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The Cork comedian is currently on tour with his show‘Offline', where he shares the wisdom he gained when he gave up using theInternet completely for 2 months Official site: https://chriskentcomedy.com/
Do you know how to get under God's wings for His Supernatural Protection?A mysterious pneumonia is ripping through Chinese schools; Is this a repeatof 2020? New York Court rules in favor of Gov. Hochul's quarantine camps; The U.N.& amp; The shady Bill Gates Foundation launches “50 in 5” global digital infrastructure plan; The FCCapproves the Biden Administration's plan to give the federal government full control of theInternet; A brave whistleblower exposes WEF Klaus Schwab's Agenda;Argentina and the Netherlands elect new Presidents that are against the NewWorld Order; and Ireland is at war with illegal immigrants! New episodes are released every Monday. Subscribe so you don't miss an episode, and leave us a rating on your podcast platform of choice. For more info or to support Burning Bush Ministries, visit our website at burningbushministries.tv.Follow us on social media:Twitter.com/ediifypodcastFacebook.com/edifypodcast Product Spotlight:Dr. Rhonda's Immunity Booster:https://doctorrhonda.net/podcast-product-spotlightUse promo code Edify!My Pillow:https://www.mypillow.com/?cq_src=google_ads&cq_cmp=6481386640&cq_term=my%20pillow&cq_med=&cq_plac=&cq_net=g&cq_plt=gp&gclid=CjwKCAjwue6hBhBVEiwA9YTx8D1g59gXEUjFegHoWVjHHx6V_dwQUAQpc2fT4fQqsK93A1s2W-XT-RoCeLsQAvD_BwEUse promo code B66Swiss America Gold:Call Bill Durnan at (480) 861-1520 Sources:https://www.kingjamesbibleonline.org/2-Timothy-3-1/https://www.kingjamesbibleonline.org/Ephesians-1-18/https://www.kingjamesbibleonline.org/Psalms-Chapter-91/https://www.kingjamesbibleonline.org/Hebrews-1-3/https://www.kingjamesbibleonline.org/Hebrews-10-11_10-12/https://www.kingjamesbibleonline.org/John-19-30/https://www.kingjamesbibleonline.org/Colossians-2-10/https://www.kingjamesbibleonline.org/Psalms-62-8/https://www.kingjamesbibleonline.org/Isaiah-26-4/https://www.kingjamesbibleonline.org/Hebrews-4-12/https://www.kingjamesbibleonline.org/Acts-4-12/https://www.kingjamesbibleonline.org/Galatians-4-19/https://www.kingjamesbibleonline.org/Hebrews-13-5/https://www.kingjamesbibleonline.org/Exodus-33-22_33-23/https://www.kingjamesbibleonline.org/Galatians-2-20/https://www.kingjamesbibleonline.org/Ephesians-2-4_2-7/https://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-12779783/child-pneumonia-outbreak-china-hospitals.htmlhttps://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2023/11/ny-court-rules-favor-hochul-landmark-case-government/https://www.zerohedge.com/political/un-bill-gates-launch-50in5-global-digital-infrastructure-planshttps://www.newstarget.com/2023-11-21-fcc-gives-federal-government-full-control-internet.htmlhttps://newsaddicts.com/calls-mount-klaus-schwabs-arrest-wef-whistleblower-speaks-out/https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2023/11/netherlands-geert-wilders-against-migration-tsunami-dutch-will/https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2023/11/ireland-we-are-war-mma-champion-connor-mcgregor/
What are the benefits of advertising and public relations? And what'sthe difference? This is the fourth episode in which I help you answerthose questions, and continue to share what I know to help you tellthem apart. My ultimate goal is still to help you make informed choices when you'redeciding how to integrate public relations and advertising into yourmarketing plan.Yes, public relations is always less expensive than advertising. This maysurprise some of you – but a Facebook campaign can quickly add upto tens of thousands of dollars.Obviously, if you're just starting out and have a newly launched product outthere, your budget won't let you do that kind of advertising campaign– it wouldn't make sense. However, public relations and socialmedia are within your reach.At NATA PR, which I founded more than 20 years ago, I've seen plentyof trends and schools of thought emerge along with social media. Someclients believed that influencers were the new, and the onlyworthwhile, brand ambassadors. However, every day we still seeproducts and companies partnering with the artists, athletes andcelebrities who often make headlines in mainstream media.Others who would swear only by the Facebook ad, which of course generatesthem sales, hadn't figured out that investing in their reputationwould probably have helped them last longer.Since the advent of social media, the lifecycles of promotion fashions andtrends have sped up considerably. That's why you may have heard of360o campaigns, which simply means getting yourself seen and promoted onseveral platforms, not just investing everything in one likeFacebook, even if it's very profitable for you in the short term.New brands can launch cheaply online and, if these young companies alsosucceed in getting talked about, they can quickly start to eat intoyour market share.But let's get back to our point. We're talking about spending here,specifically how much less public relations can cost you thanadvertising. During the pandemic, when many people believed theInternet and online sales would continue to skyrocket, some of ourclients hired digital marketing agencies to continue boosting theironline results. Some of those agencies had even recommended that ourclients take the budget they had for public relations and give it tothem. So I crunched some numbers to find out how much the most recent onlinead campaigns by that agency had cost versus our PR results, e.g. thecost of acquiring new subscribers to their