We’re very approachable and, but very approachable. Keep calling, he’ll answer and take care of you, but it’s gonna get busy because the philosophy here is the right one. Thanks. So congratulations for putting this together and thank you for the invite. Uh, it is been a pleasure to see it. It’s uh, it, it’s great to know that you are around and you’re helping the industry. Alfred Crabtree: Thank you. We appreciate it and you guys are a great clarion for the industry. A great voice. So, uh, those words, uh, right in the fields. And I wanna thank Cheryl too for coming out. I haven’t seen her for a while. It’s funny ’cause today I, on my phone, you know, five years ago today, she and I were here before this business existed as rope partner employees working on r and d week doing infusions. So, uh, Sheryl Weinstein: the space has transformed. It’s amazing. Yeah. You guys have done a, a [00:32:00] really great job. Like I, yeah, I think you’re definitely pushing the industry into a, like a new realm. Bringing something that, that it really needs, you know, that we don’t have at the moment or that we didn’t have. Alfred Crabtree: Yeah, well hopefully, uh, it improves everybody’s quality of product and the bottom line. ’cause uh, you know, that’s what we’ll do. We’ll affect your bottom line for sure. Allen Hall: So Sheryl and Alfred, thank you so much for being on the podcast. Thanks guys. Right, Sheryl Weinstein: thank you.
Stay informed on current events, visit www.NaturalNews.com - Data Centers and Their Overbuilding (0:11) - Introduction to the Theory (2:05) - Global Data Center Build-Out (3:20) - Revenue Model and Financial Concerns (6:04) - The Role of AI and Simulation Theory (8:48) - Simulated Worlds and Digital Darwinism (17:41) - Practical Applications of Simulated Worlds (22:47) - The Simulation Hypothesis (32:52) - Theological and Philosophical Implications (50:42) - Conclusion and Future Directions (53:21) - Machine Settings and Crop Contamination (1:20:24) - Food Contamination and Industry Trends (1:25:42) - Global Food Scarcity and Quality Control (1:27:49) - Self-Reliance and Preparedness (1:33:16) - Impact of Middle East Conflict on Global Food Supply (1:36:04) - Economic and Energy Implications (1:58:35) - Preparation and Adaptation Strategies (2:08:53) - Potential Outcomes of Continued Conflict (2:12:41) - Call to Action and Final Thoughts (2:16:44) Watch more independent videos at http://www.brighteon.com/channel/hrreport ▶️ Support our mission by shopping at the Health Ranger Store - https://www.healthrangerstore.com ▶️ Check out exclusive deals and special offers at https://rangerdeals.com ▶️ Sign up for our newsletter to stay informed: https://www.naturalnews.com/Readerregistration.html Watch more exclusive videos here:
Study Guide: Surgical Management of Female Neonatal Anorectal AnomaliesGeneral Principles and Initial EvaluationPerform a meticulous perineal exam on every newborn to identify the exact position of openings and meconium 11.Systematic evaluation is required for any neonate failing to pass meconium within 24 hours 12.Associated VACTERL anomalies are the rule rather than the exception 12.Mandatory screening includes renal ultrasound, spinal imaging, and an echocardiogram 12, 18, 55.Delay radiographic imaging for 16 to 24 hours to allow gas or meconium to descend 12, 61.Triage is dictated by counting the visible perineal orifices: 1, 2, or 3 54, 61.Subtype 1: Anterior Ectopic Anus / Perineal Fistula (Functional Low Lesion)Clinical Presentation: The perineum looks grossly normal but the anus is positioned significantly anterior near the vaginal fourchette 1, 15, 51.Physical Findings: There are 3 distinct orifices present (urethra, vagina, and displaced anus) 54, 62.Symptoms: Often presents later in infancy with persistent crying, straining, and passing ribbon-like stools 1, 15, 50.Management: Initiate aggressive medical therapy with stool softeners and laxatives first 4, 15, 51.Surgical Intervention: Posterior anoplasty is strictly reserved for cases refractory to medical management after 3 to 6 months 4, 15, 56.Subtype 2: Rectovestibular Fistula (Classic Mid-Lesion)Clinical Presentation: This is the most common form of anorectal malformation in females 5, 16.Physical Findings: A flat perineum with no anal opening but meconium is seen oozing from the vaginal vestibule 5, 16, 50.Differentiation: Two orifices are visible (urethra and fistula); a separate, normal urethral opening above the fistula rules out a cloaca 6, 16, 52.Surgical Strategy: This is a favorable lesion typically managed with a primary Posterior Sagittal Anorectoplasty (PSARP) without a neonatal colostomy 6, 7, 56.Timing: Definitive repair is performed electively between 1 and 3 months of age 7, 16, 61.Subtype 3: Cloacal Anomaly (Complex Multi-Organ Emergency)Clinical Presentation: The rectum, vagina, and urethra fail to separate and join into a single common channel 8, 53.Physical Findings: A single perineal orifice passes both urine and meconium; a featureless perineum is common 8, 16, 50.Critical Risks: High risk for obstructive uropathy, renal dysplasia, and hydrocolpos (distended, fluid-filled vagina) 9, 30, 53.Emergency Management: Immediate damage control includes a diverting colostomy and vaginostomy tube placement to decompress the system 10, 11, 17, 61.Diagnostic Standard: A cloacagram is essential to assess common channel length and vaginal anatomy 10, 18, 55.Definitive Reconstruction: Total urogenital mobilization (TUM) is a major operation typically delayed until 3 to 12 months of age 10, 17, 53.The 3cm Rule: A common channel less than 3 cm is approachable via a standard sagittal route, while greater than 3 cm requires complex abdominal or laparotomy approaches 17, 59, 61.Post-Operative ImperativesA structured anal dilation program is mandatory for at least two months post-surgery to prevent anal stenosis 38.Long-term functional outcomes depend on the ARM type; vestibular fistulas have an 80 percent normal bowel function rate while cloacas average 50 percent 46.Saved responses are view only
Artificial intelligence (AI) can act as a virtual nursing preceptor, providing students with a safe place to practice thinking like a nurse practitioner (NP) before working with real patients. It can present realistic patient scenarios and ask guiding questions, such as which information is most important, which possible diagnoses are most likely, and what is the best plan of care. As students make decisions, the AI can give immediate feedback—pointing out strengths, gaps, and more evidence-based options. This podcast and article discuss how AI is used as a tool to complement actual human interaction to prepare NP students for practice.
