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David Zahl joins Kelsi to talk about his new book, The Big Relief: The Urgency of Grace for a Worn-Out World.David Zahl is the director of Mockingbird Ministries and editor-in-chief of the Mockingbird website. David and his wife Cate reside in Charlottesville, VA with their three boys, where David also serves on the staff of Christ Episcopal Church. He is the author of Seculosity: How Career, Parenting, Technlogy, Food, Politics, and Romance Became Our New Religion and What To Do About It and Low Anthropology: The Unlikely Key to a Gracious View of Yourself. Show Notes:Support 15171517 PodcastsThe 1517 Podcast Network on Apple Podcasts1517 on YoutubeMore from Kelsi: Kelsi Klembara Follow Kelsi on Instagram Follow Kelsi on Twitter Kelsi's Newsletter Subscribe to the Show: Apple Podcasts Spotify YoutubeMore from Dave: Preorder The Big ReliefMockingbird MinistriesListen to the Mockingcast
David Zahl was born in New York City and brought up on the East Coast and in Europe, David graduated with honors from Georgetown University in 2001. He then served for five years as a para-church youth minister in New England before starting Mockingbird Ministries in 2007, an organization devoted to connecting the Christian faith with the realities of everyday life in fresh and down-to-earth ways. He remains its executive director today. David is also a licensed lay preacher in the Diocese of Virginia. He is the author of A Mess of Help: From the Crucified Soul of Rock N' Roll, Seculosity: How Career, Parenting, Technlogy, Food, Politics, and Romance Became Our New Religion and What To Do About It and co-author of Law and Gospel: A Theology for Sinners (and Saints). His most recent book is Low Anthropology: The Unlikely Key to a Gracious View of Others (and Yourself). He and his wife Cate have three boys.
There are growing concerns over Chinese technology, and whether it could be weaponized. A recent incident—where exploding pagers and walkie-talkies killed at least 37 people and wounded around 3,000 in Lebanon and Syria, in an attack being blamed on Israel—is shining a spotlight on how ordinary technology can be weaponized in a war. And now, the United States is proposing a ban on Chinese hardware and software in vehicles, amid concerns over national security. We'll discuss in this episode of Crossroads. Views expressed in this video are opinions of the host and guests and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times. ⭕️
AI priests, a polarized church, and women and alcohol. This week on The Bulletin, hosts Mike Cosper and editor in chief Russell Moore talk with David Zahl of Mockingbird about artificial intelligence -- ChatGPT -4.o and AI priests -- and the need for embodied presence and wisdom. Next, they tackle the latest challenge in church polarization, this time in the Presbyterian Church in America. Last, special guest Ericka Andersen joins the show to shed some light on the hidden struggles of women who are alcohol-dependent. Today's Guests: David Zahl is the director of Mockingbird Ministries and editor-in-chief of the Mockingbird website. Born in New York City and brought up elsewhere, David graduated from Georgetown University in 2001, and then worked for several years as a youth minister in New England. In 2007 he founded Mockingbird in NYC. Today David and his wife Cate reside in Charlottesville, VA with their three boys, where David also serves on the staff of Christ Episcopal Church. He is the author of A Mess of Help: From the Crucified Soul of Rock N' Roll and co-author of Law and Gospel: A Theology for Sinners (and Saints). His most recent book, Seculosity: How Career, Parenting, Technlogy, Food, Politics, and Romance Became Our New Religion and What To Do About It, appeared in 2019 from Fortress Press. Ericka Andersen is a freelance writer, podcast host and owner of Pitch and Publish Writing Company. She is the author of "Reason to Return: Why Women Need the Church & the Church Needs Women" and "Leaving Cloud 9: The True Story of a Life Resurrected From the Ashes of Poverty, Trauma and Mental Illness." She has been published multiple times in the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, USA Today, the Washington Post and more. Ericka is a weekly columnist at WORLD Magazine and a freelance reporter for Christianity Today. Prior to freelancing, Ericka worked for National Review Magazine, the Heritage Foundation and in communications for the U.S. Congress on Capitol Hill. Resources Referenced: SobrietyCurious.com “The Bulletin” is a production of Christianity Today Executive Producer: Erik Petrik Producer: Clarissa Moll and Matt Stevens Associate Producer: McKenzie Hill and Raed Gilliam Editing and Mix: TJ Hester Music: Dan Phelps Show Design: Bryan Todd Graphic Design: Amy Jones Social Media: Kate Lucky Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Define AI, GenerativeAI and dismiss common myths or misconceptions.How can AI can be used as a precise tool for a specific project right now?How can local governments vet vendors?Application for smaller towns and counties.Are GenerativeAI tools going to remain free?AI's ability to help and/or hurt public discourse and local government employees caught in the middle.ResourcesCity of Boston Interim Guidelines for Using GenerativeAIICMA's Local Government Reimagined Conferences:Explore the Future of AI in Local GovernmentOne Topic. Two Locations. ICMA is headed to Boston, MA and Palm Desert, CA for the Local Government Reimagined Conferences. From cutting-edge applications to strategic insights, discover how AI is reshaping the landscape of local government. Register here.Government AI CoalitionJoin over 140 government agencies in creating standards for responsible AI procurement and governance for public agencies. Learn more.Additional ContentZencity: Using Generative AI for Community Engagement, from our partner named a 2024 GovTech100 company.