newsletter vs. a publicrelations campaign. Some of you will tell us that it's not the samething, and we agree 100% – but here are the results:It cost our client between $5 and $10 per new subscription, per emailacquisition. As for our reputation campaign, it figured in cents:$0.005 per potential reader/listener/fan.Several big brands that retain the services of NATA PR are investing solelyin two areas: social media and public relations.Naturally, there's no magic formula that works for everyone all the time. But wehave convincing case studies and, as I like to repeat, largecorporations don't hire a public relations agency just for fun –but to get results.So it's up to you to include PR in your marketing plan. If you want to discuss it in person with us, get in touch now at www.natapr.com.INSTAGRAMhttps://www.instagram.com/nata_pr_school/GET FEATURED FOR FREEhttps://prschool.natapr.com/evergreen_enTHE FREE NATA PR MODELhttps://prschool.natapr.com/Le-Modele-NATA-PR
Working his way up as a young musician and producer, Steve Lacy got his break in funk group The Internet and now has a #1 crossover hit! "Bad Habit" just made Billboard history topping 3 genre charts simultaneously. I discuss Steve's music experience, break down "Bad Habit"'s unique arrangement, and analyze how it's currently being marketed. Theme Song: "Dance Track", composed by Jessica Ann CatenaMusic Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VF-FGf_ZZiISteve Lacy's discography: https://open.spotify.com/artist/57vWImR43h4CaDao012Ofp?si=MOC7ZDFMTGO2Px2B1FzyqwSteve Lacy's TikTok video guitar riff: https://bit.ly/3MwqTbXThe Internet's discography: https://open.spotify.com/artist/7GN9PivdemQRKjDt4z5Zv8?si=2mFcJJqKR8igpTEntiPMgQ- "Girl" (2016): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zmY8mG4_3j4[Steve Lacy's wearing a red sweatshirt in the video.]- "Roll (Burbank Funk)" (2018): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SIqvRzEIqIo[Steve sings lead with Syd harmonizing.]- "Come Over" (2018): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NB3gWkhLkxM[Steve's sitting next to Syd on the right, and playing guitar in the video.]Billboard's "Bad Habit" #1 article: https://www.billboard.com/music/chart-beat/steve-lacy-bad-habit-hot-100-sam-smith-kim-petras-glorilla-cardi-b-1235149114/#recipient_hashed=102a9789436f7bb35228817c45bbba606ec14e43c94e0a813210aae284c68208&recipient_salt=43a5ce0c1563427a5c39bd09c51eaec3ec701d0e3919131229cf156215f1c1c7R&B / Rock charting history: https://www.billboard.com/music/chart-beat/steve-lacy-bad-habit-tops-rb-hip-hop-songs-alternative-1235135263/
An artist struggles to manage the chaos unleashed by the world's first ARG “Ong's Hat.” Chapter One - "Born To Be Weird"Books, punk, drugs, HAM radio and "The family weirdos" inspire Joseph on his way to the mystical encounter that inspired Ong's Hat. *Listen loudly or with headphones*Visit toowiarts.com or patreon.com/toowiarts for more info
Alex is a first-generation immigrant who, like many of us, has absorbed different cultures from all walks of life. But with a less geographically isolated family and upbringing, a certain uniqueness is found in his views and questions on the expanding internet culture and its effects on American life. Alex and Marq explore the delicacy of human involvement with the robustness of present-day and future technology. And with the help of special guest Cade Bergman, learn more about the next generation of the internet frontier.CHAPTERS:0:00 - Teaser0:25 - Cancel culture and censorship:Do sticks and stones break bones while words never hurt you? Or is the pen mightier than the sword? Do our differences in culture, opinion, and reactions to both shape who we are as individuals; and by extension our society? Your character, upbringing, and culture say more about you than anything else.13:05 - How nature and the world around us influences us:America's culture war, what we consume, how we are raised, and how the communities we grow up in influence our personalities and beliefs. How are we developing as a growing people, into the future, with those truths? With WW3, civil strife, national crisis, and government distrust, how do we move forward?22:50 - Theinternet is chaning us forever:The internet is evolving faster than humans can. What are the social/societal implications of this? Why do we have overwhelming feelings of inadequacy? What is coming for us and should we be cautious? (social media, web 3, NFTs, Tech, blockchain)55:09 - Special Guest and NFT/Personality Youtuber CADE BERGMAN teaches Marq and Alex everything about NFTs, Crypto, Web 3, VR, the expanding internet universe, and what it means culturally.1:29:47 - OutroAlex's ProfilesIG: https://www.instagram.com/alexpark.ig/?hl=enTikTok: https://vm.tiktok.com/ZTd9aJXKy/_________________________________________MARQ'S profiles and content belowhttps://instabio.cc/-M-G-C-_________________________________________Cade's Profiles and morehttps://linktr.ee/cadebergman________________________________________#web3 #blockchain #internetculture
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Pom Tea & Earl Grey are starting off the new year, spilling the tea on life pre-social media. They introduced this new generation of Tik Tok users to a space outside of the internet. Pom Tea shares how important it was to not tie up the phone line while going on AOL, through your dial up connection & Earl Grey shared the beauty of stacking up all your CDs on a special rack. Asking ASL in a chatroom and calling people after 9pm when your minutes were free were crucial to us as pre-teens. Tune in to hear more about growing up in the 90s. Keep Sippin!