Humans have a very important role to play in God's world. The Almighty created a world in which He is obfuscated. It is possible to live a whole life without acknowledging the one, singular reality of existence: God. The world was designed with the capacity for that reality being ignored. But we are here to […]
Humans have a very important role to play in God's world. The Almighty created a world in which He is obfuscated. It is possible to live a whole life without acknowledging the one, singular reality of existence: God. The world was designed with the capacity for that reality being ignored. But we are here to change that. Our national mission is to sanctify the name of God - to publicize His existence and Dominion. That is the mission that Abraham embarked upon and that is what we have been dedicated towards ever since. This requirement - to sanctify the Name of God and not to, Heaven forbid, desecrate it - is featured in our Parsha and is a central element of our religion. But how exactly do we sanctify God's name? What can we do practically to publicize the name of God, to change the trajectory of the world? In this parsha, and in this this very fascinating (if lengthy) Parsha podcast, we discover some very interesting and powerful answers.– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –DONATE: Please consider supporting the podcasts by making a donation to help fund our Jewish outreach and educational efforts at https://www.torchweb.org/support.php. Thank you!– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –NEW TORCH Mailing Address POBox:TORCHPO BOX 310246HOUSTON, TX 77231-0246– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –Email me with questions, comments, and feedback: rabbiwolbe@gmail.com– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –SUBSCRIBE to my Newsletterrabbiwolbe.com/newsletter– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –SUBSCRIBE to Rabbi Yaakov Wolbe's PodcastsThe Parsha PodcastThe Jewish History PodcastThe Mitzvah Podcast This Jewish LifeThe Ethics PodcastTORAH 101 ★ Support this podcast ★
This Week's Panel - ElroyOMJ, FreakyRO, InigoMontoya80 Show Discussion - In an unexpected update section of the podcast, the old man panel looks up everyone they know to see where they rank on various beat 'em up leaderboards. This, of course, if followed up by an exciting look at all the upcoming releases. One host then talks about a game they played, and by a game they played we mean no games he has played since last appearing on the podcast. Another host discusses a torture scene, and then the third host unexpectedly opens a can of worms in discussing unfunny stoner comedies and how they are not as cool as Space Ghost (who saw a yard gnome once but it didn't scare him). Games Mentioned: ElroyOMJ - Potato Pahtato, Streets of Rage 4: Mr. X Nightmare, Jay and Silent Bob: Chronic Blunt Punch & Chronic Busted Achievements, Indoor Baseball, Indoor Kickball, Legend of Kay: Anniversary, Replaced FreakyRO - Eragon, It Takes Two, Priest Simulator InigoMontoya80 - Save My Wife, Powerwash Simulator 2: Adventure Time Pack, Aery: Soar My Wife ----- AH101 Podcast Show Links - https://tinyurl.com/AH101Links Intro music provided by Exe the Hero. Check out his band Window of Opportunity on Facebook and YouTube
AI Collaborative Simulated Case Discussions on ARM in Male Neonates.Study Guide: Surgical Management of Anorectal Anomalies in Male NeonatesGeneral Principles and Initial Evaluation✔️Anorectal anomalies occur in approximately 1 in 5,000 live births and are driven by ectopic positioning of the anal opening.✔️The VACTERL complex is a common finding, making associated anomalies the rule rather than the exception.✔️Every patient requires a systemic evaluation including renal ultrasound, spinal imaging, and an echocardiogram .✔️A meticulous perineal exam must be performed on any neonate failing to pass meconium within 24 hours .✔️Radiographic imaging should be delayed for 16 to 24 hours to allow gas to descend to the rectum.✔️A cross-table lateral X-ray classifies lesions as low, intermediate, or high based on gas position relative to the PC and I lines.Subtype 1: Perineal Fistula Low LesionClinical Presentation: Meconium is typically visible on the perineum through a tiny, pinpoint midline opening .Physical Findings: The abdomen is usually soft and non-distended with no meconium found in the urine .Surgical Management: These cases are managed with a primary anoplasty or mini-posterior sagittal anorectoplasty PSARP in the neonatal period .Staging:A colostomy is not required for this type of anomaly .Functional Outcome: Prognosis is excellent, with 90 percent of patients achieving normal bowel function by puberty .Subtype 2: Rectobulbar and Rectoprostatic Urethral Fistula Intermediate to High LesionClinical Presentation: This is the most common form of anorectal malformation in males 8.Pathognomonic Sign: The presence of murky, greenish urine indicates meconium in the urinary tract.Initial Management: A staged repair is mandatory to avoid high sepsis risks associated with primary neonatal pull-throughs .Emergency Phase: An emergent dividing sigmoid colostomy is performed within 24 to 48 hours to divert the fecal stream .Definitive Repair: A high-pressure distal colostogram is used to map the fistula before a definitive PSARP is performed at 6 to 8 weeks of age.Functional Outcome: Normal bowel function at puberty is expected in 70 percent of bulbar and 50 percent of prostatic cases .Subtype 3: Rectovesical Fistula Highest and Most Complex LesionClinical Presentation: This rare but severe anomaly represents less than 15 percent of cases and presents as a life-threatening emergency.Critical Symptoms:Neonates show severe abdominal distension, respiratory compromise, and septic shock.Immediate Action:Management starts with NICU resuscitation and broad-spectrum intravenous antibiotics .Surgical Intervention: Damage control involves an immediate laparotomy for a divided sigmoid colostomy and a suprapubic catheter for urinary diversion.Long-term Plan: Definitive reconstruction is delayed for 3 to 6 months .Functional Outcome: Only 10 percent of these patients are expected to have normal bowel function at puberty .Post-Operative Imperatives ✔️Long-term mechanical maintenance via a structured anal dilation program is mandatory for at least two months post-surgery.✔️Failure to follow dilation protocols invariably leads to severe anal stenosis and secondary bowel obstruction.
