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Apple appears to be renumbering all of its OSes, it appears to be radically changing the Mac, iPad, and iPhone, and Nothing's CEO says Apple has lost all creativity, on the AppleInsider Podcast.Contact your hosts:@WGallagher on TwitterWilliam's 58keys on YouTubeWilliam Gallagher on emailWes on BlueskyWes Hilliard on emailSponsored by:Fast Growing Trees: Visit fast-growing-trees.com/appleinsider to get an additional 15% off plants and trees, even the many already discounted to half priceLinks from the Show:Apple rumored to release iOS 26 at WWDC, instead of iOS 19Apple prepares iOS 19, macOS 16 'Solarium' UI overhaul for WWDCSwitching from iPhone to Android to get easier in iOS 19 with eSIM transferNothing CEO takes shots at Apple, ludicrously says that apps are going awayA future iPhone may get a 200MP camera — eventuallyDedicated Apple Games app could be revealed during WWDC 2025Apple acquires tiny two-person 'Sneaky Sasquatch' developer RAC7T-Mobile secretly records iPhone screens and claims it's being helpfulTrump demands 25% tariff on any iPhone not made in the USIt's still cheaper to import iPhones with 25% tariffs, than assemble in the USTrump's 25% smartphone tariff starts just in time for the iPhone 17California Attorney General threatens lawsuit over potential 25% iPhone tariffTrump may have added 25% iPhone tariff specifically to punish Tim CookiPhone buyers worldwide may see higher prices because of Trump's tariffsTrump 'Liberation Day' tariffs blocked by U.S. trade courtTim Cook tried to kill Texas App Store age verification bill by calling the governorTexas passes App Store age verification law, despite Tim Cook's concernsApple Invites now lets you share content & sites with a new Link tileSupport the show:Support the show on Patreon or Apple Podcasts to get ad-free episodes every week, access to our private Discord channel, and early release of the show! We would also appreciate a 5-star rating and review in Apple PodcastsMore AppleInsider podcastsTune in to our HomeKit Insider podcast covering the latest news, products, apps and everything HomeKit related. Subscribe in Apple Podcasts, Overcast, or just search for HomeKit Insider wherever you get your podcasts.Subscribe and listen to our AppleInsider Daily podcast for the latest Apple news Monday through Friday. You can find it on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, or anywhere you listen to podcasts.Those interested in sponsoring the show can reach out to us at: advertising@appleinsider.com (00:00) - Intro (01:15) - 26 (10:20) - Solarium (18:26) - Nothing nonsense (22:18) - iPhone 17 (30:57) - Apple Games (39:54) - T-Mobile controversy (42:53) - Controversy Corner (57:41) - Apple invites ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
I Quit Wine - how to stop drinking and have a much better life
In this episode, I'm joined by the lovely Sally German, a coach who shares her inspiring journey of quitting alcohol and how journaling became a powerful part of her recovery and personal growth.Sally's story is incredibly relatable—like so many women, her drinking was woven into her social life, career, and stress management. But after years of questioning her relationship with alcohol, trying to moderate, and experiencing the emotional toll it took, she made the brave decision to quit for good.We also dive deep into one of my favourite tools for sobriety and self-discovery: journaling. If you've ever felt a bit weird writing things down or didn't know where to start, this conversation will give you the nudge you need.✨ What We Talked About:Sally's JourneyFirst drink at 10 or 11—can you believe it?Drinking quickly became the norm in her late teens and twentiesShe tried all the moderation tricks (dry months, training for a marathon) before finally saying goodbye to alcoholIt took around 10 years from her first “maybe I should stop” moment to full sobrietyThe Challenges of QuittingSocietal conditioning and the fear of missing out are realFriends often didn't understand her choice, which made things even tougherSally shares how hard it was to imagine social life or travel without alcohol—but also how freeing it's been since quittingJournaling for Sobriety & GrowthJournaling started as something awkward for Sally… and me too, to be honest!Now it's a daily essential for both of usIt's not just about writing—it's a space for emotional release, pattern spotting, and serious self-awarenessTips for Starting a Journaling PracticeKeep it simple: start with “Right now I feel…” or “Today I'm feeling…”5 minutes is plenty to begin withTry it in the morning with your coffee or at night to wind downPush through the initial discomfort—it gets easier, and the insights are so worth it
A) Three ThingsCanada Doesn't Have an Egg Problem Like the USIt's Bracket TimeBirths Way DownB) How to Pack the Perfect Carry-On Bag (Without Overpacking!)C) AI Bot PIPS Pick of the DayTrade while you sleep and across time zones with Arbitrage Trade Assist. Sign up today at ArbitrageTrade .com. Arbitrage Trade is your trusted source for business, finance, and tech info.#fyp, #news, #TrendingSupport this show http://supporter.acast.com/arbitrage. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Send us a textEmpty nest syndrome is real, and can be very painful to navigate. I've already discussed it with Susie, including ideas for how we can manage our feelings in a positive way to help us move on. https://www.teenagersuntangled.com/empty-nest-how-to-cope-when-your-teen-moves-out-also-manners-what-are-they-and-what-should-we-te/But are we looking at it in the wrong way? Change management specialist, Hanna Bankier, hates the term empty nest because it has such negative connotations. 'How can the nest be empty if I'm still in it?'She encourages us mothers to take a pro-active approach to that next stage of life by planning ahead from as early as when our kids turn tween and teen. In this discussion, Hanna helps us think differently about this life stage, explains the key mistakes we make and which areas need focus, and how to plan for the nest stage of our life in a really positive, life-affirming way.Hanna's top five tips:Start early: Begin preparing for this transition during your child's teenage years by gradually shifting your parenting style from hands-on to mentorship.Create a personal plan: Map out your own identity and interests beyond motherhood. Use Hannah's exercise of drawing a circle with your name in the center and identifying activities that energize you.Build a supportive community: Cultivate female friendships and join groups or activities that interest you. These connections are crucial for emotional support and personal growth.Communicate openly with your child: Have honest conversations about how your relationship will evolve, setting expectations and creating a new dynamic as they become independent adults.Embrace the joy of this new chapter: Recognize that this is not an ending, but a new beginning. Celebrate your success in raising an independent child and look forward to the opportunities ahead for both of you.The key is to view this transition as a positive opportunity for personal growth and rediscovery, rather than a loss.Free tool:https://www.birdylauncher.com/freeofferHanna Bankier:https://www.birdylauncher.com/To check out the experiences JENZA offers, visit: www.jenza.comThe JENZA Travel Group consists of heritage and dedicated Summer Camp USA brand BUNAC, Irish youth work and travel brand, USIT, and youth-led work and travel brand JENZA. That's over 60 years of experience.Founded in 2023, JENZA arranges flexible working holidays and international internships in Canada, Japan, Australia, New Zealand, the USA and UK. Support the showThank you so much for your support. Please hit the follow button if you like the podcast, and share it with anyone who might benefit. You can review us on Apple podcasts by going to the show page, scrolling down to the bottom where you can click on a star then you can leave your message. I don't have medical training so please seek the advice of a specialist if you're not coping. My email is teenagersuntangled@gmail.com My website has a blog, searchable episodes, and ways to contact us:www.teenagersuntangled.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/teenagersuntangled/Facebook: https://m.facebook.com/teenagersuntangled/Susie is available for a free 15 minute consultation, and has a great blog:www.amindful-life.co.uk
Day 16: Trusting Christ's Quiet Growth in Us It is only necessary to give ourselves to that life, all that we are, to pray without ceasing, not by a continual effort to concentrate our minds but by a growing awareness that Christ is being formed in our lives from what we are. We must trust ... Read more The post Day 16: Trusting Christ's Quiet Growth in Us – From the writings of Caryll Houselander – Discerning Hearts Podcasts appeared first on Discerning Hearts Catholic Podcasts.
Here's a whole sermon for ya... I have some shit to say about this virus called hustle culture that's slowly killing usIt shows up in "urgency" and "boss babe" mindset which btw is just bro marketing tactics (I know you are grossed out by) disguised in a pretty dress We have to stop extracting ourselves We have to untangle our worth from productivity, achievement and the pace in which we move in this world It's time for a mf boss babe funeral in business, lay that shiiiit to rest and stop overriding our body's innate wisdom Let me know what lands or stirs for you on IG (@nicolepasveer)
The big news has dropped: Ireland's Andy Quinn has committed to Boston College, where he will play over the next four years. Michael chats with Andy after the historic news for the former Leader Kicking and NFL Academy athlete.We would like to take this opportunity to wish Andy and his family the very best this evening as he begins the next chapter of his extraordinary journey. From Ireland's Kicking King with Leader Kicking to the NFL Academy, to the US - It has been fantastic to chat with Andy over the past three years. This is only the beginning - wishing you the very best, Andy!
Good afternoon, I'm _____ with today's episode of EZ News. Tai-Ex opening The Tai-Ex opened down 95-points this morning from yesterday's close, at 22,870 on turnover of 4-billion N-T. The market gained ground on Monday - rising more than 180-points - as it rebounded from a session earlier after buying was sparked by gains on Wall Street at the end of last week. The bellwether electronics sector led the upturn, but turnover was low amid lingering investor caution ahead of the U-S presidential election. Agricultural Losses from Typhoon Kong-Rey Top NT$1.3 billion The Ministry of Agriculture says losses (損失) due to damage to farms and agricultural facilities caused by Typhoon Kong-Rey currently stand at 1.32-billion N-T. According to the ministry, farms in Yunlin County were the hardest hit - suffering estimated losses of 365-million N-T. That was followed by Hualien County, where farming losses stand at 317-million N-T, Taichung which has reported losses of 296-million N-T, and Taitung County, where agricultural losses stand at 179-million N-T. Broken down by crops, pears grown on 640 hectares of farmland in Taichung suffered losses of at least 233-million N-T - the most of any crop. Frank Wu Takes Office as SEF Chairman Former Control Yuan member Frank Wu has assumed the chairmanship of the Straits Exchange Foundation. Wu was elected to the post by the foundation's board of directors and supervisors. He replaces acting chair Rock Hsu. Hsu had served as the interim head of the foundation following the resignation (辭職) of Cheng Wen-tsan, who stepped down from the post in July after being charged in a corruption case related to his tenure as Taoyuan mayor. Speaking after being elected, Wu said he hopes that the Association for Relations Across the Taiwan Straits will show reciprocal goodwill and work collaboratively to improve bilateral relations. US Election Day Eve in the US It's Election Day eve in the US and both Vice President Kamala Harris and former president Donald Trump are campaigning Monday in Pennsylvania, the battleground state with the largest number of electoral votes at stake (處於危急關頭). Kate Fisher reports from Washington Russia Rocket Carries Iranian Satellites into Orbit A Russian rocket has blasted off successfully to carry a pair of Iranian satellites into orbit. The Soyuz rocket lifted off as scheduled today from a launchpad ((火箭)發射台) in far eastern Russia and put its payload in a designated orbit nine minutes later. It carried two Russian Earth observation satellites and several dozen smaller satellites, including the two Iranian ones. Iran's two satellites were the first launched on behalf of the country's private sector. French Groups on Displacement After Paris Olympics A coalition of over 100 organizations has reported that nearly 20,000 individuals were displaced from informal housing in Paris and surrounding areas during preparations for the 2024 Summer Olympics. The group claims these evictions are part of “social cleansing,” citing evidence including government documents that reference the Olympics as justification. Eviction operations surged by 41% compared to the previous year, with over 4,500 minors affected. French officials, including President Emmanuel Macron, have stated that every displaced person was offered alternative (可供選擇的) housing and emphasized the creation of a social legacy linked to the Games. That was the I.C.R.T. EZ News, I'm _____. ----以下訊息由 SoundOn 動態廣告贊助商提供---- 高雄美術特區2-4房全新落成,《惟美術》輕軌C22站散步即到家,近鄰青海商圈,卡位明星學區,徜徉萬坪綠海。 住近美術館,擁抱優雅日常,盡現驕傲風範!美術東四路X青海路 07-553-3838
Jon (JonDavids.com) tells us about a man named Todd Graves bootstrapped a simple idea of a chicken finger restaurant into an empire. • His restaurant is called Raising Cane's • They've grown to 700 locations across the US • It's a private company — Todd Graves owns 90% Jon tells you exactly how he did it. Enjoy this? Grab JD's book Marketing Superpowers. And follow JD across social: X (Twitter) | Instagram | LinkedIn | TikTok | YouTube
6pm: The History of Yelling “Freebird!” at Concerts // SPS Superintendent gets pay raise approval nearing $400k per year // Quincy, Washington named AirBnB’s top summer destination in the US // It’s clamming time: Five days of coastal razor clamming to begin this week // Surveillance Parents Face the Ultimate Firewall: Freshman Year // Parents Are Walking To Class With Their College Freshmen // Study find helicopter parents are causing depression and anxiety in their kids // How John Cheated His Way Into College… cont.
3pm: The History of Yelling “Freebird!” at Concerts // SPS Superintendent gets pay raise approval nearing $400k per year // Quincy, Washington named AirBnB’s top summer destination in the US // It’s clamming time: Five days of coastal razor clamming to begin this week // Surveillance Parents Face the Ultimate Firewall: Freshman Year // Parents Are Walking To Class With Their College Freshmen // Study find helicopter parents are causing depression and anxiety in their kids // How John Cheated His Way Into College… cont.