Austin Campbell is the founder of Zero Knowledge Consulting. In this interview we discuss:- Austin's background & testimony before Congress - Austin's time at JPMorgan and their adoption of Blockchain - The future of Stablecoins and how they will coexist with CBDCs - SEC's losing to Crypto & restructuring the agency - #SEC PayPal Subpoena - Will Coinbase beat the SEC?- Crypto regulation bills and when they may be signed into law - BlackRock and Wall Street's race for a Bitcoin Spot ETF https://www.zeroknowledge.consulting/
Become a special monthly podcast supporter! Click here and then click Support. I was never very good at limbo. I remember repeated forced limbo games in school, on spirit days or athletics days, or the occasional picnic. The attempt to sincerely try to get as low as you could go, in front of everybody -- well, the chances of failure seemed too high for my pride. I was gangly, averse to physical embarrassment. So instead of really trying, I made a goofy show of failing. If I couldn't win, I'd make people laugh. I'd flail my arms and knock down the pole. They couldn't make me go low. My little form of protest. My little version of perfectionism. Mockingbird Ministries director, David Zahl, has just released a book called Low Anthropology, in hopes of reaching a perfectionism-saturated Western culture with the grace and love of God. The life God has for us -- of joy, peace, and yes, righteousness, becoming better at being human, begin and subsist, first and always, in humility and a realistic view of ourselves and others. If that book could have spoken to my limbo-evading self, it might say, "Enough with the pretense dear, goofy, misguided child of God. You're going to fail. You're going to look stupid and be ridiculous. You're going to do it wrong. It's not about how low you can go. You're human -- you're already pretty low. The difference is, do you want to go through this with grace? And have some genuine laughs along the way?" David Zahl is founder and director of Mockingbird Ministries and editor-in-chief of the Mockingbird website. David also serves on the staff of Christ Episcopal Church, Charlottesville, Virginia, as college and adult education minister. He is the author of A Mess of Help: From the Crucified Soul of Rock N' Roll; Seculosity: How Career, Parenting, Technlogy, Food, Politics, and Romance Became Our New Religion and What To Do About It; and his newest book is, of course, Low Anthropology: The Unlikely Key to a Gracious View of Others (and Yourself). Our interviewer is the Rev. Zac Koons, rector of St. Mark's Episcopal Church in Austin, Texas. A word about our human plight is, through Jesus, always a word of hope. And we hope you enjoy the conversation. Check out Low Anthropology: The Unlikely Key to a Gracious View of Others (and Yourself). --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/living-church/support
Interviews Editor Emily Chambers Sharpe speaks with David Zahl, author of Low Anthropology and editor of the website Mockingbird. A transcript of the interview can be found online in our current Autumn issue. David Zahl is the director of Mockingbird Ministries and editor-in-chief of the Mockingbird website. Born in New York City and brought up elsewhere, David graduated from Georgetown University in 2001 and then worked for several years as a youth minister in New England. In 2007 he founded Mockingbird in NYC. Today David and his wife Cate reside in Charlottesville, VA, with their three boys, where David also serves on the staff of Christ Episcopal Church. He is the author of A Mess of Help: From the Crucified Soul of Rock N' Roll, Seculosity: How Career, Parenting, Technlogy, Food, Politics, and Romance Became Our New Religion and What To Do About It, and co-author of Law and Gospel: A Theology for Sinners (and Saints). His most recent book, Low Anthropology: The Unlikely Key to a Gracious View of Others (and Yourself), was published by Brazos in Sept. 2022. Even after all these years, he's still mourning the end of Calvin and Hobbes (and hoping that Morrissey and Marr will bury the hatchet). His favorite theologian is probably a cross between Johnny Cash, Flannery O'Connor and his brother Simeon. We need your help! To assist us in increasing the visibility of this podcast, would you consider leaving a review on your listening platform of choice? And if you'd like to make a tax-deductible donation to help sustain the work we do to engage spirituality and the arts, please head to the donate page on our website. Thanks so much for your support! --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/vita-poetica/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/vita-poetica/support
Kurt talks with Mariano Plis, Regional Marketing and Strategy Director of Latin America at Boston Scientific. Mariano talks on representing the Latam Region and explains the challenge that occur compared to in the U.S. He also talks upon his achievements in the med device market and creating solutions.
