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Send us a textIn this episode of the METUS Tech Show the boys speak with Tiger Team members, Shawn Tauss and Brandon Russell, as they explain what they look for when using Maintenance Tool to diagnose equipment CITY MULTI equipment.Check out our youtube channel called the METUS Training Network.Thanks for listening! Please visit www.mitsubishicomfort.comContact us at metustechshow@hvac.mea.com
Satellites in orbit can help measure particulate matter in the air.
Hey CX Nation,In this week's episode of The CXChronicles Podcast #235 we were live at Customer Contact Week in the Caesar's Forum Entertainment Center in Las Vegas for Customer Contact Week with Stephanie Crase Moritz, Chief Customer Innovation Officer at the American Dental Association based in Chicago, IL. The not-for-profit American Dental Association (ADA) is America's leading advocate for oral health. A community of doers, thinkers, dreamers, and believers building a new day for dentistry. The ADA advocates for over 159,000 members – promoting the art and science of dentistry by supporting dental professionals through advocacy, cutting-edge scientific research and guidance, dental insurance resources and more.In this episode, Stephanie and Adrian chat through the Four CX Pillars: Team, Tools, Process & Feedback. Plus share some of the ideas that Stephanie and her team at the ADA think through on a daily basis to build world class customer experiences.**Episode #235 Highlight Reel:**1. Creating a magnetic brand that focuses on customer innovation above all else 2. Developing future products, experiences & offerings for dentists across the USA 3. Leveraging best in class SaaS solutions to build the ADA's future tech-stack 4. Building your VOC Task Force or Tiger Team to leverage customer feedback 5. Establishing trust with your employees to drive innovation and positive change Click here to learn more about Stephanie Crase MortizClick here to learn more about American Dental AssociationHuge thanks to Stephanie for coming on The CXChronicles Podcast and featuring her work and efforts in pushing the customer experience & customer success space into the future.If you enjoy The CXChronicles Podcast, stop by your favorite podcast player hit the follow button and leave us a review today.For our Spotify friends, click here to make sure you are following CXC & please leave a 5 star review so we can find new listeners & members of our community.For our Apple friends, same deal -- click here to follow CXCP and leave us a review letting folks know why you love our customer focused content.You know what would be even better?Go tell one of your friends or teammates about CXC's content, our strategic partners (Hubspot, Intercom, Zendesk, Forethought AI, Freshworks, TimeToReply & Ascendr) + they can learn more about our CX/CS/RevOps services & please invite them to join the CX Nation!Are you looking to learn more about the world of Customer Experience, Customer Success & Revenue Operations?Click here to grab a copy of my book "The Four CX Pillars To Grow Your Business Now" available on Amazon or the CXC website.For you non-readers, go check out the CXChronicles Youtube channel to see our customer & employee focused business content. Reach Out To CXC Today!Support the Show.Contact CXChronicles Today Tweet us @cxchronicles Check out our Instagram @cxchronicles Click here to checkout the CXC website Email us at info@cxchronicles.com Remember To Make Happiness A Habit!!
SummarySuccessful integrations are required to achieve the full value of any acquisition. Most know that the odds are stacked against the acquirer from the start - so how does one move the odds in their favor? How should a SaaS leadership team plan and execute an integration process with an acquired team of less than 100 people and the acquirer is less than 1,000 (roughly)? This is a large company buying a much smaller company and the assumption is the buyer is a first-time acquier. Deal economics certainly impact acquired founder and employee sentiment, but how the actual people integration is run has an outsized impact on realizing the full value of M&A.In this episode of In/organic, we welcome Mohammed M. Baloch, Head of Integrations at Gainsight, a SaaS company backed by Vista Private Equity. During the discussion, Mohammed describes the key elements of a successful integration plan. He also lays out the key players, roles, and profiles of talent who can support an integration, even if they have never done the work before. We also discuss the role of an integration consultant (which is a must) and how to contemplate their role in the integration process.TakeawaysPeople integration is a critical aspect of post-merger integration and should be given equal importance as the economic goals of the acquisition.When selecting an integration lead, look for someone who is well-networked, has a strategic mindset, and possesses strong project management skills.Consider outsourcing integration if you don't have a dedicated integration team, and look for a partner who is flexible, experienced, and familiar with your industry.Start integration planning as soon as the LOI is signed, and define a clear North Star that outlines the goals and criteria for success in the acquisition.Clear communication and a formal onboarding process are vital for successful people integration.Consider having acquired employees interview for their jobs to ensure cultural fit and mutual alignment.Highlights00:00 Introduction02:22 Mohammed Baloch's Background and Gainsight04:01 Setting the Stage06:08 Key Players in the Integration Process9:56 Selecting an Integration Lead11:40 Considerations for Outsourcing Integration16:15 Defining the North Star18:40 Enabling Sales Teams for Cross-Selling19:49 Debate on Tiger Team vs. Full-Team Format25:36 Ensuring Success in People Integration 29:52 Interviewing Acquired Employees for Their Jobs31:22 Advice: Don't Wait, Start Integration PlanningConnect with Christian & In/organic PodcastChristian's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/hassold/In/organic on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/inorganic-podcastIn/organic on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@InorganicPodcast/featuredConnect with Mohammad Baloch on LinkedInhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/mmbaloch/ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
New satellite technologies have helped fill in the spatial gaps between the EPA air quality monitors.
The Tiger Team concept offers a unique opportunity to work for a short time on a very difficult problem.
Part of the EPA's mission is to give people real-time air quality data. And the more measurements you have, the more effective that data will be.
The EPA relies heavily on its air monitoring network for data about air quality. But there aren't monitors everywhere.
Since May 2022, Congress has held three hearings looking into Unidentified Aerial Phenomena and the possibility of non-human intelligent life flying aircraft on Earth. In this episode, hear testimony from three Defense Department officials and three credible whistleblowers, whose testimony is often as contradictory as it is shocking. Please Support Congressional Dish – Quick Links Contribute monthly or a lump sum via Support Congressional Dish via (donations per episode) Send Zelle payments to: Donation@congressionaldish.com Send Venmo payments to: @Jennifer-Briney Send Cash App payments to: $CongressionalDish or Donation@congressionaldish.com Use your bank's online bill pay function to mail contributions to: Please make checks payable to Congressional Dish Thank you for supporting truly independent media! Background Sources Whistleblower Protections Clayton E. Wire. 2020. Ogborn Mihm LLP. Security Classifications Security Classification of Information, Volume 2. Principles for Classification of Information. Arvin S. Quist. Oak Ridge National Laboratory: 1993. UAP Background Brian Entin. June 6, 2023. NewsNation. Leslie Kean and Ralph Blumenthal. June 5, 2023. The Debrief. May 16, 2021. 60 Minutes. Ralph Blumenthal. December 18, 2017. The New York Times. Helene Cooper et al. December 16, 2017. The New York Times. Independent Research and Development National Defense Industrial Association. SCIFs Derek Hawkins et al. April 26, 2023. The Washington Post. Kirkpatrick Response Letter D. Dean Johnson (@ddeanjohnson). Twitter. Audio Sources July 26, 2023 House Committee on Oversight and Accountability, Subcommittee on National Security, the Border, and Foreign Affairs Witnesses: , Former Commanding Officer, United States Navy Ryan Graves, Executive Director, Americans for Safe Aerospace David Grusch, Former National Reconnaissance Office Representative, Unidentified Aerial Phenomena Task Force, Department of Defense Clips timestamps reflect C-SPAN video 4:30 Rep. Glenn Grothman (R-WI): The National Defense Authorization Act of 2022 established the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office or AARO to conduct or to coordinate efforts across the Department of Defense and other federal agencies to detect, identify and investigate UAPs. However, AARO's budget remains classified, prohibiting meaningful oversight from Congress. 19:50 Rep. Robert Garcia (D-CA): We know the Senate is taking up an amendment to their defense authorization bill which will create a commission with broad declassification authority and we should all agree that that is an important step. 27:40 Ryan Graves: Excessive classification practices keep crucial information hidden. Since 2021, all UAP videos are classified as secret or above. This level of secrecy not only impedes our understanding, but fuels speculation and mistrust. 27:55 Ryan Graves: In 2014, I was an F-18 Foxtrot pilot in the Navy fighter attack Squadron 11, the Red Rippers, and I was stationed at NAS Oceana in Virginia Beach. After upgrades were made to our jet's radar systems, we began detecting unknown objects operating in our airspace. At first, we assumed they were radar errors. But soon we began to correlate the radar tracks with multiple onboard sensors, including infrared systems, and eventually through visual ID. During a training mission in Warning Area W-72, 10 miles off the coast of Virginia Beach. Two F/A-18F Super Hornets were split by a UAP. The object, described as a dark gray or a black cube inside of a clear sphere, came within 50 feet of the lead aircraft and was estimated to be five to 15 feet in diameter. The mission commander terminated the flight immediately and returned to base. Our squadron submitted a safety report, but there was no official acknowledgement of the incident and no further mechanism to report the sightings. Soon these encounters became so frequent that aircrew would discuss the risk of UAP as part of their regular pre-flight briefs. 29:00 Ryan Graves: Recognising the need for action and answers, I founded Americans for Safe Aerospace. The organization has since become a haven for UAP witnesses who were previously unspoken due to the absence of a safe intake process. More than 30 witnesses have come forward and almost 5000 Americans have joined us in the fight for transparency at safeaerospace.org 29:20 Ryan Graves: The majority of witnesses are commercial pilots at major airlines. Often, they are veterans with decades of flying experience. Pilots are reporting UAP at altitudes that appear above them at 40,000 feet potentially in low Earth orbit or in the gray zone below the Karman Line, making unexplainable maneuvers like right hand turns and retrograde orbits or J hooks. Sometimes these reports are reoccurring with numerous recent sightings north of y and in the North Atlantic. Other veterans are also coming forward to us regarding UAP encounters in our airspace and oceans. The most compelling involve observations of UAP by multiple witnesses and sensor systems. I believe these accounts are only scratching the surface and more will share their experiences once it is safe to do so. 31:30 David Grusch: I became a whistleblower through a PPD 19 urgent concern filing in May 2022 with the intelligence community Inspector General following concerning reports from multiple esteemed and credentialed current and former military and intelligence community individuals that the US government is operating with secrecy above congressional oversight with regards to UAPs. My testimony is based on information I've been given by individuals with a long standing track record of legitimacy and service to this country, many of whom also have shared compelling evidence in the form of photography, official documentation, and classified oral testimony to myself and my various colleagues. I have taken every step I can to corroborate this evidence over a period of four years while I was with the UAP Task Force and do my due diligence on the individual sharing it. Because of these steps. I believe strongly in the importance of bringing this information before you. 33:30 David Grusch: In 2019, the UAP Task Force director asked me to identify all Special Access Programs and Controlled Access Programs, also known as SAPS and CAPS. We needed to satisfy our congressionally mandated mission and we were direct report at the time to the [Deputy Secretary of Defense]. At the time, due to my extensive executive level intelligence support duties, I was cleared to literally all relevant compartments and in a position of extreme trust both in my military and civilian capacities. I was informed in the course of my official duties of a multi-decade UAP crash retrieval and reverse engineering program to which I was denied access to those additional read-ons when I requested it. I made the decision based on the data I collected to report this information to my superiors and multiple Inspectors General and, in effect, becoming a whistleblower. 35:20 Cmdr. David Fravor: We were attached to carrier 11, stationed onboard USS Nimitz and began a two month workup cycle off the coast of California. On this day, we were scheduled for a two v two air-to-air training with the USS Princeton as our control. When we launched off Nimitz, my wingman was joining out, we were told that the training was going to be suspended and we're going to proceed with real world tasking. As we proceeded to the West, the air controller was counting down the range to an object that we were going to and we were unaware of what we're going to see when we arrived. There, the controller told us that these objects had been observed for over two weeks coming down from over 80,000 feet, rapidly descending to 20,000 feet, hanging out for hours and then going straight back up. For those who don't realize, above 80,000 feet is space. We arrived at the location at approximately 20,000 feet and the controller called the merge plot, which means that our radar blip was now in the same resolution cell as a contact. As we looked around, we noticed that we saw some whitewater off our right side. It's important to note the weather on this day was as close to perfect as you could ask for off the coast of San Diego: clear skies, light winds, calm seas, no white caps from waves. So the whitewater stood out in a large blue ocean. All four of us, because we were in an F/A-18F F, so we had pilots and WSO in the backseat, looked down and saw a white tic tac object with a longitudinal axis pointing north-south and moving very abruptly over the water, like a ping pong ball. There were no rotors, no rotor wash, or any sign of visible control surfaces like wings. As we started clockwise towards the object, my WSO I decided to go down and take a closer look with the other aircraft staying in high cover to observe both us and the tic tac. We proceeded around the circle about 90 degrees from the start of our descent, and the object suddenly shifted its longitudinal axis, aligned it with my aircraft and began to climb. We continued down another 270 degrees, and we went nose low to where the tic tac would have been. Our altitude at this point is about 15,000 feet and the tic tac was about 12,000. As we pulled nose-on to the object within about a half mile of it, it rapidly accelerated in front of us and disappeared. Our wingmen, roughly 8000 feet above us, lost contact also. We immediately turned back to see where the whitewater was at and it was gone also. So as you started to turn back towards the east the controller came up and said "Sir you're not going to believe this but that thing is that your cat point roughly 60 miles away in less than a minute." You can calculate the speed. We returned to Nimitz. We were taking off our gear, we were talking to one of my crews that was getting ready to launch, we mentioned it to them and they went out and luckily got the video that you see, that 90 second video. What you don't see is the radar tape that was never released, and we don't know where it's at. 37:55 Cmdr. David Fravor: What is shocking to us is that the incident was never investigated. None of my crew ever questioned and tapes were never taken and after a couple days it turned into a great story with friends. It wasn't until 2009 until J. Stratton had contacted me to investigate. Unbeknownst to all, he was part of the AATIP program at the Pentagon led by Lue Elizondo. There was an unofficial official report that came out it's now in the internet. Years later, I was contacted by the other pilot Alex Dietrich and asked if I'd been contacted and I said "No, but I'm willing to talk." I was contacted by Mr. Elizondo, and we talked for a short period of time, he said we'd be in contact. A few weeks after that I was made aware that Lue had left the Pentagon in protest and joined forces with Tom DeLonge and Chris Mellon, Steve Justice, and others to form To the Stars Academy, an organization that pressed the issue with leading industry experts and US government officials. They worked with Leslie Kean, who is present today, Ralph Blumenthal, and Helene Cooper to publish the articles in the New York Times in 2017. It removed the stigma on the topic of UFOs, which is why we're here today. Those articles opened the door for the government and public that cannot be closed. It has led to an interest from our elected officials, who are not focused on Little Green Men, but figuring out where these craft are, where they are from, the technology they possess, how do they operate. It also led to the Whistleblower Protection Act in the NDAA. 39:45 Cmdr. David Fravor: In closing, I would like to say that the tic tac object we engaged in 2004 was far superior to anything that we had on time, have today, or are looking to develop in the next 10 years. If we, in fact, have programs that possess this technology and needs to have oversight from those people, that the citizens of this great country elected in office to represent what is best for the United States and best for the citizens. I thank you for your time. 40:20 Rep. Glenn Grothman (R-WI): Are your pilots, or pilots that you interact with as part of your organization, do you feel adequately trained and briefed on how to handle encounters with UAPs? Ryan Graves: No. Right now, military witnesses to UAP have limited options for reporting UAP. But more more concerning is that the commercial aviation sector has not adapted to the lessons that the military has implemented. The military and Department of Defense have stated that UAP represent a critical aviation safety risk. We have not seen that same language being used in the commercial markets, they are not acknowledging this. 41:05 Ryan Graves: Right now we need a system where pilots can report without fear of losing their jobs. There's a fear that the stigma associated with this topic is going to lead to professional repercussions either through management or perhaps through their yearly physical check. So having a secure system, reducing the stigma, and making this information available through the public is going to reduce the concerns that aircrew have. 41:30 Rep. Glenn Grothman (R-WI): Can you just give me a little idea the degree to which reports in the past are not made public right now? Ryan Graves: Well, I don't think there has been a proper reporting system to gather those reports and thus not report them. So to answer your question, I think there is a dearth of data due to the fact that the reporting has been limited up to this time. 41:45 Ryan Graves: There's certainly some national security concerns when we use our advanced sensors and our tactical jets to be able to identify these objects. However, there's no reason that the objects themselves would be classified. I would be curious to see how the security classification guideline actually spells out the different nuances of how this topic is classified from the perspective of UAP, not national security. 