[SEGMENT 1-1] Do you trust yourself 1 Do you trust yourself? Do you trust your instincts? As I say to my son, don't trust your instincts, trust your training. Picadilly's[SEGMENT 1-2] Do you trust yourself 2 And what does your training say to you about the state of America? I promise, I'm not leading you to any conclusion. I really want you to ask yourself about the world around you. Where do you want to start? Let's start with immigration? Even if it's not impacting you directly, it's impacting you indirectly. And I bet you are well-verse on the subject. Have you EVER had immigration so front and center with all that illegals are being given? We only need to look at one issue to test your trust. Do you think people think like you? Or are you an outlier? Do you have any idea how many illegals are here because of Biden? Do you believe most Americans blame Trump or Biden for the illegal issue? What do you think most Americans believe about illegals and crime? Think like the other side. We know they will virtue-signal, but what do they really think? [SEGMENT 1-3] Do you trust yourself 3 I trust myself. I have trained for decades to weed through the BS. That's why I jettisoned a fake butt guy who played games with my organization. He is a fraud, and he knew he was. I posted a message on FB without naming names and he called me within a MINUTE of the post. Frauds know when the game is up, and the game is up for Leftists. All over America and in many parts of the world, people are revolting. And the people will ultimately win. Because people want truth. Here is Maxine Waters being confronted for her lies. The audio isn't great but you will get the gist. [X] SB – Springfield residents speak on invasion Schools Little towns is where you went to see a drop in the cost of living Not anymore [SEGMENT 1-4] Do you trust yourself 4 [X] SB – Bill Clinton on illegal immigration I trust myself. Because I'm right. Almost all of the time. I told you about the debate. Have you looked at the polls? Trump is dominating in the electoral college. Well over 300 they are showing. But it's far bigger than that. [X] SB – Black pastor explains Haitian culture (cut) You don't see it. Corrupt media Shipping the around to cities all over the US It sounded crazy but it's true. Voodoo culture. CultureBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-kevin-jackson-show--2896352/support.
A week on from CrowdStrike's outage and not all systems are back online CrowdStrike CEO George Kurtz said in a post yesterday that "over 97%" of systems running its software were back online as of 25 July. Microsoft estimates that 8.5 million PCs had been disabled, so that suggests approximately 250,000 devices remain offline. In the US, Delta Airlines is the most high profile victim with lingering issues well into this week continuing to cause flight disruptions, seemingly related to issues with the systems for crewing planes with pilots and flight attendants. The stock price managed to make a little bit of a recovery on Tuesday, but is continuing to slide, and it's down around 10% since the outage. It's taken them back to December 2023 levels, effectively wiping out their 2024 gains. There are reports today of a new blue screen of death issue - but this time it's not related to CrowdStrike. Microsoft's latest blue screen can't be blamed on CrowdStrike, which is popping up on Windows 11 machines that use BitLocker. BitLocker is Microsoft's hard-drive encryption tool that protects data from unauthorized access or theft. The issue isn't widespread, but those impacted will have to enter a recovery key to get a PC to boot properly. WhatsApp now has 100 million monthly users in the US It's the big metropolitan cities showing the biggest growth - Los Angeles, New York, Miami, and Seattle. They're also the cities that have the most immigrants. WhatsApp now has more than 2 billion users in over 180 countries, but the dominance of Apple's iMessage in the US has proven to be a hurdle since the 2014 acquisition for $16 billion. As Google and Apple both adopt RCS messaging, Meta will continue to face an uphill battle. LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
We want all men to be Thriving Men. They thrive when working on the 4 fundamentals of their lives: Physical, Mental, Emotional, and Spiritual. We include the spiritual because as men we are spiritual creatures. God created us this way and we flourish when we live His design.The spiritual side of us as men is the foundation of all the other fundamentals. One of the best ways to build our spiritual side is to engage with the book designed to do that: The Bible.Join us as we talk about the greatest book ever written and how incredible it is that God gave us a way to grow and get to know Him through it.Why Read the Bible?You must take out the assumptions that many people have about the Bible.The Bible is God's communication to usThe Bible is the greatest teacher of how to liveThe Bible is the guide and pathway to REAL spiritual truthWithout the Bible, we make up our spiritualityThe Uniqueness of the BibleIts a Library of books not just a bookIt is like a museum with different exhibits curated to communicate a single powerful messageGod used different authors in different periods with multiple styles of writingWe read the different styles of books differentlyThe Bible has shaped the Western worldThe Bible shaped many of the positive parts of the Western worldThe Bible is historically accurateThe Bible is bigger than we are and will outlast usIt is the key building block to a life well-livedOur founding fathers saw the wisdom of establishing the country on the BibleCHALLENGE:Read the bible yourselfRead the Proverb of the day based on the date for JulyRESOURCES TO HELP YOU THRIVE AS A MAN========================Thriving Man Coaching Resources4D MODEL FREE PDFLearn about the 4 fundamentals of a Successful LifeDiscover OUR SPEAKING AND HOW WE HAVE EMPOWERED THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE ACROSS THE WORLD
Welcome to The Times of Israel's Daily Briefing, your 20-minute audio update on what's happening in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world. It is day 243 of the war with Hamas. Diplomatic correspondent Lazar Berman and political reporter Sam Sokol join host Jessica Steinberg for today's episode. Berman discusses the diplomatic discussions between the various counterparts in the push for a hostage agreement, as the Biden administration pushes for a first phase of a deal, and waits for the first stages of agreement from Hamas via Qatar. He notes that Israel has agreed to move forward on the deal, and that the government is doing more than he expected to get the hostages out. That said, Israel is insisting on toppling Hamas militarily, getting all hostages out and ensuring that Gaza will not be a future platform for terrorist attacks. Berman also discusses Netanyahu's conversation with French prime minister Emmanuel Macron who reemphasized French support for Israel and the hostages. Sokol looks at the reactions of far-right ministers Itamar Ben-Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich to the hostage talks, as they have threatened to bring down the government if Netanyahu signs what they consider a reckless deal. He also notes that the ultra-Orthodox are in favor of the deal, given their long-time support of Netanyahu. The Haredi parties generally don't weigh in on security issues, given that their communities don't serve in the army. Finally, Sokol offers a quick preview of the upcoming Jerusalem Day flag march into the Old City, an often controversial event particularly given the presence of Ben Gvir at the march. For more updates, please check out The Times of Israel's ongoing live blog. Discussed articles include: PM says Biden version of deal ‘incomplete'; US: It accurately reflects Israeli offer Macron tells Netanyahu Gaza war must end, is mum on freeing hostages as condition Biden's ‘Israeli' proposal for a hostage deal leaves key questions unanswered Far-right ministers accuse Netanyahu of ‘whitewashing' hostage deal, hiding details THOSE WE HAVE LOST: Civilians and soldiers killed in Hamas's onslaught on Israel THOSE WE ARE MISSING: The hostages and victims whose fate is still unknown Subscribe to The Times of Israel Daily Briefing on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, or wherever you get your podcasts. This episode was produced by the Pod-Waves. IMAGE: Demonstrators call for the release of Israeli hostages held in the Gaza Strip outside Defense Ministry in Tel Aviv, June 4, 2024. (Photo by Avshalom Sassoni/Flash90)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Welcome to The Times of Israel's Daily Briefing, your 20-minute audio update on what's happening in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world. It is day 242 of the war with Hamas. Political correspondent Tal Schneider and diaspora reporter Canaan Lidor join host Jessica Steinberg for today's episode. Schneider discusses the IDF's discovery of four hostages pronounced dead in Gaza, including three octogenarian Kibbutz Oz founders Chaim Peri, Amiram Cooper and Yoram Metzger and Kibbutz Nirim's Nadav Popplewell, and how that finding enrages the hostage families in their push for a deal. She also looks at the politics of the current hostage deal on the table, as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu walks a narrow line of trying to keep his coalition intact while honing to the requests of US President Joe Biden who wants to see a deal on the table. Lidor talks about the presidential election in Mexico, won by candidate Claudia Sheinbaum, who describes herself as having Jewish roots, and what it could mean for Mexico and the US. He also describes a recent conference of representatives of the Jewish communities of the European Union, who practiced tactics of fighting off antisemitic attacks and discussed at what point they will tell their communities to leave Europe. For more updates, please check out The Times of Israel's ongoing live blog. Discussed articles include: Israel announces the deaths of four hostages in Hamas captivity Protesters block Tel Aviv highway, urging hostage deal after 4 captives declared dead Biden says Israel ready to advance deal, urges Qatari pressure on Hamas to agree PM says Biden version of deal ‘incomplete'; US: It accurately reflects Israeli offer Claudia Sheinbaum wins election to become Mexico's 1st woman, 1st Jewish president Quietly Jewish scientist poised to win Sunday's Mexican presidential election THOSE WE HAVE LOST: Civilians and soldiers killed in Hamas's onslaught on Israel THOSE WE ARE MISSING: The hostages and victims whose fate is still unknown Subscribe to The Times of Israel Daily Briefing on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, or wherever you get your podcasts. This episode was produced by the Pod-Waves. IMAGE: Protests on Tel Aviv's Begin Road on Monday night as hostage family members make desperate plea for a deal (Courtesy Gilad Furst)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Morse code transcription: vvv vvv If Trump is convicted, what happens next Israel Gaza Rafah offensive not a major operation, US says NFL player Brandon McManus accused of assault on London flight Boy survives 400ft canyon fall in Washington state Ukraine peace talks Zelensky urges Biden to attend Swiss summit US military Gaza pier knocked out of action by heavy seas US IT services firm fined 38,000 for whites only job posting Wu Tang Clan Rare album to go on display at Mona in Tasmania Jared Ravizza charged over Massachusetts stabbings that injured six Pope Francis apologises over reported homophobic slur
Morse code transcription: vvv vvv NFL player Brandon McManus accused of assault on London flight US IT services firm fined 38,000 for whites only job posting US military Gaza pier knocked out of action by heavy seas Jared Ravizza charged over Massachusetts stabbings that injured six Ukraine peace talks Zelensky urges Biden to attend Swiss summit Boy survives 400ft canyon fall in Washington state Pope Francis apologises over reported homophobic slur If Trump is convicted, what happens next Wu Tang Clan Rare album to go on display at Mona in Tasmania Israel Gaza Rafah offensive not a major operation, US says
Morse code transcription: vvv vvv Wu Tang Clan Rare album to go on display at Mona in Tasmania US military Gaza pier knocked out of action by heavy seas Boy survives 400ft canyon fall in Washington state Ukraine peace talks Zelensky urges Biden to attend Swiss summit Jared Ravizza charged over Massachusetts stabbings that injured six US IT services firm fined 38,000 for whites only job posting If Trump is convicted, what happens next NFL player Brandon McManus accused of assault on London flight Israel Gaza Rafah offensive not a major operation, US says Pope Francis apologises over reported homophobic slur
Morse code transcription: vvv vvv If Trump is convicted, what happens next Jared Ravizza charged over Massachusetts stabbings that injured six Israel Gaza Rafah offensive not a major operation, US says US military Gaza pier knocked out of action by heavy seas Boy survives 400ft canyon fall in Washington state US IT services firm fined 38,000 for whites only job posting NFL player Brandon McManus accused of assault on London flight Pope Francis apologises over reported homophobic slur Wu Tang Clan Rare album to go on display at Mona in Tasmania Ukraine peace talks Zelensky urges Biden to attend Swiss summit
The Security Weekly crew and special guest Seemant Sehgal explore what PTaaS involves, how it differs from traditional penetration testing, and why it's becoming a crucial service for companies of all sizes to protect their digital assets. We'll discuss the how PTaaS is using the latest technologies (e.g machine learning), the benefits of having a third-party service, and real-world scenarios where PTaaS has successfully thwarted potential security breaches. PTaaS can be a game-changer in enhancing your organization's security posture! This segment is sponsored by Breachlock. Visit https://securityweekly.com/breachlock to learn more about them! An exploit that makes you more secure, pardon the interruption, water heater company in hot water, IoT devices are vulnerable, Squeege and RDP scraping, free laundry for everyone!, Wifi routers and Apple Air tags, North Koreans fill US IT positions, taking out drones, the NVD backlog, IBM is no longer a security company?, and DNSBombs! Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/psw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/psw-830
An exploit that makes you more secure, pardon the interruption, water heater company in hot water, IoT devices are vulnerable, Squeege and RDP scraping, free laundry for everyone!, Wifi routers and Apple Air tags, North Koreans fill US IT positions, taking out drones, the NVD backlog, IBM is no longer a security company?, and DNSBombs! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/psw-830
The Security Weekly crew and special guest Seemant Sehgal explore what PTaaS involves, how it differs from traditional penetration testing, and why it's becoming a crucial service for companies of all sizes to protect their digital assets. We'll discuss the how PTaaS is using the latest technologies (e.g machine learning), the benefits of having a third-party service, and real-world scenarios where PTaaS has successfully thwarted potential security breaches. PTaaS can be a game-changer in enhancing your organization's security posture! This segment is sponsored by Breachlock. Visit https://securityweekly.com/breachlock to learn more about them! An exploit that makes you more secure, pardon the interruption, water heater company in hot water, IoT devices are vulnerable, Squeege and RDP scraping, free laundry for everyone!, Wifi routers and Apple Air tags, North Koreans fill US IT positions, taking out drones, the NVD backlog, IBM is no longer a security company?, and DNSBombs! Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/psw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/psw-830
An exploit that makes you more secure, pardon the interruption, water heater company in hot water, IoT devices are vulnerable, Squeege and RDP scraping, free laundry for everyone!, Wifi routers and Apple Air tags, North Koreans fill US IT positions, taking out drones, the NVD backlog, IBM is no longer a security company?, and DNSBombs! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/psw-830
Are you 18-30 and looking for something unique to do this summer? Now's your chance!The deadline for USIT's 'Camp USA' is fast approaching and they're looking for the last few people to get involved. The special visa will allow you to spend the summer living and working in a camp. Kiera Grice did it last year and loved it so much that she's going back, and she joined Dave to explain why.