In this first episode of season three Matt and Rachel are joined by David Zahl to discuss, “performancism” and “seculosity.” David will help us see that we, as a culture, are not less religious as we are so often told. Instead, we have — according to Zahl — shifted our religious needs and impulses to other things, like performance and efficiency.David Zahl is the founder and director of Mockingbird Ministries and co-host of The Mockingcast. He and his family live in Charlottesville, Virginia. Zahl is the author of Seculosity: How Career, Parenting, Technlogy, Food, Politics, and Romance Became Our New Religion and What To Do About It. His next book, Low Anthropology: The Unlikely Key to a Gracious View of Others (and Yourself) comes out Sept 2022 from Brazos Press. ++++Check out What Matters Most, daily teachings from Matt Popovits, available wherever you get your podcasts.For more information on MPM, head to mattpopovits.comSupport the show
It's getting pretty close to April Fools but believe it or not, these are real stories. Producer Sam brings you the weirdest and whackiest news stories from around the world to bring you 'What's Making News'.
The past two years have seen unprecedented levels of innovation and transformation among organizations worldwide. Many organizations are operating in a significantly different manner than they did just a few years ago — focused on resilience, data access and governance, predictive analytics, enabling technologies, and more. Innovation and transformation, in fact, are now mainstays in ensuring businesses stay relevant and competitive over the long term.This unquestionably is a mindset that chief audit executives and their internal audit teams must adopt as well — and many have. According to the results of the latest Next-Generation Internal Audit Survey from Protiviti, a majority of internal audit departments have completed or are currently undertaking transformation or innovation initiatives. And perhaps more important, returns on investment are viewed to be substantial.In this episode of Powerful Insights, we talk with Protiviti managing directors Ashley Cuevas and Mark Peters, who discuss some of the highlights from our global study and what they're seeing in the market regarding these matters.Ashley is the global head of innovation for Protiviti, and Mark is a leader in Protiviti's global IT Audit practice.Contact Ashley at ashley.cuevas@protiviti.com.Contact Mark at mark.peters@protiviti.co.uk. For more information and to find our research report, Innovation and Transformation Are Driving the Future of Internal Auditing, visit www.protiviti.com/IAsurvey. Transcriptions of Powerful Insights are available upon request from kevin.donahue@protiviti.com.
In this episode, we sit down with Jon Lester, Head Coach of Men's Golf at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology. We talk about the incredible year they had last year, making Nationals for the first time ever! We also discuss their new indoor facility and take a look at the upcoming year. We hope you enjoy!Pinned Golf: https://pinnedgolf.com/?ref=zX3kILEmOLh_BBCode: D3GOLFGUYS
Sunday 18th July 2021 - Pst Garth Ball (Relaunch Team Gathering - Table, Temple and Technlogy) by C3 Church Nairobi
In this episide of the Customer Experience Superheroes podcast series we catch up with Gunjan Allen, a recognised positive force on the world of customer experience. With a background in corporate and public sector improving the experience for customers and employees, Gunjan is well placed to offer her advice on the difference between these areas. In conversation with host Christopher Brooks, Gunjan discusses the criteria of successful leaders in CX, and the pair share personal examples where they've seen the impact of poor management on employees confidence.Alongside her endeavours in customer centricity, Gunjan is a director for Women in Technlogy in Australia. Gunjan explains the importance of putting a spot light on this topic generally, but never more so now with a digital divide happening. Clientship CX Customer Experience world leading practitioners.