43:00 Rep. Glenn Grothman (R-WI): Mr. Fravor, the tic tac incident that you were engaged [in] occurred in 2004. What kind of reporting took place after that incident? Ryan Graves: None. We had a standard debrief where the back-seaters went down to our carrier intel center and briefed what had happened, and that was it. No one else talked to us. And I was in the top 20 in the battle group, no one came that the Captain was aware, the of Admiral was aware, nothing was done. Rep. Glenn Grothman (R-WI): Did your commanding officers provide any sort of justification? Ryan Graves: No, because I was the commanding officer of the quadron. So no. Rep. Glenn Grothman (R-WI): Was this incident the only UAP event that you encountered while you were a pilot? Ryan Graves: Yes, it was. 43:50 Rep. Glenn Grothman (R-WI): Do you believe UAPs pose a potential threat to our national security? Ryan Graves: Yes, and here's why: the technology that we faced was far superior than anything that we had, and you could put that anywhere. If you had one, you captured one, you reverse engineered it, you got it to work, you're talking something that can go into space, go someplace, dropped down in a matter of seconds, do whatever it wants and leave. And there's nothing we can do about it. Nothing. 44:20 Ryan Graves: I would also like to add from a commercial aviation and military aviation perspective, we deal with uncertainty in our operating space as a matter of our professional actions. Identifying friend from foe is very important to us. And so when we have identified targets and we continue to ignore those due to a stigma or fear of what it could be, that's an opening that our adversaries can take advantage of. 44:55 Ryan Graves: There needs to be a location where this information is centralized for processing and there needs to be a two-way communication loop so the operators on the front end have feedback and can get best practices on how to process information, what to do, and to ensure that their reporting is being listened to. Right now there is not a lot of back and forth. 46:25 Ryan Graves: When we were first experiencing these objects off the eastern seaboard in the 2014 to 2015 time period, anyone that had upgraded their radar systems were seeing these objects. So there was a large number of my colleagues that were detecting these objects off the eastern seaboard. They were further correlating that information with the other onboard sensors. And many of them also had their own eyesightings, as well, of these objects. Now, that was our personal, firsthand experience at the time. Since then, as I've engaged this topic, others have reached out to me to share their experiences both on the military side as well as the commercial aviation side. On the military aviation side, veterans that have recently got out have shared their stories and have expressed how the objects we are seeing in 2014 and 2015 continued all the way to 2019, 2020, and beyond. And so it became a generational issue for naval aviators on the Eastern Seaboard. This was something we were briefing to new students. This is something that was included in the notice to airmen to ensure that there was no accidents. And now with commercial aviators, they are reaching out because they're having somewhat similar experiences as our military brothers and sisters, but they do not have any reporting system that they can send this to. 47:55 Cmdr. David Fravor: It's actually, it's a travesty that we don't have a system to correlate this and actually investigate. You know, so if you took the east coast, there's coastal radars out there that monitor our air defense identification zone. Out to 200 miles, they can track these. So when you see them, they could actually go and pull that data and get maneuvering. And instead of just having the airplanes, there's other data sources out there. And I've talked to other government officials on this. You need a centrally located repository that these reports go to. So if you just stuck it in DOD, you wouldn't get anything out of the Intelligence Committee because they have a tendency not to talk. But if you had a central location where these reports are coming in, not just military, but also commercial aviation, because there's a lot of that going on, especially if you talk to anyone that flies from here to Hawaii, over the Pacific they see odd lights. So I think you need to develop something that allows you a central point to collect the data in order to investigate. 51:20 Rep. Robert Garcia (D-CA): Mr. Grusch, finally, do you believe that our government is in possession of UAPs? David Grusch: Absolutely, based on interviewing over 40 witnesses over four years. Rep. Robert Garcia (D-CA): And where? David Grusch: I know the exact locations and those locations were provided to the Inspector General, and some of which to the intelligence committees, I actually had the people with the firsthand knowledge provide a protected disclosure to the Inspector General 52:15 Rep. Tim Burchett (R-TN): Mr. Graves. Again, I'd like to know, how do you know that these were not our aircraft? Ryan Graves: Some of the behaviors that we saw in a working area. We would see these objects being at 0.0 Mach, that's zero airspeed over certain pieces of the ground. So what that means, just like a river, if you throw a bobber in, it's gonna float downstream. These objects were staying completely stationary in category four hurricane winds. The same objects would then accelerate to supersonic speeds 1.1-1.2 Mach, and they would do so in very erratic and quick behaviors that we don't -- I don't -- have an explanation for. 55:50 Rep. Tim Burchett (R-TN): Mr. Fravor, do you believe that you witnessed an additional object under the water in relation to your encounter? Cmdr. David Fravor: I will say we did not see an object. There was something there to cause the whitewater and when we turned around, it was gone. So there was something there that obviously moved. Rep. Tim Burchett (R-TN): Okay, it was not the same object, though, that you were looking at, correct? Cmdr. David Fravor: No, we actually joked that the tic tac was communicating with something when we came back, because the whitewater disappeared. 56:15 Rep. Tim Burchett (R-TN): We were, in another instance, told about the capabilities of jamming when there were some people chasing some of these objects. Did you experience any of that jamming, or interrupting your radar or weapon system? Cmdr. David Fravor: My crew that launched, after we landed, experienced significant jamming to the APG 73 radar, which was what we had on board, which is a mechanically scan, very high end system, prior to APG 79. And yes, it did pretty much everything you could do range, velocity, aspect, and then it hit the lock and the targeting pod is passive. That's when we're able to get the video on. Rep. Tim Burchett (R-TN): I'm about to run out of time, but are you aware of any of our enemies that have that capability? Cmdr. David Fravor: No, no. 57:40 Rep. Jaime Raskin (D-MD): You've identified these as taking place on the East Coast. Is it just on the East Coast where these encounters have been reported? Ryan Graves: No. Since the events initially occurred, I've learned that the objects have been detected, essentially where all Navy operations are being conducted across the world. And that's from the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office reporting. 58:50 Rep. Jaime Raskin (D-MD): Are there common characteristics to the UAPs that have been sighted by different pilots? And can you describe what the convergence of descriptions is? Ryan Graves: Certainly. We were primarily seeing dark gray or black cubes inside of a clear sphere. Rep. Jaime Raskin (D-MD): I'm sorry, dark gray or black cubes? Ryan Graves: Yes, inside of a clear sphere where the apex or tips of the cube were touching the inside of that sphere. And that was primarily what was being reported when we were able to gain a visual tally of these objects. That occurred over almost eight years, and as far as I know, is still occurring. 59:45 Ryan Graves: I think we need both transparency and the reporting. We have the reporting, but we need to make sure that information can be propagated to commercial aviation as well as the rest of the populace. 1:05:00 Ryan Graves: In the 2003 timeframe, a large group of Boeing contractors were operating near one of the launch facilities at Vandenberg Air Force Base when they observed a very large, 100-yard-sided red square approach the base from the ocean and hover at low altitude over one of the launch facilities. This object remained for about 45 seconds or so before darting off over the mountains. There was a similar event within 24 hours later in the evening. This was a morning event, I believe, 8:45 in the morning. Later in the evening, post sunset, there were reports of other sightings on base including some aggressive behaviors. These objects were approaching some of the security guards at rapid speeds before darting off, and this is information that was received through one of the witnesses that have approached me at Americans for Safe Aerospace. 1:06:15 Ryan Graves: I have not seen what they've described. This object was estimated to be almost the size of a football field, and I have not seen anything personally that large. 1:07:05 Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-FL): With the FAA, to your understanding, pilots that are seeing this, commercial airline pilots, are they receiving cease and desist letters from corporations for coming forward with information in regards to safety for potential air airline passengers? Ryan Graves: I have been made privy to conversations with commercial aviators who have received cease and desist orders. Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-FL): So the American public should know that corporations are putting their own reputations ahead of the safety of the American people. Would you agree with that statement? Ryan Graves: It appears so. 1:08:15 Rep. Jared Moskowitz (D-FL): So what about G forces? Let's talk about G forces in those vehicles. Could a human survive those G forces with known technology today? Cmdr. David Fravor: No, not for the acceleration rates that we observed. 1:08:45 Cmdr. David Fravor: So we got within a half mile of the tic tac, which people say that's pretty far, but in airplanes that's actually relatively close. Now it was perfectly white, smooth, no windows, although when we did take the original FLIR video that is out there, when you put it on a big screen it actually had two little objects that came out of the bottom of it. But other than that, no windows, no seams, no nothing. 1:09:05 Rep. Jared Moskowitz (D-FL): Mr. Grusch, as a result of your previous government work have you met with people with direct knowledge or have direct knowledge yourself of non-human origin craft? David Grusch: Yes, I personally interviewed those individuals. 1:09:40 Rep. Jared Moskowitz (D-FL): Do you have knowledge or do you have reason to believe that there are programs in the advanced tech space that are unsanctioned? David Grusch: Yes, I do. Rep. Jared Moskowitz (D-FL): Okay. And when you say that they're above congressional oversight, what do you mean? David Grusch: Complicated question. So there's some, I would call it abuse here. So congressional oversight of conventional Special Special Access Programs, and I'll use Title X, so DOD, as an example. So 10 US Code section 119 discusses congressional oversight of SAPS, discusses the Deputy Secretary of Defense's ability to waive congressional reporting. However, the Gang of Eight is at least supposed to be notified if a waived or waived bigoted unacknowledged SAP is created. That's Public Law. Rep. Jared Moskowitz (D-FL): I don't want to cut you off, but how does a program like that get funded? David Grusch: I will give you generalities. I can get very specific in a closed session, but misappropriation of funds. Rep. Jared Moskowitz (D-FL): Does that mean that there is money in the budget that is set to go to a program but it doesn't and it goes to something else? David Grusch: Yes, have specific knowledge of that. Yep. Rep. Jared Moskowitz (D-FL): Do you think US corporations are overcharging for certain tech they're selling to the US government and that additional money is going to programs? David Grusch: Correct, through something called IRAD. 1:12:45 Rep. Virginia Foxx (R-VA): Mr. Grusch, in your sworn testimony you state that the United States government has retrieved supposedly extraterrestrial spacecraft and other UAP related artifacts. You go so far as to state that the US is in possession of "non human spacecraft" and that some of these artifacts have circulated with defense contractors. Several other former military and intelligence officials have come forward with similar allegations albeit in non-public setting. However, Dr. Sean Kirkpatrick, the Director of AARO, previously testified before Congress that there has been and I quote, "no credible evidence" thus far of extraterrestrial act activity or "off world technology" brought to the attention of the office. To your knowledge, is that statement correct? David Grusch: It's not accurate. I believe Dr. Kirkpatrick mentioned he had about 30 individuals that have come to AARO thus far. A few of those individuals have also come to AARO that I also interviewed and I know what they provided Dr. Kirkpatrick and their team. I was able to evaluate -- Rep. Virginia Foxx (R-VA): Okay, I need to go on. David Grusch: Sure. 1:21:25 Rep. Tim Burchett (R-TN): Has the US government become aware of actual evidence of extraterrestrial or otherwise unexplained forms of intelligence? And if so, when do you think this first occurred? David Grusch: I like to use the term non-human, I don't like to denote origin, it keeps the aperture open scientifically. Certainly, like I've just discussed publicly, previously, the 1930s. 1:21:45 Rep. Tim Burchett (R-TN): Okay, can you give me the names and titles of the people with direct, first-hand knowledge and access to some of these crash retrieval programs and maybe which facilities, military bases that the recovered material would be in? And I know a lot of Congress talked about, we're gonna go to area 51. And, you know, there's nothing there anymore anyway, it's just you know, we move like a glacier. And as soon as we announce it, I'm sure the moving vans would pull up, but please. David Grusch: I can't discuss that publicly. But I did provide that information both to the Intel committees and the Inspector General. Rep. Tim Burchett (R-TN): And we could get that in the SCIF, if we were allowed to get in a SCIF with you? Would that be probably what you would think? David Grusch: Sure, if you had the appropriate accesses, yeah. 1:22:30 Rep. Tim Burchett (R-TN): What Special Access Programs cover this information? And how is it possible that they have evaded oversight for so long? David Grusch: I do know the names, once again, I can't discuss that publicly. And how they've evaded oversight in a closed setting I could tell you this specific tradecraft used. Rep. Tim Burchett (R-TN): Alright. 1:22:50 Rep. Tim Burchett (R-TN): When did you think those programs began and who authorized them? David Grusch: I do know a lot of that information, but that's something I can't discuss publicly because of sensitivities Rep. Tim Burchett (R-TN): Alright. 1:24:05 Rep. Tim Burchett (R-TN): Title 10 and title 50 authorization, they seem to say they're inefficient. So who gets to decide this, in your opinion, in the past? David Grusch: It's a group of career senior executive officials. Rep. Tim Burchett (R-TN): Okay. Are they government officials? David Grusch: Both in and out of government and that's about as far I'll go there. Rep. Tim Burchett (R-TN): Well, that leads to my next question, which private corporations are directly involved in this program? How much taxpayer money has been invested in these programs? David Grusch: Yeah, I don't know the specific metrics towards the end of your question. The specific corporations I did provide to the committees in specific divisions, and I spent 11 and a half hours with both Intel committees. 1:25:30 Rep. Tim Burchett (R-TN): Has there been an active US government disinformation campaign to deny the existence of Unidentified Aerial Phenomena? And if so, why? David Grusch: I can't go beyond what I've already exposed publicly about that. Rep. Tim Burchett (R-TN): Okay, I've been told to ask you what that is and how to get it in the record. Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-FL): What have you stated publicly in your interviews, for the Congressional Record? David Grusch: If you reference my NewsNation interview, I talk about a multi-decade campaign to disenfranchise public interest basically. 1:28:00 Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY): When it comes to notification that you had mentioned about IRAD programs, we have seen defense contractors abuse their contracts before through this committee. I have seen it personally, and I have also seen the notification requirements to Congress abused. I am wondering, one of the loopholes that we see in the law is that there is, at least from my vantage point, depending on what we're seeing, is that there are no actual definitions or requirements for notification, are there? What methods of notification did you observe? When they say they notified Congress, how did they do that? Do you have insight into that? David Grusch: For certain IRAD activities....I can only think of ones conventional in nature. Sometimes they flow through certain out of say SAP programs that have cognisant authority over the Air Force or something. And those are congressionally reported compartments, but IRAD is literally internal to the contractor. So as long as it's money, either profits, private investment, etc, they can do whatever they want. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY): To put a finer point on it, when there is a requirement for any agency or company to notify Congress, do they contact the chairman of a committee, do they get them on the phone specifically, is this through an email to hypothetically a dead email box? David Grusch: A lot of it comes through what they call the PPR, Periodic Program Review process. If it's a SAP or Controlled Access Program equity, and then those go to the specific committees. 1:30:40 Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY): For the record, if you were me, where would you look? Titles, programs, departments, regions? If you could just name anything. And I put that as an open question to the three of you. David Grusch: I'd be happy to give you that in a closed environment. I can tell you specifically. 