Andy and Dave discuss the latest in AI news and research, including the new DARPA FENCE program (Fast Event-based Neuromorphic Camera and Electronics), which seeks to create event-based cameras that only focus on pixels that have changed in a scene. NIST proposed an approach for reducing the risk of bias in AI and has invited the public to comment and help improve it. Researchers from the University of Colorado, Boulder use a machine learning model to learn physical properties in electronics building blocks (such as clumps of silicon and germanium atoms), as a way to predict how larger electronics components will work or fail. Researchers in South Korea create an artificial skin that mimics human tactile recognition, and couple it with a deep learning algorithm to classify surface structures (with an accuracy of 99.1%). A survey from IE University shows, among other things, that 75% of people surveys in China support replacing parliamentarians with AI, while in the US, 60% were opposed to it. A scientist with uses machine learning to learn Rembrandt's style and then recreate missing pieces of the painter's “The Night Watch.” Researchers at Harvard, San Diego, Fujitsu, and MIT present methodical research on demonstrating how classification neural networks are susceptible to small 2D transformations and shifts, image crops, and changes in object colors. The GAO releases a report on Facial Recognition Technology, surveying 42 federal agencies, and finds a general lack of accountability in the use of the technology. The WHO releases a report on Ethics and Governance of AI for Health. In rebuttal to DeepMind's “Reward is enough” paper, Roitblat and Byrnes pens separate essays on why “Reward is not enough.” An open-access book by Wang and Barabasi looks at the Science of Science. Julia Schneider and Lena Ziyal join forces to provide a comical essay on AI: We Need to Talk, AI. And the National Security Commission on AI holds an all-day summary on Global Emerging Technology. Follow the link below to visit our website and explore the links mentioned in the episode. https://www.cna.org/CAAI/audio-video
Andy and Dave discuss the latest in AI news, including a report that the Israel Defense Forces used a swarm of small drones in mid-May in Gaza to locate, identify, and attack Hamas militants, using Thor, a 9-kilgram quadrotor drone. A paper in the Journal of American Medical Association examines an early warning system for sepsis, and finds that it misses out on most instances (67%) of cases, and frequently issued false alarms (to which the developer contests the results). A new bill, the Consumer Safety Technology Act, directs the US Consumer Product Safety Commission to run a pilot program to use AI to help in safety inspections. A survey from FICO on The State of Responsible AI (2021) shows, among other things, a disinterest in the ethical and responsible use of AI among business leaders (with 65% of companies saying that can't explain how specific AI model predictions are made, and 22% of companies have an AI ethics board to consider questions on AI ethics and fairness). In a similar vein, a survey from the Pew Research Center and Elon University's Imagining the Internet Center found that 68% of respondents (from across 602 leaders in the AI field) believe that AI ethical principles will NOT be employed by most AI systems within the next decade; the survey includes a summary of the respondents' worries and hopes, as well as some additional commentary. GitHub partners with OpenAI to launch CoPilot, a “Programming Partner” that uses contextual cues to suggest new code. Researchers from Stanford University, UC San Diego, and MIT research Physion, a visual and physical prediction benchmark to measure predictions about commonplace real world physical events (such as when objects: collide, drop, roll, domino, etc). CSET releases a report on Machine Learning and Cybersecurity: Hype and Reality, finding that it is unlikely that machine learning will fundamentally transform cyber defense. Bengio, Lecun, and Hinton join together to pen a white paper on the role of deep learning in AI, not surprisingly eschewing the need for symbolic systems. Aston Zhang and Zack C. Lipton, and Alex J Smola release the latest version of Dive into Deep Learning, now over 1000 pages, and living only as an online version. Follow the link below to visit our website and explore the links mentioned in the episode. https://www.cna.org/CAAI/audio-video
The Internet is not a simple story to tell. In fact, every sentence here is worthy of an episode if not a few. Many would claim the Internet began back in 1969 when the first node of the ARPAnet went online. That was the year we got the first color pictures of earthen from Apollo 10 and the year Nixon announced the US was leaving Vietnam. It was also the year of Stonewall, the moon landing, the Manson murders, and Woodstock. A lot was about to change. But maybe the story of the Internet starts before that, when the basic research to network computers began as a means of networking nuclear missile sites with fault-tolerant connections in the event of, well, nuclear war. Or the Internet began when a T3 backbone was built to host all the datas. Or the Internet began with the telegraph, when the first data was sent over electronic current. Or maybe the Internet began when the Chinese used fires to send messages across the Great Wall of China. Or maybe the Internet began when drums sent messages over long distances in ancient Africa, like early forms of packets flowing over Wi-Fi-esque sound waves. We need to make complex stories simpler in order to teach them, so if the first node of the ARPAnet in 1969 is where this journey should end, feel free to stop here. To dig in a little deeper, though, that ARPAnet was just one of many networks that would merge into an interconnected network of networks. We had dialup providers like CompuServe, America Online, and even The WELL. We had regional timesharing networks like the DTSS out of Dartmouth University and PLATO out of the University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana. We had corporate time sharing networks and systems. Each competed or coexisted or took time from others or pushed more people to others through their evolutions. Many used their own custom protocols for connectivity. But most were walled gardens, unable to communicate with the others. So if the story is more complicated than that the ARPAnet was the ancestor to the Internet, why is that the story we hear? Let's start that journey with a memo that we did an episode on called “Memorandum For Members and Affiliates of the Intergalactic Computer Network” sent by JCR Licklider in 1963 and can be considered the allspark that lit the bonfire called The ARPANet. Which isn't exactly the Internet but isn't not. In that memo, Lick proposed a network of computers available to research scientists of the early 60s. Scientists from computing centers that would evolve into supercomputing centers and then a network open to the world, even our phones, televisions, and watches. It took a few years, but eventually ARPA brought in Larry Roberts, and by late 1968 ARPA awarded an RFQ to build a network to a company called Bolt Beranek and Newman (BBN) who would build Interface Message Processors, or IMPs. The IMPS were computers that connected a number of sites and routed traffic. The first IMP, which might be thought of more as a network interface card today, went online at UCLA in 1969 with additional sites coming on frequently over the next few years. That system would become ARPANET. The first node of ARPAnet went online at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA for short). It grew as leased lines and more IMPs became more available. As they grew, the early computer scientists realized that each site had different computers running various and random stacks of applications and different operating systems. So we needed to standardize certain aspects connectivity between different computers. Given that UCLA was the first site to come online, Steve Crocker from there began organizing notes about protocols and how systems connected with one another in what they called RFCs, or Request for Comments. That series of notes was then managed by a team that included Elizabeth (Jake) Feinler from