Cyber Security | Cyber crime | Ethical Hacking | Pen Testing | Privacy | Digital Forensics தமிழ்
Social Media Crime Facebook To adjust who can see your Friends section: Click in the top right of Facebook. Select Settings & privacy > Settings. In the left column, click Privacy. Look for the setting Who can see your friends list? and click Edit to the far right. Select the audience of people (such as Friends) you'd like to have access to your friends list. Whatsapp https://faq.whatsapp.com/general/security-and-privacy/hoax-messages/?lang=en Gmail https://support.google.com/mail/answer/7036019?co=GENIE.Platform%3DDesktop&hl=en Ethical Hacking | Cyber Crime | Cyber Security | Cyber Forensics | Updated News -Dinesh Paranthagan Hackup Technology
Technlogy has encompassed all aspects of our lives and travel is one area where we see a lot of benefits. But do you know what tools and technologies are available these days for travel. In 2018, I backpacked South America, with my wife , for 5 months covering 8 countries across 2 continents. In this week's talk, Amit explains all about what technologies can we use for travelling, how it makes our life easy, how to plan for travel using tech, and a lot more!
[0:00] Welcome to this bonus episode of The Amplify your awesome podcast. This episode was really inspired by a lot of conversations that I've had lately, with parents and other entrepreneurs, really getting together to brainstorm ways we can show up and serve at a higher level when people need us most. [0:21] This episode is focused on our kids, and empowering them and equipping them with skills that are really techie, nerdy a little bit, but skills nonetheless that they can start to explore these days, especially because there's an outpouring from the greater community at large, with free access to tools that students can create. [1:18] How do we empower our kids and help them to start telling their own story about what life is like for them as a kid right now? [1:33] What if our kids could start recording their own stories and documenting their reality for future generations?[1:54] Connect with Yong on IG or FB [3:02] Today we’re diving into helping our kiddos discover how to use technology in a positive way, help you out in your current business, or maybe even start to dream up a new business of your own. [5:08] Grab the Alone Together Toolkit - a list of resources for you and your family at www.yongpratt.com/alonetogether [7:56] Be sure you’re subscribed to the podcast so you get this and other bonus episodes delivered straight to you [8:35] Getting the most out of your content starts with strategy and systems [9:49] The 1x30 Content Formula [10:08] Grab the Alone Together Resources at www.yongpratt.com/alonetogether and get your kiddos started with ideas and skills they can use to help you[11:18] Starting the adventure with your kiddos begins with conversations and finding out what lights them up. [12:35 ] The backstory of how Yong’s daughters got started in her business [14:44] Examples of what Yong’s kiddos have created for her business and others’ [15:18] Since kids are digital natives, it makes sense for us to include them in those parts of our business [15:45] It’s time to raise creators - kids who can think outside the box kids who see opportunities kids who have big dreams. And we can start fostering that right now, at this time.[16:15] Wouldn't it be better if we equipped and empowered them now to start using these [digital] tools, when they have access to them? When you're there to look over their shoulder to make sure they're heading in the right direction? Wouldn't that be better than letting them watch TV mindlessly four hours a day? [17:03] Let's let our kids explore together. Let's let them create and show one another what they've discovered and what they're doing and let them step up to the role of teacher. Because how often do kids get to do that every day, when they can learn a skill, and they can show someone else how to do it, their mastery of that skill increases exponentially. And that's the best learning there is. [18:21] Let’s continue this conversation at www.yongpratt.com See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
There's a lot that's not known about the spread of the coronavirus right now, including how long the virus remains dangerous on household surfaces. That's why you should think twice about keeping those rental reservations.