1:35:40 Cmdr. David Fravor: Things are over-classified. I know for a fact the video or the pictures that came out in the 2020 report that had the stuff off the east coast, they were taken with an iPhone, off the east coast. A buddy of mine was one of the senior people there and he said they originally classified a TSS CI, and my question to him was what's TSS CI about these? They're an iPhone, right, literally off the vacates, that's not TSS CI. So they're over classified, and as soon as they do that, they go into the vault, and then you all have to look for them. 1:37:20 Rep. Eric Burlison (R-MO): Has any of the activity been aggressive, been hostile in your reports? David Grusch: I know of multiple colleagues of mine that got physically injured. Rep. Eric Burlison (R-MO): By UAPs, or by people within the federal government? So there has been activity by alien or non-human technology and or beings that has caused harm to humans? David Grusch: I can't get into the specifics in an open environment, but at least the activity that I personally witnessed, and I have to be very careful here, because they tell you never to acknowledge tradecraft, right. So what I personally witnessed, myself and my wife, was very disturbing. 1:38:20 Rep. Eric Burlison (R-MO): You've said that the US has intact spacecraft. You said that the government has alien bodies or alien species. Have you seen the spacecraft? David Grusch: I have to be careful to describe what I've seen firsthand and not in this environment. But I could answer that question behind closed doors. Rep. Eric Burlison (R-MO): Have you seen any of the bodies? David Grusch: That's something I've not witnessed myself. 1:40:45 Rep. Eric Burlison (R-MO): These aircraft, have they been identified that they are being produced by domestic military contractors? Is there any evidence that that's what's being recovered? David Grusch: Not to my knowledge. Plus the recoveries predate a lot of our advanced programs. 1:48:05 David Grusch: I've actually never seen anything personal, believe it or not. 1:51:00 Rep. Nancy Mace (R-SC): If you believe we have crashed craft, stated earlier, do we have the bodies of the pilots who piloted this craft? David Grusch: As I've stated publicly already in my NewsNation interview, biologics came with some of these recoveries. 1:51:15 Rep. Nancy Mace (R-SC): Were they human or non human biologics? David Grusch: Non human and that was the assessment of people with direct knowledge on the program I talked to that are currently still on the program. Rep. Nancy Mace (R-SC): And was this documentary evidence video, photos, eyewitness like how would that be determined? David Grusch: The specific documentation, I would have to talk to you in a SCIF about that. 1:53:10 Rep. Nick Langworthy (R-NY): Commander Fravor, we've all seen the floating tic tac video that you engage with on November 14, 2004. Can you briefly talk about why you were off the coast of San Diego that day? Cmdr. David Fravor: Yeah, we were at a work up with all the battle groups. So we integrate the ships with the carrier, the airway with the carrier and we start working. So we were doing an air-to-air defense to hone not only our skills, but those of the USS Princeton, and when they had been tracking him for two weeks. The problem was, there were never manned aircraft airborne when they were tracking them. And this was the first day and unfortunately, we were the ones airborne and went and saw it. Rep. Nick Langworthy (R-NY): Do you remember the weather that day? It was a cloudy or windy or anything out of the ordinary on the Pacific coast. Cmdr. David Fravor: If you're familiar with San Diego, it was a perfect day. Light winds, no whitecaps, clear skies, not a cloud. For flying, it was the best. Rep. Nick Langworthy (R-NY): Now, is it true that you saw, in your words, a 40 foot flying tic tac shaped object? Cmdr. David Fravor: That's correct. Or for some people that can't know what a Tic Tac is, it's a giant flying propane tank. Rep. Nick Langworthy (R-NY): Did this object come up on radar or interfere with your radar or the USS Princeton? Cmdr. David Fravor: The Princeton tracked it, the Nimitz tracked it, the E2 tracked it. We never saw it on our radars, our fire control radars never picked it up. The other airplane that took the video did get it on a radar as soon as it tried to lock in to jam the radar, spit the lock and he's rapidly switched over to the targeting pod which you can do in the F/A 18 Rep. Nick Langworthy (R-NY): From what you saw that day and what you've seen on video. Did you see any source of propulsion from the flying object including on any potential thermal scans from your aircraft? Cmdr. David Fravor: No, there is none. There is no IR plume coming out. And Chad who took the video went through all the EO, which is black and white TV and the IR modes, and there's no visible signs of reflection. It's just sitting in space at 20,000 feet. Rep. Nick Langworthy (R-NY): In your career. Have you ever seen a propulsion system that creates no thermal exhaust? Cmdr. David Fravor: No. Rep. Nick Langworthy (R-NY): Can you describe how the aircraft maneuvered? Cmdr. David Fravor: Abruptly, very determinant. It knew exactly what it was doing. It was aware of our presence. And it had acceleration rates, I mean, it went from zero to matching our speed and no time at all. Rep. Nick Langworthy (R-NY): Now if the fastest plane on Earth was trained to do these maneuvers that you saw, would it be capable of doing that? Cmdr. David Fravor: No, not even close Rep. Nick Langworthy (R-NY): Just to confirm, this object had no wings, correct? Cmdr. David Fravor: No wings. Rep. Nick Langworthy (R-NY): Now the aircraft that you were flying, was it armed? Cmdr. David Fravor: No, never felt threatened at all. Rep. Nick Langworthy (R-NY): If the aircraft was armed, do you believe that your aircraft or any aircraft in possession of the United States could have shot the tic tac down? Cmdr. David Fravor: I'd say no. Just on the performance, it would have just left in a split second. 1:58:10 Rep. Andy Ogles (R-TN): Is there any indication that these UAPs could be essentially collecting reconnaissance information? Mr. Graves? Ryan Graves: Yes. Rep. Andy Ogles (R-TN): Mr. Grusch? David Grusch: Fair assessment. Rep. Andy Ogles (R-TN): Mr. Fravor? Cmdr. David Fravor: Very possible. 1:59:05 Rep. Andy Ogles (R-TN): Mr. Graves and Fravor, in the event that your encounters had become hostile, would you have had the capability to defend yourself, your crew, your aircraft? Ryan Graves: Absolutely not. Cmdr. David Fravor: No. 2:00:55 Rep. Tim Burchett (R-TN): I might have asked this before, but I want to make sure. Do you have any personal knowledge of someone who's possibly been injured working on legacy UAP reverse engineering? David Grusch: Yes. Rep. Tim Burchett (R-TN): Okay. How were they injured? Was it something like a radioactive type situation or something we didn't understand? I've heard people talk about Havana syndrome type incidences. What what was your recollection of that? David Grusch: I can't get into specifics, but you could imagine assessing an unknown unknown, there's a lot of potentialities you can't fully prepare for. 2:02:10 Rep. Tim Burchett (R-TN): Are you aware of any individuals that are participating in reverse engineering programs for non terrestrial craft? David Grusch: Personally, yes. Rep. Tim Burchett (R-TN): Do you know any that would be willing to testify if there were protections for them? David Grusch: Certainly closed door, and assurances that breaking their NDA, they're not going to get administratively punished. 2:03:45 Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-FL): Referring to your news nation interview, you had referenced specific treaties between governments. Article III of the nuclear arms treaty with Russia identifies UAPs. It specifically mentions them. To your knowledge. Are there safety measures in place with foreign governments or other superpowers to avoid an escalatory situation in the event that a UAP malevolent event occurs? David Grusch: Yeah, you're referring to an actual public treaty in the UN register. It's funny you mentioned that, the agreement on measures to reduce the risk of outbreak of a nuclear war signed in 1971, unclassified treaty publicly available. And if you cite the George Washington University national security archives, you will find the declassified, in 2013, specific provisions in this specific Red Line Flass message traffic with the specific codes pursuant to Article Three and also situation two, which is in the the previously classified NSA archive. What I would recommend and I tried to get access, but I got a wall of silence at the White House, was the specific incidents when those message traffic was used, I think some scholarship on that would open the door to a further investigation using those publicly available information. 2:05:20 David Grusch: I have concerns, based on the interviews I conducted under my official duties, of potential violations of the Federal Acquisition Regulations, the FAR. 2:06:10 Rep. Jaime Raskin (D-MD): What was your general attitude or perspective on the UFO discussion before that happened? Cmdr. David Fravor: I never felt that we were alone with all the planets out there. But I wasn't a UFO person. I wasn't, I wasn't watching History Channel and MUFON and all that. Rep. Jaime Raskin (D-MD): And have you had any experiences or encounters since that happened? Cmdr. David Fravor: No. Rep. Jaime Raskin (D-MD): And so, have you formed any general conclusions about what you think you experienced then? Cmdr. David Fravor: Yes, I think what we experienced was, like I said, well beyond the material science and the capabilities that we had at the time, that we have currently, or that we're going to have in the next 10 to 20 years. 2:06:55 Rep. Jaime Raskin (D-MD): You've been able to answer in great detail on certain questions, and then other things you say you're not able to respond to. Can you just explain where you're drawing the line? What's the basis for that? David Grusch: Yeah, based on my DOPSR security review and what they've determined that is unclassified. Rep. Jaime Raskin (D-MD): I see, so you're answering any questions that just call upon your knowledge of unclassified questions, but anything that relates to classified matters you're not commenting on in this context? David Grusch: In an open session, but happy to participate in a closed session at the right level. 2:08:15 Ryan Graves: Certainly I think the most vivid sighting of that would have been near mid air that we had at the entrance to our working area. One of these objects was completely stationary at the exact entrance to our working areas, not only geographically but also at altitude. So it was right where all the jets are going, essentially, on the Eastern Seaboard. The two aircraft flew within about 50 feet of the object and that was a very close visual sighting. Rep. Jaime Raskin (D-MD): And you were in one of the aircraft. Ryan Graves: I was not. I was there when the pilot landed. He canceled the mission after. I was there. He was in the ready room with all his gear on with his mouth open. And I asked him what the problem was and he said he almost hit one of those darn things. Rep. Jaime Raskin (D-MD): He said he was 50 feet away from it? Ryan Graves: Yes, sir. Rep. Jaime Raskin (D-MD): And his description of the object was consistent with the description you gave us before? Ryan Graves: A dark gray or black cube inside of a clear sphere. Rep. Jaime Raskin (D-MD): Inside of a clear sphere. With no self evident propulsion system. Ryan Graves:: No wings, no IR energy coming off of the vehicle, nothing tethering it to the ground. And that was primarily what we're experiencing out there. April 19, 2023 Senate Committee on Armed Services Witnesses: , Director, All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office Clips 2:00:50 Dr. Sean Kirkpatrick: The AARO team of more than three dozen experts is organized around four functional areas: operations, scientific research, integrated analysis, and strategic communications. 2:01:25 Dr. Sean Kirkpatrick: Consistent with legislative direction, AARO is also carefully reviewing and researching the US government's UAP-related historical record. 2:02:05 Dr. Sean Kirkpatrick: AARO is the culmination of decades of DOD, intelligence community, and congressionally directed efforts to successfully resolve UAP encountered first and foremost by US military personnel, specifically navy and air force pilots. 2:03:15 Dr. Sean Kirkpatrick: However, it would be naive to believe that the resolution of all UAP can be solely accomplished by the DOD and IC alone. We will need to prioritize collection and leverage authorities for monitoring all domains within the continental United States. AARO's ultimate success will require partnerships with the inner agency, industry partners, academia and the scientific community, as well as the public. 2:04:15 Dr. Sean Kirkpatrick: I want to underscore today that only a very small percentage of UAP reports display signatures that could reasonably be described as anomalous. The majority of unidentified objects reported to AARO demonstrate mundane characteristics of balloons, unmanned aerial systems, clutter, natural phenomena, or other readily explainable sources. While a large number of cases in our holdings remain technically unresolved, this is primarily due to a lack of data associated with those cases. Without sufficient data, we are unable to reach defendable conclusions that meet the high scientific standards we set for resolution, and I will not close a case that I cannot defend the conclusions of. 2:06:00 Dr. Sean Kirkpatrick: AARO is a member of the department's support to the administration's Tiger Team effort to deal with stratospheric objects such as the PRC high altitude balloon. When previously unknown objects are successfully identified, it is AARO's role to quickly and efficiently hand off such readily explainable objects to the intelligence, law enforcement, or operational safety communities for further analysis and appropriate action. In other words, AARO's mission is to turn UAP into SEP, Somebody Else's Problem. 2:07:30 Dr. Sean Kirkpatrick: I should also state clearly for the record that in our research, AARO has found no credible evidence thus far of extraterrestrial activity, offworld technology, or objects that defy the known laws of physics. In the event sufficient scientific data were ever obtained that a UAP encountered can only be explained by extraterrestrial origin, we are committed to working with our interagency partners at NASA to appropriately inform [the] U.S. government's leadership of its findings. For those few cases that have leaked to the public previously and subsequently commented on by the US government, I encourage those who hold alternative theories or views to submit your research to credible peer reviewed scientific journals. AARO is working very hard to do the same. That is how science works, not by blog or social media. 2:13:20 Dr. Sean Kirkpatrick: How are we going to get more data? We are working with the joint staff to issue guidance to all the services and commands that will then establish what are the reporting requirements, the timeliness, and all of the data that is required to be delivered to us and retained from all of the associated sensors. That historically hasn't been the case and it's been happenstance that data has been collected. 2:17:20 Dr. Sean Kirkpatrick: As of this week we are tracking over a total of 650 cases. 2:17:45 Dr. Sean Kirkpatrick: Let me walk everyone through what our analytic process looks like. We have essentially a five step process. We get our cases in with all the data, we create a case for that event. My team does a preliminary scrub of all of those cases as they come in, just to sort out, do we have any information that says this is in one of those likely categories? It's likely a balloon, it's likely a bird, it's likely some other object, or we don't know. Then we prioritize those based off of where they are. Are they attached to a national security area? Does it show some anomalous phenomenology that is of interest? If it's just a spherical thing that's floating around with the wind and it has no payload on it, that's going to be less important than something that has a payload on it, which will be less important than something that's maneuvering. So there's sort of a hierarchy of just binning the priorities, because we can't do all of them at once. Once we do that and we prioritize them, we take that package of data in that case and I have set up two teams, think of this as a Red Team Blue Team, or competitive analysis. I have an intelligence community team made up of intelligence analysts and I have an S&T team made up of scientists and engineers, and the people that actually build a lot of these sensors are physicists, because you know, if you're a physicist, you can do anything. But they're not associated with the intel community, they're not intel officers. So they they look at this through the lens of the sensor, of what the data says. We give that package to both teams. The intelligence community is going to look at it through the lens of the intelligence record, and what they assess, and their intel tradecraft, which they have very specific rules and regulations on how they do that. The scientific community, the technical community is going to look at it through the lens of "What is the data telling me? What is the sensor doing? What would I expect a sensor response to be?" and back that out. Those two groups give us their answers. We then adjudicate. If they agree, then I am more likely to close that case, if they agree on what it is. If they disagree, we will have an adjudication. We'll bring them together, we'll take a look at the differences, we'll adjudicate. Why do you say one thing and you say another? We will then come to a case recommendation that will get written up by my team. That then goes to a Senior Technical Advisory Group, which is outside of all of those people, made up of senior technical folks and intel analysts and operators retired out of the community. And they essentially peer review what that case recommendation is. They write their recommendations, that comes back to me, I review it, we make a determination, and I'll sign off one way or the other, and then that will go out as the case determination. Once we have an approved web portal to hang the unclassified stuff, we will downgrade and declassify things and put it out there. In the meantime, we're putting a lot of these on our classified web portal where we can then collaborate with the rest of the community so they can see what's going on. In a nutshell, that is the process. 2:27:10 Dr. Sean Kirkpatrick: There are emerging capabilities out there that in many instances, Russia and China, China in particular, are on par or ahead of us in some areas. So previously, I used to be the Defense Department's intelligence officer for science and technical intelligence. That was our job to look for, what does all that look like? And then my last several years of course, in Space Command, doing space. The adversary is not waiting. They are advancing and they're advancing quickly. If I were to put on some of my old hats, I would tell you, they are less risk averse at technical advancement than we are. They are just willing to try things and see if it works. Are there capabilities that could be employed against us in both an ISR and a weapons fashion? Absolutely. Do I have evidence that they're doing it in these cases? No, but I have concerning indicators. 