POPULARITY
#TarekOsman, #Tarek_Osman, #India India. West. Choices. Issues. Several factors make the India-West relationship highly important. But several issues complicate the relationship. https://tarekosman.com
#Tarek_Osman, #TarekOsman, #France, #Elections France's Elections - Why you should care? https://tarekosman.com
#Philosophy, #Tarek_Osman, #TarekOsman, #JohnLeCarre Philosophy - Seriously, Simply - John Le Carre https://tarekosman.com https://www.facebook.com/TarekOsmanpage
Four words that bring together Nasser, Eisenhower, Khrushchev and British Prime Minister Anthony Eden for what might be Billy's most difficult lyric to sing. But, what was the Suez crisis all about? And what did it mean for Egypt, Britain, France, Israel, the US and more? Tarek Osman is back on the show to tell us. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
#TarekOsman, #Tarek_Osman, #Machiavelli, #Philosophy Philosophy - Seriously, Simply - Machiavelli Machiavelli beyond "Ends Justify Means". What else he said? And why it's more important than "ends justify means"? https://tarekosman.com https://www.facebook.com/TarekOsmanpage
He's all work no play… except for the occasional Western movie. This week we're nattering about Egyptian revolutionary Nasser, with author and broadcaster, Tarek Osman! So, would the revolution have happened without Nasser? What inspired his political career? And what's his legacy? See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Open Tech Talks : Technology worth Talking| Blogging |Lifestyle
Chatbot uses artificial intelligence & natural language processing to understand what a human wants, and guides them for the action that they are looking for in software applications. Chatbots are helping all businesses to deliver customer services in these difficult times. AI chatbots or digital assistants are taking control of customer service. Covid-19 is accelerating digital transformation in an industry that was already automating work at a rapid pace. Governments and businesses are deploying digital assistants, chatbot to address citizens, customers most common questions, for example how to identify symptoms of COVID-19 or how to get tested, where the testing facility is available. These chatbots are making it easy for the agencies to update and expand the chatbot’s responses as queries evolved. This is all happened to handle the influx of calls which has resulted due to coronavirus crisis, grocery stores, retail outlets, banks to healthcare providers, everyone started exploring how they can use digital assistant/ chatbot to manage this unprecedented times. The number of hospitals are trying to find ways how they can deploy a conversational mobile chatbot to help with intake forms and remote check-ins for both in-person and telehealth visits rather than staff sitting and facing the patients to avoid contact due to COVID-19. The chatbots will be able to give patients tech advice when they are using telemedicine. When used at physical locations, the chatbots will be able to tell patients when to go directly into the physician room. The traditional pre-visit process of walking into the clinic, hospital, filling out paper forms, reading instructions, and then waiting for a physician's room is changing. Earlier session on OTechTalks was covered during July 2017, Chatbots Basics 101, the role of Natural Language Processing, Artificial Intelligence and machine learning and to access in presentation format from the post What are Chatbots? Beginner’s Guide To Chatbots. Today we have our guest speaker & special thanks to Tarek Osman for joining me this week. Until next time! You’ll Learn: Learn from the fonder what he has learned from the book ‘Lean Startup’ A personal need leads to launch a company that is the free virtual assistant that can Find, Book, Buy, Deliver, and Do anything for you in Dubai. You can use Yanzo for, Shopping, Car related services, Travel arrangements, Home errands, Office ad-hoc tasks, and Anything else… Speaker has shared his experience on what challenges they have faced and how they are managing the supply-chain process.
