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How a Former Recruiter Built a £266M Financial Planning Business - Vikash's Journey from BD to Chartered AdviserIn this episode of the Financial Planner Life podcast, Sam Oakes is joined by Chartered Financial Planner Vikash, who shares how he made the bold move from a successful recruitment career into the world of financial advice.Vikash's story is one of intentional reinvention. After building a strong career in recruitment and business development, he stepped away from the boardroom and into financial planning - starting from scratch, taking a pay cut, and retraining in his early 30s.Now, ten years later, he co-leads Chatsworth Wealth Management, a thriving practice with £266 million in Assets Under Management, serving over 1,000 families.We talk about:What made him walk away from recruitmentWhy recruiters are uniquely skilled for financial planningHow he took over and scaled an existing practiceBuilding client trust and social proof through contentThe future of advice, succession planning, and team cultureThe value of understanding client happiness and purposeIf you're in recruitment and wondering what's next, or you're considering a second career in financial advice, this episode is packed with insight and inspiration.Begin your financial planning career journey todayWhether you are looking to become a paraplanner, administrator, mortgage and protection adviser or financial planner, the Financial Planner Life Academy is for you. With limited entry-level job roles, giving yourself the best financial planning career education, will not only kick start your financial planning journey with relevant qualifications and skills, but it'll also help you achieve success much faster.&nbsBe sure to follow financial planner life on YouTube for extra content about a career within Financial Planning HIT THAT SUBSCRIBE BUTTON! If you're looking to start your career in Financial Planning, check out the Financial Planner Life Academy hereReach out to Sam@financialplannerlife.com in regards to sponsorship, partnerships, videography or career development.
Thank you for joining us for another episode of the Low Carb MD Podcast. Dr. Vikash Modi is the Medical Director of Preventative Medicine at Prenuvo, a company whose mission is “to flip the paradigm from reactive ‘sick-care' to proactive health care.” Prenuvo accomplishes this goal by using their award-winning whole body scans to safely, quickly, and non-invasively detect early signs of cancer, aneurysms, and diseases. Dr. Vikash earned his BS degree in Neuroscience from Emory University and his MD from the Medical College of Georgia at Augusta University. In this episode, Drs. Brian, Tro, and Vikash talk about… (00:00) Intro (04:04) How Dr. Vikash got into medicine and what he is passionate about (14:47) The work that Prenuvo does and how they are able to offer incredible value to people through full body scans (22:31) The medical-legal landscape and patient anxiety (29:21) Procedure-based insurance and preventative screening (34:17) The possible pros and cons of GLP-1 drugs (38:52) Prenuvo's new 100,000 patient study looking into the long-term impact of preventative full body scans on health trajectory (40:19) Catching early stage cancers and other potential inflammation/structural issues using preventative full-body scans (50:31) The motivational power of a full body scan for helping patients seeing the need for being proactive about their health (52:08) The scans and other services offered by Prenuvo (55:54) How Prenuvo connects people with its services and its plans for future growth (57:54) Outro For more information, please see the links below. Thank you for listening! Links: Please consider supporting us on Patreon: https://www.lowcarbmd.com/ Dr. Vikash Modi: Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/vikash-modi-04194a139/ Prenuvo: https://prenuvo.com/ Prenuvo Research: https://prenuvo.com/research Instagram: @docmodi Dr. Brian Lenzkes: Website: https://arizonametabolichealth.com/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/BrianLenzkes?ref_src=twsrc^google|twcamp^serp|twgr^author Dr. Tro Kalayjian: Website: https://www.doctortro.com/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/DoctorTro Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/doctortro/ Toward Health App Join a growing community of individuals who are improving their metabolic health; together. Get started at your own pace with a self-guided curriculum developed by Dr. Tro and his care team, community chat, weekly meetings, courses, challenges, message boards and more. Apple: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/doctor-tro/id1588693888 Google: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=uk.co.disciplemedia.doctortro&hl=en_US&gl=US Learn more: https://doctortro.com/community/
Tell us what you though of the episodeGo behind the scenes of Netflix's "Laapataa Ladies" with cinematographer Vikash as he reveals the hidden artistry behind this critically acclaimed film. Learn how this veteran cinematographer balanced artistic vision with storytelling, choosing to let the powerful narrative breathe through subtle cinematography rather than flashy camera work. Vikash shares candid insights about his initial hesitation to take on the project, his collaboration with director Kiran, and the technical challenges that led to some of the film's most memorable moments.Vikash Nowlakha is known for Brahmastra Part One: Shiva (2022), Laapataa Ladies (2023) and The White Tiger (2021). http://twitter.com/dreamingkingdomhttp://instagram.com/kingdomofdreamspodcasthttp://facebook.com/kingdomofdreamspodcast Watch the feature films that I have directedCitizen of Moria - https://rb.gy/azpsuIn Search of My Sister - https://rb.gy/1ke21Official Website - www.jawadmir.com