Stanford once Doug Engelbart's project on the “Augmentation of Human Intellect” at Stanford Research Institute (SRI) became the second node to go online. SRI developed a Network Information Center, where Feinler maintained a list of host names (which evolved into the hosts file) and a list of address mappings which would later evolve into the functions of Internic which would be turned over to the US Department of Commerce when the number of devices connected to the Internet exploded. Feinler and Jon Postel from UCLA would maintain those though, until his death 28 years later and those RFCs include everything from opening terminal connections into machines to file sharing to addressing and now any place where the networking needs to become a standard. The development of many of those early protocols that made computers useful over a network were also being funded by ARPA. They funded a number of projects to build tools that enabled the sharing of data, like file sharing and some advancements were loosely connected by people just doing things to make them useful and so by 1971 we also had email. But all those protocols needed to flow over a common form of connectivity that was scalable. Leonard Kleinrock, Paul Baran, and Donald Davies were independently investigating packet switching and Roberts brought Kleinrock into the project as he was at UCLA. Bob Kahn entered the picture in 1972. He would team up with Vint Cerf from Stanford who came up with encapsulation and so they would define the protocol that underlies the Internet, TCP/IP. By 1974 Vint Cerf and Bob Kahn wrote RFC 675 where they coined the term internet as shorthand for internetwork. The number of RFCs was exploding as was the number of nodes. The University of California Santa Barbara then the University of Utah to connect Ivan Sutherland's work. The network was national when BBN connected to it in 1970. Now there were 13 IMPs and by 1971, 18, then 29 in 72 and 40 in 73. Once the need arose, Kleinrock would go on to work with Farouk Kamoun to develop the hierarchical routing theories in the late 70s. By 1976, ARPA became DARPA. The network grew to 213 hosts in 1981 and by 1982, TCP/IP became the standard for the US DOD and in 1983, ARPANET moved fully over to TCP/IP. And so TCP/IP, or Transport Control Protocol/Internet Protocol is the most dominant networking protocol on the planet. It was written to help improve performance on the ARPAnet with the ingenious idea to encapsulate traffic. But in the 80s, it was just for researchers still. That is, until NSFNet was launched by the National Science Foundation in 1986. And it was international, with the University College of London connecting in 1971, which would go on to inspire a British research network called JANET that built their own set of protocols called the Colored Book protocols. And the Norwegian Seismic Array connected over satellite in 1973. So networks were forming all over the place, often just time sharing networks where people dialed into a single computer. Another networking project going on at the time that was also getting funding from ARPA as well as the Air Force was PLATO. Out of the University of Illinois, was meant for teaching and began on a mainframe in 1960. But by the time ARPAnet was growing PLATO was on version IV and running on a CDC Cyber. The time sharing system hosted a number of courses, as they referred to programs. These included actual courseware, games, convent with audio and video, message boards, instant messaging, custom touch screen plasma displays, and the ability to dial into the system over lines, making the system another early network. In fact, there were multiple CDC Cybers that could communicate with one another. And many on ARPAnet also used PLATO, cross pollinating non-defense backed academia with a number of academic institutions. The defense backing couldn't last forever. The Mansfield Amendment in 1973 banned general research by defense agencies. This meant that ARPA funding started to dry up and the scientists working on those projects needed a new place to fund their playtime. Bob Taylor split to go work at Xerox, where he was able to pick the best of the scientists he'd helped fund at ARPA. He helped bring in people from Stanford Research Institute, where they had been working on the oNLineSystem, or NLS and people like Bob Metcalfe who brought us Ethernet and better collusion detection. Metcalfe would go on to found 3Com a great switch and network interface company during the rise of the Internet. But there were plenty of people who could see the productivity gains from ARPAnet and didn't want it to disappear. And the National Science Foundation (NSF) was flush with cash. And the ARPA crew was increasingly aware of non-defense oriented use of the system. So the NSF started up a little project called CSNET in 1981 so the growing number of supercomputers could be shared between all the research universities. It was free for universities that could get connected and from 1985 to 1993 NSFNET, surged from 2,000 users to 2,000,000 users. Paul Mockapetris made the Internet easier than when it was an academic-only network by developing the Domain Name System, or DNS, in 1983. That's how we can call up remote computers by names rather than IP addresses. And of course DNS was yet another of the protocols in Postel at UCLAs list of protocol standards, which by 1986 after the selection of TCP/IP for NSFnet, would become the standardization body known as the IETF, or Internet Engineering Task Force for short. Maintaining a set of protocols that all vendors needed to work with was one of the best growth hacks ever. No vendor could have kept up with demand with a 1,000x growth in such a small number of years. NSFNet started with six nodes in 1985, connected by LSI-11 Fuzzball routers and quickly outgrew that backbone. They put it out to bid and Merit Network won out in a partnership between MCI, the State of Michigan, and IBM. Merit had begun before the first ARPAnet connections went online as a collaborative effort by Michigan State University, Wayne State University, and the University of Michigan. They'd been connecting their own machines since 1971 and had implemented TCP/IP and bridged to ARPANET. The money was getting bigger, they got $39 million from NSF to build what would emerge as the commercial Internet. They launched in 1987 with 13 sites over 14 lines. By 1988 they'd gone nationwide going from a 56k backbone to a T1 and then 14 T1s. But the growth was too fast for even that. They re-engineered and by 1990 planned to add T3 lines running in parallel with the T1s for a time. By 1991 there were 16 backbones with traffic and users growing by an astounding 20% per month. Vint Cerf ended up at MCI where he helped lobby for the privatization of the internet and helped found the Internet Society in 1988. The lobby worked and led to the the Scientific and Advanced-Technology Act in 1992. Before that, use of NSFNET was supposed to be for research and now it could expand to non-research and education uses. This allowed NSF to bring on even more nodes. And so by 1993 it was clear that this was growing beyond what a governmental institution whose charge was science could justify as “research” for any longer. By 1994, Vent Cerf was designing the architecture and building the teams that would build the commercial internet backbone at MCI. And so NSFNET began the process of unloading the backbone and helped the world develop the commercial Internet by sprinkling a little money and know-how throughout the telecommunications industry, which was about to explode. NSFNET went offline in 1995 but by then there were networks in England, South Korea, Japan, Africa, and CERN was connected to NSFNET over TCP/IP. And Cisco was selling routers that would fuel an explosion internationally. There was a war of standards and yet over time we settled on TCP/IP as THE standard. And those were just some of the nets. The Internet is really not just NSFNET or ARPANET but a combination of a lot of nets. At the time there were a lot of time sharing computers that people could dial into and following the release of the Altair, there was a rapidly growing personal computer market with modems becoming more and more approachable towards the end of the 1970s. You see, we talked about these