POPULARITY
Whether you've tried to garden before, or you're brand new to the idea - whether you have a tiny backyard or none at all - here's why you should start a garden. Explore the possibilities with Kathi Rodgers, in this first episode of HOMEGROWN: Your Backyard Garden Podcast.Transcript:Why you should plant a garden - How to start a garden for beginnersKeep in touch!Oak Hill Homestead, the blogFacebookInstagramPinterest
Welcome to (Re)Design Podcast. My name is Annegret Bönemann, thanks for tuning in to our first episode!In June this year, we launched the (Re)Design community, which connects researchers, designers, developers, strategists, marketers, managers and many more people working in the digital industry. We all share the one goal of creating a better future. One that is more resilient, more sustainable and more inclusive.Since June, several members of the community have asked us why companies should invest in Responsible Design. Or in other words: What's the business case of Responsible Design?And since that question appeared so pressing, and since this is our first podcast, we decided to keep it simple but also to make it a special episode in which we give our own answers to this question.Today on the show we have Cecilia Scolaro, who is my colleague and the Head of Responsible Design at foryouandyourcustomers.Cecilia sees that companies and organisations can play an important role in shaping a better future by providing products and services that bring real change. Cecilia will discuss with us why it is relevant for businesses to shift their perspective, away from growth- and short-term thinking.Enjoy listening!---Link to our resources: https://www.notion.so/02-Re-Design-why-investing-in-Responsible-Design-2bd5cfbf3fd34fdb93b67db98a44b7f0Link to the podcast with captions: https://youtu.be/-XK-DorWaI0Link to the transcript: https://www.notion.so/responsibledesign/Transcript-Why-investing-in-Responsible-Design-c3eeca2ce4604370844f18b51dda7256
This talk was given in Highland, Utah on March 6, 2021 to a group of young adults Transcript Why don’t we go ahead and start? And we’ll just spend the first few minutes doing a review. I’ve written up on the board some of the same kinds of information that was up there last time. […] The post Understanding Your Soul, Part 2 appeared first on Restoration Archives Blog.
Ephesians 5:25-26 - Husbands, love your wives, just as Christ also loved the church and gave Himself for her, that He might sanctify and cleanse her with the washing of water by the word, Transcript: Why did Christ give himself for the church? In Ephesians chapter five, we read, in verse 26, the first reason, That he might sanctify and cleanse her with washing of water by the word. But, we also read the second reason that he might present her to himself a glorious church. Does that describe your church? Does that describe the group of people that you belong to? A glorious church presented to Christ and submissive to him. For more from the Collierville Church of Christ, visit www.colliervillecoc.org.
Russell is on vacation this week, so it seems appropriate to replay this episode about entrepreneurs and vacations! Enjoy! ---Transcript--- Why are vacations so hard for Entrepreneurs like us? Do you ever have any of your friends or family members, or people you care about? Maybe a wife or a spouse tell you something like, this, “You need a break. You need to stop or else you’re going to get burned out.” How many times do we have people who we love and we care about tell us things like that? They think that a break is what we need to be happy, to have a balanced life. What they don’t understand is that us entrepreneurs actually get stressed out by vacations. Why? Well right now I’m in Kauai, Hawaii with my beautiful wife celebrating our 15 year anniversary. And this beach house right here, we spent over 2500 a night to stay here. We’ve flown in helicopters, we’ve gone on boat tours, we’ve floated on irrigation canals, we’ve had an amazing vacation, but I’m actually more stressed out now than I was at home running my entire company. Why? Because entrepreneurs don’t need vacations, but the people around us that we love, they do. What our loved ones don’t understand is that us entrepreneurs, we don’t get happy and sad like normal people. We only feel momentum. We’re either moving forward or we’re moving backwards. When we’re moving forward we feel happy. When we’re not, we feel sad and we feel upset and we feel stressed. It’s kind of like when the coach pulls you out of the big game and sets you on the bench to catch your breath. Yet, as you’re watching the game from the sidelines and you’re seeing your teammates, and you’re seeing your players all move towards the goal line, you want to do everything in your power to get back into the game. Being in the game is why you do what you do. What they don’t understand is that what we do, it is our hobby, it is our vacation. And when we’re moving forward, that’s all the fuel that we need. When we have to stop for vacation or for sleep, so does our momentum. So if you’re watching this and you care about entrepreneurs, don’t worry about us, we’re not going to burn out. We don’t need a break, we just need to keep moving forward. So if our mind is wandering when we’re on vacation, or it seems like we’re struggling, it’s not because we don’t love you. We do, in fact, that’s the reason why we’re on this vacation, it’s because we do love you. We’re just trying to figure out how to keep moving forward without ruining the vacation for others around us. And for my entrepreneurs who are watching this, first is tag and share this video with those who are around you, who love you, so they’ll understand you better, and they’ll stop trying to get you to relax. And second the secret to a happy vacation for you and for the people you love is to figure out a way to keep the momentum happening even while you’re on vacation. For me it’s reading a book or listening to an audio course or something I can learn that doesn’t interrupt the vacation for others. For them, it seems like I’m relaxing, so the people that I love don’t stress out and think I’m going to burn out. But inside my mind I can continue to plot and scheme and figure out how to keep things moving forward. You’re an entrepreneur and this game we play, it isn’t a job it’s your life. And that’s okay.