This week on Look Forward, Jay and Brad return to discuss Trump getting a 10 day stay on paying his NY fraud bond while having it significantly reduced, merger of Truth Social isn't all sunshine and rainbows, MAGA is all-in for conspiracies around the ship crash in Baltimore, Republicans behind the scenes don't see much power in attacking Biden in state races, James Comer ends his nonsensical impeachment hunt on Joe Biden, Ronna McDaniel finally tells the truth - too little too late, RNC funding is a bigger mess than you might realize, another GOP member leaves the House of Representatives early, Marjorie Taylor-Greene puts Mike Johnson on notice, and much more!StoriesTrump's given 10 day stay and significant bond reduction in NY fraud caseNot all sunshine and rainbows for TrumpTruth Social merger will not likely save him hereRightwing already pushing conspiracy nonsense in bridge collapse in MarylandA lesson in nonsensical political attacking and why your narratives can hurt youJames Comer and Republicans admit that Biden impeachment isn't happeningRonna McDaniel now says Biden won the 2020 race fairly after being fired from RNCRNC funding hole is way worse than we realizedAnother Republican leaves the House, handicapping the GOP furtherMTG puts Mike Johnson on notice about his time as Speaker of the HouseWife of Judge on Mifepristone Case Was Paid by Anti-Abortion GroupThis Week in StupidFinally we can rest knowing he's watching out for usIt comes for us all eventuallyWait what?!!
Lots of suggestions, no regulations: cars, broadband, AI & more; Apple lawsuits; drone delivery, again; Starbucks NFT program ending; Glassdoor adds real names to accounts without consent; AI news round-up; Stability AI wobbles; cyberflasher conviction; Russia warns of potential SpaceX strikes; data broker bar, sort of; happiness rankings, the kids aren't alright; Better Call Saul; the Acolyte; the juice is loose; the Regime; music revenue has grown (along with prices); Poe; Reddit goes public; photography; manuals; home repair with the Geeks; let's go karaoke!Sponsors:Factor - Head to Factor and use code grumpy50 to get 50% off. That's code grumpy50 at Factor to get 50% off!1Password - Get a great deal on the only password manager recommended by Grumpy Old Geeks! gog.show/1passwordPrivate Internet Access - Go to GOG.Show/vpn and sign up today. For a limited time only, you can get OUR favorite VPN for as little as $2.03 a month.SetApp - With a single monthly subscription you get 240+ apps for your Mac. Go to SetApp and get started today!!!Show notes at https://gog.show/641FOLLOW UPEuropean crash tester says carmakers must bring back physical controlsBillionaire Who Died in Tesla Had Three Times Legal Blood Alcohol to DriveIN THE NEWSThe FCC just quadrupled the download speed required to market internet as ‘broadband'Apple can't get out of facing a class-action lawsuit over AirTags stalking claimsJustice Department files antitrust lawsuit against Apple over its infamous 'walled garden'DoorDash and Wing are piloting fast food delivery in the USIt took Starbucks a little too long to realize coffee NFTs aren't itUsers say Glassdoor added real names to user profiles without their consentWorld's first global AI resolution unanimously adopted by United NationsUnited Nations General Assembly Adopts by Consensus U.S.-Led Resolution on Seizing the Opportunities of Safe, Secure and Trustworthy Artificial Intelligence Systems for Sustainable DevelopmentGoogle Hit With Huge Fine for Training Ai With News Articles Without Getting PermissionYouTube will require disclosure of AI-manipulated videos from creatorsFacebook's Algorithm Is Boosting AI Spam That Links to AI-Generated, Ad-Laden Click Farms‘AI-powered' ad ignites creator controversy on InstagramStability AI Is Falling ApartFirst 'Cyberflasher' Convicted in England Gets Year in Prison for Sending Explicit PhotoRussia Warns of Potential Military Strike on Spacex SatellitesHouse passes bill that would bar data brokers from selling Americans' personal information to 'adversary' countriesUS Happiness Ranking Plummets as One Group Struggles MostCanada Ranks 15th, But Young Canadians Are Unhappy, Finds 2024 World Happiness ReportThe kids are not OK. New data shows Canadians under-30 ‘very unhappy'Using Computers Strongly Linked to Erectile DysfunctionMEDIA CANDYBetter Call SaulStar Wars: The AcolyteTim Burton's First Beetlejuice Beetlejuice Trailer Summons More Afterlife ChaosThe RegimeThe 3 Body ProblemThe Bloody HundredthDirector of Original Crow Makes It Clear He's Not Happy with Remake, Before Deleting Post10.2% growth of global music industry; initial coverage of IFPI annual reportAPPS & DOODADSPoeReddit is now a publicly traded companyThis Website Tells Travelers If They're Flying on a Boeing PlaneZoom - for Home TVApple's new webpage helps users find product manuals and guidesCLOSING SHOUT-OUTSAstro JoeCan stop the music: Karaoke inventor diesVernor Vinge, father of the tech singularity, has died at age 79RIP, Vernor VingeChildren of the Sky | Vernor Vinge | Talks at GoogleSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Welcome to The Literary Life Podcast and our second episode in our series on E. M. Forster's book Howards End. This week, Angelina and Thomas cover chapters 8-16, continuing their discussion of the book and the overarching concept of “Story” along the way. In talking about different plot points and characters, Angelina and Thomas make some comparisons between the two couples presented in these chapters and share some thoughts on the friendship between Margaret and Mrs. Wilcox. Angelina points out that Forster is doing some medieval things in this story, as we will see as we go on further. They also bring out more of the significance and symbolism of Howards End the place in the story. If you want to check out our previous episodes on two of E. M. Forster's short stories, you can find those here: Episode 17: “The Celestial Omnibus” Episode 99: “The Machine Stops” We hope you will join us for the sixth annual Literary Life Online Conference, “Dispelling the Myth of Modernity: A Recovery of the Medieval Imagination.” During the live or later series of webinars, we will seek to dis-spell the Myth of Modernity and gain eyes to see and ears to hear Reality as it truly is. Speakers include Jason Baxter, Jenn Rogers, and Kelly Cumbee, in addition to Angelina and Thomas. This March you can join Thomas and his brother James back for a webinar on King Alfred the Great. You can sign up at houseofhumaneletters.com. Commonplace Quotes: [The Greeks] were children with the intellects of men. R. W. Livingstone, from The Greek Genius and Its Meaning to Us It is astonishing how little attention critics have paid to Story considered in itself. Granted the story, the style in which it should be told, the order in which it should be disposed, and (above all) the delineation of the characters, have been abundantly discussed. But the Story itself, the series of imagined events, is nearly always passed over in silence, or else treated exclusively as affording opportunities for the delineation of character. There are indeed three notable exceptions. Aristotle in the Poeticsconstructed a theory of Greek tragedy which puts Story in the centre and relegates character to a strictly subordinate place. C. S. Lewis, from On Stories A Selection from “Terminus” By Ralph Waldo Emerson It is time to be old, To take in sail:— The god of bounds, Who sets to seas a shore, Came to me in his fatal rounds, And said: “No more! No farther shoot Thy broad ambitious branches, and thy root. Fancy departs: no more invent; Contract thy firmament To compass of a tent. There's not enough for this and that, Make thy option which of two; Economize the failing river, Not the less revere the Giver, Leave the many and hold the few. Book List: Aspects of the Novel by E. M. Forster The Longest Journey by E. M. Forster Wendell Berry An Experiment in Criticism by C. S. Lewis Support The Literary Life: Become a patron of The Literary Life podcast as part of the “Friends and Fellows Community” on Patreon, and get some amazing bonus content! Thanks for your support! Connect with Us: You can find Angelina and Thomas at HouseofHumaneLetters.com, on Instagram @angelinastanford, and on Facebook at www.facebook.com/ANGStanford/ Follow The Literary Life on Instagram, and jump into our private Facebook group, The Literary Life Discussion Group, and let's get the book talk going! http://bit.ly/literarylifeFB
Ben played Infinite Wealth, Sara watched Twin Peaks, and Saturn did... not much!Fate/stay night REMASTERED announced for Switch, PCPlayStation State of Play January 2024: Everything AnnouncedStreet Fighter 6 DLC character Ed launches February 27 Megamind's New Film, TV Series Both Reveal First TrailerSonic 3 Reveals More Of Its Cast, But Not Who Fans Are Waiting ForMeet the man making the worst video game of all timeEXCLUSIVE | Microsoft plans Starfield launch for PlayStation 5Neil Druckmann has a concept for a third The Last of Us: “It does feel like there's probably one more chapter to this story”Ambitious Fallout 2 fan remake emerges, blinking into the light through Fallout 4's engineSupport the showPATREON: http://www.patreon.com/thegorgeDiscord: discord.gg/K8A6SG2Big Gay Nerds: https://soundcloud.com/biggaynerdsBackground music: DJ CUTMAN: https://music.djcutman.com/Broke for Free: https://brokeforfree.comVisager: https://visager.bandcamp.comAdventuria: https://adventuria.bandcamp.com/INTRO: https://soundcloud.com/zak235Ben's Twitter: @TheGorgePodcastSara's Twitter: @RadioinactivityE-mail: thegorgepodcast@gmail.com
Sinners and Winners Support the channel: https://www.flowcode.com/page/samuelfrancis Cashapp: https://cash.app/$wearjesusis Venmo: https://account.venmo.com/u/wearjesusis Paypal: https://paypal.me/wearjesusis?country.x=US&locale.x=en_US It's straightforward – you're either a sinner or a winner. But have you ever stopped to consider which one defines you? Join Sam and I as we delve into the story of the Prodigal Son, initially on a winning streak but got lost in sin. Through real-life examples and unfiltered honesty, we dig deep to understand what it means to be a winner in Jesus. Visit our website: https://www.thenextdropoff.com/ Follow us on Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/thenextdropoff/?hl=en All Socials: https://linktr.ee/thenextdropoff Email: thenextdropoff@gmail.com Thanks for listening and join us again!