Today on the podcast we will be revisiting a holiday classic, 'Home Alone' (1990)! Joining me on the podcast today as a guest is my co-host Vikash and also the host of the Reel Lovers Podcast, Marley. You can find their social channels below as well as both their excellent podcasts: https://twitter.com/oshkoshvikas https://letterboxd.com/merry722/ https://www.tiktok.com/@oshkoshvikash?lang=en CINEMA PURSUIT PODCAST: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/cinema-pursuit-podcast/id1716825579?ign-itscg=30200&ign-itsct=lt_p Marley: https://linktr.ee/marleylovesfilm ------------------------------ Intro/outro music created by Patrick Baxter! You can find his social channels below as well: https://spamcaller.bandcamp.com/
Today on the podcast we are going to be doing something a little different than we normally do. I hosted a Trivia Night with a few of my co-hosts, TaNina, Vikash and Martin! They had to guess the film that was in my collection (rules explained in the episode). Hope you all enjoy! The Third Act Podcast: https://x.com/TheThirdAct_Pod https://www.youtube.com/@TheThirdActPodcast https://open.spotify.com/episode/58KphF4Dz0sXAMRz7qqrEA?si=rS17cyB7SKu_t0N6oAiyPQ&nd=1&dlsi=a948a0fba95943dd https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-third-act-pod/id1765927425 TaNina: https://x.com/lilbajablast_ https://letterboxd.com/lilbajablast24/ Martin Padilla: https://twitter.com/alejandroxpadi https://letterboxd.com/alejandroxpadi/ https://www.tiktok.com/@alejandroxpadilla Vikash Patel: https://twitter.com/oshkoshvikas https://letterboxd.com/merry722/ https://www.tiktok.com/@oshkoshvikash CINEMA PURSUIT PODCAST: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/cinema-pursuit-podcast/id1716825579?ign-itscg=30200&ign-itsct=lt_p https://www.tiktok.com/@cinemapursuitpodcast ------------------------------ Intro/outro music created by Patrick Baxter! You can find his social channels below as well: https://spamcaller.bandcamp.com/
What is there was a scan that could detect diseases before they ever happened? Well, it just so happens that it exists! There's a new type of MRI that's taking the country by storm, and celebrities are lining up to get it done. And I was lucky enough to get one done myself.. I was shocked at the results. In this episode, you'e going to get an inside look into what this MRI does, why it's so amazing, and how you can use it detect sickness and disease before it ever happens. This is Episode 14 of our 14 part Eudemonia Miniseries. Eudemonia is a brand new health and wellness event, hositng some of the biggest names and brightest minds in the world, to share what's new and exciting in the health, wellness and longevity space. TOPICS DISCUSSED IN THIS EPISODE: Early detection of disease An inside look at my personal scan and the shocking results What to expect and how it works Where you can get one done for yourself and your loved ones More from Prenuvo: Instagram: @prenuvo Website: prenuvo.com Locations (100% worth travelling to): prenuvo.com/locations Need help with your gut? Visit my website gutsolution.ca to join a program: Get help now Contact us: reversablepod.com/tips Leave us a Review: https://www.reversablepod.com/review SOCIAL MEDIA: Instagram Facebook YouTube
Vikash Sharma, a passionate dance aspirant from Bihar shares how his friend suggested him about our courses at IDALS and why did he join Dual Course. Vikash initially found it difficult to grasp things but eventually picked up according to his pace and started showing decent growth in his skills. He explains how PITP helped him in overcoming his public fear as an artist.Listen to the full podcast to know the journey of Vikash Sharma!Chapters:(00:13) Introduction of Vikash Sharma(00:54) What convinced Vikash to join Dual Course at IDALS?(03:07) How has been Vikash's journey so far at IDALS?(03:49) Did Vikash have any doubt before joining our course?(04:41) When did Vikash feel that he has come at the right place?(06:06) What all important skills did Vikash get to learn in PITP?(08:10) How much growth is Vikash able to see in himself?(09:04) How did Vikash find the teaching methodology at IDALS?(11:32) According to Vikash, why Dual Course is important for the dance artists of today's generation?Support the showThank you for listening to IDALS Podcast!Follow IDALS on all the social media platforms: YouTube | Instagram | Twitter | LinkedInLearn from the best teachers of our country online at IDALS: WebsiteJoin our offline Certified & Licensing courses: WhatsApp