The Greek islands were geographically predisposed to democracy. The ritualised, antagonistic debates of parliaments and law courts were then generalised to all philosophical domains, creating a unique intellectual climate that put a premium on adversarialism and pure reason. This style of thought proved ideal for mathematics. Transcript Why the Greeks, of all people? Why did … Continue reading Why the Greeks?
T7 Chicken was where it all began with Nick's journey into development. Nick had no development experience. Still, he wasn't satisfied with the websites and apps available for Tekken framerate data, so he took it upon himself to learn Android development to create his mobile app. Nick had the support of the Tekken community and received programming help from people online. Projects like these are so crucial for rapidly growing as a developer, and you won't get the same experience at work. It's making something you need for your community. It's also a place where you are free to experiment with new technologies. Most of us wouldn't be where we are today in our careers without the help of the online programming community. Nick gives back through his work as a mentor at the Resilient Coders bootcamp. Resilient Coders is different from most bootcamps. They pay their students to learn to code! They are a non-profit and rely on donations from generous individuals and companies to operate. Paying their students allows them to be truly inclusive by providing an opportunity for people who don't have the privilege of being able to survive without some form of income. Transcript"Why do you do it? With Nick DeJesus" TranscriptResourcesResilient CodersT7 Chicken TwitteriOS: T7 ChickenAndroid: T7 ChickenApprenticeship Patterns: Guidance for the Aspiring Software CraftsmanNick DeJesusTwitterWebsiteJoel HooksTwitterWebsite
At Christmas we celebrate the birth of Jesus. Why? Why is Jesus' birthday so important? Today's Pastor: Tim Hartwig from Peace Lutheran Church in North Mankato. Transcript: Why was Jesus born? Was it to teach us about God? Was it to show us how to love one another? Was it so that we could just learn to get along? In a vision, Joseph was told why Jesus was born. He had been thinking of divorcing his fiancee Mary because he had learned she was pregnant with Jesus. God sent an angel to Joseph in a vision. And this is what the angel said to him. “Joseph, son of David, do not be afraid to take Mary home as your wife, because the child conceived in her is from the Holy Spirit. She will give birth to a son, and you are to give him the name Jesus, because He will save his people from this sins.” (Matthew 1:20-21) So why was Jesus born? He was born to save his people from their sins. In fact he was given the name Jesus to indicate that very thing. Jesus means ‘the Lord saves.' Now it was a common name at that time, but Jesus was the only one to wear it in truth. Because he was born to bear people's sins and to suffer and die in payment for them. He was born to be the Savior. So when it says he will save his people from their sins, God wants you to know that that includes you. Jesus was born to save you. God wants you to celebrate Christmas. Not because you get lots of gifts from others, but because God has given you the great gift of Jesus. Someone to take away your sins so that you can be forgiven, and one day be with God in heaven. May you then receive the true peace that Christmas gives. Not just between family and friends and neighbors, but between man and God. Jesus was born. He is your savior. You are forgiven, amen. ---- If you have a moment, could you fill out our end of year survey and tell us how we're doing? https://PeaceDevotions.com/2019-feedback/ If you find benefit from these devotions we'd encourage you to support our ministry. You can donate by visiting: https://els.org/donate Connect with us on social media: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PeaceDevotions/ Website: https://peacedevotions.com/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC2pFo5lJV46gKmztGwnT3vA Twitter: https://twitter.com/peacedevotions Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/peace_devotions/ Email List: https://peacedevotions.com/email --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/peace-devotions/support
In today’s episode Denver answers the questions, “Who are the remnant groups?” and “What are the prophecies concerning them in our dispensation?” Transcript: Why does the remnant, which will build Zion, tear in pieces and trample underfoot the Gentiles? Why do they do that? Start thinking about the image of Babylon that is going to … Continue reading 16: The Remnant → The post 16: The Remnant appeared first on Denver Snuffer.
Transcript -- Why does the world trade in US dollars?
Transcript -- Why did we start making money out of metal?