Bloomberg Daybreak Weekend with Tom Busby takes a look at some of the stories we'll be tracking in the coming week. 1) In the US - It's been a very Merry Crypto-mas with Bitcoin and Etherum surging. Will it continue in 2024? 2) In the UK - 2023 has been a year of inflation, rate debates, and job cuts. What lessons can be learned from the past year and how can they help us navigate the next 12 months? 3) In Asia - After a devastating pandemic and prolonged economic slowdown in China, how has Macau's casino and gaming business recovered? 4) In Washington - The 118th Congress has convened for the year after a session marked with turmoil. What was actually accomplished, and who were the winners and losers? See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Bloomberg Daybreak Weekend with Tom Busby takes a look at some of the stories we'll be tracking in the coming week. 1) In the US - It's been a very Merry Crypto-mas with Bitcoin and Etherum surging. Will it continue in 2024? 2) In the UK - 2023 has been a year of inflation, rate debates, and job cuts. What lessons can be learned from the past year and how can they help us navigate the next 12 months? 3) In Asia - After a devastating pandemic and prolonged economic slowdown in China, how has Macau's casino and gaming business recovered? 4) In Washington - The 118th Congress has convened for the year after a session marked with turmoil. What was actually accomplished, and who were the winners and losers? See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
https://www.paypal.me/Truelifepodcast?locale.x=en_USIt has been a wild ride.8 years ago, I was at the height of my self-abuse . The walls of truth were closing in on me.I was sick, scared, stuck, misguided, lost, insecure and in a lot of pain.By all societal measures, I was a success and living the American Dream.I followed all the rules and never asked any questions, this way of life almost killed me. I followed others and rarely thought for myself.The childhood sexual trauma that I held closely was eating away at my soul, I was slowly poisoning myself with negative thoughts and erroneous beliefs that I lacked the courage to examine and address. My heart was closed off and nearly broken, beaten down from a lifetime of self-abuse and self-betrayal.I was completely fucked. I lived dishonestly and my word was mostly undependable. I tried everything multiple times to break my patterns to no avail…But something shifted.And then I found meditation.Poof…Presto Chango!This daily practice helped me to LET GO of what didn't serve me and has now created abundant opportunities for inspiration to flow from within.It i s surprisingly simple, let go to let in.Break down to build up.These are natural cycles that I have found to align with Universal law. I was missing the mark and unable to see how my wrong thinking was causing all of my heartache and dismay.I am motivated to share for those that don't have a voice. My life has changed for the better after committing to serving and helping others push through challenges that I've been blessed to move through. Why do I kick the covers off every morning? For the more than 1.5 million US veterans needlessly struggling with PTSD and Depression,40+/- million American adult survivors of child sex abuse suffering in silence,43% of American women have sexual dysfunction,Viagra Sales are off the charts as our warped definition of masculinity now requires a blue pill for the flaccidly impotent, I walked away from the money—my soul wasn't for sale. All of this is for LOVE . All of it.My personal story has been a savory combination of Stealing Fire, Sex at Dawn and Tribe. Three impactful books that have rocked and shaken my belief systems to its deepest core. I now believe anything is possible, that anything can happen! Even peace.I am truly grateful for all of life's blessings. Everything on my path has served as a lesson for growth, for the evolution of my soul and being. All that I needed was an earnest step in the direction of my dreams. It all starts with just a step.nltrans.org https://www.paypal.me/Truelifepodcast?locale.x=en_US
Welcome to part 2 of our amazing conversation with Amberly Lago. Amberly is a peak performance coach, TEDx speaker, top 1% podcast host, motivational speaker, and a leading expert in the field of resilience, transformation, and health and wellness. She is also the bestselling author of the book True Grit and Grace, and the founder of Unstoppable Life Mastermind.Amberly has an incredible life story and she is sharing pure gold advice on how to overcome life challenges, how to deal with trauma, and become resilient and successful.Time stamps:00:54 Randall's emotional story about his heart attackLife-threatening situation and a traumatic experienceFinding he had myocarditisDeath of a close friendAsked by doctors if he was taking cocaineGrateful for being aliveThe power of endorphins10:30 Hitting a rock bottom and suicidal thoughtsAmberly was always a high achieverThe pain became unbearableAlcohol numbed the painIt worked until it didn'tBecame addicted to alcohol and went to rehabDidn't want to live but had to endure because of her daughters15:15 The importance of resilienceWe have to decide to take action and thriveShifting perspective to gratitudeFocusing on what you can do, not what you can'tAcceptance and being aware of who you areConnecting to a community – Success is built on relationshipsResting is essential for resilience21:08 The power of writing down our goalsThere is power in writing things downThe story of Amberly's bookRandall's thoughts on writing things down24:36 Put yourself on the to-do listAmberly likes helping people and meeting their needs firstIt's important to take care of yourself as well28:33 Surround yourself with the right peopleGet rid of the doggie downers and stick with the puppy uppersSurround yourself with people who are passionate and go-gettersAvoid energy vampires21:28 We are all superheroesWe all have superpowers and resilience in usIt's hard to become aware of thatFocus on what brings you joyGratitude practice and Amberly's gratitude groupA sense of purpose and giving serviceAsk people what your superpower is37:25 Sexual abuse and its consequencesAmberly was sexually abused by her stepfatherTakes a lot of courage to tell someoneTold her dad but he didn't do anythingAt 23, she told that to her abusive husbandDealing with triggering situationWriting about the sexual abuse was very catharticThe importance of therapy1:01:28 The importance of extreme preparationShe was an athlete and a dancerAlways worked very hardPreparing for a TEDx talkPreparation gives you confidence51:16 What are the key ingredients for success?Know your WhyHave a strong communitySeek council not opinionStick to your non-negotiables54:28 Why do motorcyclists take so much risk?There's nothing like a feeling of freedom while ridingYou are fully in the presentAmberly's husband stoppedSponsors:Sandee | Bliss: BeachesWant to Connect? Reach out to us online!Website | Instagram | LinkedIn
Why should you access your inner child aura in order to live your best life today? With the release of Michaela's brand new “Inner Child Aura Quiz” lets deep dive into your own inner child aura! She discusses how being stuck energetically in childhood agreements can hold back your spiritual development today. Michaela and Scott deep dive into how nostalgia plays a role in unsticking your emotional energy, and MMSF members share their favorite toys from childhood. What Is Your Inner Child's Aura? Take the Quiz: https://knowyouraura.com/aura-quizzes/what-is-your-inner-childs-auraWhat's Your Aura? Take the Quiz: https://knowyouraura.com/whats-your-auraMystic Michaela Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mysticmichaelaKnow Your Aura Website: https://knowyouraura.comMystic Michaela Website: https://www.mysticmichaela.comMystic Michaela Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/2093029197406168Mystic Michaela Podcast Itunes: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/know-your-aura-with-mystic-michaela/id1477126939Mystic Michaela Bonus Episode - Every Aura Color Explained: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/bonus-every-aura-color-explained/id1477126939?i=1000479357880Ads:Control Body Odor ANYWHERE with @lumedeodorant and get $5 off off your Starter Pack (that's over 40% off) with promo code KYA at https://lumedeodorant.com! #lumepodUpgrade your cookware this holiday season with Greenpan. Receive 30% off your entire order plus free shipping over $99 with promo code KYA at https://www.greenpan.usIt's time to get the sleep you deserve! Head to Get Soul and use code KYA for 20% off your order at https://www.getsoul.com/kyaHere's a special, limited time deal for our listeners to get you started right now - 55% off your Babbel subscription at https://babbel.com/auraKnow Your Aura is sponsored by Betterhelp. Get 10% off your first month at https://www.betterhelp.com/kyaMore podcasts at WAVE: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/artist/wave-podcast-network/1437831426See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
16 October 2023 12PM EST - This morning Joe and David are joined By Noel Fritsch, Noel is an experienced political and communications professional. Together they discuss Noels interaction with Dan Crenshaw, the speaker of the house vote, and how important it is to pay attention to what our politicians are doing. In addition, Joe and David discuss the importance of brotherhood, and how the people must share a common brotherhood again, and DEFEND each other when we use our voices, we must not stand down! Close the Border! Send this message to Congress! Follow us on Social Media: https://libertylinks.io/ConservativeDaily https://libertylinks.io/JoeOltmann https://libertylinks.io/Apollo WAR Coming Through The BORDER: They Will Bring the War to Us & It'll Be Through Our OPEN Border https://conservative-daily.com/border-crisis/war-coming-through-the-border-they-will-bring-the-war-to-us-and-itll-be-through-our-open-border
16 October 2023 6PM ET - This evening David Clements is joined by guest Kris Jurski, an individual who is well versed in elections and election fraud. Together they discuss how election have been stolen, in varying countries, historically, and now, and how these tactics are being used today. In addition, they focus attention on the machines, and how every level of the election has been corrupted. Follow us on Social Media: https://libertylinks.io/ConservativeDaily https://libertylinks.io/JoeOltmann https://libertylinks.io/Apollo WAR Coming Through The BORDER: They Will Bring the War to Us & It'll Be Through Our OPEN Border: https://conservative-daily.com/border-crisis/war-coming-through-the-border-they-will-bring-the-war-to-us-and-itll-be-through-our-open-border
Victims of human trafficking are often left in the dark, voiceless, and completely unseen by society. Vanessa and Steph shed light on the topic by sharing the story of a sex trafficking survivor. She has entrusted them with telling her story for the very first time on this podcast. Listen with an open heart and an open mind. For the safety of their guest, she will remain anonymous and this episode is audio only. Trigger warnings: this episode includes detailed discussion of sexual abuse, self-harm, violence, eating disorders. Your co-hosts take this topic seriously and continue to research human trafficking. In their findings, they realize human trafficking has many stories and many experiences. It is why the movie The Sound of Freedom is polarizing. Hear what their guest thinks of the movie and why human trafficking needs more awareness. Get help or report a tip National Human Trafficking Hotline Call: 1-888-373-7888, TTY: 711 Text* 233733 Department Defense General Inspector Hotline 1-800-424-9098 Statistics, myths, facts on human trafficking from Polaris, the largest known dataset on human trafficking in the US “It can happen to anyone,” and “it's happening in your backyard,” are common in the anti-human trafficking field. Technically, they are true: Anyone can be trafficked, in any community, just as anyone can be the victim of any kind of crime. But the real story is that while it can happen to anyone available evidence suggests that people of color and LGBTQ+ people are more likely to be trafficked than other demographic groups. That's not a coincidence. Generational trauma, historic oppression, discrimination and other societal factors and inequities create community-wide vulnerabilities. Traffickers recognize and take advantage of people who are vulnerable in certain ways. Worldwide, experts believe there are more situations of labor trafficking than of sex trafficking, but there is much wider awareness of sex trafficking in the U.S. than of labor trafficking. 11 facts about human trafficking Slavery is everywhere Researchers estimate that 40 million are enslaved worldwide, generating $150 billion each year in illicit profits for traffickers. Labor Slavery. About 50 percent (21 million) toil in forced labor slavery in industries where manual labor is needed—such as farming, ranching, logging, mining, fishing, and brick making—and in service industries working as dish washers, janitors, gardeners, and maids. Sex Slavery. About 12.5 percent (4 million) are trapped in forced prostitution sex slavery. Forced Marriage Slavery. About 37.5 percent (15 million) are trapped in forced marriages. Child Slavery. About 25 percent of today's slaves are children. MORE RESOURCES Domestic Violence: National Domestic Violence Hotline, 24 hour Hotline: 1-800-799-SAFE (7233) Sexual Abuse: Rape, Abuse and Incest National Network (RAINN), 24 hour Hotline: 1-800-656-4673 Dating Violence: National Dating Abuse Helpline, 24 hour Hotline: 1-866-331-9474 Runaway and Homeless Youth: National Runaway Safeline, 24 hour Hotline: 1-800-RUNAWAY (786-2929) Missing Children and Child Pornography: National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, 24 hour Hotline: 1-800-THE-LOST (843-5678) --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/realmotherfuckers/support
It's a wild and wet July night of wind and rain. So why not step aboard for a while as we meander down some fox trails and contemplate the pleasure of sunshine and dark skies.Journal entry:11th July, Tuesday“A quarter to midnight. Lying in bed and listening To the drum of rain On the cabin roof.All day I have watched the dark Clouds boil in the cauldron Of the west. Storm heads tower In castle greys.Maggie and I stood On the hill with no name Watching the ragged veils Of cloud-tear Sweep towards usIt falls like brush strokes Played on a snare drum.”Episode Information:In this episode I read a very short extract from the Ladybird Book What to look for in Summer by E.L. Grant Watson (1960) published by Wills and Hepworth. I also read the following Sabbath Poems XXII and XXIII by Wendell Berry (2013) published by Catapult.With special thanks to our lock-wheelersfor supporting this podcast.Sean James Cameron Laurie and Liz Phil Pickin Orange Cookie Donna Kelly Mary Keane. Tony Rutherford. Arabella Holzapfel. Rory with MJ and Kayla. Narrowboat Precious Jet. Linda Reynolds Burkins. Richard Noble. Carol Ferguson. Tracie Thomas Mike and Tricia Stowe Madeleine SmithGeneral DetailsIn the intro and the outro, Saint-Saen's The Swan is performed by Karr and Bernstein (1961) and available on CC at archive.org. Two-stroke narrowboat engine recorded by 'James2nd' on the River Weaver, Cheshire. Uploaded to Freesound.org on 23rd June 2018. Creative Commons Licence. Piano and keyboard interludes composed and performed by Helen Ingram.All other audio recorded on site. For more information about Nighttime on Still WatersYou can find more information and photographs about the podcasts and life aboard the Erica on our website at noswpod.com. It will also allow you to become more a part of the podcast and you can leave comments, offer suggestions, and reviews. You can even, if you want, leave me a voice mail by clicking on the microphone icon. Support the showBecome a 'Lock-Wheeler'Would you like to support this podcast by becoming a 'lock-wheeler' for Nighttime on Still Waters? Find out more: 'Lock-wheeling' for Nighttime on Still Waters.ContactFor pictures of Erica and images related to the podcasts or to contact me, follow me on: Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/noswpod Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nighttimeonstillwaters/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/NoswPod Mastodon: https://mastodon.world/@nosw I would love to hear from you. You can email me at nighttimeonstillwaters@gmail.com or drop me a line by going to the nowspod website and using either the contact form or, if you prefer, record your message using the voicemail facility by clicking on the microphone icon.