Lumbar and Spigelian Hernia Study GuideThe Great MasqueradersLumbar and Spigelian hernias are known as the great masqueraders of the lateral abdominal wall because they hide deep within tissue layers, often cause chronic pain, and can strangulate without warning. A high index of suspicion and the use of imaging are critical for diagnosis.Lumbar HerniaAnatomical Boundaries Lumbar hernias are posterior-lateral defects that occur through two specific anatomical regions:Superior Lumbar Triangle of Grynfeltt-Lesshaft: This is the most common site for herniation. It is bounded medially by the quadratus lumborum muscle, laterally by the internal oblique muscle, and superiorly by the 12th rib.Inferior Lumbar Triangle of Petit: This region is bounded medially by the latissimus dorsi, laterally by the external oblique, and inferiorly by the iliac crest.Clinical Presentation Patients often present with a history of flank pain. A bulge typically appears when the patient coughs or lifts heavy objects and reduces completely when they lie down.Diagnostic Essentials A CT scan is mandatory for any suspected lumbar hernia. It is used to confirm the diagnosis, define the exact size of the defect, and rule out underlying retroperitoneal masses that might be pushing the tissue outward.ManagementSurgical Indication: Elective repair is recommended for symptomatic hernias to prevent enlargement and incarceration.Techniques: Small defects may be treated with primary closure and mesh reinforcement. Larger defects or those in obese patients often require open mesh repair with wide overlap or component separation.Laparoscopic Approach: This is the modern standard for faster recovery and can be performed via transabdominal or totally extraperitoneal routes.Spigelian HerniaAnatomy and Pathophysiology A Spigelian hernia occurs through the Spigelian fascia, which is the aponeurosis located between the rectus abdominis muscle and the semilunar line. It most commonly occurs at the level of the arcuate line where the posterior rectus sheath is deficient.The Interparietal Nature This hernia is interparietal, meaning the sac lies concealed between the internal oblique and transversus abdominis muscles. Because it sits deep to the external oblique aponeurosis, it is frequently not palpable as a discrete mass.Clinical Presentation and Misdiagnosis Patients often report vague, intermittent pain in the lower quadrant. Because of its location and hidden nature, it is frequently misdiagnosed as appendicitis, diverticulitis, or abdominal wall hematomas.Diagnosis Dynamic ultrasound is the preferred first-line imaging study. It allows the clinician to identify the fascial defect and hernia contents, such as omentum or bowel, while the patient performs a Valsalva maneuver.ManagementSurgical Indication: All Spigelian hernias should be repaired due to a high risk of strangulation caused by their typically narrow necks.Laparoscopic Repair: Approaches such as TAPP or IPOM are increasingly preferred because they allow for full visualization of the defect and easy mesh placement with adequate overlap.Open Repair: This approach is more challenging because the surgeon must divide the intact external oblique aponeurosis to access the concealed hernia sac before repairing the deeper muscular layers
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SURGICAL EDUCATOR'S ACADEMY Advanced Online Surgery Masterclass Study Guide: Umbilical and Epigastric HerniasOverview of Midline HerniasUmbilical and epigastric hernias are common abdominal wall defects, but they are distinct clinical entities with different management principles based on the patient's age and the nature of the defect.1.Infant Umbilical Hernia: The Benign BulgePathophysiology: These are congenital defects caused by the absence of Richet's fascia or the incomplete closure of the umbilical ring, often associated with umbilical sepsis in children.Natural History: Most infantile umbilical hernias close spontaneously by two to five years of age.Management: The primary strategy is reassurance and observation.Indications for Surgery: Intervention is only required if the defect is large (exceeding 1.5 to 2 centimeters), becomes symptomatic with pain or irreducibility, persists beyond four to five years of age, or if incarceration or strangulation occurs.2. Adult Umbilical Hernia: The Acquired RiskEtiology: Unlike infant hernias, these are acquired and associated with obesity, pregnancy, ascites, or chronic abdominal distension.Clinical Presentation: Patients may present with a reducible bulge, an irreducible (incarcerated) mass where contents are trapped, or a strangulated emergency involving compromised blood supply.Risks: They do not close spontaneously and carry a lifetime risk of incarceration or strangulation of approximately 10 to 15 percent.Evaluation: Clinical examination is usually sufficient, but ultrasound or CT