#Tarek_Osman's review of #Andrew_Roberts' book: #Napoleon the Great. https://tarekosman.com
#Tarek_Osman's review of Francis #Fukuyama's #book: "Political Order & Political Decay". https://tarekosman.com
Review of #Isabelle_Hammad's #The_Parisian. Tarek Osman's website: https://tarekosman.com
Episode 11 of the Islam series, on: the meaning of prophethood and what it entails .. on the Islamic concept of prophethood relative to that in Judaism and Christianity .. on the "promise" and the "threat" in the prophetic message .. and on the personification of prophethood. Tarek Osman's website: https://tarekosman.com
Tarek Osman's website:https://tarekosman.com
This podcast is about: what are the meanings in Naguib Mahfouz's reflections and dreams at the end of his life? And how do these writings relate to his life-long oeuvre of novels? What was he trying to leave us with? Tarek Osman's website: https://tarekosman.com
Things are hot in the Middle East and even hotter on this week's podcast. Geraldine and Eliza have divergent views about the American assassination of Iranian Commander Qasem Suleimani. They also disagree about some of the journalism that has stemmed from the killing. But they do tend to see eye to eye on 'Meghxit'. Eliza feels sorry for Meghan Markle and hates her treatment in the press. But she also thinks the Sussexes could have handled the split better. Also this week: Captain Cook and summer time in Cairns. Money exchange in Beirut. And how to define 'star power' on TV. Join the conversation at the Facebook page "Long Distance Callers" or email us at ldcpodcast1@gmail.com Thanks for listening! Trent Dalton’s three-part series on Captain Cook in The Australian https://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/inquirer/cook-rediscovered-white-ghosts-on-the-coast/news-story/b2ff8dd879ac8d345f195b23638ea79b https://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/inquirer/cook-rediscovered-miracle-on-the-great-barrier-reef/news-story/2e118a456b4df6ded3cce366e6d8aeeb https://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/inquirer/cook-rediscovered-endeavour-believed-to-be-in-watery-rhode-island-grave/news-story/9cc8cbff3b434dc6b0124e723cfb0bfb Dexter Filkins on Qasem Suleimani https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2013/09/30/the-shadow-commander Thomas Freidman on Suleimani https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/03/opinion/iran-general-soleimani.html Tarek Osman on Suleimani https://tarekosman.com/articles/four-consequences-of-soleimanis-assassination?utm_source=Tarek+Osman%27s+New+Mailing+List+29%2F04%2F2015&utm_campaign=942639b2bc-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2020_01_05_11_58&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_4a88c6fa22-942639b2bc-154316349 Julia Baird on Meghan Markle https://www.smh.com.au/world/europe/diana-s-lament-applies-to-meghan-but-must-every-strong-woman-in-history-confront-such-savagery-20200110-p53qdu.html
المعرفة في لحظة ظهور الإسلام Tarek Osman's website: https://tarekosman.com
بريطانيا - ما بعد الانتخابات و بريكسيت by Tarek Osman
Algeria - What Might Happen by Tarek Osman
What Arthur Miller’s “The Price” Tell Us about today’s Capitalism & Society by Tarek Osman
رؤية جديدة لفيلم الأرض..ليوسف شاهين by Tarek Osman
In this special ‘live’ edition of our podcast Pocket Economics, the EBRD’s Jonathan Charles discusses the challenges our world is currently facing with the FT’s Neil Buckley and, also from the EBRD, Sergei Guriev, Alexia Latortue and Tarek Osman.
اشكالات مفهوم "المثقف" في التجربة العربية by Tarek Osman
Tarek Osman talks about the thinking and philosophy of the writer Tawfik al-Hakeem, an important figure in the Arab liberal age.
When it comes to the Middle East, it is no surprise that political leaders, diplomats, and the donor and humanitarian community typically focus on the here and now. Yet we must not lose sight of the future. In this episode, editors Whitney Arana and Jonathan Stein speak with Tarek Osman, a PS contributor, author, political economist, and broadcaster, on four trends likely to set off new problems in the region. Like what you hear? Please subscribe, rate, and review our podcasts.