Inge Carr is the owner of Altair Strategic Marketing, through which she provides Fractional and Chief Marketing Officer (CMO) services. Her vast experience consulting throughout the US, Canada, and Europe and fluency in five languages, gives Inge tremendous insight into how companies can successfully align corporate strategy with branding and marketing, especially internationally, to drive revenue. Inge was a member of the team who created an award-winning campaign focused on marketing Canada to Olympic visitors. She reminds us that people coming from other countries to Canada may connect with different messages. And it's not dependent so much on a person's country of origin, but why the person is traveling. By hiring a market research company, the team was able to determine what experiences people wanted and how they wanted to hear about it. For example: 1. Northern Lights UK and Germany: “See the grandiose lights with standing room only.” US: “It's standing room only for the greatest light show.” France: “Incredible light show and training of the dogs.” (This was the direct translation but I'm not sure what it's supposed to mean!) 2. Glamping The US is the only country interested in “glamping,” or luxurious camping. It's not talked about in other countries. 3. Sailing Nova Scotia UK, Germany, and France: “Have a wonderful lunch of lobster and scallops and enjoy the view for dessert.” US: “Lounge around all day and have a 5-star meal for dinner.” Inge also mentioned that a great translator simultaneously provides multilingual marketing insight to companies without a hefty Olympics-sized budget. (I certainly agree, at Rapport International our translators do it all the time.) Among the team's challenges were initial social media posts that did not perform as well as expected. Yet they knew to keep tweaking them until they increased their response rates. In another role, Inge worked with an insurance company struggling with 20 different brands and a fractured brand experience. Representatives from each of the brands worked together to build a unified brand that worked across multiple languages. And although there were no language specialists in the meeting, each team member had deep experience with translation, so they resolutely kept translation issues in mind. If you are interested in seeing how Rotary International unified their brand in multiple countries and how they handled language translation and cultural adaptation, tune in to The Global Marketing Show, episode #17. Inge's final words of advice: make sure to hire a professional translation organization to get the support you need. If you can't clearly communicate your value proposition and messaging, you won't emotionally connect with your audience. And since 90% of decision making is driven by emotion, you will also miss out on sales and lose opportunities. Inge's favorite word is Dutch slang for “ATM”: “Flappentapper" (flappen - tapper)! Just say it to laugh, she says. It literally means: Flopa: currency or bills Topper: the server who dispenses the beer at a bar I'm adding that word to my lexicon! Links: Website: https://www.altairmktg.com/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/icarr Email: icarr@altairmktg.com Phone: 760-655-6451 Connect with Wendy - https://www.linkedin.com/in/wendypease/ Music: Fiddle-De-Dee by Shane Ivers - https://www.silvermansound.com
Hello to you listening in Galiano Island, B.C. Canada!Coming to you from Whidbey Island, Washington this is Stories From Women Who Walk with 60 Seconds for Motivate Your Monday and your host, Diane Wyzga.Maybe like me your mom said: “You're the oldest! You should know better.” Why? You think I went to Know Better School?But I can't blame my mom; it seems that they all went to Mom School. How else do you explain that what moms say to their children day in and day out is understood practically all over the world?Take 3 minutes to listen to stand-up comedian Anita Renfroe sum up all the things that a mother says to her children - Momisms - set to the William Tell Overture. See how many you remember from your childhood. And which you say today to motivate your own kids.Click HERE to listen to the Official YouTube VersionLyrics in the Episode Notes if you want to sing along:William Tell Momisms LyricsGet up now, get up now, get up out of bedWash your face, brush your teeth, comb your sleepy headHere's your clothes and your shoes, hear the words I saidGet up now, get up and make your bedAre you hot? Are you cold? Are you wearing that?Where's your books and your lunch and your homework at?Grab your coat and your gloves and your scarf and hatDon't forget you gotta feed the catEat your breakfast, the experts tell usIt's the most important meal of allTake your vitamins so you will grow upOne day to be big and tallPlease remember the orthodontist will beSeeing you at three todayDon't forget your piano lesson isThis afternoon so you must playDon't shovel, chew slowly, but hurry, the bus is hereBe careful, come back here, did you wash behind your ears?Play outside, don't play rough, would you just play fair?Be polite, make a friend, don't forget to shareWork it out, wait your turn, never take a dareGet along, don't make me come down there Clean your room, fold your clothes, put your stuff awayMake your bed, do it now, do we have all day?Were you born in a barn? Would you like some hayCan you even hear a word I say?Answer the phone, get off the phoneDon't sit so close, turn it down, no texting at the tableNo more computer time tonightYour ipod's my ipod if you don't listen upWhere you going and with whomAnd what time do you think you're coming home?Saying thank you, please, excuse meMakes you welcome everywhere you roamYou'll appreciate my wisdom somedayWhen you're older and you're grownCan't wait 'til you have a couple littleChildren of your ownYou'll thank me for the counsel I gave you so willinglyBut right now I thank you not to roll your eyes at meClose your mouth when you chew, would appreciateTake a bite maybe two of the stuff you hateUse your fork, do not you burp or I'll set you straightEat the food I put upon your plate Get an A, get the door, don't get smart with meGet a grip, get in here or I'll count to 3Get a job, get a life, get a PhDGet a dose of...I don't care who started itYou're grounded until your 36Get your story straightAnd tell the truth for once for heaven's sakeAndIf all your friendsJumped off a cliffWould you jump too?If I've said it once, I've said at leastA thousand times before thatYou're too old to act this wayIt must be your father's DNALook at me when I am talkingStand up straighter when you walkA place for everythingAnd everything must be in placeStop crying or I'll give you something real to cry aboutOh! Brush your teeth, wash your face, get your PJs onGet in bed, get a hug, say a prayer with momDon't forget I love you *kiss*AndTomorrow we will do this all againBecause a mom's work never endsYou don't need the reason whyBecause, because, because, becauseI said so, I said so, I said so, I said soI'm the Mom, the mom, the mom, the momThe momTa-da!You're invited: “Come for the stories - stay for the magic!” Speaking of magic, would you subscribe, share a 5-star rating + nice review on your social media or podcast channel of choice, and join us next time!Meanwhile, stop by my Quarter Moon Story Arts website to:✓ Check out What I Offer,✓ Arrange your free Story Session call + Bonus gift,✓ Opt In to my monthly Newsletter for valuable tips & techniques to enhance your story work, and✓ Stay current with Diane and on LinkedIn.Stories From Women Who Walk Production TeamPodcaster: Diane F Wyzga & Quarter Moon Story ArtsMusic: Mer's Waltz from Crossing the Waters by Steve Schuch & Night Heron MusicAll content and image © 2019 to Present: for credit & attribution Quarter Moon Story Arts
Welcome back to "The Power Of God's Whisper Podcast". I'm excited to dive into a powerful story today about a man named Gideon. In Judges 6:12, the angel of the LORD appeared to him and said, “Mighty hero, the LORD is with you!” You may think Gideon was already a mighty hero, but not quite. Let's explore this together.Thank you for reading My Reasons To Believe. This post is public so feel free to share it.Point 1: God's Perception Versus Reality Gideon was far from being a mighty hero. He was actually hiding from the Midianite marauders. But God's voice doesn't echo our self-doubts or the accusations of others. He sees us from an eternal perspective. He sees the potential in us, the end from the beginning. God called Gideon a mighty hero because He knew what Gideon would become.Point 2: Hearing God's Voice Brings Out the Best in Us God's voice has transformative power. He called out to Gideon, not as the man he was in that moment, but as the man he would become. And that's how God speaks to us as well. He sees the best in us, even when we can't see it ourselves. He calls us according to the divine potential He has placed within us.Point 3: Embracing God's Assessment of Us It might be hard to accept the identity God gives us. You may not feel like a mighty warrior, a person of great faith, or whatever else He calls you. But, God's view of us is not based on our current circumstances but on our future possibilities. When God calls you something, even if it seems unlikely, trust His words. He calls us out of hiding and into our destiny.Conclusion: Gideon's story is a powerful reminder that God sees beyond our present struggles. He sees the potential in us, the end from the beginning. He speaks to the mighty hero within us, calling us out of hiding and into the glorious destiny He has planned for us.Call to Action: Are you ready to hear God's voice and step into the destiny He has for you? Start by spending time with Him, in prayer and in His word. Listen for His voice. He might call you something you don't feel like right now, but trust His words. Embrace the identity He has for you. And remember, God is always with you, just as He was with Gideon. Don't forget to subscribe to "The Power Of God's Whisper Podcast" for more inspiration and insights. See you next time!Let's Pray…Really, Lord? I find Your words about me to be far more lofty than I deserve or expect. Help me grow into the vision You have for me. I am everything You say I am, simply because You say so.My Reasons To Believe is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. Get full access to My Reasons To Believe at myr2b.substack.com/subscribe
Get your free Personal Reboot Guide at www.theconfidentman.meCheck out more resources to help you as a man at David Maxwell CoachingShame is a strange thing to talk about because many people try to deny shame or say we shouldn't feel it. Shame is real and it is a serious issue among men today. We talk about how shame hurts men but also bring out some of the positives of shame that we have forgotten as a society. The Negative Side of ShameShame is a hidden weight too many men carrySecret actions that no one may know about but we still deal withMen are designed to be the ones who stand up for othersShame causes us to pull ourselves from the fightShame and failure lead many men to quit tryingOther men just get hard to the shame and stop caringWe must recognize the negatives that are coming from our shame or they will silently rob us of our real design as menThe Positive Side of ShameOur conscience feeling bad can be a good direction for usIt makes us think twice before engaging in an actionImagining the shame more than imagining the thing you want to do is a positive benefit of shameWe have imaginations and we should use them to think ahead about our actionsSeeing someone else affected makes us rethinkShame can keep us from investigating and finding out more about specific activitiesThinking through the consequences of shame and letting our own shame keep us from hurtful things is a positive of shameThe Antidote to Bad ShameCharacter and integrity should be the pillars of strength for menDr. Henry Cloud in Integrity: "Character is the ability to meet the demands of reality"The more you have a strong core, the more you will make the right choicesCharacter is built through the lens of our realityThe Reality of Our Strengths and WeaknessesThe Reality of Our Core
3.19 Campylobacter Jejuni Microbiology review for the USMLE Step 1 exam Campylobacter jejuni is a gram-negative, comma-shaped bacteria that causes diarrheal illness It is the most common cause of bacterial diarrhea in the US It can be distinguished from other gram-negative, comma-shaped bacteria by its desired culture temperature of 42C/107F It is mostly acquired through consumption of raw milk, undercooked poultry, and contaminated water 90% of cases in the US occur during the summer months, likely due to increased grilling of poultry Symptoms include high fever, rigors, dizziness, body aches, diarrhea (more than 10 stools a day), abdominal cramping, and nausea Complications include Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) and reactive arthritis Diagnosis is typically made through a stool culture Treatment typically includes supportive care and replenishing fluids and electrolytes, with antibiotics (macrolides) used for more severe cases.
Today we decided to watch the 2013 concert film/documentary "One Direction: This is Us" It came out 10 years ago. The movie followed the Boys over several months on a world tour and also showed how they got together and also them recording a new album.
Get your free Personal Reboot Guide at www.theconfidentman.meCheck out more resources to help you as a man at David Maxwell CoachingDoes it matter what we think? As long as others don't know our thoughts are we really hurting anyone? We are! As men, our minds are key to our success in life. Our thoughts lead to actions in one form or another. Our thoughts affect us first and foremost. We must do the work to develop a strong core mindset. If don't do the work to build a strong core mindset there are areas of our life that will forever be untapped.What is a Core MindsetOur core mindset is the foundation of our thoughtsWe all think and how we think is our core mindsetThe push for sameness today has robbed many men of their ability to thinkWe have to protect and work on our mindsetOur core mindset is the key to our lifeAs men, we must take back our core mindsetMen who are confident in what they think and willing to explore and engage their full potential as menThe Default Core MindsetAs men, our brains have a default core mindset It is a mindset that we have to battle and fight if we want to be men who make a positive difference in the worldHere are some of the most common defaults in our minds that we have dealt with for centuriesSelfishnessAppetitesControlJust as men have done for centuries, we must battle to develop a better core mindsetThe men who do this are the men who reach the full limits of their potentialThe Better Core MindsetWe have to recognize our messed-up core mindset if we are going to fix itThis doesn't mean we beat ourselves up, but we try to objectively look at our actions and our thoughtsBetter Core Mindset Principle CharacteristicsAbove usPractical as well as philosophicalTimelessThe Case for the BibleIt's above usIt's practical as well as philosophicalTimelessWhat if I don't believe in God?The Bible is the best core mindset you can have as a manMentioned in this episode:Get your free Personal Reboot Guide Ebook to start your year strong! Go to www.theconfidentman.me to get your copy today.