Transcript -- Why can’t we get a good weather forecast? Meteorologist Edward Lorenz tried to predict the weather but in the end all he discovered were chaotic systems, leading him to declare long term weather forecasting is utterly impossible.
Design Essentials: small objects of desire - for iPod/iPhone
Transcript -- Why re-invent the bottle? Theo Zamenopoulos and the team explore the advantages and disadvantages of a new design for an old object.
Transcript -- Why is practitioner research important?
Transcript -- Why do mergers and acquisitions take place?
Transcript -- Why do mergers and acquisitions go ahead?
Transcript -- Why do mergers and acquisitions go ahead?
Transcript -- Why do mergers and acquisitions take place?
Transcript -- Why is an environmental audit important?
Transcript -- Why is an environmental audit important?
Transcript -- Why do so many people picture God as a man? JJ Bachofen suggested there was once a time when it was the Goddess, not God that people turned to for religious guidance.
Transcript -- Why do so many people picture God as a man? JJ Bachofen suggested there was once a time when it was the Goddess, not God that people turned to for religious guidance.
Transcript: Why do people so strongly believe in aliens despite no evidence for their existence? When Orson Wells’ radio War of the Worlds episode was broadcast, it caused widespread panic on the east coast because people were ready to believe that Martians could attack us. When Star Wars and Star Trek and the X-Files moved from the status of simple movies or TV shows to widespread cultural phenomena, it’s because the idea of aliens resonates with something deep in our psyche. The idea of aliens, intelligent aliens, embodies our deepest hopes, fears, and longings. In the pessimistic view, such as movies like Alien and Independence Day, they could destroy us. In the optimistic view, represented by the movie Contact, they could inform and rescue us. Many movies and TV shows illustrate a strict biblical or religious metaphor. The best example is Spielberg’s movie E.T. where E.T. follows a direct analog of the Christ story. This thing, this phenomenon of the aliens embodying our hopes and fears and longings raises a different question than, are we alone? Perhaps the real question is why are we so lonely?
Transcript: Why is the universe accelerating, and how does this relate to the more standard cosmological idea that since the big bang the expansion rate has been decelerating due to the action of gravity on all the matter of universe? For the answer to this we have to go back to Einstein in the 1920s. Einstein solved the equations of General Relativity and realized that the solutions naturally indicated expansion or contraction. When told that the universe was static, Einstein added a term to the solution of his equations called the cosmological constant to suppress the natural expansion. Thus the cosmological constant represents something that acts opposite to gravity. Gravity is an attractive force; the cosmological constant represents something that is repulsive. In the standard model of the universe with a cosmological constant the big bang is followed by a period of deceleration due to all the matter in the universe. And then at some epoch several billion years ago the deceleration changes into an acceleration, and the rate of expansion increases. We are currently witnessing a phase of acceleration in the universe and its evidence that the term in gravity is balanced by another term, the cosmological constant.
Transcript: Why has the SETI strategy focused so heavily on radio waves for communication? There are simple reasons to do with fundamental physics. Radio photons are preferred over optical photons because they have low energy and so are less costly to produce in energetic terms, and they travel unimpeded through space, being unaffected by dust and gas. Also, there are regions of the electromagnetic spectrum where there are minimum amount of cosmic noise from other energy sources, and the radio part of the spectrum from one to a hundred gigahertz is just such a range. Also the sensitivity of our technology to radio detection is extraordinary. The Pioneer 10 satellite, currently at a distance of more than six billion miles from the Earth was detected by the Arecibo Radio Telescope when it was five billion miles from the Earth, yet it had the equivalent energy in its transmitter of a one Watt radio light bulb. The Arecibo dish itself, a thousand feet across, is the world’s largest radio telescope. In an interesting thought experiment, the Arecibo radio dish can not only listen but can send pulsed microwaves. If Arecibo-type radio technology existed anywhere else in the Milky Way galaxy, we could detect it if it were transmitting pulsed signals. Presumably the converse is true, and they could detect us. Thus radio waves, in principle, allow communication across the entire Milky Way galaxy.