2:43:45 Dr. Sean Kirkpatrick: So the vision is, at one point, at some point in the future, you should not need an AARO. If I'm successful in what I'm doing, we should be able to normalize everything that we're doing into existing processes, functions, agencies and organizations, and make that part of their mission and their role. Right now the niche that we form is really going after the unknowns. I think you articulated it early on, this is a hunt mission for what might somebody be doing in our backyard that we don't know about? That is what we are doing, but at some point, we should be able to normalize that. That's why it's so important the work we're doing with joint staff to normalize that into DoD policy and guidance. We are bringing in all of our interagency partners. So NASA is providing a liaison for us, I have FBI liaison, I have OSI liaison, I have service liaisons, half of my staff come from the [Intelligence Community], half of my staff come from other scientific and technical backgrounds, I have DOE. So what we're trying to do is ensure, again, as I make UAP into SEP they get handed off to the people that that is their mission to go do, so that we aren't duplicating that. I'm not going to go chase the Chinese high altitude balloon, for example. That's not my job. It's not an unknown, and it's not anomalous anymore. Now it goes over to them. May 17, 2022 House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, Subcommittee on Counterterrorism, Counterintelligence, and Counterproliferation Witnesses: , Deputy Director, Office of Naval Intelligence , Under Secretary of Defense Intelligence and Security, Department of Defense Clips 10:00 Ronald Moultrie: The NDAA for fiscal year 2022 has helped us to establish a dedicated office to oversee processes and procedures for the timely collection, processing, analysis, and reporting of UAP related data. 10:15 Ronald Moultrie: What are UAP? Put simply, UAP are airborne objects that, when encountered, cannot be immediately identified. 10:25 Ronald Moultrie: It is the department's contention that by combining appropriately structured, collected data with rigorous scientific analysis, any object that we encounter can likely be isolated, characterized, identified and if necessary, mitigated. 10:40 Ronald Moultrie: We know that our service members have encountered unidentified aerial phenomenon. And because UAPs pose potential flight safety and general security risks, we are committed to a focused effort to determine their origins. Our effort will include the thorough examination of adversarial platforms and potential breakthrough technologies, US government or commercial platforms, Allied or partner systems, and other natural phenomena. 11:15 Ronald Moultrie: We also understand that there has been a cultural stigma surrounding UAP. Our goal is to eliminate the stigma by fully incorporating our operators and mission personnel into a standardized data gathering process. We believe that making UAP reporting a mission imperative will be instrumental to the effort's success. 11:45 Ronald Moultrie: To optimize the department's UAP work, we are establishing an office within the Office of the Secretary of Defense. That office's function is clear: to facilitate the identification of previously unknown or unidentified airborne objects in a methodical, logical, and standardized manner. 13:50 Scott Bray: Since the early 2000s, we have seen an increasing number of unauthorized and or unidentified aircraft or objects in military controlled training areas and training ranges and other designated airspace. Reports of sightings are frequent and continuing. We attribute this increase in reporting to a number of factors, including our work to destigmatize reporting, an increase in the number of new systems such as quad copters and unmanned aerial systems that are in our airspace, identification of what we can classify as clutter (mylar balloons and other types of of air trash), and improvements in the capabilities of our various sensors to detect things in our airspace. 14:50 Scott Bray: The basic issues, then and now, are twofold. First, incursions in our training ranges by unidentified objects represent serious hazards to safety of flight. In every aspect of naval aviation, safety of our air crews is paramount. Second, intrusions by unknown aircraft or objects pose potential threats to the security of our operations. Our aviators train as they would fight, so any intrusions that may compromise the security of our operations by revealing our capabilities, our tactics, techniques or procedures are of great concern to the Navy and Department of Defense. 16:40 Scott Bray: The direct result of those efforts has been increased reporting with increased opportunities to focus a number of sensors on any objects. The message is now clear: if you see something, you need to report it. And the message has been received. 18:55 Scott Bray: As detailed in the ODNI report, if and when individual UAP incidents are resolved, they likely fall into one of five potential explanatory categories: airborne clutter, natural atmospheric phenomena, US government or US industry developmental programs, foreign adversary systems, or another bin that allows for a holding bin of difficult cases, and for the possibility of surprise and potential scientific discovery. 22:20 Scott Bray: If UAP do indeed represent a potential threat to our security then the capabilities, systems, processes and sources we use to observe, record, study, or analyze these phenomena need to be classified at appropriate levels. We do not want, we do not want potential adversaries to know exactly what we're able to see or understand or how we come to the conclusions we make. Therefore, public disclosures must be carefully considered on a case by case basis. 23:35 Rep André Carson (D-IN): This is the third version of this task force and, to be frank, one of Congress's concerns is that the executive branch, in administrations of both parties, has been sweeping concerns about UAPs under the rug by focusing on events that can be explained and avoiding events that cannot be explained. What can you say to give the American people confidence that you aren't just focusing our attention on low hanging fruit with easy explanations? Ronald Moultrie: Congressman, I'll start and then Mr. Bray, please feel free to weigh in. So the way that we're approaching it is with a more thorough, standardized methodology than what we have in the past. First and foremost, the Secretary Defense is chartering this effort, this is not someone lower in the Department of Defense, and he is assigned that task to the Office of Secretary of Defense's Under Secretary for Intelligence Security, that's me, because I'm responsible for looking at intelligence matters, I'm responsible for security matters, and this is potentially both. So we're concerning ourselves with the safety of our personnel, the safety of our installations and bases. There's no other higher power than what we have in actually getting after this. And as you have stated, we have been assigned that task to actually stand up an office, the AOIMSG, which I believe the name server will likely change, but we have moved forward in terms of moving to establish that office. We have, as of this week, picked the director for that effort, a very established and accomplished individual. 42:00 Scott Bray: I would say that we're not aware of any adversary that can move an object without discernible means of propulsion. The question then becomes, in many of these cases where we don't have a discernible means of propulsion in the data that we have, in some cases, there are likely sensor artifacts that that may be hiding some of that, there's certainly some degree of something that looks like signature management that we have seen from some of these UAP. But I would caution, I would simply say that there are a number of other events in which we do not have an explanation. There are a small handful in which there are flight characteristics or signature management that we can't explain with the data that we have. 43:40 Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA): With respect to the second two videos showing the small triangles, the hypothesis is that those are commercial drones that because of the use of night vision goggles appear like triangles, is that the operating assessment? Scott Bray: Some type of drone, some type of unmanned aerial system, and it is simply that that light source resolves itself through the night vision goggles onto the SLR camera as a triangle. 47:55 Scott Bray: Allies have seen these, China has established its own version of the UAP task force. So clearly a number of countries have observations of things in the airspace that they can identify. Rep. Brad Wenstrup (R-OH): And do we share data with some, with all? Are they sharing with us? Scott Bray: We share data with some and some share data with us. Rep. Brad Wenstrup (R-OH): But not necessarily all that have publicly reported something? Scott Bray: That's correct. 52:25 Scott Bray: When I say we can't explain, I mean, exactly as you describe there, that there's a lot of information, like the video that we showed, in which there's simply too little data to create a reasonable explanation. There are a small handful of cases in which we have more data that our analysis simply hasn't been able to fully pull together a picture of what happened. Those are the cases where we talked about where we see some indications of flight characteristics or signature management that are not what we had expected. When it comes to material that we have, we have no material. We have detected no emanations within the UAP task force that would suggest it's anything non-terrestrial in origin. 59:35 Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-IL): There have been no collisions between any US assets and one of these UAPs, correct? Scott Bray: We have not had a collision, we've had at least 11 near misses though. 59:55 Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-IL): And there's been no attempt, there's no communications, or any kind of communication signals that emanate from those objects that we've detected, correct? Scott Bray: That's correct. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-IL): And have we attempted to communicate with those objects? Scott Bray: No. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-IL): So we don't we don't even put out an alert saying, you know, "U.S., identify yourself, you are within our flight path," or something like that? Scott Bray: We haven't said anything like that. We've not put anything out like that, generally speaking. For example, in the video that we showed earlier, it appears to be something that is unmanned, appears to be something that may or may not be in controlled flight, and so we've not attempted any communication with that. 1:00:55 Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-IL): And I assume we've never discharged any armaments against a UAP, correct? Scott Bray: That's correct. 1:01:05 Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-IL): How about wreckage? Have we come across any wreckage of any kind of object that has now been examined by you? Scott Bray: The UAP task force doesn't have any wreckage that isn't explainable, that isn't consistent with being of terrestrial origin. 1:01:20 Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-IL): Do we have any sensors underwater to detect on submerged UAPs, anything that is in the ocean or in the seas? Ronald Moultrie: So I think that would be more properly addressed in a closed session. 1:05:30 Ronald Moultrie: So one of the concerns that we have is that there are a lot of individuals and groups that are putting information out there that that could be considered to be somewhat self serving. We're trying to do what's in the best interests of, one, the Department of Defense, and then two, what's in the best interest of the public, to ensure that we can put factually based information back into the mainstream and back into the bloodstream of the reporting media that we have, so people understand what's there. It's important because we are attempting, as this hearing has drawn out to understand, one, what may just be natural phenomenon, two, what may be sensor phenomenology or things that were happening with sensors, three, what may be legitimate counterintelligence threats to places that we have or bases or installations, or security threats to our platforms. And anything that diverts us off of what we have with the resources that have been allocated to us, sends us off in the spurious chases and hunts that are just not helpful. They also contribute to the undermining of the confidence that the Congress and the American people have that we are trying to get to the root cause of what's happening here, report on that, and then feed that back into our national security apparatus so we are able to protect the American people and our allies. So it is harmful, it is hurtful, but hopefully, if we get more information out there, w
The three astronauts aboard the Apollo 13 spacecraft have retreated into the cramped lunarmodule, the only part of the spacecraft that's still fully functioning. Back on Earth, NASA's Mission Control sets up an elite team of engineers—the Tiger Team—to figure out how to stretch the spacecraft's dwindling water, heat, and power over the perilous, days-long journey back to Earth.Listen early and ad free with Wondery+. Join Wondery+ for exclusives, binges, early access, and ad free listening. Available in the Wondery App https://wondery.app.link/againsttheodds.Support us by supporting our sponsors!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Clean Code - Chapter 1قسمت اول از بررسی کتابClean Codeفصل 1برخی منابع و کتاب ها در دنیای برنامه نویسی به عنوان مرجع شناخته می شن و به برنامه نویسها در هر سطحی توصیه می شه که حتما این کتاب ها رو مطالعه کنن.تصمیم گرفتم که برخی از این کتاب ها رو به مرور در کانال اردیلند معرفی و بررسی کنم، به این صورت که هر کتاب رو فصل به فصل به صورت خلاصه تشریح کنم که هم با کلیات موضوع آشنا بشیم و هم نکات مهم یا کمی پیچیده تر رو به زبانی ساده برای مخاطب فارسی زبان تشریح کنم.اولین کتاب از این مجموعه، معروفترین و شاید مهترین کتاب مرجع برنامه نویسی هست یا کتاب معظم "کد تمیز" از رابرت مارتین یا باب مارتین یا همون "آنکل باب" معروفClean Code: A Handbook of Agile Software CraftsmanshipRobert C. Martin , aka Uncle Bobتو این فصل آنکل باب از ضرورت تمیز نگه داشتن کد میگه و یک سری تعاریف اولیه از کد تمیز ارائه میده. همراه با مثال ها و توضیحاتی که می تونید توی ویدئو ببینید.کلا ادبیات آنکل باب بسیار جذاب هست و مباحث کاملا جدی دنیای برنامه نویسی رو همراه با داستان، شوخی، خاطره و التبه مقادیر بسیار زیادی کد و تعاریف به مخاطب انتقال میده.امیدوارم این اولین ویدئو شروع خوبی باشه و صد البته که بهبود این سری ویدئو ها با فیدبک شما عزیزان بیشتر و بیشتر خواهد بود. پس ممنون می شم که من رو از فیدبک های خوبتون با لایک و کامنت محروم نکنید و همچنین با به اشتراک گذاری این ویدئو و کانال به بزرگتر شدن دایره مخاطبین کانال کمک کنید.راستی اگر هم تا حالا سابسکرایب نکردید، بکنید!تا بعد!شروع (0:00)معرفی کلیت کتاب و فصل اول (1:08)اهمیت کد تمیز (3:30)چرا کد کثیف میشه (4:15)افت خلاقیت تیم در طول زمان بخاطر کد کثیف (6:49)Greenfield project, Tiger Team (8:15)تعریف Clean Code (12:13)برنامه نویس به عنوان نویسنده (15:22)The Boy Scout Rule (17:34)پایان (18:22)---------------------------------------------------------------لینک کانال در سایر شبکه های اجتماعیYouTube:https://www.youtube.com/c/Ardiland1---------------------------------------------------------------Telegram:https://t.me/ardiland_tm---------------------------------------------------------------Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/ardiland_ig/---------------------------------------------------------------Twitter:https://twitter.com/Ardiland3---------------------------------------------------------------GitHub:https://github.com/ardalanebrahimi---------------------------------------------------------------LinkedIn:https://www.linkedin.com/in/ardalan-ebrahimi---------------------------------------------------------------
Trevor is the founding CEO of OMS360, which has multiple locations across 5 states.Trevor shares how growing up on the farm helped shape him for the grind of becoming a CEO.OMS360 separate themselves by focussing heavily on their core values, dubbed TIGER:Team work Integrity Growth mindedExcellenceRespectTeam work Integrity Growth mindedExcellenceRespectAustin and Trevor talk about headwinds and tailwinds in multisite healthcare space and his team is preparing to take advantage of economic uncertainty. Get in touch www.oms360.com Trevor@oms360.com If you need help finding the perfect location or your ready to invest in commercial real estate, email us at podcast@leadersre.com. Sign up for a FREE vulnerability analysis and lease renewal services View our library on apple podcasts or REUniversity.org. Connect on Facebook. Commercial Real Estate Secrets is ranked in the top 50 podcasts on real estate
Bunny Tiger Team Podcast #023 Mixed By Kinree Listen & Download: fanlink.to/BTD094 Follow us on: www.facebook.com/BunnyTigerMusic/ www.instagram.com/bunnytigerofficial https://www.instagram.com/kinreemusic/ https://www.facebook.com/kinreemusic https://soundcloud.com/kinree @bunnytiger
外媒透露,白宮悄悄部署了一個名為「老虎隊」(Tiger Team)的特別小組,其任務是如果普京在對烏克蘭的戰爭中使用化學、生物或核武器時,美國和盟友應該如何應對。 更多內容請見:https://www.epochtimes.com/b5/22/3/24/n13670269.htm 大纪元,大纪元新闻,大紀元,大紀元新聞, 核武器, 俄烏戰爭, 老虎隊, Tiger Team
I've said very little about the Russian-Ukrainian conflict this week because what can I really know at this distance?We're here in New Zealand, we are beholden to the overseas media to tell us the story and you see the propaganda that's coming at you from both sides, it's evident to us all in this cynical age.You hear the stories of the heroic Ukrainians, particularly that woman who took down a drone by throwing a jar of tomatoes at it. Come on, how stupid do you think we are?We got Russia claiming all sorts of atrocious weapons are about to be used to give them license to use atrocious weapons back.Russia claiming they're advancing, Ukraine claiming they're not. Who knows? I don't know.What I do know is that Europe in particular is gripped by the conflict. TV channels are broadcasting updates continually.A friend of mine in the media in Europe has now left his job. He suffered a breakdown. He had the fear and dread of Covid replaced by the threat of war. It was all too much for him. He's decamped to the country to grow vegetables.You can talk about apocalypse for only so long and that's the talk in Europe: apocalypse.Facebook messages from friends in Germany speak of nothing else. They talk of refugees starting to trickle through town.It makes you realise the scale of this. For Europe, Covid is well and truly off the headlines, unlike here.The events that are unfolding in Brussels as we speak are not unprecedented, but we haven't seen them for a very, very long time.It's a stretch to call it a world war, but it's close.There are crucial differences since the last World Wars.Modern communications have lifted some of the fog of wartime diplomatic manoeuvring.Europe is also no longer split into multiple blocs. NATO seems remarkably coherent and unifying.There's just two players here: the West and Russia.It's right to be concerned about where China lies in this, but they have their own fish to fry in regions worryingly much closer to us.My two biggest fears are these: 1. A long, protracted Ukrainian skirmish that leaves a modern, productive and beautiful land a wasteland of ashes and the world mired in an extended economic slowdown.My other worry is mistakes: Four days into the war, the US assembled a team known as the Tiger Team.Its job was to figure out how to respond if Putin uses chemical, biological or nuclear weapons in its ongoing war against Ukraine.It's thought that the chances that Russia ends up using small tactical nukes is actually quite low. The real fear is the use of biological and chemical weapons inside Ukraine that then sees contaminants drift into Western Europe and whether this will be considered an act of aggression to the neighbouring states. States that are all a part of NATO, whose stance as we all know is all for one and one for all.That could blow things sky high depending on which way the wind blows.At the end of the day, it all rests on the shoulders of one man: a 69-year-old in Moscow it's rumoured has an addiction to steroids who has yet to explain any rational meaning for continuing these actions.