Sophia Chen of MRS Bulletin interviews Dan Walkup of the National Institute of Standards and Technlogy about an unusual concentric quantum dot structure created in graphene. Read the abstract in Physical Review B .TranscriptSOPHIA CHEN: Physicist Dan Walkup has a mystery on his hands. Working at the National Institute of Standards and Technology in Gaithersburg, Maryland, his team has engineered a strange phenomenon in the 2D material graphene using a scanning tunneling microscope, or STM. They created the phenomenon by accident playing around with the STM, whose very sharp tip manipulates single atoms on a material. In the graphene it created a quantum dot (QD). DAN WALKUP: Historically we weren’t trying to study coupled QDs per se. We were trying to figure out how to tune the properties of the graphene with STM tip. In that way we came eventually to this QD study. SC: You can visualize the QD as an island in the graphene, where electric charges are confined and isolated from the rest of the material. At the QD, negative electrons gather around positive electron holes. They can also do the charge inverse of this, where the positive holes go around a negatively charged nucleus. From this, you might get the sense why QDs are sometimes known as artificial atoms. Like atoms, quantum dots consist of one type of charge going around a nucleus of the opposite charge. The researchers have taken the graphene, stuck it on a substrate of hexagonal boron nitride, and manipulated the electric charges with the STM inside these two materials to create the QD. DW: We create a little pocket of charge in the hexagonal boron nitride, and that charge pocket attracts oppositely charged electrons in the graphene and makes a little charge pocket in the graphene, which becomes a QD. SC: But this isn’t your garden variety QD. The geometry of this particular island has never been seen in graphene. By using the STM and applying a strong magnetic field to the material, Walkup’s team has made a nested QD, one island of charge stacked on the other. From overhead it looks like a bulls’ eye, with one island of charge at the center, and another forming a ring around it. DW: The two dots are like the two tiers of this wedding cake.SC: They’re two concentric quantum dots: one dot is in the center and the other dot is the ring around the first. These two structures are distinct quantum dots because electrons from one island are generally confined to that island. Walkup’s team ran some experiments in which they added electrons to each quantum dot. They did this by applying a voltage to the back of the material, causing electrons to move toward each dot. The researchers can then monitor where the electrons go using the scanning tunneling microscope. And what they found was puzzling. They found that as they added electrons to either of the two quantum dots, they behaved in a way that can’t be explained by accepted models of quantum dot physics. Walkup says you would expect the two dots to repel each other as you add electrons to them, since negative charges repel each other. But the inner dot only cared about its own charge. It did not care about the charge of the outer dot. Whereas the outer dot responded to the combined charge of both dots. They want to figure out why. DW: Part of this paper is an open invitation to the theorists in the world to figure out why it is this way instead of some other way. SC: A better understanding of the basic physics of this bizarre quantum dot configuration could help the development of applications such as quantum computing, in which information is stored in the way quantum dots share electrons. This work was published in a recent issue of Physical Review B.
There's a lot that's not known about the spread of the coronavirus right now, including how long the virus remains dangerous on household surfaces. That's why you should think twice about keeping those rental reservations.
Music provides and provokes a response, which is universal, ingrained into our evolutionary development, and leads to marked changes in emotions and movement.
Listen to Dr Kristen Sosulski about the data visualization, an essential skill required in today's information-rich world. Importance of linear process to develop data visualization literacy and exploratory, inquiry-based approaches to visualization issues and developing expertise to use data. It is so important for practitioners in almost every field to have a coherent way to share findings from research, big data, learning analytics, and more.
Oggi parliamo di Cybersecurity.Giovedì scorso un articolo pubblicato da Bloomberg (https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2018-10-04/the-big-hack-how-china-used-a-tiny-chip-to-infiltrate-america-s-top-companies) viene denunciato un "hackeraggio" di migliaia di server americani dove un piccolo chip hardware avrebbe modificato il comportamento rendendolo controllabile dall'esercito cinese. Trovate la notizia ripresa dalla stampa specializzata.Una notizia non confermata da fonti ufficiali ma provenendo da un'autorevole pubblicazione faccio fatica ad immaginare completamente falsa.Colgo l'occasione nel podcast di condividere alcune riflessioni sul tema della sicurezza e della protezione delle informazione e raccontare cosa è successo.Nelle prossime settimane vorrei approfondire il tema della sicurezza delle informazioni e della loro importanza strategica per le aziende ma anche per i paesi.Mandate i vostri feedback e le vostre riflessioni a paolino@madotto.comBuon Ascolto
Oggi parliamo di Cybersecurity.Giovedì scorso un articolo pubblicato da Bloomberg (https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2018-10-04/the-big-hack-how-china-used-a-tiny-chip-to-infiltrate-america-s-top-companies) viene denunciato un "hackeraggio" di migliaia di server americani dove un piccolo chip hardware avrebbe modificato il comportamento rendendolo controllabile dall'esercito cinese. Trovate la notizia ripresa dalla stampa specializzata.Una notizia non confermata da fonti ufficiali ma provenendo da un'autorevole pubblicazione faccio fatica ad immaginare completamente falsa.Colgo l'occasione nel podcast di condividere alcune riflessioni sul tema della sicurezza e della protezione delle informazione e raccontare cosa è successo.Nelle prossime settimane vorrei approfondire il tema della sicurezza delle informazioni e della loro importanza strategica per le aziende ma anche per i paesi.Mandate i vostri feedback e le vostre riflessioni a paolino@madotto.comBuon Ascolto
This week we discuss the current issues of autonoumous driving with Uber as well as the many levels of autonomy and discuss possibilities of car ownership in the future. Don't forget to listen to Robots by Flight of the Conchords after this Podcast. 0000001!