scans are used to identify contents or assess anatomy in obese patients and for large hernias.3. Epigastric Hernia: Small But PainfulAnatomy: These hernias occur through defects in the linea alba, typically between the xiphoid process and the umbilicus.Contents: They frequently contain preperitoneal fat that can become incarcerated or strangulated.Clinical Nuance: They often present as a small, firm, and tender midline lump that is frequently painful due to the entrapped fat. In some cases, patients should undergo upper GI endoscopy to rule out peptic ulcer disease, which can mimic the symptoms of an epigastric hernia.Surgical Management and ClassificationThe European Hernia Society (EHS) classification guides treatment based on the size of the fascial defect:Small (under 2 centimeters): Primary suture repair, such as the Mayo vest-over-pants technique, may be acceptable for thin, low-risk patients, though it has a higher recurrence rate of 10 to 20 percent.Medium (2 to 4 centimeters): Mesh repair is the standard of care to reduce recurrence to less than 5 percent.Large (over 4 centimeters): These require mesh repair and may necessitate component separation techniques.Surgical Urgency and TechniquesUrgency Scale: Asymptomatic and symptomatic hernias are repaired electively. Incarcerated but viable hernias require urgent surgery within 24 to 48 hours. Strangulated hernias are true surgical emergencies requiring immediate intervention.Laparoscopic IPOM-Plus: This is the preferred approach for defects over 2 centimeters and for obese patients. It involves primary closure of the fascial defect followed by placement of a composite mesh with an anti-adhesive barrier, ensuring a 3 to 5 centimeter overlap.Mesh Rules: Polypropylene is used for preperitoneal placement, while composite mesh is used for intraperitoneal placement. Permanent mesh must be strictly avoided in cases of gross contamination or bowel perforation.Long-Term ConsiderationsObesity is a major risk factor for both the development and recurrence of these hernias; therefore, preoperative weight loss is highly recommended. Because hernias can recur years after surgery, long-term follow-up and counseling on risk modification for factors like chronic cough or COPD are essential.
This is an AI Collaborative Simulated Case Scenario Discussions on Inguinal Hernia both uncomplicated and complicated.Inguinal Hernia Study NotesAnatomy and PathophysiologyAll groin hernias emerge through the myopectineal orifice of Fruchaud, a conceptual biomechanical weak spot in the lower anterior abdominal wall. This region is vulnerable to intra-abdominal pressure, especially when the dynamic shutter mechanism of the internal oblique and transversus abdominis muscles fails.Indirect Inguinal Hernia: Results from a patent processus vaginalis, a congenital remnant of the peritoneal evagination that follows the testis during descent. The hernia sac enters through the deep inguinal ring, lateral to the inferior epigastric vessels.Direct Inguinal Hernia: An acquired defect caused by mechanical wear and tear of the transversalis fascia in Hesselbach's triangle. It bulges medial to the inferior epigastric vessels.Uncomplicated Inguinal HerniaClinical Presentation:A soft, reducible swelling in the groin that appears with standing or coughing and disappears when lying down.Typically painless with a palpable cough impulse.Diagnosis:Deep Ring Occlusion Test: Reduce the hernia and apply pressure over the deep inguinal ring. If the hernia is controlled, it is indirect; if it reappears medial to the pressure, it is direct.Zieman's Three-Finger Test: Uses the index finger for the deep ring, the middle finger for the superficial ring, and the ring finger for the saphenous opening to differentiate indirect, direct, and femoral hernias.Management:Elective repair is indicated for symptoms or to prevent future incarceration and strangulation.Lichtenstein Tension-Free Mesh Repair: The gold standard elective procedure involving the placement of a polypropylene mesh to reinforce the floor of the inguinal canal.Complicated Inguinal HerniaComplications occur when the hernia becomes irreducible or incarcerated, leading to obstruction or strangulation.Obstructed Hernia:The bowel lumen is blocked, but blood supply remains intact.Presentation: Irreducible, tense, and tender swelling accompanied by colicky abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, and constipation.Warning: Manual reduction should not be attempted due to the risk of rupturing friable bowel or causing reduction en masse, where a still-strangulated sac is pushed into the preperitoneal space.Strangulated Hernia:A surgical emergency where blood supply is compromised, leading to ischemia and necrosis.Presentation: Systemic toxicity including fever, tachycardia, and hypotension. The skin over the hernia may be dusky or erythematous.Critical Sign: A sudden decrease or relief of pain is a dangerous indicator that nerve endings have died due to profound ischemia and necrosis.Surgical Management of ComplicationsResuscitation: Requires aggressive intravenous fluids, nasogastric tube decompression, and broad-spectrum antibiotics.Viability Assessment: During surgery, the bowel is checked for signs of life: pink color, visible peristalsis, and palpable arterial pulsations.Mesh Usage: Synthetic mesh is generally safe for obstructed hernias if the bowel is viable and the field is clean. In strangulated cases with gross contamination or gangrene, mesh is strictly contraindicated.Alternative Repairs: If mesh cannot be used, primary tissue repairs such as the Bassini or Shouldice techniques are performed, although they have higher recurrence rates.