This week we sit down with Matt Conte, Co-Founder of Outbound Lighting. Matt discusses the origin story of the business and details the benefits of Outbound's approach to lighting (hint: it has its origins in the automotive world). Outbound Lighting Support the Podcast Join The Ridership Automated Transcription, please excuse the typos: Outbound Lighting [00:00:00] Craig Dalton: Hello, and welcome to the gravel ride podcast, where we go deep on the sport of gravel cycling through in-depth interviews with product designers, event organizers and athletes. Who are pioneering the sport I'm your host, Craig Dalton, a lifelong cyclist who discovered gravel cycling back in 2016 and made all the mistakes you don't need to make. I approach each episode as a beginner down, unlock all the knowledge you need to become a great gravel cyclist. This week on the show, we welcome Matt Conti, one of the founders of outbound lighting. You may remember outbound from a number of years ago when they originally launched the company via Kickstarter project. I, for one, pay a lot of attention to Kickstarter cycling projects. For some reason, I'm a sucker for them, and I was sort of curious, you know, with so many industry stalwarts in the lighting business, how this company was gonna make a mark. Well, they successfully funded the campaign and have successfully built a. Manufacturing in the United States, which is absolutely amazing. But what was equally amazing was Matt's description of the technology that he applied to the bicycle lighting industry. He came from automotive lighting and had a lot of, advanced engineering skills specific to how to light the world in front of you at night. And it was fascinating to just hear his take on the existing bicycle light in. Further how he evolved the very specific lighting options that outbound uses and offers customers. Today I've been using their helmet mounted light as well as their bar mounted light and definitely appreciate a number of things about the design that Matt will get into you for you during this episode. So I hope you enjoy it. And just a quick note, I apologize. A little bit of sporadic release of episodes these days. I've been traveling and had a ton on my plate, and it's been a real struggle to get to the editing and everything else involved in the podcast, so I appreciate your patience. There certainly will be another couple weeks towards the end of the year where I take off just to decompress, but look forward to getting many, many more great episodes out the door to you in the coming year. With that said, let's jump right into my conversation with Matt. Matt, welcome to the show. [00:02:16] Matt Conte: Hey, glad pleasure to be here. I'm [00:02:19] Craig Dalton: excited to dig in and learn a little bit more about outbound lighting. Why don't we start by just letting the listeners know where you are in the world, and then let's talk about what led to you starting outbound light lighting in the first place. [00:02:32] Matt Conte: Yeah, so we are located in just north of Chicago, Illinois in Skokie, just kind of a middle suburb and stuff. And then we got Tom, my co-owner. He's out in Olympia, Washington. Kind of the Mecca Mountain biking out there for him. Couldn't convince him to move to the city, unfortunately, but yeah, so we are, we got our headquarters here. It's where we design, assemble, ship, every bike light that we make. And yeah, I guess from like far as what got us to start this company like you sort of mentions that kind of interestingly, like I'm not that kind of guy who. Hardcore biker who saw an opportunity to make something. I came from the automotive lighting ex world. Used to design l e d headlights, off road lights stuff like that, like Baja trucks and things like that. And I was really into rally car racing where you're on gravel roads, slinging cars, and a hundred miles an hour at night through the woods to blast. But at the time I was kind of looking to how. Basically branch out and take my experience from developing lighting products to something else. I just kind of wanted to do my own thing. And so I looked at experimental aircraft. I looked at exterior architectural lighting and all that kind of stuff. And wasn't until a friend of mine posted on Facebook basically a selfie of him writing at night Asia being like, Oh yeah, I heard night riding. And I was like, Huh, that's. You got a couple headlights on your bike, like what is that? Like, what are you using? And oh, I got the night rider, 1800 pros, the best light out there, all that kind of stuff. And I looked it up and it was like 350 bucks and I was like, it's a flashlight. And talked to him for a bit, kind of like, Hey, can I come over and check this thing out? Kind of seems like this is possibly an opportunity to take what we, what I've done in the automotive space and bring it to bikes. And so yeah, he took me out on a ride and I enjoyed it. Had a lot of fun and kind of was like, Yeah, I could definitely do way better than this. And from there I designed a prototype gave it to him. He liked it, loved it. Ran a Kickstarter campaign, was able to wait enough money to pay for the initial tool in the product, and bought a bing, bought a boom. Five years later. Here we are and we've now got three different products. We've gone through a couple iterations of stuff and yeah, now the goal is basically just continue to build the best bike lights that we can using all of the experience that I used to have from the automotive sector. Interesting. [00:04:50] Craig Dalton: So that was, that goes back to, was it 2017 for that original Kickstarter [00:04:54] Matt Conte: project? Yeah, just about I think I was starting to kick the idea around like 2016 or so. And then, They drew out some sketches, made some models pro, pretty printed a bunch of stuff, and I was doing this all like after hours from my normal job. Kind of trying to keep those two things completely separate. And yeah, so it was about a six months, eight months of just prototyping, validating, doing a bunch of stuff until it was like, All right, we've got something that looks production enough. Let's make a Kickstarter campaign and let's see what happens. I kind of use that as sort of that litmus test of either all my friends and family are wrong and it's not really a great product, or we do have something that other people who are outside of our little in sphere of influence actually find useful and want to have and all that kind of stuff. So that was kind of my testing ground just to see if this is what people wanted and turns out enough people wanted it that we were able to get that started and into production and all that kind of. That's [00:05:53] Craig Dalton: such an interesting kind of validating ground for new products Kickstarter. It's, it's got both incredible advantages, but also risks in terms of like getting, getting your fundraising across the finish line, et cetera. [00:06:07] Matt Conte: Yeah, it's certainly not as good as it used to be. Like I feel like Kickstarter usefulness, we were on the tail end of it. Not as ma a lot of people have been burned in the past by products that just never came to market, all that kind of stuff, and. It was kind of a challenge to like advertise and get the word out that this is what we're doing. And it's even harder nowadays. I think Kickstart has sort of pivoted their entire model away from my products to artists and creators and games and all that kind of stuff. So yeah, it's certainly not as, not as good as it used to be but it's definitely one of the best spots to kind of figure. Is this what people want? Yeah. And it's sort of a low cost, low risk kind of method before you go and dump two 50, $60,000 worth of tooling just to find out that you don't have a market, which I'm sure some people have done that, unfortunately, but that's. The way it goes. [00:06:58] Craig Dalton: I do remember when the product came to market on Kickstarter, simply because I sort of follow Kickstarter and certainly bike projects on Kickstarter with a lot of interest. And it had me thinking about the sort of decades of bike lights that I have experienced or have in the garage dating back to when you used to have the battery in your water bottle cage. Attached by a wire to your headlight and if you could get 250 lumens out of that setup, it was sort of miraculous. Yeah. And then I remember the sort of escalation of lumens being the sort of main driver of innovation. Like the, the form factors weren't changing too much. I just kept seeing this escalation of lighting power so much so that you know, when you got up to even north of 500, 600 lumen. You were getting outshined from behind. If the person behind you had a brighter light than you, it created this weird shadow, and it was worse than having your own light on the bike because they were so powerful behind you. And I think we'll get into this a little bit, but they were very sort of flashlight like and very directional in their beams. So it's, it's interesting and I wanna get into it for sure, your form factor and how that evolved. But let's, let's start what, you mentioned that you had a cyclic fr cycling front. You kind of showed you his lights that were state of the art at that moment in time. What did you see in that light that, given your experience in the automotive industry, you felt was, you know, dramatic shortcoming and the thing you could improve upon very easily? [00:08:32] Matt Conte: Yeah, definitely. So the first thing that. I kind of noticed just because a lot of the bike lights were kind of similar to sort of like the cheap off-road lights that I'd see in the automotive side where it was basically just an l e d sitting inside of a reflect bowl. It's kind of your most common, typical. Standard flashlight type of optic. And the problem with that is that gives you one pattern. It's just gonna be a straight up circle. You're gonna have a tight hotpot from where all of the light was bouncing off through a reflector size and concentrating on the middle. And then you're gonna have like a secondary ring of all the spill light coming straight from the l e d. So you end up. A very concentrated hotspot, an outer sort of just dimmer ring, and then a hard, sharp edge around the outside. And that's sort of what creates that sort of tunnel vision effect, like when you're riding quickly with behind one of those kind of lights. Basically we have not done that in the automotive sector since the sixties. We've all been shaped light with lots of, I mean, if you look at any headlight on a car anywhere the ones that are super basic with just a reflective, even like the old hoens, they're all segment reflectors and they're all doing very little things to redirect the light into certain. Because the automotive lighting inject is so heavily regulated. You have lighting targets that you have to hit, you have to get a certain amount of light at zero degrees, zero left and right, and zero degrees up and down. Like it has to be a hundred. I'm thinking off the top of my head, like 200 Ls or something like that, but then off to the left by 15 degrees up, five degrees down, you have to have a certain amount of Candela requirements to legally sell a vehicle. So the D o T and all that kind of stuff have set up basically all these lighting standards for high beam, low beam turn signals, brake lights, every kind of lighting you can think of. It's been standardized for targets, but in the bike lighting world, Especially offroad kind of step, especially in the US It's kind of very interesting how Europe and US are completely segmented. We can get into that later, but in the US there's absolutely no targets. There's no requirements. So the goal there was always just build a brighter looking light. Not always necessarily make it more useful. And I kind of feel like that segment was always so small and niche. Nobody was taking the advanced software packages that we use in the automotive side to bikes because I have personally designed reflectors and stuff for clients and things like that, and it gets expensive really quick. The software package that we use costs 25 to $30,000 a year just to license because it's such a niche automotive specific lighting package. There's only maybe 50 companies in the world that are using it. But it is what lets us redirect and shape light the way it is. And so when I rode with those older night Rider lights, and I, I don't want to call 'em out specifically cuz pretty much every brand is almost the same. That kind of what I noticed that these were all just flashlights. They were the same beam patterns that you would expect. From a flashlight that you're gonna use around your house, walking down the woods and all that kind of stuff. And I saw that opportunity to basically be like, All right, let me sit here as a driver. Not so much a writer, but like, how do I, how would I approach this problem if I was doing this from an automotive perspective? I could, Okay, I'm gonna be my eyesight eyelines here. My lights mounted two and a half feet below me. Six inches in front. Okay. I know that I want to be able to see with a reaction time of 10 seconds while riding at 35 miles an hour, the fastest, like super fast downhill. I know that I need I know that in order to recognize an object, you need three to five looks of light. Okay? If I know I'm doing 35 miles an hour. And I want 10 seconds, I can figure out that distance that I need to have something illuminated with three to five lus and then backtrack that to figure out how much cannella that I need. And that sets my minimum target in the center. And then basically I can then shape the beam pattern so that we hit that minimum target so it feels bright enough. And then we take all the other lumens that we have and kind of spread that around so that we build essentially a wall of light. Which is exactly how we do it in the automotive sector. A lot of fine tuning and figuring out what targets we wanna hit at what beam angles. All right, let's go into our software programs. Let's spend a couple weeks iterating, optimizing, simulating all these different types of beam patterns. Tweaking, reflect your facets individually until we get what we feel is inappropriate beam powdering for that Pacific type of light. Then we can prototype it. Test. Make changes. It's a very iterative process there. But yeah, it was pretty much that first night ride that I had was very eye-opening as far as, yeah, like if this is the best we can do so much better. And there's so much more opportunity to develop good lighting, utilizing the automotive sector and bring it to bikes rather than being just another bike and enthusiast who's putting together a really bright l e. Into an off the shelf reflector and calling it a bike light kind of thing. So, that's kind of how I see like our paths to arriving here being a little bit different than other companies especially in the logging space. But it does seem like a lot of biking companies start from bike and enthusiast, which obviously that makes sense. And so that's kind of how we arrived to that point and got. Yeah, it's super [00:14:12] Craig Dalton: interesting taking it with a kind of first principal's fresh eyes look and taking what you learned in the automotive industry. You know, one of the, the sort of hallmarks of the outbound lighting visual is it's sort of wider. You know, you think of a lot of these lights and they're, you know, essentially akin to a flashlight or circular or just square light right in the center kicking out a lot of lumens. As you just described, the outbound lighting profile is quite a bit wider. What do you do with that extra space? You mentioned how you sort of can really fine tune where you want the, the extra lumens to go to, et cetera. What are you doing across that big visual front plate of lights? [00:14:51] Matt Conte: Yeah, so that's also kind of playing into the whole like physiological way that our eyes respond to light. Our eyes prefer very. Evenly lit spaces as you can kind of imagine, like when you're riding in, driving in a tunnel and you come outta the tunnel and you get that like big flash of brightness, how it takes a little bit for your eyes to like auto expose. I guess like from a camera perspective. The same thing happens when you're riding a night. If you're riding behind a light that's like very bright, the center and has harsh edges, when that light is moving around, like your eyes are constantly trying to balance. This bright object moving around in front of you versus when you have a very wide even beam pattern, it feels a lot more like daylight. And that's kind of like why we feel so comfortable right around in the day because everything is evenly lit from, not only from like where you're trying to look, but also all the ground in front of you from like where you're looking all the way out to the front of your tire. And so that is definitely like one of the biggest challenges. And as far as like developing an optic. Is to set up the, the beam, and again, the, the surfaces on these things have to be so precise. The tooling for them is very expensive, but it's part of like, why it's so good. Basically what we're doing after we set that target hotspot that we want to hit, then like you said, we're taking all that extra lumens and stuff. And then first of all, I'm trying to like make the lighting from the, where you're looking all the way to the front of your. As evenly as even as possible on the ground. So I'm able to basically set up like a sensor plane in my software for brightness and then set up like a driver perspective, or in this case a writer perspective. But since we use an automotive software, we're always using driver. So I set that up and then basically I'm able to like do cross sectional curves and make sure that we don't have any like weird ripples or really. Peaks which you can kind of see if you study a lot of different beam pattern all over the spectrum from like the cheapest lights to the most expensive lights. You'll see, like there's blotchy areas where lights just gets a little bit more concentrated. You might not notice it, but isn't until someone like me points it out kind of thing. But it's a really, really tough job to try and do that. And that's sort of like where I find the value in the software that we. To be so valuable because yeah, once we set like the ground plane to be evenly lit from the front of your tire all the way out you're looking, then that's where I try to expand the width and then more importantly, try to taper the brightness so that it's, you get all this peripheral spill light to decide that never shows up in pictures, never shows up in video because it's just so. That camera sensors can't really pick it up unless you start pull a Photoshop and brightening stuff and all that kind of stuff. But our eyes are incredibly sensitive optical in instruments, so our eyes start to pick this stuff up and then from the very outside corners, I very progressively try to ramp up that brightness to the center so it feels very smooth and progressive. And that's sort