[Explicit Content] Hulu's Pam and Tommy series. The Judge Jackson hearings and the avalanche of Republican code-language for the n-word. What the children's books actually say. Charlie Kirk and Ben Shapiro dog-whistling. Kirk suspended from Twitter for misgendering and deadnaming Biden official. A majority of Americans want nuclear war, apparently. The Tiger Team. The American Nervous Breakdown continues. The Pomerantz resignation letter. Where is Clarence Thomas? Record low jobless claims. With Jody Hamilton and David TRex Ferguson, music by The Bitter Elegance and Elijah Bone, and more!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Who do you've to deal with in your life that makes you feel dumb?
In This Episode…We talk with Melinda Pham about Global Results Communications' Tiger Team and its role in giving back and making a difference. This is an uplifting and positive episode about the importance of caring for the community. If your business or PR agency is interested in doing your part to support your community, this is the episode for you. Show Notes· [01:05] Are you a coffee or tea drinker?· [01:32] Can you summarize your expertise?· [02:51] Why did you decide to pursue a career in PR?· [04:09] What is GRC's Tiger Team?· [05:14] What is your role in the Tiger Team?· [06:11] Why is it important to give back to your community?· [09:37] Have you seen any positive impact with your employees of Tiger Team?· [10:35] Is Tiger Team going to try out anything new?· [11:51] Have you seen any PR agency try to emulate Tiger Team?· [12:39] Final thoughtsPeople and Companies, We Mentioned in the Show· Melinda Pham was our guest today. Learn more about Global Results Communications.Episode Length: 13:33Thanks so much for tuning in. Join us again next week for another episode!Download Options· Listen and subscribe to Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcast, or your favorite podcast player for free!· If you enjoyed this episode, leave us a review!Contact Us! ● If you want to get involved, leave us a comment!● Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and LinkedIn! Thanks for listening! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Three years ago a Saudi 'Tiger Team' tried to assassinate a high-ranking former intel official now living in Canada, Dr Saad Al Jabri. When that failed, the Saudis sued the official, alleging massive fraud. A similar case in the US has just been dismissed as groundless: what should Canada do now? Borealis is rejoined by former CSIS agent Al Treddenick to discuss.Alan Treddenick is a former senior Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) officer who was stationed at the Canadian embassy in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. He has more than 30 years domestic/international tactical & strategic experience in intelligence operations and criminal investigations with CSIS and the RCMP.Phil Gurski is the President and CEO of Borealis Threat and Risk Consulting Ltd. and Programme Director for the Security, Economics and Technology (SET) hub at the University of Ottawa's Professional Development Institute (PDI). He worked as a senior strategic analyst at CSIS (Canadian Security Intelligence Service) from 2001-2015, specializing in violent Islamist-inspired homegrown terrorism and radicalisation.►Check Phil's latest book ''The Peaceable Kingdom'' - https://borealisthreatandrisk.com/the-peaceable-kingdom/►Website - https://borealisthreatandrisk.com/►Twitter - https://twitter.com/borealissaves►LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/phil-gurski-8942468/►Email - borealisrisk@gmail.com
Chris Wong, WWF Malaysia's Tiger Team joined Asha & JD on #TheLITEBreakfast to talk about how tiger are being used by poachers.
Welcome back to episode 12 of Tab Talk Get Ready for a deep dive into everything from the house of cards that is the airline points industry all the way to plant hoarding. First up is Duuce, the marketplace for buying and selling newsletters online. Some are overvalued and some are a steal. https://duuce.com/ New Zealand is banning Tobacco. They are raising the legal age every year until people born in 2008 can never smoke. Is it people's right to consume tobacco? https://twitter.com/i/events/1470506809634942977?utm_source=coda&utm_medium=iframely A menswear company that makes award-winning clothes out of copper? Oren brings another deep dive into a fascinating piece of fashion. https://www.vollebak.com/gear/?utm_source=coda&utm_medium=iframely Solid Basics is a blanks company that provides blanks to your favorite streetwear brands, Colin discovered them through a niche tik toker. https://solidbasics.co/?utm_source=coda&utm_medium=iframely Plants are sick...and people are hoarding them? Oren brings a tab nobody saw coming. The underground world of plant hoarding is blowing up all over tik tok. And people are going into debt to buy them... https://www.inputmag.com/culture/online-houseplant-community-hoarding-problem?utm_source=coda&utm_medium=iframely Many airline points programs EXCEED the value of the actual airline. Operating flights have become a loss leader for their points program. Believe it or not, some airlines points programs are worth 5x what the entire market caps of the busineeses are. https://twitter.com/jayvasdigital/status/1471839155256709126?s=20 Plus as always James Explains what a "Tiger Team" is and the guys talk about their yeild farm of the hour
It's a campaign that never seems to end. The Office of Personnel Management is on a mission to help agencies with their hiring, and understand the tools and tricks they can use to bring new employees on board faster. Many agencies already had plenty of hiring to do earlier in the year. But the new Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act is piling more on. Federal News Network's Nicole Ogrysko joined the Federal Drive to explain what OPM is trying to do to help.
In this episode of Farming Together host Amanda Scott talks to Andie White who enlisted the help of Sam Marwood of Cultivate Farms to turn her family's dreams of owning a farm into a reality.Andie was among a growing number of landless farmers who could prove they were productive farmers but couldn't quite get a foothold in the property market. She talks about how she made it happen with Cultivate Farms, which matches retiring farmers with aspiring farmers and investors.Topics covered:The vision and journey of Cultivate Farms: How do you make ownership possible for those who are not going to inherit farms?Andie's farm ownership journey: from devastation and rejection to hope.Surrounding yourself of with a ‘Tiger Team' of farmer friend experts who wanted is to succeed.Don't be scared to ask people for advice: it's a confidence booster for others!Andie's new Farm: irrigation and a house!Cultivate Farms: Retiring farmers who love the idea of ageing of farm and are open to the idea of sharing and supporting younger farmersPackaging the pitch: Prove you can do it, be ready and confident and keep hunting for opportunities (Cultivate can help with this)Putting yourself out there: Prove you have the morals and values in common with farmersOlder farmers want to grow communities and support young farming families.Retiring farmers have so much power to make money and support their community.A question of values: Corporate owners vs locals farming families. Giving retiring farmers confidence that the land is going to be lovedInvestors want to be able to trace the provenance of where their money is investedThere is nothing new about the legal frameworkFarmers need to get over their modestyShare farming is risky: Ask yourself, what is your exit strategy and are you being matched with someone who you can go into business with - but those risks are not unsurmountable.Further resources:Cultivate Farms website
Bunny Tiger Team Podcast #022 Mixed By NURAN Listen & Download: smarturl.it/BTD087 Tracklist: 1. NURAN - INTENT 2. Kaudron - Esengo 3. NURAN - ID 4. Sal'm Raisov, Nogaev - Italo Stars (Kinky Sound remix) 5. George Nikolaou - Ground Zero 6. LiD x NM - Mood 7. Tim Light - Noxious 8. FREYA [CH] - Masquerade 9. Flora, DCW - Countdown 10. Mirida - It's Not Over 11. NURAN- INTENT ( HIGHLITE remix)
Former Detroit Tigers' Catcher Bill Freehan passed away at the Age of 79. He was on the 1968 Tiger Team that won The World Series where he finished Second in the MVP Voting to Fellow Teammate Denny McLain. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/ed5046/support
We have the answers about Simone Biles. Jim saw a Nicolas Cage movie about his lost pig and Jim apologized inside Belcourt theater. We found out our company has a Tiger Team!
The episode focuses on the role of Saud al-Qahtani, the right hand man and enforcer of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, in the intimidation of Saudi dissidents, including journalist Jamal Khashoggi. Qahtani was known for his ruthlessness: He supervised the torture of a prominent women's rights activist. He also met and supervised the Tiger Team of assassins who flew to Istanbul in Oct. 2018 to assassinate Khashoggi — a shocking crime that is reconstructed in this episode based on notes of secret Saudi interrogations and an interview with Agnes Callamard, the former United Nations special rapporteur for extrajudicial killings, who investigated the murder. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Chief Master Sgt. John Dubuc, Command Chief of the 102nd Intelligence Wing, delivers the 102nd IW Command Message for June 2021. He discussed the importance of professional development, and the newly established Enlisted Force Tiger Team, which developed a framework to provide enlisted professional development to all Airmen. “I am excited about the changes that this will bring to all of us, allowing us to focus on the skills and competencies that we all need as American Airmen," says Chief Dubuc. “I ask that you all take advantage of the opportunities provided through this culture change with enlisted professional development. You are the best advocate for your career and I know that this will make you a better airman and wingman.” -----SCRIPT----- Hello Team, I am CMSgt John Dubuc, the 102d Intelligence Wing Command Chief with your Command Message for June 2021. This month I want to talk about Professional Development. What is Professional Development? What an important question to ask and I hope that I can provide some perspective for you. The American Hospitality Academy has a great definition and I want to share it with you, they state that Professional development refers to all training, certification and education that a worker needs to succeed in his or her career. I believe that it is important for you to define what professional development is for you and your career. The Air Force has done a tremendous job training all of us at basic training and tech school, providing all of the skills needed to start our careers. We are all provided opportunities to enhance these skills through Professional Military Education throughout our careers. These opportunities are so important to grow your skills and you career but it is important for you as an airmen to take advantage of these opportunities when they are offered. Professional Development can also take you to a different career path or even a different service. I began my career with the Army National Guard and did take advantage of opportunities for enlisted development when they were offered to me, knowing at the time that I would retire from the Army National Guard, boy was I wrong. I was given an opportunity to join the Air National Guard and did need to be retrained which opened up so many more opportunities for me and I know allowed me to develop the skillset that I needed to be the Command Chief of this incredible Wing. I will let you all know that your Wing Leadership understands the importance of Professional Development and how it molds our future leaders. This is my take on professional development and your Wing Leadership did identify some gaps in Enlisted Professional Development throughout the Wing. We established a Tiger Team to address these gaps and a way forward for our enlisted force. I wanted to let you all know about the great work that our Enlisted Force Tiger Team has been doing to begin our culture change regarding Enlisted Professional Development. This team has been working nights and weekends since early January developing a framework to ensure the 102d can provide deliberate focused enlisted professional development for all of our airmen. I am excited about the changes that this will bring to all of us, allowing us to focus on the skills and competencies that we all need as American Airmen. I ask that you all take advantage of the opportunities provided through this culture change with enlisted professional development, you are the best advocate for your career and I know that this will make you a better airmen and wingman. Thank you for all you do as members of the 102d Intelligence Wing, always remember that your careers belong to you!
When Azzedine Downes became President and CEO of the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW) in 2012, one thing was clear to him: “Talking to people who already agreed with us just isn’t enough to get real results.” As IFAW’s Executive Vice President since 1997, Azzedine had worked closely with experts from across the sciences and decision makers from around the world. But when he became President, IFAW started bringing together what Azzedine likes to call “the unusual suspects.” Seamstresses in Malawi. Auction houses in China. Military intelligence officers in Minnesota. Working together, IFAW’s eclectic network is now helping animals and people thrive together in more than 40 countries. Azzedine has led IFAW through a groundbreaking period of geographic expansion and strategic consolidation. He’s helped open offices on four continents, including IFAW’s first office in the Middle East. He’s deployed IFAW’s world-class Tiger Team to South Asia, where new programs are proving critical support for the species. And he established IFAW’s Wildlife Crime program. Azzedine has also influenced international policies to create positive change on the ground. In Azzedine’s first year as President, IFAW signed a historic lease agreement with a Maasai community near Amboseli National Park in Kenya, securing 16,000 acres of precious habitat for elephants. Months later, Azzedine helped establish a first-of-its-kind cooperative framework between IFAW and INTERPOL’s Environmental Crime Program. For years, Azzedine has served as the Head of the Delegation to the CITES Conference of the Parties. And recently, he directed IFAW’s successful campaign for membership to the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN). Before joining IFAW, Azzedine served as the Chief of Party for the U.S. Agency for International Development in Jerusalem and Morocco, as well as the Acting Regional Director for the United States Peace Corps in Eurasia and the Middle East. In 2015, Fast Company named Azzedine one of the “The Most 100 Creative People in Business,” and he has been listed among The NonProfit Times’s “Power and Influence Top 50.” He is a member of the Global Tiger Forum Advisory Council, and he currently sits on the U.S. Trade and Environmental Policy Advisory Committee. A graduate of Providence College and Harvard University, Azzedine is fluent in Arabic, English, and French. https://www.ifaw.org/ https://nexuspmg.com/
Col. Sean Riley, commander of the 102nd Intelligence Wing, delivers the 102 IW Command Message for April 2021. He talked about his goal to establish the 102nd as a unit of choice, reviewed some of the steps that wing leadership has taken and discussed how far the wing has progressed, achieving a 95% retention rate, where over 90% of eligible Airmen are choosing to reenlist with the 102nd. “So while there is still work to do, we are heading in the right direction, and I would like to thank each and every one of you for all you do to make the 102nd a world-class organization,” says Col. Riley. “With everyone’s help, we are clearly on our way to establishing ourselves as a unit of choice!” -----SCRIPT----- Members of the 102d, I am excited to bring you this month’s Command Message: Spring and nicer weather are just around the corner. the wing is back on step with in-person drills, and we are fully engaged with both our federal and state mission sets When I took command of the 102d one of my lines of effort was to – establish the 102d as a unit of choice. supporting Airmen personally & developing them professionally, enhancing quality of life by maintaining a climate that fosters, accountability, inclusivity and trust So leadership across the wing helped me develop Wing-wide Goals for 2021, to get after this Line of effort. Those goals are: Maintaining a retention rate greater than 90%, Looking for opportunities to recognize deserving Airmen, Providing Timely Feedback – enlisted & officer performance reports, Reenergize the Wing Diversity Council, Promotion Board Process, Implement an Enlisted Force Development Program at the 102nd. So how are we doing so far? Thanks to all of your efforts, our current retention rate is 95% and over 90% of eligible Airmen are choosing to reenlist and stay at the 102d. Commanders at all levels were challenged to review military decorations for all assigned Airmen and we announce and track all regional and national level award programs – So far this year, Mr. Scott Etler was selected as the Inspector General Civilian of the Year for the Air National Guard and Master Sgt. Meghan Gehl was selected as the ANG, Region 1, First Sergeant of the Year. We continue to improve with the timeliness of EPRs and OPRs and our IG office just completed an internal review of Airmen Comprehensive Assessments which identified several opportunities to make sure Airmen at all levels are receiving timely and meaningful feedback Our Human Resource Advisor, SMSgt Hayner has drafted a new vision for our Diversity Council and held the first meeting in a long time during the March Drill. Chief Dubuc developed a Tiger Team that is Improving our advisory councils, now the Top 3 and Rising 6. Developing a program for deliberate, Enlisted Force Development for all Airmen across the wing So while there is still work to do, we are heading in the right direction, and I would like to thank each and every one of you for all you do to make the 102d a world-class organization. With everyone’s help, we are clearly on our way to establishing ourselves as a unit of choice!