larger networks but not hardware. The first modulator demodulator, or modem, was the Bell 101 dataset, which had been invented all the way back in 1958, loosely based on a previous model developed to manage SAGE computers. But the transfer rate, or baud, had stopped being improved upon at 300 for almost 20 years and not much had changed. That is, until Hayes Hayes Microcomputer Products released a modem designed to run on the Altair 8800 S-100 bus in 1978. Personal computers could talk to one another. And one of those Altair owners was Ward Christensen met Randy Suess at the Chicago Area Computer Hobbyists' Exchange and the two of them had this weird idea. Have a computer host a bulletin board on one of their computers. People could dial into it and discuss their Altair computers when it snowed too much to meet in person for their club. They started writing a little code and before you know it we had a tool they called Computerized Bulletin Board System software, or CBBS. The software and more importantly, the idea of a BBS spread like wildfire right along with the Atari, TRS-80, Commodores and Apple computers that were igniting the personal computing revolution. The number of nodes grew and as people started playing games, the speed of those modems jumped up with the v.32 standard hitting 9600 baud in 84, and over 25k in the early 90s. By the early 1980s, we got Fidonet, which was a network of Bulletin Board Systems and by the early 90s we had 25,000 BBS's. And other nets had been on the rise. And these were commercial ventures. The largest of those dial-up providers was America Online, or AOL. AOL began in 1985 and like most of the other dial-up providers of the day were there to connect people to a computer they hosted, like a timesharing system, and give access to fun things. Games, news, stocks, movie reviews, chatting with your friends, etc. There was also CompuServe, The Well, PSINet, Netcom, Usenet, Alternate, and many others. Some started to communicate with one another with the rise of the Metropolitan Area Exchanges who got an NSF grant to establish switched ethernet exchanges and the Commercial Internet Exchange in 1991, established by PSINet, UUNet, and CERFnet out of California. Those slowly moved over to the Internet and even AOL got connected to the Internet in 1989 and thus the dial-up providers went from effectively being timesharing systems to Internet Service Providers as more and more people expanded their horizons away from the walled garden of the time sharing world and towards the Internet. The number of BBS systems started to wind down. All these IP addresses couldn't be managed easily and so IANA evolved out of being managed by contracts from research universities to DARPA and then to IANA as a part of ICANN and eventually the development of Regional Internet Registries so AFRINIC could serve Africa, ARIN could serve Antarctica, Canada, the Caribbean, and the US, APNIC could serve South, East, and Southeast Asia as well as Oceania LACNIC could serve Latin America and RIPE NCC could serve Europe, Central Asia, and West Asia. By the 90s the Cold War was winding down (temporarily at least) so they even added Russia to RIPE NCC. And so using tools like WinSOCK any old person could get on the Internet by dialing up. Modems for dial-ups transitioned to DSL and cable modems. We got the emergence of fiber with regional centers and even national FiOS connections. And because of all the hard work of all of these people and the money dumped into it by the various governments and research agencies, life is pretty darn good. When we think of the Internet today we think of this interconnected web of endpoints and content that is all available. Much of that was made possible by the development of the World Wide Web by Tim Berners-Lee in in 1991 at CERN, and Mosaic came out of the National Center for Supercomputing applications, or NCSA at the University of Illinois, quickly becoming the browser everyone wanted to use until Mark Andreeson left to form Netscape. Netscape's IPO is probably one of the most pivotal moments where investors from around the world realized that all of this research and tech was built on standards and while there were some patents, the standards were freely useable by anyone. Those standards let to an explosion of companies like Yahoo! from a couple of Stanford grad students and Amazon, started by a young hedge fund Vice President named Jeff Bezos who noticed all the money pouring into these companies and went off to do his own thing in 1994. The companies that arose to create and commercialize content and ideas to bring every industry online was ferocious. And there were the researchers still writing the standards and even commercial interests helping with that. And there were open source contributors who helped make some of those standards easier to implement by regular old humans. And tools for those who build tools. And from there the Internet became what we think of today. Quicker and quicker connections and more and more productivity gains, a better quality of life, better telemetry into all aspects of our lives and with the miniaturization of devices to support wearables that even extends to our bodies. Yet still sitting on the same fundamental building blocks as before. The IANA functions to manage IP addressing has moved to the private sector as have many an onramp to the Internet. Especially as internet access has become more ubiquitous and we are entering into the era of 5g connectivity. And it continues to evolve as we pivot due to new needs and threats a globally connected world represent. IPv6, various secure DNS options, options for spam and phishing, and dealing with the equality gaps surfaced by our new online world. We have disinformation so sometimes we might wonder what's real and what isn't. After all, any old person can create a web site that looks legit and put whatever they want on it. Who's to say what reality is other than what we want it to be. This was pretty much what Morpheus was offering with his choices of pills in the Matrix. But underneath it all, there's history. And it's a history as complicated as unraveling the meaning of an increasingly digital world. And it is wonderful and frightening and lovely and dangerous and true and false and destroying the world and saving the world all at the same time. This episode is pretty simplistic and many of the aspects we cover have entire episodes of the podcast dedicated to them. From the history of Amazon to Bob Taylor to AOL to the IETF to DNS and even Network Time Protocol. It's a story that leaves people out necessarily; otherwise scope creep would go all the way back to to include Volta and the constant electrical current humanity received with the battery. But hey, we also have an episode on that! And many an advance has plenty of books and scholarly works dedicated to it - all the way back to the first known computer (in the form of clockwork), the Antikythera Device out of Ancient Greece. Heck even Louis Gerschner deserves a mention for selling IBM's stake in all this to focus on things that kept the company going, not moonshots. But I'd like to dedicate this episode to everyone not mentioned due to trying to tell a story of emergent networks. Just because they were growing fast and our modern infrastructure was becoming more and more deterministic doesn't mean that whether it was writing a text editor or helping fund or pushing paper or writing specs or selling network services or getting zapped while trying to figure out how to move current that there aren't so, so, so many people that are a part of this story. Each with their own story to be told. As we round the corner into the third season of the podcast we'll start having more guests. If you have a story and would like to join us use the email button on thehistoryofcomputing.net to drop us a line. We'd love to chat!
I have been feeling a lot of feelings the past... 7 years? And nothing has encapsulated and made more real those feelings then the masterpiece and work of art that is Bo Burnham's new Netflix special "Inside." From the ravages of the internet and social media, to mental health, to a general sense of hopelessness in ourselves and the world, Bo's special is all that and more, singular, genius, raw, moving, depressing. I talk about it.