of one of those things. . That's why like when you shine one of our lights, like against the garage wall or the back wall, it's not gonna seem as bright compared to some other lights because we spread it out so much. But it is one of those things like once you're on a trail, on a road pitch dark, and you turn on our step and you give your eyes a few minutes to adjust, and it's one of those things that people just never wanna go back to another type of light. And it really is all those little. Details and days of simulating and tweaking and simulating and tweaking, and simulating, tweaking over and over and over that it really pays off. And I'm pretty sure that, I mean, I notice kind of like why our lives have been so well received. It's a, yeah, it's, it's something that no one else has really done before. Because it is a very expensive it of process that if you try to hire that out to somebody, . Like you have to give them the targets. You have to say, I wanted to be this bright, I've got this much light I can do, make it work and that, and I'll give you 10 or $15,000. And that guy's gonna do two days, three days worth of work and be like, Oh, here you go. Versus like us, we're obsessive about it. I've been up till two or three in the morning just simulating, tweaking. Cuz every time I simulate I'm like, All right, I'm gonna let this simulate. I'm gonna go to bed and be. Wait five minutes, like, Oh, but I'm so close. Let me tweak this again. And Right another five minutes, ah, if I just move this another degree to the left, it'll be all right. And then boom, three o'clock in the morning. And my wife's wondering why I'm not in bed yet. It's, it's that kind of obsession with lighting is like, it's why I enjoy what we do. I love what we're doing, making lights and all that kind of stuff. And I think that really shows in the products. And customer. Yeah, [00:19:39] Craig Dalton: there's a lot of, there's a lot of detail we can get into on the lights. So after the Kickstarter project goes off, you've, you've amassed a little bit of capital to presumably pay for some tooling and get some of the basic products off the ground. What was your vision for how you would, you would assemble the product? Where are the components coming from and did that change from the original Kickstarter first version to, to what you guys are doing now? [00:20:02] Matt Conte: Yeah, so. At first, like the previous company I was at before, we did a lot of stuff overseas. Just cause like the tooling's cheap, all that kind of stuff. And so initially, like after we ran the Kickstarter, we raised like 30 grand. I still needed like another 40, so I ended up getting a home equity line of credit against our house at the time. So I was literally betting the house on this working. Thankfully it did but. It was one of those things where I wanted to work with domestic tooling companies and all that kind of stuff. But the problem is, is that you need a lot of scale. So these guys usually don't even wanna like start talking to you until you're doing like 5,000 units, 10,000 units. At the time I needed 500. I just needed enough to get going. So in order to get the company off the ground, we had to go overseas as far as like getting the tooling going because they'll do the tooling cheap and they'll do it with low minimum quantities, cuz all they really care about is the tooling. While domestic suppliers are more for the recurring orders that come in every day or every quarter or whatever. And so we were able to get stuff started and make the initial shipments and all that kind of stuff. And the tooling, all the tooling was done overseas. The PCBs the actual printed circuit boards and the assembly was done still stateside. At the time I was using a company out in Kansas City. We've always kept the electronics state side because that's, that's the part of developing these products. Needs a lot of hands on experience and needs a lot of like quick turn reaction parts will be out of stock and alright, quickly we gotta find another resistor that can drop into this and all that kind of stuff. And that's where you need that good kind of communication lanes which don't always get going overseas, but when it comes to like a rubber strap or just a guy cast piece, like yeah, you can go overseas and do that kind of stuff. My goal was always to try and build the company up to the scale that we could do more domestic manufacturing. And we finally have kind of reached that point where we're building 10,000 EVAs this year, well, I think we did about eight or 10,000 this year. And once you get to about six to eight to 10,000 units per year, that's when domestic manufacturing makes a lot of sense. Not just from, but the tooling's gonna be more expensive. The lead time's a little bit longer, but the per unit cost is gonna be a little bit cheaper. And more importantly, you're gonna save a ton on shipping shipping, tariffs, all that kind of stuff. And so, as well as just being able to quickly react to different changes and things like that. So we now have a fantastic supplier out in Michigan. They, they do automotive components as their bread and butter, but they also like working with small manufacturers like ourself and. , we're able to now utilize a lot more advanced materials. We're using thermally conductive plastics and everything, which I think is an industry first. We're able to get it. It's one of those things, like the quality just gets so much better as you're able to bring things domestically, but you can't do that until you get the scale. And so it's kind of like a chicken before the egg thing where either you're gonna have a ton of money and you can do it right away and just make a big risk, which I couldn't do because we didn't have investors. We didn't have anything. It. Me betting the house against some tooling that I hope works in an industry that I don't have a ton of experience in. But now we've gotten to that point where every single new product that we develop is almost a hun a hundred percent stateside developed. We do all the assembly and manufacturing in-house. I've invested a lot into automation, robotics stuff like that. Mostly because I love playing with them. I'm an engineer and I love programming them and trying to figure out how to make things better, faster, quicker. Not just from lights, but also how we can build things better. So we're able to build 30,000 lights a year, which is one production guy overseeing three or four different robotics systems. Wow. That autonomously dispense grease. They autonomously sold. I've got an order right now for a cobot arm, so we're gonna have like an arm that's picking up pieces, snapping 'em together, checking the torque on all the screws, checking the force to snap those pieces together. Basically, you can turn it on on an optical sensor, make sure that the light output is exactly what it needs to be. If it's not great, kick it off to the side. Someone else will look at it. But for the most part, trying to do everything I can. Basically make this business run as smoothly as possible so that we can just continue to focus on building better products and as well as like the customer service and all that kind of stuff. Cause yeah, for me it's one of those things that as if you build a great product first, everything else becomes easy. If you build a product that just works every time, you don't need a huge customer service department that's handling warranties and all this kind of stuff. Build a product that's just simple to operate. You don't need complex instruction manuals telling you how to turn on the light. Like it's just turns on, it goes and all that kind of stuff. So to me it's kind of one of those things like we'll always spend the extra couple bucks on genuine components and all that kind of stuff automotive grade sealants and plastics so that this stuff just won't break. And if it does break, we just fix it. We just. You know, if it breaks, it's an engineering issue, we'll be able to figure out how to make it not break and we'll be able to work with our suppliers quickly to modify the tool, and three months later we'll have the product with that problem solved. And so our stuff is incredibly iterative. The product that you buy a year from now is probably gonna be very slightly different than what you would get today, just because we're constantly trying to stamp out every little issue that comes up. And so, Yeah. Yeah, I love [00:25:41] Craig Dalton: that. I love that that benefit of us manufacturing and having that tight relationship. So you can take the customer feedback if you're listening and just put it right back into the product. And sometimes it's minor, but it's always a step in the right direction, whether it's for performance, durability, [00:25:57] Matt Conte: what have you. Yeah, yeah, exactly. And it's, yeah, it's one of those things that it sounds easy on paper. It's shocking, like how many companies don't actually do that. Yeah. [00:26:07] Craig Dalton: Listening to customers is surprisingly hard and actually doing something about it, I found. [00:26:12] Matt Conte: Yeah. Yeah. It definitely is. But, you know, let's, [00:26:15] Craig Dalton: let's, let's talk about the, the outbound and lighting lineup as of today. What are the different models? And I'd love to just talk a little bit about the intention of the various [00:26:24] Matt Conte: models. Yeah, yeah. So like, that's sort of another one of those things that makes us unique in this space is, We make a different light for each specific purpose. We're not just making one light at three different power levels or five different power levels. We first, we've got our like bread and butter, which is more for mountain biking. Its so a trail evo that's like a handlebar mounted bike light that's designed to go into handle bars. It's pretty heavy, so it's not gonna fit on your helmet. And it's just an incredibly wide even beam pattern. So that you can be moving your handlebars, you know, 30 degrees to the left and you'll still be able to see where you're going. And then we have our hangover light, which is an ultra lightweight, very slim, low profile helmet light that's designed to go on your helmet can work on the handlebar, but it's not great because it is a narrower spot. Because wherever your head is pointed is probably your eyes are looking. So we can kind of take that beam powder and narrow it down. And still get, have half the lumens, but still the same peak output as I like handlebar light, if not a little bit more. That's so [00:27:28] Craig Dalton: interesting and, and sorry to interrupt Matt, but I, I spent a bunch of time with the, the helmet mounted light. The hangover recently Loved it by the way. And hearing you describe kind of the very purposeful difference, honestly, my entire lighting. I've stuck handlebar mounted lights on my helmet. Yeah, and there was no distinction between the two. It was just like, Okay, great. For the uninitiated night rider, like having a helmet light is important because as you turn your head, as you're going through sweeping corners, A lot of times, certainly with traditional lights, the the light on your bar can disappear. All of a sudden you're going through this arcing turn and you're actually not seeing the trail you're seeing off in the woods. And, you know, you've touched on this in a couple different ways. One, on your handlebar lights you've described how you've tried to purposely widen that, that lighting profile mm-hmm. so that you can turn that 30 degrees and still be in. But the addition of the handle, or sorry, the, the helmet mounted light just gives you that additional ability to kind of look even further. So from by my likes when I'm mountain biking, the ultimate combination is definitely that Evo Plus hangover helmet. Helmet mounted light. [00:28:38] Matt Conte: Yeah, definitely. And that's where those two lights, we also designed to work in concert with each other. So like, the exact same color tempera. Pretty similar being punched strain, so you're not like one light isn't overpowering the other, but it is once you're like looking off down into a hair pan or something like that, that's where it's like you get the brightness of the helmet light. But we make sure that the peripheral spill blends well enough that you're not ending up looking at like two distinct lights. Like it's still feels like an unbroken wall. And so that was like a really important part of the design constraints that we set up when we set the initial lighting targets. Both of these lights was they need to work well together, so, I think it was like 135 degrees off center is like what I aimed for. So basically you're looking your hand, the bars are dead ahead and you're looking like way back behind you. And I still wanted to make sure that there light was blending a little bit so it didn't feel like you saw a black hole basically in between. Yep. Where you're looking and where your hand of eyes are pointing. So it always feels unbroken. Cause as long as you do that, then your eyes are not gonna like. I keep saying like auto exposure, but it's not really the terminology. But basically your eyes aren't trying to adjust for the blackness here and the bright intensity. So as long as it keeps it unbroken. Yeah. Also it's like as you write with it longer, your eye, your pupils start to open up. Cuz they're so used to it, they're not having to contract and expand and contract and expand with the varying brightness levels. As long as it's consistent, you have people who can slowly expand and take in more light. So even though we're working with Lower Lu. Because we wanna have a longer battery life. By just having that unbroken wall of light, it ends up feeling brighter as you get used to it because of the fact that you were, i your eyes are physically opening up more and able to take in more light. Just like when you sit in a room for five minutes in the dark, your eyes start to open up and you can start to see a little bit better. The same thing effect happens with just dim lighting. And all that kind of stuff. And so that's sort of where that philosophy of make sure everything's evenly lit, ultimately ends up helping a lot more as far as like having to like feel a lot brighter, even though the numbers on paper don't seem that impressive. But of course that's one of those things that you can't really, you can't break that down into a one line item on an ad. You can't show that in a picture. You can't show that in video. It's one of. . You just gotta get out there. You gotta ride with it. You gotta try it. And so that's why like word of mouth for us is our biggest yeah. Seller pretty much. Well hopefully [00:31:10] Craig Dalton: this deep dive in the podcast will be a good mechanism for people understanding like the depth of the. Engineering that go into these products and the thoughtfulness that you guys have put in there. Yeah. I think at, before I interrupted you, you were gonna talk about the third lineup, Third light, your lineup. Yeah. [00:31:28] Matt Conte: Yeah. So that's our newest light which is called Detour. It's basically like a road beam headlight. It's designed for gravel riding and road riding. The main difference is being, is that it's, it's basically like a low beam on a car headlight. It's got a cutoff. Where, basically a horizontal line where the light doesn't go above it. So that way you can aim the light up and flat and still be able to see really far down the road where you want to go. Cuz you can put the brightest part of the beam right there, but you're not blinding oncoming traffic. Which is a big deal especially for gravel riders, road riders, or you're approach. Other rider coming towards you, pedestrians and stuff like that. Definitely don't really need it for mountain biking. Cuz a moose doesn't really care if you don't blind him or not. He's still gonna be in the middle of the trail. So, so yeah, that's our newest one. Which again, it's a very specific type of light. It's designed to be a hand of our light, designed to be front and center on your bike. And designed to be aimed in a certain way so that you're not blinding oncoming traffic and stuff. And that's still very wide beam pattern, very progressive lighting from where you're looking all the way out to the front of your tire. I've got side market lights and stuff, so you have better side visibility for traffic or things like that. But yeah, it's just another one of those like. We're not gonna come out with a detour of 1500 or detour 2000 like it's, that's, this is the light. It does around 1200 lumens. You're able to get a lot brighter hotspot because the fact that you, you're not putting half that light in the sky, but to get the cutoff beam pattern so it feels brighter than actually is, you can get good run times and all that kind of stuff. So, Yeah. Cause I was, it's still, [00:33:06] Craig Dalton: it still boggles my mind as someone who started out with a 200 lumen light back then as being like the pinnacle of performance that now you can get 1200 lumens in this incredibly small package. No battery, no external battery. It's all right in there. It's, it's just [00:33:23] Matt Conte: astounding. And you still get an hour and a half, two hours of run time and weighs, was it 135 grams or something? Yeah, and I mean we've got some other designs in play right now that get set even smaller. I'm really, that's sort of like, you know, looking towards the future. Cause you know, like you said, it, it started out with like halogens and car batteries. That was kind of how it started out 20 years ago, 30 years ago. And then IDs bulbs came in and they came out with a little really miniature IDs that again, they did 250, 300 lumens. But they were power sucks. As you waste most of that energy and just heat, like heat coming out of the lamp. But then in around 2005, 2006 is kind of when LEDs became a lot more mainstream. You were able to get them cheap enough that you could build cheap products with. So you saw that explosion, not only the automotive side. Cause that was like when I was really into that, went. The H I d Offroad Lights to Rigid Industries coming out with all their LED D stuff. And the same thing, the bike side. That's like when Night Rider came out, their first I think it was the new or the Lua, their first Lua, like 2005, 2006. Again, 300 lumens. 