In this episode, we're speaking with Charles Galiano of C25 Training Products. Charles is a former professional catcher in the Milwaukee Brewers organization. The current catching instructor on the east coast made a gigantic move during the pandemic...He started a business. The former catcher turned instructor became a solopreneur with C25. What is C25? It's a simple idea that provides solid results for catchers when it comes to receiving and blocking. He created a weighted ball that you can use with a machine. What's the point of a catcher using a weighted ball? Find out in our interview. Charles tackles new age framing instruction, blocking adoption, and receiving nasty 90mph sliders. GET NOTIFIED WHEN WE UPLOAD Subscribe to the show on Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/rawlings-tigers-interview-series/id1553851157 Follow the show on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6b8RY79LXAWxpSMMTyLWqG Do you want to become a Tiger Team? Visit us at www.rawlingstigers.com Rawlings Tigers Baseball (SUBSCRIBE)
The Tiger Team was all around campus for this episode of music, comedy, news and interviews!
All companies have been affected by the pandemic over the last year, but companies in the healthcare industry - like Kaiser Permanente - have felt the pressure and the change to their operating procedures more than most. Mary Beth Lang is the Chief Supply Chain and Procurement Officer at Kaiser Permanente, an integrated managed care consortium, based in Oakland, California. In this conversation, Mary Beth tells Host Philip Ideson: The importance of understanding your suppliers’ supply chains: how they produce or secure volume, whether their demand is met by contracted demand or spot buys, and where they are reliant upon imports to fill orders How Kaiser Permanente divided its procurement resources between a. product authenticity, and quality, and testing, certification and b. how to make good decisions quickly Which parts of their pre-pandemic procurement processes Kaiser Permanente doesn’t intend to return to How the Kaiser Permanente procurement team plays an active role in helping drive community impact.
Join your Tiger Team as we discuss holiday plans, upcoming events, and tips on handling COVID stress during this holiday season. 41st FA BDE's embedded Tiger Team (consisting of Behavioral Health, Chaplain and FRSA) will create episodes for various mental and spiritual health topics during the limited operations under COVID19. The following episodes will include common topics such as feeling overwhelmed, spiritual well-being, homeschooling tips, family support strategies, recommended phone apps, etc. While these episodes are no substitute for engagement with your Behavioral Health or Unit Ministry Teams, consider them as conversation starters.
On today's episode of Bailey and Southside we play a round of the Deaf Masked Singer, talk to the lead of Tiger Team that's headed to the White House today to get Joe Exotic pardoned, Southside gets a new bed, and so much more! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Brian 'Penny' Collins is entering his third year as Tennessee State's basketball coach. The Tigers doubled their win total from nine to 18 last season and are poised for more growth. As an HBCU, TSU is uniquely poised to help lead the conversation on racial inequality and police brutality. Coach Collins believes that both police reforms are needed and that there are already great police officers on the job. We discuss the coming season and how the Tiger program is on an upward trajectory. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
A current USAF, second lieutenant serving as the Equal Opportunity Director for the Kentucky Air National Guard, leading a Tiger Team for cultivating diversity and The Community Action Team Leader, one would think Shonda Unseld has enough on her plate. But she has a passion for community improvement and travel, she created a travel company that focuses on group travel so others can travel, serve, inspire. Her business model is unique and I loved listening to her talk about her journey so candidly. #Justgo #Passportsmatter It is my great pleasure to introduce a rising star in the ranks and in the world making a global impact. Join the movement at Passports Matter. Connect on Facebook. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/freedomsisters/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/freedomsisters/support
Our Brigade Equal Opportunity Advisor, SFC Philip Hawley, joins the Tiger Team this week to chat about managing our emotions and ways to approach difficult conversations. CH Byers and the embedded BHOs discuss different approaches to emotional regulation and tips for overcoming discomfort. The embedded BHOs close with an opportunity for in-person discussion.
41st FA BDE's embedded Tiger Team (consisting of Behavioral Health, Chaplain and FRSA) will create episodes for various mental and spiritual health topics during the limited operations under COVID19. The following episodes will include common topics such as feeling overwhelmed, spiritual well-being, homeschooling tips, family support strategies, recommended phone apps, etc. While these episodes are no substitute for engagement with your Behavioral Health or Unit Ministry Teams, consider them as conversation starters.
41st FA BDE's embedded Tiger Team (consisting of Behavioral Health, Chaplain and FRSA) will create episodes for various mental and spiritual health topics during the limited operations under COVID19. The following episodes will include common topics such as feeling overwhelmed, spiritual well-being, homeschooling tips, family support strategies, recommended phone apps, etc. While these episodes are no substitute for engagement with your Behavioral Health or Unit Ministry Teams, consider them as conversation starters.
Guest 1 - Matt Johnston, First Responder Health Overcoming Mental Health and Addiction for First Responders Matt Johnston is a full-time professional firefighter and mental health clinician based in the Metro Vancouver area. In 2018, Matt co-founded First Responder Health Services, a company dedicated to closing the gap between mental healthcare and public safety organizations. Utilizing customized apps built specifically for public safety personnel, First Responder Health Services offers online counselling, annual wellness programs and psychoeducational e-learning services to organizations. The overall goal of First Responder Health Services is to foster inclusive access to competent upstream mental healthcare providers for all public safety groups across Canada. Recently, Matt’s efforts garnered national attention as he was the only individual appointed from Western Canada to Tiger Team 3; a committee in charge of implementing Bill C-211 - the Legislative Framework for PTSD in Canada. Matt is proud to be part of the BCPFFA Mental Health Taskforce and realizes the value of collaboration in stemming the mental health challenges facing public safety personnel in Canada. Learn more at: https://firstresponderhealth.org/ Guest 2 - Lizzie Allan - Hilarapy Addiction Recovery and Mental Wellness using Comedy Therapy Hilarapy harnesses the healing power of comedy to inspire human connections with the spark of shared laughter. It all began in the UK as Addictive Comedy, the brainchild of comedy therapist and performer, Lizzie Allan. She found her niche in the comedy space and began developing a new, nourishing eco-system where comedians can thrive rather than survive. This passion evolved into the birth of Hilarapy, a seriously jovial place to share real and vulnerable stuff in a healthy and supportive environment. Lizzie is a Registered Therapeutic Counsellor and Stand-up Comedian with a degree in Comedy Writing and Performance. You can connect with her every Friday at 12:30 on Facebook Live at Hilarapy Studios.
In a room full of experts, who takes charge in a crisis? And when your spacecraft is headed for the moon, how do you turn it around when its main engine is dead? —————————— Saving Apollo 13 is the incredible story of NASA's Apollo 13 mission, told by Forensic Engineer Sean Brady. It's the story of the spacecraft that failed en route to the moon, and the feats of human ingenuity that saved the lives of the 3 men aboard. Saving Apollo 13 is produced by: • forensic engineering firm Brady Heywood, and • leading podcast agency Wavelength Creative. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Software-defined networking (SDN) is an approach to create a centrally controlled programmable packet network. Any protocols with the same approach could be considered as SDN as well.For open protocols, we have one popular standard protocol “OpenFlow” talking among the central controllers to all managed networking devices. Open Network Foundation (ONF) defines OpenFlow protocol.In fact, vendors also have developed proprietary protocols to implement this same approach. For example, Cisco’s ACI is a proprietary SDN solution.Here I summarize 3 most probable scenarios when we deploy SDN.Scenario 1: Open protocol, open multiple vendorsSince OpenFlow protocol from ONF is open, any vendors can develop inter-operable software and hardware products. For enterprise customers, the first natural approach is to buy from multiple networking venders.For example, controllers from vendor A, some switches from vendor B, some routers from vendor C, and so on and so forth.The most obvious benefit of this scenario is lower buying cost. Enterprises can buy any compatible networking products from any vendors in the market with the lowest price. White-brand, or no-brand vendors have opportunities to compete on price against existing networking vendors.However, only the buying cost is lower. We also must consider other costs to build and maintain a working network. Integration of software and hardware itself is a heavy project.When we already have a capable team of hardware and software integration, we can work comfortably with this approach. If we simply don’t have such a “Tiger Team”, or we are just about to create a team from scratch, this scenario could be difficult and costly. It could cancel out all benefits of lower buying cost.Scenario 2: Open protocol, one major vendorSome vendors are capable to provide all components for OpenFlow. For example, Cisco. In this scenario, basically we buy controllers and network devices from single major vendor. For less important areas, we buy some from other venders in the market.In this approach, we might have higher buying costs. Because we now have a major vender, we can gain better support from that major vendor. We can also achieve less integration cost because our team have fewer combinations of products to experiment and integrate with. We don’t need a huge team like previous scenario.I am more familiar with Cisco. Let me summarize what Cisco can provide for OpenFlow.“Cisco Open SDN Controller” is OpenFlow protocol controller. The software is a commercial distribution of OpenDaylight by OpenDaylight open source project. This software is packaged as a virtual machine format.In addition, Cisco’s Nexus 3000 and 9000 family switches can run “Cisco OpenFlow Agent” inside to become OpenFlow switches so they can be controlled by standard OpenFlow controllers.We can deploy OpenFlow by simply selecting all components from Cisco. Because OpenFlow protocol is open, we also have the flexibility to add non-Cisco but OpenFlow compatible devices.Scenario 3: Close protocol, one vendorSome vendor can provide all features and benefits of “centrally controlled programmable packet network”, with proprietary protocol. For example, again, Cisco.Cisco’s Application Centric Infrastructure (ACI) is Cisco’s proprietary SDN solution. With Cisco’s ACI, we can achieve even more than OpenFlow such as:Device managementBetter integration with non-networking devices such as Layer 7 switches and stateful firewallsBetter programmer-friendly abstraction instead of VLANs and subnets.In this scenario, we have the highest buying cost and we are locked into single vendor. However, we have the lowest integration cost and we now have full support from that single vendor. We only need an even smaller support team and concentrate all resources on using the network instead of experimenting interoperability among vendors.One more thing…Winter flowers near Taoyuan High Speed Rail Station.SDN is a promising approach for next generation networking. Programmable network indeed is the foundation for network automation.On the other hand, I don’t think it fits well for all types and sizes of customers. Let me talk more about who needs SDN in the coming posts.I am Li-Ji Hong. This is my blog “Show IP Protocols”. See you next time!
This week Josh and I wont give into the trap of looking ahead to Alabama, not when a renewed Auburn is looming! Drop us a comment or a rating and please share!
Kinder-, Jugend- und Sachbuchautor Thomas Brezina im Gespräch mit Podcast Host Holger Potye. Wir lassen uns inspirieren vom Erfinder von „Tom Turbo“, der „Knickerbocker-Bande“ und „Ein Fall für dich und das Tiger-Team“. Er erzählt uns, wie es ihm gelingt, seine Selbstzweifel und Ängste zu überwinden, und verrät uns, warum wir eigentlich keine Fehler im Leben machen können.Thomas Brezina hat über 40 Millionen Bücher verkauft und gilt als einer der erfolgreichsten Autoren der Welt. In Österreich hat er sich mit der Knickerbocker-Bande und Tom Turbo einen Ehrenplatz in jedem Kinderzimmer erobert. Aktuell widmet sich Thomas vor allem dem Schreiben von Ratgebern für Erwachsene. Zuletzt sind „Tu es einfach und glaub daran – Wie du mehr Freude in dein Leben bringst“ und „Die Freude Notfall Apotheke“ von ihm erschienen. Thomas ist UNICEF-Österreich-Botschafter und engagiert sich auch privat karitativ. Er verrät uns im Podcast, wie es ihm gelingt, sein Leben schöner zu machen – indem er bewusst positiv denkt –, und er glaubt fest an die Kraft des Visualisierens. Eines seiner Lebensmottos lautet – getreu einem chinesischen Sprichwort: „Der Lehrer kommt, wenn der Schüler bereit ist.“ (Foto: Tom Storyteller GmbH)
Read this article about tiger teams on the Maark blog.
Before the snow caused the schedule to come to a grinding halt, Stewartville sports couldn't have been better! And a Tuesday night to remember as every Tiger Team dominated! 0:00 Intro 1:18 Boys Golf Triangular 2:26 Baseball vs. Kasson-Mantorville 3:34 A Tuesday to Remember!!! 3:51 Girls Golf Stewartville Invitational 4:29 Boys Golf Dual vs. Rochester Lourdes 5:54 Baseball vs. Lake City 8:16 Softball vs. Goodhue 12:00 Track and Field - Al Heitman Invitational Results 21:25 Looking ahead in Tiger Nation
Dieser Mann ist einer der produktivsten Autoren überhaupt. Thomas Brezina hat mehr als 560 Bücher geschrieben, die in 35 Sprachen übersetzt wurden. Die meisten Bücher standen und stehen in den Regalen von Kinder- und Jugendzimmern. "Die Knickerbockerbande", "Ein Fall für dich und das Tiger-Team" und "Tom Turbo" sind die bekanntesten Titel und Serien.
Der Wiener Thomas Brezina ist Kinder-, Jugendbuch- sowie Drehbuchautor, Fernsehmoderator und seit 2005 TV-Produzent des gesamten Kinderprogramms des ORF. Erfahren Sie im Podcast mehr zu Brezinas Lebensstil, zur "Marke" Brezina und zu den neuen Business-Ideen, wie den soeben erschienen Lebensratgebern und brandaktuellen Podcasts. Generationen von Kindern kennen Thomas Brezina von seinen Buchreihen "Die Knickerbocker-Bande", "Ein Fall für dich und das Tiger-Team" oder dem Buch- und TV-Fahrrad-Detektiv "Tom Turbo". Brezina hat 550 Bücher geschrieben und 45 Mio Bücher verkauft, die in 35 Sprachen übersetzt wurden.
Business transformation is not a roadmap that your business will follow, step by step, milestone after milestone, until you reach a destination or end-goal called “digital transformation.” A final destination does not exist—transformation is more like an on-going charter—you set out with well-reasoned and well-supported intentions (a strong business case and buy-in from the C-suite) for your business to venture into the future. The unexpected will occur, but your business will learn from it. Listen to this episode to learn about 6 guidelines for crafting a charter for your business transformation: Define what transformation means to your enterprise and your customer. Align IT and business. Laser-focus on one thing you do really well. Lead with a Tiger Team—and make it a brilliant one. Innovation is the key driver of transformation and, to innovate, you must allow for iteration and failure. Build in security and privacy.