This week J discusses taking a walk around through society, and seeing some asinine behavior along with falling into a deep rabbit hole through strange tube, incels, and lots of crazier stupid things showing that we're not far from back to being abnormal. Twitter: @j360productionsFacebook.com/j360productionsEmail: J360productions@outlook.com
Sometimes, music can bring together old ties that never break, and this week, our guest (@waxfroetic aka @aticketfortwo) was a friend from Morgan who experienced the rise of the greatest music collective of the 2010s, Odd Future. When the OF Tape Vol. 2 dropped back in 2011, the project showcased a much brighter and popular Odd Future compared to their previous projects while maintaining the darkness that artists like Tyler, the Creator have established with Bastard. It was also the only collective album to feature Frank Ocean as a member of the legendary group. This week, the Co-Hosts and Special Guest choose their top 2, discuss the Grammys, and talk about how Odd Future is arguably the greatest music collective of the 2010s. Listen to this new episode and previous others on: Apple Podcasts (https://tinyurl.com/jydzz9fk) Spotify (https://tinyurl.com/c3u77hcf) Anchor (https://anchor.fm/recordreport) Follow Record Report Podcast on: Instagram (@RecordRepPod) Facebook (Facebook.com/RecordReportPodcast) Twitter (@RecordRepPodcast) #FrankOcean #tylerthecreator #OFWGKTA #OddFuture #earlsweatshirt #TheInternet
https://morethanwordz.rocks/
Matt zooms with Craig, and Wendell to discuss family members on the internet, Craig's incident at work, Matt's apartment fiasco, and working at The Herald Examiner. Wendell reviews South Park "The Pandemic Special."
Sobriety, Oral sex, Car Accidents, History, NFL Football, Prostitution, The Social Dilemma, Conspiracy Theories, Fighting Rats, Cats, The Internet, Smacking Stuff
There was a scratch on the disk down in the dungeon- this was a supposed to be out last week, SO here is which is supposed to be in the past now in the present! -Julian and Joe dive deep down into the tunes of #Borns and #TheInternet sharing their music reactions to Borns and #TheInternet. Two similar beautiful music groups but with opposing origins, styles, and band members. The dynamic group The Internet with deep lyrics a masculine woman lead vocalist. Borns a spiritual suburban Psychedelic pop singer who is effeminate, and prefers not to align in a gender. A very interesting look at two different artist and our Tricks of the keys #Prince Purple Rain! Julian #Valencia has released his new song today be sure to listen and download on your favorite streaming apps.
Constable Amy Boudreau is an International Crime Prevention Specialist (ICPS) our of Ontario, Canada. She sits down with Adam to discuss Evidence-Based Policing (EBP) and what officers and agencies can do to increase their efficiency. They also discuss social media, bot its effect and affect on current police culture, and how it can greatly benefit both officers and agencies in community outreach. EPISODE PAGE: https://thebreakdown.caAmy is a writer and public speaker who has provided her subject matter expertise to news media outlets, including video/radio/podcast interviews, news clips, and article publications. She advocates for evidence-based policing (EBP); law enforcement social media (LESM); gender equity and inclusion; first responder wellness through the use of yoga and mindfulness meditation; and crime prevention, in an effort to evolve police culture.CONTACT AMY: Instagram: @TheYogaCopLinkedIn: Amy Boudreau, B.A., ICPSTwitter: @TheYogaCop & @AmyBoudreauICPS EPISODE RESOURCESEvidence-Based Policing (EBP)Canadian Society of Evidence-Based Policing (CANSEBP): is an Association of policepractitioners, academic researchers, public policy-makers and others, whose mission is tofoster the creation and mobilization of quality research in order to make evidence-basedapproaches a cornerstone of policing in Canada. Join as a member for FREE to gainaccess to EBP resources: https://www.can-sebp.net/Center for Evidence-Based Crime Policy (CEBCP): Symposium June 29, 2020 Fairfax,Virginia, USA. Visit: https://www2.gmu.edu/topic/list/all/21066m America Society of Evidence-Based Policing (ASEBP): Conference June 1-2, 2020Washington, DC, USA. Visit: https://www.americansebp.org/ Law Enforcement Social Media (LESM)SMILE Conference: is the leading training conference devoted to Social Media, theInternet and Law Enforcement initiatives. The SMILE Conference, now together with theiSMILE Conference (investigations), has pioneered the adoption of social media by lawenforcement agencies across the world for public outreach, crime prevention, andforensics since 2010. The SMILE Conference has become both the go-to and most trustedsource by law enforcement agencies worldwide. Come to learn from the best and networkwith an international audience of police social media practitioners.Visit: http://smileconference.com/Toronto Police College, Social Media in Communications Training: Contactlaurie.mccann@torontopolice.on.ca &a scott.mills@torontopolice.on.ca
This week: the internet made old again, and why AI struggles with the new. Sandra Peter (Sydney Business Insights) and Kai Riemer (Digital Disruption Research Group) meet once a week to put their own spin on news that is impacting the future of business in The Future, This Week. You can subscribe to this podcast on Soundcloud, iTunes, Spotify, Stitcher, Libsyn, YouTube or wherever you get your podcasts. You can follow us online on Flipboard (flip.it/jdwqTP), Twitter (twitter.com/SydBusInsights), or https://sbi.sydney.edu.au. Show notes and links to this episode, including the news stories of the week, other stories we bring up and more are available at: https://sbi.sydney.edu.au/internet-culture-and-ai-struggles-on-the-future-this-week/ If you enjoyed this episode, you can access our playlists at https://sbi.sydney.edu.au/thefuturethisweek
This week: the internet made old again, and why AI struggles with the new. Show notes and links to this episode, including the news stories of the week, other stories we bring up and more are available at: https://sbi.sydney.edu.au/internet-culture-and-ai-struggles-on-the-future-this-week/
This week: the internet made old again, and why AI struggles with the new. Sandra Peter (Sydney Business Insights) and Kai Riemer (Digital Disruption Research Group) meet once a week to put their own spin on news that is impacting the future of business in The Future, This Week. You can subscribe to this podcast on Soundcloud, iTunes, Spotify, Stitcher, Libsyn, YouTube or wherever you get your podcasts. You can follow us online on Flipboard (flip.it/jdwqTP), Twitter (twitter.com/SydBusInsights), or https://sbi.sydney.edu.au. Show notes and links to this episode, including the news stories of the week, other stories we bring up and more are available at: https://sbi.sydney.edu.au/internet-culture-and-ai-struggles-on-the-future-this-week/ If you enjoyed this episode, you can access our playlists at https://sbi.sydney.edu.au/thefuturethisweek
Names, Paranoia, Spring Time Drinks, Sexism, Ignorance About Women, Homosexual Fantasies, Hunting, Corona Virus, Traveling, First World Problems, Fat People, Fetishes, The Internet, Internet vs Reality, Crime, Tree Puns
Companies from SpaceX to OneWeb are looking to send thousands of satellites into space. The aim is to bring internet to the remotest parts of the world. But there could be problems.