This week we discuss the current issues of autonoumous driving with Uber as well as the many levels of autonomy and discuss possibilities of car ownership in the future. Don't forget to listen to Robots by Flight of the Conchords after this Podcast. 0000001!
On this episode of the Healthy Wealthy and Smart Podcast, Jo Gibson is featured to discuss physical therapy treatment of the unstable shoulder. Jo is a Clinical Physiotherapy Specialist working at the Liverpool Upper Limb Unit at the Royal Liverpool Hospital and a Consultant in private practice. She has worked as a Shoulder Specialist since 1995 and lectures nationally and internationally about assessment and rehabilitation of the shoulder complex. Jo has co-developed Masters modules with Liverpool University for the diagnosis and treatment of upper limb pathology and has co-authored national guidelines for the management of different shoulder pathologies. She has presented original research at many National and International conferences, published in peer-reviewed journals and written several book chapters. In addition she is an Associate Editor of the British Shoulder & Elbow Journal. In this episode, we discuss: -Using patient history to classify shoulder pathology -Factors to consider when deciding whether to treat with surgery or rehabilitation -The nervous system’s role in shoulder instability -How to use language and metaphors to develop buy-in -Jo’s takeaways from the British Elbow and Shoulder Society Conference -And so much more! Jo prioritizes learning about a patient’s history during the initial evaluation because it can serve as a roadmap for treatment. Jo has found that, “The biggest investment of my time is hearing how everything started and what the story has been from there.” Jo believes patient history to be more valuable than other evaluation method as she states, “The history tells me far more than any clinical test.” Symptom modification can be an important psychological tool to encourage more confidence in a patients shoulder capabilities. Jo stresses, “It is very empowering for the patient because it shows them that if we make their muscles work differently they are stable.” Jo’s treatment protocol includes a variety of functional exercises which utilize external cues to promote motor learning and neuroplasticity. Jo believes there is room for physical therapists to get creative with these treatments and that sometimes, “We kind of undermine the artistry of what we do.” Jo has found that improving her communication skills has led directly to improved physical therapy treatment outcomes. Jo reminds us that, “This is about being human. Communication underpins everything we do… Patients are just the biggest source of information and actually they give us all of the clues and give us the language to use.” For more information on Jo: Jo Gibson Grad.Dip.Phys MSc.(Adv.Pract) MCSP. Jo Gibson studied physiotherapy at the Salford College of Technlogy and qualified in 1987. Her physiotherapy career started in Nottingham in 1987 at Queen’s Medical Centre where an encounter with Professor Angus Wallace fuelled her interest in the shoulder. Jo moved to Liverpool in 1989 and after completing several years of rotational experience she joined forces with Professor Simon Frostick and in 1996 she became one of the first specialist Upper Limb Physiotherapists in the UK. In order to increase her subspeciality knowledge and expertise, Jo completed travel fellowships in the UK, Europe and the USA sponsored by the British Elbow and Shoulder Society and Royal Liverpool University Hospital Trust Charities Board. Since that time the Liverpool Upper Limb Unit has gained an International reputation as a centre of Excellence in Shoulder and Elbow surgery and it was here that Jo started working with Peter Brownson. Jo has a passion for education and since 1996 she has lectured nationally and internationally on rehabilitation of the shoulder and she runs her own courses all over the World. Internationally, in 2004 she was a co-founder of the International Congress of Shoulder and Elbow Therapists, a meeting which now runs tri-annually. In addition, Jo has served as Vice president and Chair of the education committee on the EUSSER board (European Society of Shoulder & Elbow Rehabilitation). Nationally, Jo has been the AHP representative on the British Elbow and Shoulder Society (BESS) Council and in addition she has served as a member of the BESS Research and Education Committees. She is an associate lecturer at the