Tarek Osman explores the words of Gertrude Bell, in this series looking at the impact of the First World War on great artists and thinkers. Gertrude Bell, explorer, archeologist, diplomat, linguist, writer and spy was no ordinary woman. The first woman ever to be awarded a first-class degree in modern history from Oxford, she went on to become a groundbreaking mountaineer and have a Swiss peak named after her. But these were mere asides.By 1914 she had immersed herself in the history and culture of the Levant, mastering Arabic, and forging real relationships across large swathes of the region. As the First World War raged across Europe and the Middle East, the British Empire realised it needed her knowledge and experience. And in 1917, as Oriental Secretary in the British Commission in Baghdad, she was crucial to them, visiting dignities, poring over intelligence and military plans. The only woman in that world of men, she devised British strategy, selecting its Arab partners and drawing lines in the sand which would become the borders of new states. As a young academic, Tarek tussled with the idea of Bell. She was symbolic of the way colonial powers had shaped his world and a voice that seemed so condescending. In this essay he explores his own conflicted relationship with her and how, as his understanding of the region grew, he developed a respect for a driven and courageous woman whose ideas and reflections remain so relevant today. Producer Sarah Bowen.
con: l'inviata del Gr Rai MARIA GIANNITI, il giornalista freelance egiziano TAREK OSMAN, il portavoce di Amnesty International Riccardo Noury, il presidente della Commissione Esteri al Senato PIERFERDINANDO CASINI
con: l'inviato della cronaca per il GrRai BRUNO SOKOLOWICZ, l'inviata della redazione esteri per il GrRai MARIA GIANNITI, il giornalista egiziano TAREK OSMAN, il giornalista egiziano AMRO ALI
On Start the Week Tom Sutcliffe talks to the Egyptian writer Alaa Al Aswany about his latest novel which charts the country's social upheaval through the prism of Cairo's elite Automobile Club of Egypt. The foreign correspondent Wendell Steavenson looks back at the Egyptian revolution as the crowds gathered in Tahrir Square in 2011. The political economist Tarek Osman explores how Islamism has spread through the Middle East, and what its future prospects mean for the region, while Professor Hugh Kennedy charts the rise of the Caliphate and how the so-called Islamic State uses the iconography of early Islam as propaganda.
Tarek Osman considers how the impact of the Arab Uprisings of 2011 was felt in Saudi Arabia. The country's growing youth population faced high unemployment and was well adapted to social media. But unlike other Arab countries, they did not take to the streets. And, As King Salman takes power, what is the future of this traditional society and global banker of oil?
Tarek Osman investigates the rise of the Kindgom of Saudi Arabia. In this second episode he sees how Saudi Arabia was suddenly challenged at the end of the 1970s by the Iranian Revolution and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan which gave rise to religious extremism, as well as the Arab uprisings.
Egyptian writer Tarek Osman follows the dramatic events that led to the establishment of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and its rise, in less than 50 years, to the status of global power.
A talk given as part of the Middle East Centre Friday Seminar Series
Comedian Al Murray, aka The Pub Landlord, and Egyptian political economist Tarek Osman discuss their favourite books with presenter Harriett Gilbert. Al's choice is Catch-22 by Joseph Heller. Tarek's is the controversial Egyptian novel Children of the Alley by Naguib Mahfouz, and Harriett picks Everyman by Philip Roth. Producer Beth O'Dea.
Author and journalist Tarek Osman returns to the Middle East to explore how the apparently unassuming establishment of the Café has served as a vibrant hub of change in the political tsunamis that have swept - and are still sweeping - through the region.
What kind of societies will the Arab Spring give birth to? Democratic, Capitalist, Islamic, or Unstable? Jeremy Bowen, the BBC's Middle East Editor, and Egyptian political economist Tarek Osman join Samira Ahmed to discuss this issue and to explore what the possible implications may be for the western world. Recorded at Radio 3's Free Thinking Festival at The Sage Gateshead on Saturday 3rd November 2012.
Andrew Marr travels back to Egypt in the 1950s to a time of religious pluralism and openness with the writer Tarek Osman. As Egypt votes in parliamentary elections, Tarek, asks what has happened in the intervening years. Francis Spufford imagines a very different world with his account of the Soviet Union under Kruschchev, and what could have happened if the dream of plenty had come true. Turkey's best-selling female novelist, Elif Shafak, argues against the constraints of identity politics and the pigeon-holing of multi-cultural writers. While Vicky Kaspi believes that we should be looking to outer space to stimulate curiosity and creativity: the astrophysicist and cosmologist researches some of the universe's most mysterious objects. Producer: Katy Hickman.