Companies from SpaceX to OneWeb are looking to send thousands of satellites into space. The aim is to bring internet to the remotest parts of the world. But there could be problems.
Opta 69 The world in your hands with technology history of the book to the internet take over the world 3rd world country. You shouldn’t have to things men n women especially deal with. Keep your hands to yo self. Find me Here Like share, subscribe, share, and follow me for perspective. Salute
Yes..Yes.. Much to rejoice and show gratitude for so on the eve of Thanksgiving we offer humble production designed to relax some of those tense vibes with laid back smooth sounds R&B Soul and Electronic down tempo stylie..ok Papa Love and Respect each other...JBhttps://open.spotify.com/playlist/1I5njEuUGFNGkgkyxiwRJ1
Doing IT a little late but still whipping up a set for the Independents PLease Enjoy..#LetItRide https://open.spotify.com/playlist/2ocryp6tGTYXFKXNwtYQsb
The Internet is a talented group of musicians who come together and create timeless music. After a successful release from their 2015 LP "Ego Death," we are here to celebrate another outstanding album called "Hive Mind." Kick back and relax while we serenade you on this musical journey to a group we love! #TellAFriendToTellAFriend #TheInternet
The 50th episode of the Take Talk Podcast featuring Ben Harris and Jacob Zuiderhoek! In this week's episode; T.J. Lane returns (TTP4) to guest host while Zuiderhoek is in Wisconsin. So Ben and T.J. discuss the Kawhi-Derozan trade, Le'Veon's contract, the Madden cover announcement, review new music from DRAM, Chance The Rapper, and The Internet, the Carmelo Anthony trade, Tiger Woods' performance at The Open and much more! Please make sure to follow us on Twitter and Instagram @taketalkpodcast along with subscribing on Spotify, iTunes, iheartradio, and Spreaker. Enjoy one of our best shows yet, and thank you for 1 whole year of listenership!
The 50th episode of the Take Talk Podcast featuring Ben Harris and Jacob Zuiderhoek! In this week's episode; T.J. Lane returns (TTP4) to guest host while Zuiderhoek is in Wisconsin. So Ben and T.J. discuss the Kawhi-Derozan trade, Le'Veon's contract, the Madden cover announcement, review new music from DRAM, Chance The Rapper, and The Internet, the Carmelo Anthony trade, Tiger Woods' performance at The Open and much more! Please make sure to follow us on Twitter and Instagram @taketalkpodcast along with subscribing on Spotify, iTunes, iheartradio, and Spreaker. Enjoy one of our best shows yet, and thank you for 1 whole year of listenership!
Dig it sounds from all around trickle down into one rock solid vibe...Peace..JBspotify play list link herehttps://open.spotify.com/user/12133321353/playlist/5rtMsYW9hWvwhEyv43sP2H
This week the boys dive into the deep ocean that is the World Wide Web. Dan admits his obsesion with 'The Dark Web' and Chris has come up with a new listener competition.
In this episode of The Lounge, The Love Man(@iorr03) and Susan Spice(@SusanSpice) are back from a mini-hiatus to talk Matt Barnes/Derek Fisher, Raven and a whole host of other topics backed by soundtrack featuring @BobbyCaldwell, @HiatusKaiyote, @LalahHathaway, @TheInternet and more!
Perfect Neo Soul Mix with some new classics. Enjoy! 1. Lyfe Jennings - Boomarang 2. Eric Roberson - Anymore 3. The Internet - Sunset (Ft. Yuna Zaraai) 4. Bilal - Back To Love 5. The Internet - Red Balloon 6. Daley - Alone Together (feat. Marsha Ambrosius) 7. Solange - Cash In 8. Alice Smith - Ocean 9. Daley - Look Up 10. Zo! - Show Me the Way (feat. Anthony David & Carmen Rodgers) 11. Robert Glasper Glasper - What Are We Doing Ft. Brandy 12. Zo! - Making Time (feat. Phonte & Choklate) 13. Slakah the Beatchild - Enjoy Ya Self (Remix SINcere Short Edit) 14. Amel Larrieux - Afraid 15. Quadron - Favorite Star 16. Muhsinah - L.M.O. (Giant Step Mix) 17.Quadron - Hey Love 18. Zo! - We Are On the Move (Black Coffee Remix) [feat. Eric Roberson & Phonte] 19. Eric Roberson & DJ Kemit - Fortune Teller (feat. Eric Roberson) 20. The Foreign Exchange - The Moment 21. Zo! - A Choice of Weapons (feat. Nicholas Ryan Gant & Carmen Rodgers) iTunes Podcast available here: www.djreadypodcast.com Facebook: www.facebook.com/djreadyofficial Twitter: www.twitter.com/djreadyofficial Instagram: www.instagram.com/djready Tumblr: www.djready.tumblr.com
Comedian Frank Nicotero's wife wants to introduce something new to their bed and it brings tears to Franks eyes. He tells us all about it with his story, My Wife and The Internet. Here’s a few links to help you get the most out of Story Worthy- if you’re listening on an iPhone, all you need to do is tap the cover art while the show is playing, and you’ll see the episode notes, including the links. There is one to subscribe, http://bit.ly/2eSlJZw please do! There’s one to our Facebook page and to our email address. We’d love to hear from you, either there, or on our survey at wondery.com/survey. You’ll also find some special deals courtesy of our sponsors like Hello Fresh (promo code STORY30) Casper Mattress, and Audible (promo code STORYWORTHY). It’s good karma guys!