Apollo 13 is about to undertake one of the most improvised and dangerous re-entries ever attempted by NASA. Will John Aaron and the Tiger Team figure out how to power back up the Command Module in time? Has the heat shield been damaged? Are their parachute's frozen? This is the final episode of Apollo 13. But be sure to subscribe to the podcast because we will be releasing an Addendum episode at some point in 2019. In this episode we'll take a behind the scenes look at Apollo 13. We'll cover all the material that didn't make it into the series, as well as taking a deep dive into the technical causes of the explosion on board. Thank you for listening. The series is accompanied by bonus material, in the form of photographs and graphics, which will be posted on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook. Twitter at @BradyHeywoodPod Facebook https://www.facebook.com/bradyheywoodpod/ Instagram https://www.instagram.com/bradyheywoodpod/ Email podcasts@bradyheywood.com.au For more details on Apollo 13, please read Jeffrey Kluger and Jim Lovell’s wonderful book titled 'Apollo 13'. Many of the conversations presented in this podcast are from this book. Details of the spacecraft configuration at the time of the explosion can be found here: http://img2.tfd.com/pp/wikiimg.ashx?p=commons%2fthumb%2f0%2f01%2f2010-06-11_CSM%2526LM.jpg%2f799px-2010-06-11_CSM%2526LM.jpg All the NASA audio used in the series can be found at: https://archive.org/details/Apollo13Audio (The Audio is edited.) Apollo 13's re-entry audio was recorded at Honeysuckle Creek in Australia and can be found at https://www.honeysucklecreek.net/msfn_missions/Apollo_13_mission/a13_re-entry_index.html
"I don’t give a damn about the odds and I don’t give a damn that we’ve never done anything like this before. You’ve got to believe, your people have got to believe, that this crew is coming home." Gene Kranz to the Tiger Team, Room 210, April 1970. The Tiger Team and Mission Control work through the long range problems of getting Apollo 13 home. Meanwhile, the astronauts attempt to confirm their position and trajectory as the moon continues to grow larger in their windows. A new episode will be released every Thursday. The series is accompanied by bonus material, in the form of photographs and graphics, which will be posted on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook. Twitter at @BradyHeywoodPod Facebook https://www.facebook.com/bradyheywoodpod/ Instagram https://www.instagram.com/bradyheywoodpod/ Email podcasts@bradyheywood.com.au For more details on Apollo 13, please read Jeffrey Kluger and Jim Lovell’s wonderful book titled 'Apollo 13'. Many of the conversations presented in this podcast are from this book. Details of the spacecraft configuration at the time of the explosion can be found here: http://img2.tfd.com/pp/wikiimg.ashx?p=commons%2fthumb%2f0%2f01%2f2010-06-11_CSM%2526LM.jpg%2f799px-2010-06-11_CSM%2526LM.jpg All the NASA audio used in the series can be found at: https://archive.org/details/Apollo13Audio (The Audio is edited.) Read more at http://www.bradyheywood.libsyn.com/#3kDhdq361OrESgVJ.99 Read more at https://bradyheywood.libsyn.com/#WlYBsbmY17GXd3Tc.99
Pedro Lopes is a Senior Program Manager in the Database Systems Group, based in Redmond, WA, USA. He over 15 years of industry experience. He is currently responsible for Program Management of database engine features for in-market versions of SQL Server, with special focus on the Relational Engine.He also works closely with several Tier 1 SQL Server customers, as well as partners in the field, to understand and gather information about product usage and feedback to drive improvements into the product. Prior to this role, he was a Premier Field Engineer based in Europe for several years.He has deep understanding and experience in various features of the product spanning several versions of SQL Server, starting with SQL Server 7 and up to and including SQL Server 2016.This talk has taken place during PASS Summit in Seattle, WA, on 3rd November 2017 (Friday).Why working for the Tiger Team is so fascinating? Why Pedro started to love the data? How to start to be a community leader? Is sharing knowledge an important thing? What does Pedro proud of the most?Check these answers out in this episode.
Pedro Lopes is a Senior Program Manager in the Database Systems Group, based in Redmond, WA, USA. He over 15 years of industry experience. He is currently responsible for Program Management of database engine features for in-market versions of SQL Server, with special focus on the Relational Engine.He also works closely with several Tier 1 SQL Server customers, as well as partners in the field, to understand and gather information about product usage and feedback to drive improvements into the product. Prior to this role, he was a Premier Field Engineer based in Europe for several years.He has deep understanding and experience in various features of the product spanning several versions of SQL Server, starting with SQL Server 7 and up to and including SQL Server 2016.This talk has taken place during PASS Summit in Seattle, WA, on 3rd November 2017 (Friday).Why working for the Tiger Team is so fascinating? Why Pedro started to love the data? How to start to be a community leader? Is sharing knowledge an important thing? What does Pedro proud of the most?Check these answers out in this episode.
Bunny Tiger Team Podcast #021 Mixed By The Nique ► Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/user/bunnytigerofficial/playlist/2YeXmQO0dgRG6tt7xu0ekG?si=onC6YpuFSrC_KGKeEXDbEA ► Beatport: https://www.beatport.com/label/bunny-tiger/27211 ► Traxsource: https://www.traxsource.com/label/12763/bunny-tiger ► Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCPiNwW6IC56macRzHuUC5Eg TRACKLIST: 1. Andruss, Climbers - Plain Talking (Original Mix) 2. Francelotti - Back (Original Mix) 3. Milkwish - Zuza (Original Mix) 4. Dakar, Sharam Jey - Groovin (Original Mix) 5. Andy Woldman - Echo (Original Mix) 6. Antonio Santana, Dmitri Saidi - Take Your Back (Original Mix) 7. Frey - Touch The Sky (Original Mix) 8. Woo2tech, Sharam Jey, Chemical Surf - I Can Tell You (Original Mix) 9. Pablo Carrillo - Crayzee (Original Mix) 10. Sharam Jey, Dakar - Para (Original Mix) 11. Sharam Jey, Jean Bacarreza - No Soy Facil (Original Mix) 12. Dohko - Need U_(Original Mix) Get connected: www.facebook.com/BunnyTigerMusic @bunnytiger
Bill Sempf and I watched a movie called Sneakers. This episode is sponsored by Smartsheet. This is an extra-large, jumbo-sized, special episode of Cross Cutting Concerns. There's just too much awesome in Sneakers to fit in a 15 minute episode. But don't worry, I'll be back to regular length episodes starting next week! Show Notes: Sneakers is a 1992 movie. If you haven't seen it yet, go watch it first, because this podcast contains spoilers! It's available to stream on Amazon, and it is well worth a purchase. Check out the incredible cast on IMDb (and also peek at the trivia section) An interview with Bob Abbott RSA - named after Rivest, Shamir, Adleman Intel's 49 qubit chip Fluhrer, Mantin, and Shamir attack on RC4 Book: Brute Force: Cracking the Data Encryption Standard by Matt Curtin We mentioned: Dark Web, Deep Web, Tor, look it up OSINT Framework by Justin Nordine Blue Team vs Red Team Conferences: CodeMash, DerbyCon David Kennedy segment on CNN Money Podcast: Security Through Education - Episode 098: Winning the SECTF with Chris & Rachel The Economist cover and story: The world’s most valuable resource is no longer oil, but data Bitcoin was mentioned Paper: Smartphone User Identity Verification Using Gait Characteristics (gait analysis) Comic: XKCD on Security Captain Crunch = John Draper, here's a video from ABC News Tiger Team: Car Dealer Takedown OWASP Bill Sempf is on Twitter. Want to be on the next episode? You can! All you need is the willingness to talk about something technical. Music is by Joe Ferg, check out more music on JoeFerg.com!
Bob Ward is a Principal Architect for the Microsoft Data Group (Tiger Team) which owns the development and servicing for all SQL Server versions. Bob has worked for Microsoft for 24 years supporting and speaking on every version of SQL Server shipped from OS/2 1.1 to SQL Server 2016. He has worked in customer support as a principal escalation engineer and Chief Technology Officer (CTO) interacting with some of the largest SQL Server deployments in the world. Bob is a well-known speaker on SQL Server often presenting talks on internals and troubleshooting at events such as SQL PASS Summit, SQLBits, SQLIntersection, and Microsoft Ignite. This talk has taken place during PASS Summit in Seattle, WA, on 2nd November 2017 (Thursday).Do you want to find out what is the next goal of Tiger Team for SQL Server? What was his first database he worked with and how SQL's world looked like before DMV appeared? What does Bob have to do with the city of Łódź and why he does like to return to Poland?Listen to this episode to find out all answers and more.
Bob Ward is a Principal Architect for the Microsoft Data Group (Tiger Team) which owns the development and servicing for all SQL Server versions. Bob has worked for Microsoft for 24 years supporting and speaking on every version of SQL Server shipped from OS/2 1.1 to SQL Server 2016. He has worked in customer support as a principal escalation engineer and Chief Technology Officer (CTO) interacting with some of the largest SQL Server deployments in the world. Bob is a well-known speaker on SQL Server often presenting talks on internals and troubleshooting at events such as SQL PASS Summit, SQLBits, SQLIntersection, and Microsoft Ignite. This talk has taken place during PASS Summit in Seattle, WA, on 2nd November 2017 (Thursday).Do you want to find out what is the next goal of Tiger Team for SQL Server? What was his first database he worked with and how SQL's world looked like before DMV appeared? What does Bob have to do with the city of Łódź and why he does like to return to Poland?Listen to this episode to find out all answers and more.
Bunny Tiger Team Podcast #020 Mixed By Funkwerkstatt Carsten Rausch – It’s About Music (Click Click’s Respect Remix) – Superfancy Recordings Funkwerkstatt – Bass Dive (Original Mix) – Bunny Tiger Sharam Jey & Bacarreza – Work It (Original Mix) – Bunny Tiger Funkwerkstatt – Oh Baby, In the House! (Original Mix) – Bunny Tiger Fisher – Ya Kidding (Original Mix) – Dirtybird Kollektiv Ost – Bullshit (Original Mix) – Bunny Tiger Funkwerkstatt – Bäng! Bäng! (Original Mix) – Bunny Tiger Ressless – Set me free (Original Mix) – Flashmob Records Funkwerkstatt – Oh Baby, In the House! (Carsten Rausch Remix) – Bunny Tiger Daniel Dubb – The Guardian – Brock Wild Carsten Rausch – It’s talking about Jack (Original Mix) – Superfancy Recordings The Organ Grinder – Magic Box (Original Mix) – 4LuxBlack Dompe – Chip This (Original Mix) – Monkey League ► iTunes: goo.gl/dpTx55 ► Spotify: goo.gl/65Yqmj ► Beatport: goo.gl/HCv4Na ► Traxsource: goo.gl/AQoosC ► Youtube: goo.gl/DjBqiT Get connected: www.facebook.com/BunnyTigerMusic www.facebook.com/funkwerkstatt @bunnytiger @funkwerkstatt
Bunny Tiger Team Podcast #019 Mixed By Kollektiv Ost ► iTunes: goo.gl/H2KRsX ► Spotify: goo.gl/7acUQG ► Beatport: goo.gl/EhxGtQ ► Traxsource: goo.gl/ApUZDW ► Youtube: goo.gl/DFHJd6 1 Power (Sascha Braemer Remix) - Kollektiv Ost - MUKKE 2 Jambo5 (Original Mix) - Kelvin Lucas - Bunny Tiger Dubs 3 Dirty Sneakers (Original Mix) - Kollektiv Ost - Bunny Tiger 4 Secrets - Raumakustik - Responces and Secrets - MUKKE 5 The Ghetto (Original Mix) - Outway - Snatch! Records 6 Bullshit (Original Mix) - Kollektiv Ost - Bunny Tiger 7 Super Tele (Original Mix) - Lexa Hill - Snatch! Records 8 Not Also You (Original Mix) - Henrik Schwarz - Running Back 9 Insi (Guy Mantzur & Roy Rosenfeld Remix) - Super Flu - Monaberry 10 Mobiagse - Ulf Alexander - Mobiagse EP - Mukke024 11 Chordeal (Riva Starr Remix) - Yost Koen - Circus Recordings Get connected: www.facebook.com/BunnyTigerMusic www.facebook.com/kollektivost @bunnytiger @kollektivost
Bunny Tiger Team Podcast #018 Mixed By Alejandro Franco ► iTunes: goo.gl/4JKEkH ► Spotify: goo.gl/nN9dGg ► Beatport: goo.gl/gstV1C ► Traxsource: goo.gl/sxmiiR ► Youtube: goo.gl/31pZZH 1 Frankey & Sandrino – Solaris (Original Mix) – Sum Over Histories 2 Zombies In Miami – Odissey (Original Mix) – Suara 3 Tygn – Asylum (Sharam Edit) – Bunny Tiger Dubs 4 John Talabot – Voices (Gerd Janson Version Conga) - Permanent Vacation 5 Andruss, Giorgio Brindesi, Alejandro Franco – Underground (Original Mix) - Bunny Tiger Dubs 6 Egopool – Hotura (Original Mix) – Bunny Tiger Dubs 7 Vangelis Kostoxenakis – Genesis (Original Mix) – Bunny Tiger Dubs 8 Betoko – Freeek (Original Mix) – Hedonism Music 9 Shiba San – Oh My God (Original MIx) – Repopulte Mars 10 Djs Pareja – Alto (Photonz Tribal Remix) – Comeme 11 Superpitcher – Resistance (Original Mix) – Hippie Dance Get connected: www.facebook.com/BunnyTigerMusic/ https://www.facebook.com/AlejandroFrancoOficial/ @bunnytiger @alejandro_franco
Bunny Tiger Team Podcast #017 Mixed By Malikk 1 Malikk - Galaxie 2 Malikk - Mosaic 3 Dakar & Sharam Jey - Don't stop,No sleep 4 Malikk - Acid drums 5 Kolombo & Sharam Jey - Non stop! (David Keno Remix) 6 Malikk - Come on! 7 Jean Bacarreza & Pimpo gama - Menos Noise 8 Dont Dogz - Spirit Voices (Sharam Jey Edit) 9 QOMA - Uncontrolled 10 Sharam Jey & Jean Bacarreza & Zac - Rock Da Bit ► iTunes: goo.gl/VsbYXF ► Spotify: goo.gl/bHGTHt ► Beatport: goo.gl/5ZFV3G ► Traxsource: goo.gl/92H7cn ► Youtube: goo.gl/wnHU2j Get connected: www.facebook.com/BunnyTigerMusic/ www.facebook.com/Malikkmusic/ @bunnytiger @malikk-music
Because webinar attendance drastically reduces the sales cycle and increases conversion, Bob Jenkins is back with inside information on how the Tiger Team revamped the webinar registration landing page to drive registration AND attendance. To see this complete webinar strategy in action, text LEADPAGESLIVE to 33444 or go to LeadpagesLive.com. Transcripts available at ConversionCast.com