AI Chatbots appear to really be keen on using nuclear weapons in war game simulations—something like 95 percent of the time, according to a report published in late February.Over at King's College London, researchers had ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini form teams and play simulated war games against each other. Altogether, they played 21 games, and in 20 of the games, the systems reached for the button. During the experiment, none of the models ever chose to surrender—and instead, 95 percent of the time, the AI models chose to use nuclear weapons during the war.Let's go through the details of this study together.
Join us for the March edition of the Simulcast Journal Club, hosted by Vic Brazil and Ben Symon. In this episode: The March papers Delgado M, Worlikar H, McCabe I, O'Keeffe D. Simulated asset tracking study in a diabetes clinic. J Healthc Simul. 2026. doi:10.54531/RZVS5836. Tallentire VR, McColgan-Smith S, Stewart F, McIntyre S, Smith SE. The delicate dance of debriefing: exploring how behavioural marker systems influence the socio-emotional dynamics of simulation practice. Adv Simul. 2026. doi:10.1186/s41077-026-00411-4. Lervik W, Solberg M, Wiig AC, Berg H. How facilitators use healthcare students' mistakes to promote reflections and discussions during simulation debriefings. Adv Simul. 2026. doi:10.1186/s41077-026-00412-3. Oliver N, Tennant B, Olmo-Ferrer D, Holmes C, Laws-Chapman C, Kumar P. Growing as debriefers, together: eight tips for launching and sustaining an online Meta-Debrief Club. J Healthc Simul. 2026. doi:10.54531/GMFT2275. Another great month on Simulcast. Happy listening Don't forget – Simulation Reconnect in Singapore July 16/17 Registration open now - HERE
White House war advisor ROBERT PAPE reveals why Trump is trapped in a war with Iran, the risk of a nuclear breakout, the role of China in the conflict, and how the US is losing control of the Middle East. Robert Pape is a renowned political scientist and director of the Chicago Project on Security and Threats. He has advised every White House since 9/11 on military strategy and is the author of Bombing to Win: Air Power and Coercion in War. He explains: ▪️The 3 stages of the escalation trap locking the US into war ▪️Why precision smart bombs trick leaders into strategic failure ▪️The hidden reality of Iran's 400kg enriched uranium stockpile ▪️How killing the Supreme Leader made the Iranian regime more resilient ▪️The pattern that connects Vietnam, Afghanistan, Iraq and Iran Enjoyed the episode? Share this link and earn points for every referral - redeem them for exclusive prizes: https://doac-perks.com Follow Robert: X - https://link.thediaryofaceo.com/CACnkUs LinkedIn - https://link.thediaryofaceo.com/EhIzCvZ Substack - https://link.thediaryofaceo.com/AtTbkWq The Diary Of A CEO: Join DOAC Circle - https://link.thediaryofaceo.com/EVyBm53 The Diary Of A CEO book - https://link.thediaryofaceo.com/67654nf The 1% Diary - https://link.thediaryofaceo.com/2mrbk7t Conversation Cards - https://link.thediaryofaceo.com/Ex8Yc9b Get email updates - https://link.thediaryofaceo.com/7Az7mkJ Follow DOAC on Instagram - https://link.thediaryofaceo.com/6KoLc6C Sponsors: Stan - Visit https://coach.stan.store/?ref=stevenbartlett&utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=episode1 Fiverr - https://fiverr.com/diary and get 10% off your first order when you use code DIARY Wispr - Get 14 days of Wispr Flow for free at https://wisprflow.ai/steven
Join Lionel for a deep dive into the chaotic intersection of true crime, conspiracy, and future tech. This episode dismantles the baffled incompetence surrounding the Nancy Guthrie case and questions the official narratives of the "Deep State." From politicians destroying their careers via sexting to theories that Joe Biden is a body double, no topic is off-limits. Plus, Lionel explores the terrifying rise of the Singularity, asking if we are ready for AI politicians, robot spouses, and chatbots that diagnose medical conditions better than doctors. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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On today's Call Sheet podcast, Coach Smith opens the Gridiron Glossary to break down spot-drop versus pattern-match zones, simulated pressures, the Mesh concept, and the role of a quality control coach. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
MrBallen is known for his content on YouTube, focusing on true crime, paranormal, and unsettling stories. His real name is John B. Allen and he grew up in Massachusetts near Bobby Kelly. The MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious is now part of the SiriusXM universe, which makes him a co-worker. John tells how joining a riot in college almost ruined his future until he became a Navy SEAL. He details the impossible underwater training that he had to go through to be part of Team Six.| Bobby admits that he stole one of his scary stories and passed it off as his own. *To hear the full show to go www.siriusxm.com/bonfire to learn more! FOLLOW THE CREW ON SOCIAL MEDIA: @thebonfiresxm @louisjohnson @christinemevans @bigjayoakerson @robertkellylive @louwitzkee @jjbwolf Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ to listen to new episodes of The Bonfire ad-free and a whole week early. Start a free trial now on Apple Podcasts or by visiting siriusxm.com/podcastsplus. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Today in 1970, a strange moment in boxing history: two of the greatest heavyweights of all time faced off in a computer-simulated fight for a movie. Plus: today in 1946, the birthday of David Lynch, filmmaker, musician and occasional weather forecaster. How Muhammad Ali regretted his strangest fight ever (The Sporting News via Archive.org) Watch 950 Weather Reports Presented by David Lynch, Straight from His Los Angeles Home (Open Culture)Keep this show in fighting shape, back it on Patreon today
we are one step closer to AGI, here...