Roger Frizzell and Kenny Monday to go ‘On the Mat’ this weekFormer Bedlam rivals Roger Frizzell and Kenny Monday will go “On the Mat” this Wednesday, December 8.“On the Mat" is a presentation of the National Wrestling Hall of Fame Dan Gable Museum. The show can be heard live on theInternet at www.kcnzam.com (http://www.kcnzam.com/) or locally in Northeast Iowa each Wednesday from 5:05 - 6:00 PM CST on AM 1650, The Fan.Frizzell and Monday will be on the show in advance of the Bedlam wrestling dual between Oklahoma and Oklahoma State onDec.12. This rivalry is one of the most intense in college athletics.Both will be featured in a special program at the National Wrestling Hall of Fame in Stillwater, Okla., prior to the Oklahoma-Oklahoma State dual meet on Sunday, Dec. 12. The program begins at 4 p.m. and the meet begins at 6 p.m.Frizzell was a four-time All-American for Oklahoma, placing 4th, 3rd, 3rd, and 3rd at the NCAA tournament from 1980 through 1983. Monday was a three-time NCAA championship finalist, placing 2nd, 2nd, and 1st from 1982 through 1984. Frizzell and Monday faced each other twice in Bedlam duals.
Heath Eslinger and Mike Duroe to go ‘On the Mat’ this weekTennessee-Chattanooga head wrestling coach Heath Eslinger and Cornell College head wrestling coach Mike Duroe will go “Onthe Mat” this Wednesday, November 24.“On the Mat" is a presentation of the National Wrestling Hall of Fame Dan Gable Museum. The show can be heard live on theInternet at www.kcnzam.com (http://www.kcnzam.com/) or locally in Northeast Iowa each Wednesday from 5:05 - 6:00 PM CST on AM 1650, The Fan.Eslinger is in his second year as the head wrestling coach at Tennessee-Chattanooga. He led his team to an 11-7 dual meet record last season. Eslinger’s team won the Southern Conference title and sent two wrestlers to the NCAA tournament.Duroe is in his sixth year at the head wrestling coach at Cornell College in Mt. Vernon. He was named Iowa Conference Coach of the Year last season. His team will face the University of Iowa and Tennessee-Chattanooga in a double dual on Nov. 26 at Cornell.
Rob Koll and John Smith to go ‘On the Mat’ this weekRob Koll, head wrestling coach at Cornell University, and John Smith, head wrestling coach at Oklahoma State, will go “On theMat” this Wednesday, November 3.“On the Mat" is a presentation of the National Wrestling Hall of Fame Dan Gable Museum. The show can be heard live on theInternet at www.kcnzam.com (http://www.kcnzam.com/) or locally in Northeast Iowa each Wednesday from 5:05 - 6:00 PM CST on AM 1650, The Fan.Koll is the current head wrestling coach at Cornell University in Ithaca, NY. The Big Red are ranked first in preseason polls after finishing second at the NCAA tournament in 2010. Koll was an NCAA champion for North Carolina in 1988.Smith is the current head wrestling coach at Oklahoma State. He has led the Cowboys to five NCAA team titles, including four in a row from 2003 through 2006. Smith won two NCAA titles for Oklahoma State in 1987 & ’88, and was a six-time World and Olympic champion.
Barry Davis and Ray Brinzer to go ‘On the Mat’ this weekBarry Davis, head wrestling coach at the University of Wisconsin, and Ray Brinzer, a two-time All-American for the Universityof Iowa, will go “On the Mat” this Wednesday, October 13.“On the Mat" is a presentation of the National Wrestling Hall of Fame Dan Gable Museum. The show can be heard live on theInternet at www.kcnzam.com (http://www.kcnzam.com/) or locally in Northeast Iowa each Wednesday from 5:05 - 6:00 PM CST on AM 1650, The Fan.Davis was a three-time NCAA champion for the University of Iowa and a silver medalist at the 1984 Olympics. He is currentlythe head wrestling coach at the University of Wisconsin.Brinzer was a Big Twelve champion for Oklahoma State and a two-time All-American for the University of Iowa. He was recently hired by the Wisconsin Wrestling Federation as a coach.
Jordan Holm to go ‘On the Mat’ this weekFormer Northern Iowa wrestler Jordan Holm will go “On the Mat” this Wednesday, October 6.“On the Mat" is a presentation of the National Wrestling Hall of Fame Dan Gable Museum. The show can be heard live on theInternet at www.kcnzam.com (http://www.kcnzam.com/) or locally in Northeast Iowa each Wednesday from 5:05 - 6:00 PM CST on AM 1650, The Fan.Holm wrestled for the University of Northern Iowa and was one match away from being an All-American in 2003 at 184 pounds. He won both the Greco-Roman and freestyle portions of the Northern Plains Regional in Waterloo, Iowa, in May. Holm currently resides in Minnesota.
Bob Buzzard and Dan Gable to go ‘On the Mat’ this weekBob Buzzard, 1972 Olympian and two-time All-American for Iowa State, and Dan Gable, 15-time NCAA championship coach for the University of Iowa, will go “On the Mat” this Wednesday, September 22.“On the Mat" is a presentation of the National Wrestling Hall of Fame Dan Gable Museum. The show can be heard live on theInternet at www.kcnzam.com (http://www.kcnzam.com/) or locally in Northeast Iowa each Wednesday from 5:05 - 6:00 PM CST on AM 1650, The Fan.Buzzard was an Olympian on the 1972 Greco-Roman Olympic team at 149.5 pounds. A two-time All-American for Iowa State in 1964-65, Buzzard was part of the Cyclones’ first NCAA championship team in 1965.Gable, a 15-time NCAA championship coach for the University of Iowa and a 1972 Olympic champion, will discuss his experience at the recent World Championships in Moscow, Russia.
In Australia, a Federal election is just around the corner - perhapsthe first in Australia where a mature Internet might have an influenceon the result. Chris Pudney and Gihan Perera talk about the lead-up tothe election, and rate the major political parties on their use of theInternet during the campaign. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.