Bunny Tiger Team Podcast #016 Mixed By Giorgio Brindesi 01 Andruss, Giorgio Brindesi & Alejandro Franco - Underground (Oscar Cornell Remix) - Bunny Tiger Dubs 02 Danny Kolk - Hear the Claps (Original Mix) - BLOWUP Music 03 Dateless - They Like to Funk (Original Mix) - SNOE 04 Piem - Flip The Tempo (Extended Mix) - Armada Subjekt 05 Prok & Fitch - Nodding Dog (Original Mix) - Kaluki Music 06 Sharam Jey, Zac, Jean Bacarreza - Rock Da Bit (Original Mix) - Bunny Tiger Dubs 07 Andruss, Giorgio Brindesi & Alejandro Franco - Underground (Climbers Remix) - Bunny Tiger Dubs 08 Yano - Disco Disco (Original Mix) – Islou Records 09 Sharam Jey, Jean Bacarreza - Work It (Original Mix) - Bunny Tiger Dubs 10 Dateless - This Is The Underground (Original Mix) – CR2 Records 11 Andruss & Jean Bacarreza - Do it Like (Original Mix) – Bunny Tiger 12 Jean Bacarreza, LouLou Players - Get Up (Original Mix) – Bunny Tiger 13 Andruss, Giorgio Brindesi & Alejandro Franco - Underground (Original Mix) Bunny Tiger Dubs 14 DirrtyDishes - Salvation (Original Mix) – Heinz Music 15 Jorge Montia, Coqui Selection - Changes (Original Mix) – SNOE Get connected: www.facebook.com/BunnyTigerMusic/ www.facebook.com/GiorgioBrindesiOfficial/?ref=hl @bunnytiger @giorgiobrindesi
Bunny Tiger Team Podcast #015 Mixed By Liva K 1. Liva K - Mariah 2. Sharam Jey & Dakar - Holiday 3. Ayo - Down on my knees (Liva K , Bok Remix) 4. Oliver Jay - Jungle Fire 5. Bruno Furlan - Rock 6. Liva K & Jayworx & Arish - Bling 7. Daniel Fernandes - All Night 8. Sharam Jey & Dakar - Dont Stop, No Sleep 9. Dateless - Universal 10. Oliver Jay - Karmon 11. Oxia - Domino (Frankey & Sandrino Remix) ► iTunes: itunes.apple.com/de/album/sharam-…nds/id1223403659 ► Spotify: open.spotify.com/album/7kUAFZtZdXkdiXHS95bBo7 ► Beatport: beatport.com/release/sharam-jey…nd-friends/1991290 ► Traxsource: www.traxsource.com/title/785618/sh…jey-and-friends Follow us on: www.facebook.com/BunnyTigerMusic/ www.facebook.com/livathinoskwnstantinos @bunnytiger @liva-k
Bunny Tiger Team Podcast #014 Mixed By SION 1. SION - TV [Original Mix] 2. Elevator Music - Interrupted [Original Mix] 3. Yass - Blow Up [Original Mix] 4. SION - Reckless [Original Mix] 5. SION - Jelly [Original Mix] 6. Lux Groove, Ghostea - Shake It [Original Mix] 7. SION - Where U From [Original Mix] 8. London Bridge ft Wally B - Crazy Individuals [Original Mix] 9. Jesse Rose - Love The Feeling ft. Ed Weathers [Original Mix] 10. Kreature - Access [Original Mix] 11. Clyde P - Gotha [Original Mix] 12. SION - Lose It [Original Mix] ► iTunes: itunes.apple.com/de/album/reckless-ep/id1209126142 ► Spotify: open.spotify.com/album/4UKFEtwXke358N3aDAVesj ► Beatport: www.beatport.com/release/reckless-ep/1963223 ► Traxsource: www.traxsource.com/title/766032/reckless-ep Get connected: www.facebook.com/BunnyTigerMusic/ www.facebook.com/asmadebySION/?fref=ts @bunnytiger @i_am_sion
Bunny Tiger Team Podcast #013 Mixed By Andruss TRACKLIST 1.- Andruss, Jean Bacarreza - Wanna Hm Hm 2.- Sydney Blu, Josh Wetherington, SoundSex - Jackrabbit 3.- Andruss, Jean Bacarreza - Do It Like 4.- Prok & Fitch - Pitch Roll 5.- Andruss, Dmitri Saidi - Let's Work 6.- Anton Jay, Discoplace - The Inside 7.- Romanthony - Too Long (Kevin Mckay Landmark Remix) 8.- Basti Grub, Natch! & Dothen - Oh Baby Dance 9.- Moonbootica - F.Y.S 10.- Andruss, Giorgio Brindesi, Alejandro Franco - Darkness 11.- Andruss - Sonar 12.- Jean Bacarreza, Ross - Closer 13.- Andruss, Giorgio Brindesi, Alejandro Franco - Play This Game 14.- Andruss & Jean Bacarreza - Voices Andruss, Giorgio Brindesi, Alejandro Franco - Play This Game EP Bunny Tiger Dubs BTD032 ► iTunes: itunes.apple.com/de/album/play-th…gle/id1190323945 ► Spotify: open.spotify.com/album/5lQ78MSMKzOF3XnE32kXFJ ► Beatport: www.beatport.com/release/play-this-game-ep/1925005 ► Traxsource: www.traxsource.com/title/738362/play-this-game-ep ► Youtube: www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLy…YcXAwxZ76U0A17lhe Get connected: www.facebook.com/BunnyTigerMusic/ www.facebook.com/AndrussOfficial @bunnytiger @andruss
Bunny Tiger Team Podcast #012 Mixed By Mason TRACKLIST 01. Headman - Roh feat. Stephen Dewaele 02. Phil Fuldner - Bus Stop 03. Mason - Everybody 04. Mason - This Ain’t No Disco 05. Cassius feat. Pharrell Williams & Cat Power - Go Up (Butch remix) 06. Malikk - Android 07. Mason - Body Rock 08. Mason - To The Rhythm 09. Jesse Rose - The Beast 10. Mason - It Was About Chicago 11. Mason - Dehli Express 12. Victor Lou & Illusionize - Everybody 13. Mason - Rhino Buy: beatport btprt.dj/2fxtDVy Spotify: spoti.fi/2f9t8nO iTunes: apple.co/2eFdhMS Get connected: www.facebook.com/pages/BUNNY-TIGER/256220111087629 www.facebook.com/musicofmason @bunnytiger @musicofmason
Bunny Tiger Team Podcast # Mixed By Vanilla Ace 01 Vanilla Ace - Disco Napping 02 Vanilla Ace & Earstrip & Torha - Don't Stop 03 Vanilla Ace - Down with it 04 Vanilla Ace - Night Steppin 05 Vanilla Ace & Vision Factory - Rely On 06 Vanilla Ace & Sharam Jey - Shut Em Down 07 Vanilla Ace & Sharam Jey - Down & Dirty 08 Destruct - Techno (Chemical Surf & Sharam Jey remix) 09 Tauchtalk - Bad Habits 10 Vanilla Ace & Sharam Jey - Kinky Mind 11 Vanilla Ace & Sharam Jey - Music Flow 12 Vanilla Ace & Sharam Jey - A Funk Poseur Get connected: www.facebook.com/pages/BUNNY-TIGER/256220111087629 www.facebook.com/vanillaace1 @bunnytiger @vanillaace
Bunny Tiger Team Podcast # Mixed By Moses Mehdi Tracklist: 01. Jamie Jones - Land Of The Giants feat. Hero Twins // Emerald City Music 02. Moses Mehdi - Kairo // Bunny Tiger Dubs 03. James Ruskin & DVS1 - Page 1 // Blueprint 04. Yotto - Aviate // Anjunadeep 05. Moses Mehdi - Xerxes // Bunny Tiger Dubs 06. Moses Mehdi - Godonien // Bunny Tiger Dubs 07. Floorplan - The Heavens And The Earth // M-Plant 08. Moses Mehdi - OKAY! // Bunny Tiger Dubs 09. Flo.Von - Of Course (Beatkind Remix) // Bunny Tiger Dubs 10. Patrice Baumel - Surge // Kompakt 11. Hundreds - What Remains (Oliver Schories Remix) // Embassy Of Music 12. Circle of Life - Planet Earth // Sprout 13. Marc Vision - Jungle (Moses Mehdi Remix) // Pour La Vie Get connected: www.facebook.com/pages/BUNNY-TIGER/256220111087629 www.facebook.com/MosesMehdi @moses-mehdi @bunnytiger
Bunny Tiger Team Podcast #009 Mixed By Moonbootica Tracklist: 01. Tapesh & Chemical Surf - Underground 02. Low’99 & Ray Foxx – The Lick 03. One Bit – Keep You 04. Shakecraft & Kameron - Sweat 05. Motez – Down Like This 06. Metroplane – Mr. E 07. Moonbootica - No Geez 08. Moonbootica - Prankster 09. Beatangers – My Game 10. Moonbootica – Pimp Shit 11. Moonbootica – Above Your Trouble 12. Shiba San – Get Drunk 13. Jesse Perez - Thot Get connected: www.facebook.com/pages/BUNNY-TIGER/256220111087629 www.facebook.com/Moonbootica @bunnytiger @moonbootica
Bunny Tiger Team Podcast #008 Mixed By Volac Listen : Get connected: facebook.com/pages/BUNNY-TIGER/256220111087629 www.facebook.com/volacofficial/ @bunnytiger @volac
Bunny Tiger Team Podcast #007 Mixed by Boogie Vice Listen :https://www.beatport.com/bunnytiger/mixes/tgtmvnjlcqw9/bunny-tiger-team-podcast-007-mixed-by-boogie-vice Get connected: www.facebook.com/pages/BUNNY-TIGER/256220111087629 www.facebook.com/boogievice @bunnytiger @boogievice
Bunny Tiger Team Podcast #006 Mixed by Phonique Listen :https://www.beatport.com/bunnytiger/mixes/us4f6yxexh2w/bunny-tiger-team-podcast-006-mixed-by-phonique Get connected: https://www.facebook.com/pages/BUNNY-TIGER/256220111087629 https://www.facebook.com/Phonique-229281067088163/?fref=ts @bunnytiger https://soundcloud.com/phonique
Bunny Tiger Team Podcast #005 Mixed by Teenage Mutants Buy : https://pro.beatport.com/track/muerte-original-mix/7378229 Listen : www.beatport.com/bunnytigerdubs/t…rte-original-mix Listen :https://www.beatport.com/bunnytiger/mixes/srj8kvhz7aaf/bunny-tiger-team-podcast-005-mixed-by-teenage-mutants Get connected: www.facebook.com/pages/BUNNY-TIGER/256220111087629 www.facebook.com/teenagemutants @bunnytiger @teenage-mutants
Bunny Tiger Team Podcast #004 Mixed by FREY Listen :https://www.beatport.com/bunnytiger/mixes/wkgquppcht7y/bunny-tiger-team-podcast-004-mixed-by-frey 01. Sharam Jey & LouLou Players - Hum Hum (FREY Remix) 02. LouLou Players - Thinking About (FREY's Gym Remix) 03. FREY - Harlem On The Rise (Original Mix) 04. Sharam Jey, Sammy W & Alex E - SWAG (FREY Remix) 05. FREY - Too Late (Original Mix) 06. FREY - Sniffin' (Original Mix) 07. FREY - Ridin' Higher (Original Mix) 08. Volkoder - Different Beat (Original Mix) 09. Nathan Fake - Nathan Fake - The Sky Was Pink (Holden Remix) 10. FREY - Touch The Sky (Original Mix) 11. FREY & Waxy - Drop You Off (Original Mix) 12. Jerome Robins & Chris Vench - Gin & Juice (FREY Remix) 13. FREY - Hell Yeah (Original Mix) Buy : https://pro.beatport.com/release/hell-yeah-touch-the-sky/1641189 Follow us on: www.facebook.com/pages/BUNNY-TIGER/256220111087629 www.facebook.com/freymusicofficial @bunnytiger @freymusicofficial
Bunny Tiger Podcast Team Series 003 Mixed by Betoko 1 Lorie - Only 2 Till Von Sein - The Manifest feat. Mr. V (Pablo Fierro Remix) 3 Patrick Chardronnet - Wobbler 4 Tony Barbato - Fabulous 5 Betoko - Just Live (Teenage Mutants Remix) 6 Aphrohead - Let's PRANCE 7 Dimitri Nakov & B-Vision - Vapor Trails (Conecte Remix) 8 Betoko - Dirt 9 Betoko - Just Live 10 Betoko - Blisters (Third Son Remix) 11 Betoko - Wacidus Get connected: https://facebook.com/pages/BUNNY-TIGER/256220111087629 https://soundcloud.com/bunnytiger https://betoko.com https://facebook.com/betokoofficial https://soundcloud.com/betoko https://twitter.com/Betoko https://instagram.com/betokouk https://redbusrecordingstudios.com
Bunny Tiger Podcast Team Series 002 Mixed by Bruno Be 01. Dustin Mccoi - What You Want (Dayne S Remix) 02. Mason - Nite Rite Five (Original Mix) 03. Fractal System & Rocksted - We Are One (Original Mix) 04. Saccao & Malikk - Keep (Original Mix) 05. Bruno Be - Breath Me (Original Mix) 06. Bruno Be, Jean Bacarreza, Base On - Brown Bottle (Original Mix) 07. Sharam Jey & Tom Breu - Holy Ghost! (Bruno Be & Re Dupre Remix) 08. Bruno Be & Mikandiskym - In The Club (Sharam Jey Edit) 09. The Cool Cats - Dont Kill My Vibe (Bruno Be & Jean Bacarreza Remix) 10. Re Dupre - Love 4 Me (Bruno Be Remix) 11. Bruno Be & Dado Prisco - Crazy Love Get connected: www.facebook.com/pages/BUNNY-TIGER/256220111087629 www.facebook.com/djbrunobe www.facebook.com/dj.sharamjey www.facebook.com/JeanBacarreza www.facebook.com/dadoprisco https://www.facebook.com/Mikadiskym @bunnytiger @brunobe @sharamjey @jeanbacarreza @dadoprisco https://soundcloud.com/mikadiskym
In this episode: A chat with Jeff Moss, Tiger Team storytime, Watch your mouth, Your voicemails, Parlez-vous francais?, Sincere apologies for video recommendations, Music provided by DJ Bloodpreshah
In this episode: A chat with Jeff Moss, Tiger Team storytime, Watch your mouth, Your voicemails, Parlez-vous francais?, Sincere apologies for video recommendations, Music provided by DJ Bloodpreshah
Bunny Tiger Podcast Team Series 001 Mixed by Daniel Fernandes 01 Daniel Fernandes - Running Wild (Original Mix) - Gun Powder 02 Sharam Jey Sammy W Alex E - SWAG! (Daniel Fernandes Remix) - Bunny Tiger 03 Daniel Fernandes - That's What I Said (Original Mix) - Bunny Tiger 04 Daniel Fernandes - Smokin' (Original Mix) - Gun Powder 05 LouLouPlayers - Thinking About - (Daniel Fernandes Remix) - LouLou Records 06 Daniel Fernandes - Holla At You (Original Mix)- Laser Trap Music 07 Truffle - Butter (Aston Shuffle Remix) 08 Shiro Black - I Say (Original Mix) - Laser Trap Music 09 Daniel Fernandes & LouLou Players - Don't Just Stand There (Original Mix) 10 Sharam Jey & Daniel Fernandes - Give A F*** (Original Mix) - Bunny Tiger Also check out his latest Bunny Tiger release..: https://soundcloud.com/bunnytiger/daniel-fernandes-thats-what-i-said-ep ...and get connected: www.facebook.com/pages/BUNNY-TIGER/256220111087629 https://www.facebook.com/DanielFernandesOfficial1/?fref=ts @bunnytiger @danielfernandesofficial
Intro: Alexander Pushnoy - Du Taxi Конферанс, реверанс, саундчек Приветствие, статистика, благодарность слушателям Тоска по поре отпусков Facepalm of the month: mysql.com pwnd - http://goo.gl/gsYzi Linux still down, побит рекрд SONY PSN, BSG forever Первая "практическая" атака на SSLv3/TLSv1 - http://goo.gl/8CwUR Аналогии с безопасностью WiFi, советы по защите открытых точек доступа Возвращаясь к SSL: шифруйте данные форм! Exotic Liability, Tiger Team, breakin_in, аудио цензура и поучительня история о безопасности мототранспорта - http://goo.gl/w9ZSn Параллели между разными направлениями в безопасности, смена поколений как путь эволюции безопасности - http://goo.gl/5lqP3, подростки и приватность Типичные ошибки безопасности и приватности online и советы по их исправлению: неправильная маршрутизация сообщений и использование незащищенных соединений - http://goo.gl/dlDE7 Пересмотрите права доступа к вашим сетевым аккаунтам -- прямо сейчас: facebook http://goo.gl/stfl9 - Twitter http://goo.gl/SZTPv - LinkedIn http://goo.gl/sbQ00 - Google http://goo.gl/hkVQq - Dropbox http://goo.gl/U1rrI Использование шифрования и других методов контроля доступа к важным данным: Truecrypt http://www.truecrypt.org - WhisperCore for Android http://goo.gl/GXj5a Приватность в Интернете и вообще Массовый мобильный фрод в Москве и почему это не "кибер"-взлом - http://goo.gl/syCtl Новыя пачка Троянов для Андроида, рост влияния Корпорации добра, тенденции рынка труда разработки ПО, безопасность мобильных устройств и вообще - http://goo.gl/bH4kG Сплетни на околоэйчарные темы Неавторизированная смена пароля пользователя в MacOS Lion - http://goo.gl/tg8yw XSS в Skype под iOS - http://goo.gl/2exfv Надвигающиеся угрозы ИБ: агрегация данных, желание правительств контроллировать неконтроллируемое, гонка кибер-вооружений - http://goo.gl/Dk7fo Финальные замечания, комментарии, жалобы и благодарности Outro: Die Antwoord - I Dont Need You Bonus Track: Интерконтинентальный прямой эфир с 12-часовой амплитудой (Внимание! Очень сильный фоновый шум!)