400 lumens maybe. All that kind of stuff. But then over the last 10 to 15 years, LEDs have gotten, I'd say there's about a five or 10 year stretch where LEDs just every year, just huge leaps. Huge leaps, huge leaps, and then kind of slowed down and stuff. Now the biggest technological leaps in LEDs have basically come from the miniaturization of them. So, And that ultimate that's been driven by the automotive sector, that the automotive sector requires smaller and smaller optics, which means that you need a smaller and smaller source, AKA D L E D. The l e d has to be as tiny as possible so that we can control the rays that are coming, the rays of light coming outta the l e d. So we can control that on a very small optic, and you can put that exactly where you need to. Cause if you put a huge l e. Inside of a tiny optic, you're just gonna get scatter everywhere. It's not gonna be well optimized and all that kind of stuff. So the automotive sector has driven the LEDs to become smaller and smaller and smaller, and they come out like the lumen values don't look impressive on paper. They'll be like, Oh, it's only 300 lumens on this. But that's kind of like why our trail Evo has nine of these LEDs. Cuz you can put these tiny, tiny LEDs into a tiny optic. And still get incredible beam control versus if you try to take like a Cree X H P 3.0 whatever, whatever the biggest l e D is that can do 1300, 2000 lumens, but it's massive. It's like a centimeter wide. You need a ginormous optical reflector to put that into for it to be of any use. Otherwise, you're just scattering light everywhere, uncontrolled. And you see that a lot on a lot of cheap lights. You could tell. They looked at the data sheet, they saw who? 1300 lumens. That looks great. And they're like, Well, let's just, but we gotta fit in this little thing, so let's just taste this l e d, slap it into that. Cool. We got a really bright light. And it's like, Yeah, but it doesn't do anything. Well, it's either extremely concentrated or it's just blown out. Uh um, and so, man, I kind of go off on tangents a lot if you can't tell So, yeah, like the technological jumps, LEDs have kind of slowed down a bunch. And now there's incredibly tiny, incredibly power dense and it's great for us, but there's not, there's not much more that LEDs can do. Like we've kind of reached the final form, I guess you could say. But the next big technological leaf that's gonna be really interesting to jump into is batteries. You know, all these automotive company, again, automotive is leading the, the sector to kind of then drips down into bikes. All of the solid state batteries that every single automotive company is investing into companies like solid power, all that kind of stuff. They're basically promising these batteries that can charge instantly, they can put out huge amounts of power. They won't be as affected by thermals as much. So you can run 'em really cold or really hot and they won't lose a lot of life. And just a lot more power dense. And so to me that's gonna be like the next big generational leap. Not gonna happen next year. It's not gonna happen two years from now, but maybe like five or six years. We hope that we can get, you know, 21 700 cell batteries in a solid state battery for a reasonable price. And that's, These bike flights can either be twice as bright for the same run time, or last twice as long for the same brightness. And that's gonna be, and also incredibly lightweight. Those graphing batteries, I think are like half the weight of a single 21 700 cell. Wow. So that's gonna be, that'd be refreshing. Yeah. And that's gonna be really exciting once those can start coming online. But again, that's probably five years until that becomes more mainstream. They have these technological breakthroughs that they keep promising. Thankfully it's not as vaporware as like hydrogen energy, but we're getting close I feel like. And so a couple [00:38:29] Craig Dalton: nuance things I wanted to point out before we let you go is correct me if I'm wrong, but you can actually charge the light while you're running it. [00:38:37] Matt Conte: Yeah, that's, Yeah. Which of the, [00:38:38] Craig Dalton: It may seem counterintuitive to people that, that doesn't exist across the board, but mm-hmm. , I'd say the vast majority of lights I've ever run. You could not have an external battery pack to kind of top it off if you needed to. [00:38:50] Matt Conte: Yeah. Yeah, pretty much most bike flights, you do have your external battery pack that you have to plug in into, and once you unplug it, it dies. Cause obviously you don't have any power or you plug it in, you can't turn it on because it's just simply charging. Or if you can plug it in and turn it on, it's just gonna be stuck in a low mode because the charging current going into the light isn't enough to like actually power the light. So what we've done knowing that we had a lot of customers who do 24 hour races and all that kind of stuff we do USBC pass through charging where you can basically plug in the light and sort of the way that we can do it is that the. Is being powered off the battery, but we're charging the battery with an external power bank. So you can technically, if you're running like Evo on high with a sort of a low current battery pack, you can technically outrun the battery pack and end up running down. But if you're running like a medium or low, you basically the battery pack charging the battery faster than the LEDs are pulling the power out. So we're not trying to do like a straight through, like the light isn't being powered by the external battery. The external battery package, charging the battery inside the light, which is then being used. So yeah, that was basically just kind of like, as one of those like customer requests, like, Hey, how can we use a cheap Amazon power bank to power my light? Can I do that? And like, Oh yeah, we, we can, I don't see why not. Like you just set up the charging protocols and all that kind of stuff so you could allow that to happen. It gets really complex. Turns out USB stuff is not as easy as it seems. All these like handshakes that have to happen between two different components and it's a real pain in the us But Tom, my co-founder or co-owner out in Seattle, he loves that stuff. So while I'm up at 3:00 AM tweaking beam patterns, he's up at 3:00 AM trying to tweak USB charging protocol. I love it kind of stuff. So yeah, that Love it. Unique features. Yeah. [00:40:47] Craig Dalton: The final detail I wanted to talk about was just the mounting mechanisms that you guys have designed cuz I found them to be very clever and slick and unobtrusive, which is not something I could say about a lot of the mounting mechanisms I've had to endure from other lights. [00:41:00] Matt Conte: Yeah, I mean, you should have seen some of the prototypes that we came up with before we landed on this one. They were large Oakley or Vinicky and not great. But the current one that we use for the Well, for Hangover, we just simply just use what everyone has used for the last 15 years, which is just a standard action camera. I can't officially say GoPro anymore because now they clamp down on that, but it's a GoPro mal. So everyone's used to that. It works great. Low profile. A lot of bikes have, It was built into it, so why not just make sure our helmet light works with that out of the box, which is why Hangover has. Action camera tabs on the back of it. But for Evo and Detour that mounting system was one of those like real hard design challenges because like, like we obviously buy like every single competitor light we can get our hands on. And all of them, they always have at least like one or two good design features. And I'm like, that's a good idea. I'm gonna just take this and put this in mind. But when it came to mounting, I literally could not find anything. I was like, This is great. Cause a lot of the mounting things were, if they were secure, they were really hard to put on. Like, you could not take 'em off with like a pair of thick winter writing thick winter writing gloves. Which for me, that's always been like a design standard. Make sure that we can operate anything on a light with a thick pair of winter writing gloves because most of our customers are ready at night in the. And it sucks to not have to be, not be able to turn on your light or mount it or anything like that. So we went through a lot of iterations trying to figure out how in the world we're gonna mount this light so that it can quickly be taken on and off and all that kind of stuff. Until one of my friends not related at all the bikes or anything, he's a big camera nerd. He like, Hey, you should look at man photos, camera lights, or camera mounts that were the tripod stuff. Super simple. People have used it for literally 40 years. I bought one of them. I'm like, Huh, this is a really good idea. Just a little, It's [00:42:57] Craig Dalton: so interesting that you say that. Now that you say that, I'm like, Oh yeah, that makes sense. I've seen that before and [00:43:02] Matt Conte: that's where I've seen it. Yeah. Yeah. So basically I took the man photo design. I checked photo patents. They all expired in like the late nineties. They patented like in the seventies or 80. And so with basically a free for all you could use it you're not gonna infringe on anything. And basically I took what they did, miniaturized it and tried to make sure that it works so that no matter what, you could have it mounted bird according to light. Disney just gonna fall to the ground. So we put in a little notches and stuff like that to capture it. But for the most part, it's a man foot camera. Designed for bikes or for bike lights. And so all of our lights or all of our handlebar lights have that basically standard n size on the back, a a man photo camera base plate that can slot right into our quick release mount and. Click it in, push it back, closes the plunger torsion spring snaps it shut, and you just push down in the lever to really secure it in place. Little serrated teeth with a big thumb screw that can again, easily be operated when you're wearing a pair of gloves. So you can adjust the beam angle without having to over tighten the amount or anything like that. Yeah, it's one of. The, that mount is on its third iteration. We've already got a fourth one in work right now cause we want to get rid of the, the he screw and all that kind of stuff. So we're gonna try to do like an overcame mechanism and everything. Yeah, it's, I don't know if you ever got to experience the first ones where I did 'em, amount of die cast aluminum and powder coding and ugh, that was one of those hindsight. 2020. I really wish I hadn't done that. But now, last fiber amounts. They work great. The smooth action, all that kind of stuff. It's again, goes back to that whole situation of like, every, let's just iterate. Let's quickly make changes. Don't worry that this cool tool cost five grand. Like we've gotta make the product good. If it's not easy to operate for customers, then no one's gonna like it. Yeah, and all that kinda stuff. So, [00:44:54] Craig Dalton: Awesome. Well, thanks for walking us through the lineup and that backstory. I love, I love hearing your journey. I love, it's sort of admirable to get out there and Kickstarter and put yourself out there on the line. As a former small business owner myself, I, I feel your, I feel that pain of when you mortgaged your house just to get the, the product off the ground and congrats for. Ultimately bringing it back to the US for manufacturing, as you mentioned, so many advantages there, let alone helping the economy, but just advantages that you can continue to roll out better and better performance and take that customer feedback to heart every time it comes through. Yeah, [00:45:30] Matt Conte: yeah, definitely. Yeah, it's always the golds yeah, it's, it makes business sense from a money profit standpoint, and it makes sense just from. The product standpoint, we're able to, and it's, the goal is to just continually advance ourselves further. So like these thermally conducted materials it was something I wanted to use for almost a decade. But we just never had the volume to justify it. Cuz I have to purchase three to 4,000 pounds of this material, just like the minimum order quantity, which is equivalent to like 10,000 units. And when you're starting out, you only have 500 or a thousand for the entire years, like, I can't, I can't justify that. But that's sort of our business goal is like just continually advance and kind of pull away from the competition by integrating these technologies that is not as easy to integrate from the start. Or you need the scale. So, yeah, that's where, yeah, we've got a lot of fun things planned. We've got a long list of things we want to do. We're trying to push into. Bike shops. Next year, like we finally, we've got our manufacturing dial. We've got the robots in place, like we can finally like outpace building from our retail website demand. So now we're kind of trying to expand into bike shops. We're getting like retail, this display developed and all that kind of stuff. And so that's sort of what we're hoping, you know, if anybody shot you listening, you can always go to outbound lighting.com and talk to us, get connected, get you all hooked up and everything. . Yeah. That's where if anybody ideas and stuff like that, always open to listening. If you email us, it's gonna be either come to me, it's gonna come to Tom, like there's literally four people in the company. That's it. And so it's very personable. You're gonna talk to a real person. We don't have any bots running, thankfully. . [00:47:05] Craig Dalton: Right on. Matt, thanks again for the time. I'll make sure everybody knows how to get in touch with you and super informative and congrats. [00:47:12] Matt Conte: Yeah, I appreciate it. It's been great chatting. [00:47:14] Craig Dalton: That's gonna do it for this week's edition of The Gravel Ride podcast. Big thanks to Matt for coming on the show. I hope you, like I did, learned a lot about lighting and the nuances around the lighting choices we can make as cyclists. If you're interested in supporting the show, you can visit buy me a coffee.com/the gravel ride, or ratings and reviews are hugely important. If you're interested in connecting with me, I encourage you to join the ridership. That's www.theridership.com. That's a free global cycling community. Tons of people, and interesting conversations going on in any given day. So I encourage you to join that. Until next time, here's to finding some dirt under your wheels.
This is the final chapter of Wingspan, closing out Magpie and Luca's story, and opening us up to Farfalla's... but that will come at another time. More specifically, it will come in January of 2023 with season 3 of The Skylark Bell podcast in which we'll read SkyeDive, the third and final book in the Skylark Trilogy.Be sure to listen to the end of this episode for the premier of a new song by Cannelle, inspired by this story, called Embers & Ash. Both the version featured in this episode as well as an acoustic version are available to Patreon subscribers, join us at http://www.patreon.com/melissaoliveriThe Skylark Bell is brought to you by: Phaeton Starling Publishing and Things with Wings Productions.The Skylark Bell official website - http://www.theskylarkbell.comThe Skylark Bell on Instagram: @theskylarkbellAuthor/Producer: Melissa Oliveri - http://www.melissaoliveri.comJoin Melissa's Patreon for early access to podcast episodes, music downloads, and more: http://www.patreon.com/melissaoliveriMelissa on Twitter: @melissaoliveriAll music by Cannelle: http://www.cannellemusic.comCannelle on Instagram: @cannelle.musicOfficial Merch Shops: http://www.melissaoliveri.com/storeFULL TRANSCRIPT:Things with Wings Productions presents: Episode 38 of The Skylark Bell, Wingspan. I am your host, Melissa Oliveri. In our previous episode, Magpie, still living as Farfalla, tried to warn her younger self of what the future holds before she passed away, but her plan was foiled by the appearance of Dealan-de.In today's episode we read Chapter 38 – Epilogue - in which we learn a little bit more about what happened after those final moments.This is the final chapter of Wingspan, the 2nd book in The Skylark Trilogy. Season 3 will feature the third and final book, titled SkyeDive, which will delve into the story of the original Farfalla, and how life, distance, and time can transform a person.Between now and the start of season 3 in January, I will be sharing various original stories, including a couple of Halloween specials, and some tales from my other podcast, A Carefully Built Pretend. I also do monthly live storytimes on my Instagram account, @ the skylark bell (just check the show notes for links).Be sure to listen through to the end of this episode for the premiere of a brand new song called Embers and Ash, which was inspired by the tragic tale of Magpie and Lucas.Now, it's time to settle in… grab a blanket, and a warm drink… Here is the short and sweet finale of The Skylark Bell - Wingspan.I sit and stare at her body for a long time, slowly running my eyes over her face. Perhaps it is what my face would have looked like, eventually. A roadmap of smiles, frowns, and tears etched over the course of decades. I can't help but admire that wild, white, wavy hair that never allowed itself to be tamed over the course of more than a century. It is remarkable, I suppose. I must admit, she caught me by surprise when she grabbed my arm! How clever of her to use me as a conduit to take her a few paces into the future. I can't help but feel some respect for her, and some sadness. After all, she is family. Of course, her little stunt won't work. But you already know that.I've already thrown her diary into the fireplace. The only story that matters is mine. But that is a story for another time…Thank you so much for listening. This concludes Season 2 of The Skylark Bell. I truly hope you've enjoyed the story and following Magpie and Lucas' adventures through distance and time. Be sure to subscribe so you can be notified when Season 3 launches in January! This time, we'll be revisiting the story from Farfalla's persepective – and this time we're talking about the REAL Farfalla.The Skylark Bell is brought to you by Phaeton Starling Publishing and features original music by Cannelle. I would love for you to join me on Patreon for additional content and be sure to follow my social media accounts where I share regular updates and previews. The Skylark Bell has become an award winning podcast thanks to your support and listenership with season 1 winning Best Podcast in the Multi-Dimension Independent Film Festival, Finalist in the Swedish International Film Festival, and being a Selection in both Flicker's Rhode Island Film Festival and Minnesota Web Fest.Once again, thank you, this story, this podcast, wouldn't be possible without your support and listenership. Now I'm off to write more mystical magical stories, but I'll be back in no time, no time at all...Embers & AshI'll be gone from the wreckageLeaving it all behindHolding fast to the waterSlipping through my fingersIt's the wrong time, the wrong time,the wrong time for usTwisted hearts in the rubbleSplit souls in their wakeWe were tired and troubledStar crossed and ill fatedIt's the wrong time, the wrong time,the wrong time for usIt can't be time to say goodbye (don't go)I'll hold on to the embersBurning in my palm‘Til they're nothing but ashesFloating under the same sunIt was the wrong time, the wrong timeThe wrong time for usSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/theskylarkbell/exclusive-contentAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
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