The post Alexandra Samuel on her personal AI coach Viv, simulated personalities, catalyzing insights, and strengthening social interactions (AC Ep28) appeared first on Humans + AI.
In this episode of the Crazy Wisdom podcast, host Stewart Alsop sits down with Josh Halliday, who works on training super intelligence with frontier data at Turing. The conversation explores the fascinating world of reinforcement learning (RL) environments, synthetic data generation, and the crucial role of high-quality human expertise in AI training. Josh shares insights from his years working at Unity Technologies building simulated environments for everything from oil and gas safety scenarios to space debris detection, and discusses how the field has evolved from quantity-focused data collection to specialized, expert-verified training data that's becoming the key bottleneck in AI development. They also touch on the philosophical implications of our increasing dependence on AI technology and the emerging job market around AI training and data acquisition.Timestamps00:00 Introduction to AI and Reinforcement Learning03:12 The Evolution of AI Training Data05:59 Gaming Engines and AI Development08:51 Virtual Reality and Robotics Training11:52 The Future of Robotics and AI Collaboration14:55 Building Applications with AI Tools17:57 The Philosophical Implications of AI20:49 Real-World Workflows and RL Environments26:35 The Impact of Technology on Human Cognition28:36 Cultural Resistance to AI and Data Collection31:12 The Bottleneck of High-Quality Data in AI32:57 Philosophical Perspectives on Data35:43 The Future of AI Training and Human Collaboration39:09 The Role of Subject Matter Experts in Data Quality43:20 The Evolution of Work in the Age of AI46:48 Convergence of AI and Human ExperienceKey Insights1. Reinforcement Learning environments are sophisticated simulations that replicate real-world enterprise workflows and applications. These environments serve as training grounds for AI agents by creating detailed replicas of tools like Salesforce, complete with specific tasks and verification systems. The agent attempts tasks, receives feedback on failures, and iterates until achieving consistent success rates, effectively learning through trial and error in a controlled digital environment.2. Gaming engines like Unity have evolved into powerful platforms for generating synthetic training data across diverse industries. From oil and gas companies needing hazardous scenario data to space intelligence firms tracking orbital debris, these real-time 3D engines with advanced physics can create high-fidelity simulations that capture edge cases too dangerous or expensive to collect in reality, bridging the gap where real-world data falls short.3. The bottleneck in AI development has fundamentally shifted from data quantity to data quality. The industry has completely reversed course from the previous "scale at all costs" approach to focusing intensively on smaller, higher-quality datasets curated by subject matter experts. This represents a philosophical pivot toward precision over volume in training next-generation AI systems.4. Remote teleoperation through VR is creating a new global workforce for robotics training. Workers wearing VR headsets can remotely control humanoid robots across the globe, teaching them tasks through direct demonstration. This creates opportunities for distributed talent while generating the nuanced human behavioral data needed to train autonomous systems.5. Human expertise remains irreplaceable in the AI training pipeline despite advancing automation. Subject matter experts provide crucial qualitative insights that go beyond binary evaluations, offering the contextual "why" and "how" that transforms raw data into meaningful training material. The challenge lies in identifying, retaining, and properly incentivizing these specialists as demand intensifies.6. First-person perspective data collection represents the frontier of human-like AI training. Companies are now paying people to life-log their daily experiences, capturing petabytes of egocentric data to train models more similarly to how human children learn through constant environmental observation, rather than traditional batch-processing approaches.7. The convergence of simulation, robotics, and AI is creating unprecedented philosophical and practical challenges. As synthetic worlds become indistinguishable from reality and AI agents gain autonomy, we're entering a phase where the boundaries between digital and physical, human and artificial intelligence, become increasingly blurred, requiring careful consideration of dependency, agency, and the preservation of human capabilities.