Transcript: Why has the SETI strategy focused so heavily on radio waves for communication? There are simple reasons to do with fundamental physics. Radio photons are preferred over optical photons because they have low energy and so are less costly to produce in energetic terms, and they travel unimpeded through space, being unaffected by dust and gas. Also, there are regions of the electromagnetic spectrum where there are minimum amount of cosmic noise from other energy sources, and the radio part of the spectrum from one to a hundred gigahertz is just such a range. Also the sensitivity of our technology to radio detection is extraordinary. The Pioneer 10 satellite, currently at a distance of more than six billion miles from the Earth was detected by the Arecibo Radio Telescope when it was five billion miles from the Earth, yet it had the equivalent energy in its transmitter of a one Watt radio light bulb. The Arecibo dish itself, a thousand feet across, is the world’s largest radio telescope. In an interesting thought experiment, the Arecibo radio dish can not only listen but can send pulsed microwaves. If Arecibo-type radio technology existed anywhere else in the Milky Way galaxy, we could detect it if it were transmitting pulsed signals. Presumably the converse is true, and they could detect us. Thus radio waves, in principle, allow communication across the entire Milky Way galaxy.
Transcript: Why does the galaxy have spiral arms? Some analogies just don’t work. A garden sprinkler sends out spiral patterns of water, but in this case the water is moving radially rather than the circular orbits within the Milky Way. If you stir cream into your coffee it can give the illusion of a spiral pattern, but in the case of the Milky Way stars have made fifty orbits in the history of the Milky Way and so the spiral pattern would be hopelessly scrambled after that many windings. The current idea for the spiral pattern is the idea of density waves, a pattern of enhanced activity traced by young stars but not the movement of the young stars themselves. Increased general density leads to the tracers of star formation activity, and the spiral arms that result actually move more slowly than the constituent stars. The best analogy is a traffic pileup that might occur on a freeway behind a slowly moving vehicle, say, painting the road stripe. Cars approach at normal speed, they bunch up near the obstruction, and then they space out again as they reach their normal speed. The result is a moving traffic jam where a high density of cars is created, but the set of cars involved in the high density concentration is constantly changing.
Transcript -- Why has Shakespeare become such a cultural hero?
Transcript -- Why has Shakespeare become such a cultural hero?
Transcript -- Why are people so sceptical about the truth of climate change science? Dr Joe Smith, Senior Lecturer in Environment addresses this issue in a letter to a sceptical friend.
Transcript -- Why the negotiation for China's accession to the WTO has taken so long.
Transcript -- Why the negotiation for China's accession to the WTO has taken so long.
Transcript -- Why the rise in gated communities, and are they a valid answer to crime reduction?
Transcript -- Why the rise in gated communities, and are they a valid answer to crime reduction?
Transcript -- Why peatbogs are crucial carbon containers, and how atmospheric methane is measured
Transcript -- Why peatbogs are crucial carbon containers, and how atmospheric methane is measured
Transcript -- Why sustainable energy is such an important issue all around Europe
Transcript -- Why sustainable energy is such an important issue all around Europe
Transcript -- Why, when languages change, do they often do so in rapid bursts.
Transcript -- Why actors in ancient Greece wore masks and were highly skilled.
Transcript -- Why actors in ancient Greece wore masks and were highly skilled.
Transcript -- Why is new land being created so far away from the spreading ridge?
Transcript -- Why is new land being created so far away from the spreading ridge?
International Development: microcredit and migration - for iPod/iPhone
Transcript -- Why the negotiation for China's accession to the WTO has taken so long.
International Development: microcredit and migration - for iPad/Mac/PC
Transcript -- Why the negotiation for China's accession to the WTO has taken so long.
Transcript -- Why does a rainbow have so many colours? Find out how light reflect off raindrops.
Transcript -- Why elaborate mathematical modelling is needed to predict ice break-up in Antarctica.
Transcript -- Why elaborate mathematical modelling is needed to predict ice break-up in Antarctica.
Transcript -- Why it's safer to incorporate more eyebars than are actually needed, to bear the weight of the bridge.
Transcript -- Why it's safer to incorporate more eyebars than are actually needed, to bear the weight of the bridge.
Transcript -- Why 50,000 goats had to be culled due to their effect on the tortoise population
Transcript -- Why organisations like Plus are so important. Taking part at Plus, from the perspective Angus, a young boy with Ashberger's Syndrome.
Transcript -- Why organisations like Plus are so important. Taking part at Plus, from the perspective Angus, a young boy with Ashberger's Syndrome.
Transcript -- Why this approach of Identity formation been so influential in cultural studies.
Transcript -- Why the big estates symbolised the old regime, and so were burned, stripped and redistributed.
Transcript -- Why do cells die? Can we stop them, and should we?
Transcript -- Why did humans start farming?
Transcript -- Why do cells die? Can we stop them, and should we?
Transcript -- Why the willingness to embrace Australian culture brings benefits.
Transcript -- Why the willingness to embrace Australian culture brings benefits.
Transcript -- Why is secular Egypt returning to Islam?
Transcript -- Why is secular Egypt returning to Islam?
Transcript -- Why the death toll at the border is large.
Transcript -- Why the death toll at the border is large.