University of Liverpool and has co-developed tailor made masters modules to support physiotherapists working in or towards specialist Upper Limb appointments. Jo completed her Masters in Advanced Practice at Liverpool University in 2012 and completed her dissertation on the Biopsychosocial model cementing her belief in tailoring treatment to the individual and the importance of communication skills. She continues to be involved in upper limb research, has presented original research at many National and International conferences winning three Best Paper prizes. She has published in peer-reviewed journals and written several book chapters. Jo has also co-authored BESS Care Pathways for the British Elbow and Shoulder Society. Jo’s recognized expertise in the assessment and management of shoulder pathology has resulted in consultancy work with many elite sports teams in a variety of sports including football, rugby, cricket, gymnastics, swimming, boxing and tennis. In addition she is regularly sought out by other clinicians to help problem solve more challenging presentations. Her close working relationship with Peter Brownson has been pivotal in the opportunity to develop postoperative rehabilitation regimes facilitating early return to sport or function and has resulted in a publication of results in an elite football population. Resources discussed on this show: Stanmore Classification Sham surgery versus labral repair or biceps tenodesis for type II SLAP lesions of the shoulder: a three-armed randomised clinical trial Derby Shoulder Jane Moser Research Noi Group Apps Noi Group Website Twitter #bess2017 British Elbow and Shoulder Society Jo Gibson Twitter Thanks for listening and subscribing to the podcast! Make sure to connect with me on twitter, instagram and facebook to stay updated on all of the latest! Show your support for the show by leaving a rating and review on iTunes! Have a great week and stay Healthy Wealthy and Smart! Xo Karen P.S. Do you want to be a stand out podcast guest? Make sure to grab the tools from the FREE eBook on the home page! Check out my blog post on the Top 10 Podcast Episodes of 2016!
The role of the CMO is undeniably evolving—and it’s changing quickly. CMOs must be able to evolve to survive in post-digital world in which we live, or go the way of the dinosaur. No longer is the job just about content creation and creativity; CMOs must be well-versed in technology, tools, metrics, and measurements and be able to translate this information to show the value of marketing and marketing positive contributions to the business’ bottom line. Not everyone is meeting these demands, though. CMOs are losing their jobs left and right because they are failing to adapt. In this episode of CMO Talk, Shelly Kramer and guest host Linda Patterson delve into the new demands on CMOs, and what it takes for CMOs to survive in a post-digital business world. Don’t want to end up a CMO dinosaur? Then tune in to listen to this episode of CMO Talk.
We talk value investing in tech to follow up our P/E episode on growth investing. Analyst John Rotonti explains some key metrics he looks at and discusses a few companies he really likes in the tech space.
Technlogy in he Chuch Buildings and the people who use it. Phones, pads,notebooks, cameras, and the list goes on. ipads and the Bibles that are used to break down scriptures. The discusstion of technology in the church building and does it have a place in the house of God, and God verses Technology. Looking back at the first apostles and their jobs there were notachnplogy and they did not carry a Bible or bag. Onec they received the promise he lead and guided them in every journey.
1º Simposio Internacional: Mediatecas y Archivos para el siglo XXI
Alain Depocas, Director de la Fondation Daniel Langlois, Canadá, presentó la historia de la fundación, creada en 1999 y dedicada a la conservación, investigación y catalogación de media art a través de diferentes proyectos. Entre sus prioridades está la documentación del contexto de la producción, así como la escena del media art contemporáneo y por último el contexto histórico desde finales de los años 50 hasta la actualidad. Entre sus colecciones y archivos se encuentran registros de los pioneros del media art, como son una colección de más de 500 documentos de las actividades de “Experiments in Art and Technlogy”, la documentación escrita y en vídeo del histórico proyecto “9 Evenings: Theatre and Engineering” o la colección de videoarte de Steina y Woody Vasulka.