While our team is out on winter break, please enjoy this episode of Word Notes. A security awareness training technique in which authorized, but fake phishing emails are sent to employees in order to measure and improve their resistance to real phishing attacks. CyberWire Glossary link: https://thecyberwire.com/glossary/simulated-phishing Audio reference link: “Blackhat (2014) - Hacking the NSA Scene (4/10) | Movieclips.” YouTube, YouTube, 19 Apr. 2017.
While our team is out on winter break, please enjoy this episode of Word Notes. A security awareness training technique in which authorized, but fake phishing emails are sent to employees in order to measure and improve their resistance to real phishing attacks. CyberWire Glossary link: https://thecyberwire.com/glossary/simulated-phishing Audio reference link: “Blackhat (2014) - Hacking the NSA Scene (4/10) | Movieclips.” YouTube, YouTube, 19 Apr. 2017. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Sandra and Rusty get in to Georgia's preparation for Ole Miss; have they too much time off?
Welcome back! This was a fun holiday twist on the #ASMR classic simulated scalp massage! Deep triggers are the best and I should do them more often. I truly hope you're doing well and finding time for you this holiday season! Many blessings and the sweetest of dreams!
A Massachusetts elementary school is rocked as two brothers stand charged in a classroom sex crime case, with one alleged of a simulated sex act on camera. A California jury brands a desert killer a monster after a lying-in-wait murder and a return trip to violate the body. Drew Nelson reports.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Apple's newest visionOS 26.2 developer beta delivers small but meaningful upgrades — especially for creators, stylus users, and anyone following app optimization on Vision Pro.Primary Source: Apple Developer Documentation — https://developer.apple.com/documentation/visionos-release-notes/visionos-26_2-release-notesKey Details 1. Logitech Muse Stylus Support - The Muse now communicates more consistently with VisionOS. - Pressure and button readings are normalized — meaning drawing, writing, and sculpting feel smoother and more predictable across apps.2. App Performance Tracking Fixes - Apple's “Instruments” tool correctly reports Swift app performance again. - Developers can spot memory leaks and sluggish code with better accuracy.3. Subscription Testing Enhancements - Simulated renewals and re-joins for paid plans in Xcode work reliably. - Known delay: subscription status changes may still take up to 24 hours to refresh.4. TV App SharePlay Limitation - SharePlay for DRM-protected shows/movies temporarily unavailable. - Apple has identified the issue and plans a future fix.Email: ThePodTalkNetwork@gmail.comWebsite: ThePodTalk.netYouTube: YouTube.com/@VisionProFiles
NASA Research Suggests Mars Ice Contains Best Chance for Finding Ancient Life. John Batchelor and Bob Zimmerman discuss NASA's search for signs of past organic life on Mars. A research team at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center conducted a simulated test to see how long microbiological remnants could survive Martian radiation conditions. The test exposed E. coli samples in simulated Martian sediment and pure water ice to radiation equivalent to a 50-million-year span. Results showed the samples rapidly decayed in the sediment. However, the E. coli samples survived the entire time span when encased in the ice. This research strongly suggests that searching for ancient microbiology should not occur in the dry tropics where current rovers operate. Instead, NASA must search above 30 degrees latitude where substantial near-surface ice exists. Finding living life is highly unlikely, but discovering fossilized corpses of past life in the ice is the most probable outcome.
NASA Research Suggests Mars Ice Contains Best Chance for Finding Ancient Life. John Batchelor and Bob Zimmerman discuss NASA's search for signs of past organic life on Mars. A research team at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center conducted a simulated test to see how long microbiological remnants could survive Martian radiation conditions. The test exposed E. coli samples in simulated Martian sediment and pure water ice to radiation equivalent to a 50-million-year span. Results showed the samples rapidly decayed in the sediment. However, the E. coli samples survived the entire time span when encased in the ice. This research strongly suggests that searching for ancient microbiology should not occur in the dry tropics where current rovers operate. Instead, NASA must search above 30 degrees latitude where substantial near-surface ice exists. Finding living life is highly unlikely, but discovering fossilized corpses of past life in the ice is the most probable outcome.
Listener Chris T. writes in with a powerful story about his WWII pilot grandfather, a 25-year-old discovery flight that ended in motion sickness, and the question: Is it too late to try again at 46? The crew tackles motion sickness remedies, finding the right CFI as a midlifer, and realistic training schedules for busy adults. Plus: Ben celebrates 28 years of marriage ("She's said 'You Are Right' twice—that's now a thing"), Ted does his first Special VFR, and the fly-in location may be shifting to Bentonville, Arkansas.In this episode:Chris T's story: His B-29 grandfather, motion sickness fears, and juggling four kids while chasing the aviation dreamMotion sickness reality check: "Habituation remains the most effective non-pharmacological method" - it gets better with timeThe secret: "I get motion sickness when the CFI has the controls, but when I have the controls, I don't" - your stomach needs warningFinding the right CFI as a midlifer: Why assertiveness levels matter and how to take control of your own trainingTraining schedules for busy adults: "Plan on one getting canceled every week" - fly 2-3 times weeklyBen's perfect weekend: Multi-engine training, fly fishing, charity golf tournament (came in 2nd!), and 28th anniversaryTed's first Special VFR: "Turn out whichever way you want" - getting the entire Delta to yourselfBrian flies to Alabama, shows his friend how beautiful the state really is (including seaplane runways)International Day of the Air Traffic Controller: Community members dropping off donuts and $500 in pizzasGreat wisdom:"Don't trust the CFI to guide you along—apply your midlife project management skills to your training""We definitely prefer straight information. My communication style is bullet points and curse words"Nathan Ballard on veteran students: "They all want right to the point direct feedback""That's not what we meant by power-off 180" - the compliment sandwichBen's marriage secret: "If you can make each other laugh, that's a big part of it"Fly-in update: Tango 82 is looking tough - considering Bentonville, Arkansas (VBT) with Fly Oz backcountry, grass strip, Frank Lloyd Wright house, and James Beard Award-winning chefs!Mentioned on the Show:8A1 - Guntersville Municipal Airport, Alabama - Seaplane baseVBT - Bentonville Municipal Airport - Proposed fly-in locationAR05 - Harris Field, Combs, Arkansas - 2,500' grass stripPDK - DeKalb-Peachtree Airport, AtlantaWDR - Barrow County Airport, Winder, GAXNA - Northwest Arkansas Regional Airport - Commercial airport near BentonvilleFly Oz - Backcountry flying experiences in BentonvilleGilbert Aviation - Erica Gilbert's IFR ground schoolSupport the Show:Patreon.com/MidlifePilotPodcast - Discord access & exclusive content including checkride debriefsMidlifePilotPodcast.com - Merch, feedback, and all things MLPLeave us a 5-star review on Apple Podcasts or email: midlifepilotpodcast@gmail.comyoutube.com/@midlifepilotpodcast - Live Mondays 8PM ET10% of Patreon proceeds support Freedom Aviation Network's anti-human trafficking effortsClosing wisdom: "Simulated engine failures: The only time your instructor smiles and you don't."Have motion sickness tips or CFI insights? Send us feedback at MidlifePilotPodcast.com
Dive into a fun, speculative episode where host Ryan Schlipp explores what a complete Packers rebuild might look like amid the team's struggles. From promoting Jeff Hafley to head coach to poaching rising stars like Joe Brady or Jesse Minter, we break down hypothetical coaching hires, coordinator options, and even mock draft picks to turn things around. It's a bye-week thought experiment that's equal parts entertaining and insightful for any Packers fan. Hypothetical scenarios: Promoting Hafley internally, landing Bills' OC Joe Brady, or starting fresh with Chargers' DC Jesse Minter as head coach. Coaching staff breakdowns: Potential roles for DeMarcus Covington, Mike Kafka, Greg Roman, and more to revamp offense and defense. Draft prospects: Spotlight on picks like CB Domanii Jackson, IOL Connor Lew, and DT Dante Corleone to address key needs. Fun AI-assisted elements: Simulated press conferences and philosophy deep dives on building a disciplined, explosive team. This episode is brought to you by PrizePicks! Use code PACKDADDY and visit https://prizepicks.onelink.me/LME0/PACKDADDY to get started with America's #1 fantasy sports app. Subscribe now for more Packers analysis, leave a rating and review to help the show grow, and join the conversation on Twitter @pack_daddy. Stay tuned for post-game reactions and more bye-week fun! To advertise on this podcast please email: ad-sales@libsyn.com Or go to: https://advertising.libsyn.com/packernetpodcast #Packers #NFL #GreenBayPackers #PackernetPodcast
Dive into a fun, speculative episode where host Ryan Schlipp explores what a complete Packers rebuild might look like amid the team's struggles. From promoting Jeff Hafley to head coach to poaching rising stars like Joe Brady or Jesse Minter, we break down hypothetical coaching hires, coordinator options, and even mock draft picks to turn things around. It's a bye-week thought experiment that's equal parts entertaining and insightful for any Packers fan. Hypothetical scenarios: Promoting Hafley internally, landing Bills' OC Joe Brady, or starting fresh with Chargers' DC Jesse Minter as head coach. Coaching staff breakdowns: Potential roles for DeMarcus Covington, Mike Kafka, Greg Roman, and more to revamp offense and defense. Draft prospects: Spotlight on picks like CB Domanii Jackson, IOL Connor Lew, and DT Dante Corleone to address key needs. Fun AI-assisted elements: Simulated press conferences and philosophy deep dives on building a disciplined, explosive team. This episode is brought to you by PrizePicks! Use code PACKDADDY and visit https://prizepicks.onelink.me/LME0/PACKDADDY to get started with America's #1 fantasy sports app. Subscribe now for more Packers analysis, leave a rating and review to help the show grow, and join the conversation on Twitter @pack_daddy. Stay tuned for post-game reactions and more bye-week fun! To advertise on this podcast please email: ad-sales@libsyn.com Or go to: https://advertising.libsyn.com/packernetpodcast #Packers #NFL #GreenBayPackers #PackernetPodcast
Through two games, Matt Patricia's Ohio State defense has allowed just one touchdown to Buckeye opponents, a strong start to his time as defensive coordinator. In this episode of Ross Fulton Analysis, Ross discusses how Patricia has used simulated pressures, as well as mixing things up along the defensive front and in coverages to make things difficult on opposing offenses.