In this heartfelt episode of 'Dadsense; Vikaash Khdloya, a Chartered Accountant and erstwhile CEO of a large company with a deep connection to his middle-class roots, opens up about the journey that shaped his approach to fatherhood. Reflecting on a childhood filled with cherished memories, thanks to the quality time with his father, a busy businessman, made sure to spend with him, Vikash explores how these experiences influenced his own parenting style.He shares candidly about the mistakes he made, particularly in his early years as a father, where the pursuit of conventional success of a father in India overshadowed the importance of being present with his kids. However, a turning point came when he realized that true happiness and success stem from within, not from external achievements. Inspired by the book Top 5 Regrets of the Dying, Vikash began to re-prioritize his life, focusing on the joys of parenting and the invaluable moments with his children.Throughout the podcast, Vikash offers valuable insights into setting boundaries between work and family, the importance of being vulnerable with your kids, and breaking down gender biases. He emphasizes the significance of allowing children to experience joy and the importance of encouraging them without pressure. Vikash also shares his two essential mantras for a balanced life: managing time effectively and delivering on expectations with flexibility.This episode is a must-listen for any parent striving to navigate the complexities of modern fatherhood while maintaining a meaningful connection with their children.Chapters:2:39 Introduction to the conversation4:54 Cherished childhood memories10:09 Advice from Subhasis's father12:24 Navigating teenage years14:49 Parenting goals18:14 Life-changing book "Top 5 Regrets of the Dying"20:59 Early days of parenthood25:19 How parenting changes you27:49 Kids mirror our behavior and balance work-life32:09 How kids notice everything35:54 The importance of fatherly love39:29 Teaching vulnerability and starting a new chapter43:04 Reliving kids' milestones46:29 Unconditional love and support from kids49:54 Shaping unique personalities54:19 Raising open-minded kids58:29 Enjoying activities with kids and managing expectations1:02:29 Embracing imperfection and prioritizing timeParenting Advice, Fatherhood, Dads and Parenting, Parenting Tips, Parenting Journey, Work-Life Balance, Fatherhood Chronicles, Raising Kids, Modern Parenting, Parenting Experiences, Dad Stories, Parenting Lessons, Parent-Child Relationship, Fatherhood Insights, Parenting Reflections, Parenting Challenges, Parenting Questions, Parenting Podcast, Descript Edited Video, Family Conversations.
Retour sur la défaite des Bleus en demi-finale de l'Euro 2024 contre l'Espagne (2-1), et particulièrement sur le cas Kylian Mbappé. Pour en parler, Éric Silvestro, Florian Gazan et l'ancien international français Vikash Dhorasso.
Retour sur la défaite des Bleus en demi-finale de l'Euro 2024 contre l'Espagne (2-1), et particulièrement sur le cas Kylian Mbappé. Pour en parler, Éric Silvestro, Florian Gazan et l'ancien international français Vikash Dhorasso.
Vikash Kumar Singh is an Indian expatriate who currently teaches Hindi, Indian culture, history and literature at Beijing Foreign Studies University. With 17 years of residence in China, Vikash speaks fluent Chinese and is dedicated to fostering Sino-Indian cultural exchanges through teaching and literary translation. In this episode of the Makin' It in China series, we delve into Vikash's remarkable journey and insights.
"What about our system of liberal meritocratic capitalism is good and useful? What about it is worth preserving, expanding and fixing, so that we can be prepared for the challenges that are coming?" Professor Vikash Yadav joins Cole to discuss his book, "Liberalism's Last Man". The book explores the elements of one of the great economic thinkers and philosophers of the 20th century — Friedrich Hayek — that are still relevant and viable today. The conversation focuses on the evolution of liberalism and its influence on human flourishing.
Today on the podcast we will be revisiting one of my favorite films 'Roman Holiday' (1953)! Joining me on the podcast today as a guest is my friend Vikash. You can find his social channels below as well as his excellent new podcast: https://twitter.com/oshkoshvikas https://letterboxd.com/merry722/ CINEMA PURSUIT PODCAST: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/cinema-pursuit-podcast/id1716825579?ign-itscg=30200&ign-itsct=lt_p ------------------------------ Intro/outro music created by Patrick Baxter! You can find his social channels below as well: https://spamcaller.bandcamp.com/ https://twitter.com/pattyfuego
Vikash learned an important lesson about dating in the workplace.
Today I am speaking with two members of the DappLooker team, Abhinav Singh and Vikash Choubey. You may have already heard about DappLooker, they continue to receive a lot of attention for their contributions both within The Graph and the broader Web3 community.DappLooker started as a blockchain analytics solution that enables users to explore blockchain data and create charts and visualizations, all without needing to be technically oriented or knowing how to code. You've probably seen some of the charts and visualizations about The Graph that the DappLooker Twitter account consistently shares. In addition to providing these types of analytics, DappLooker recently launched an Indexer on The Graph.During this interview, Abhinav and Vikash talked about the origins of DappLooker, how it works, and how you can use it, and then we talk about when they became interested in The Graph and why they decided to join the community and launch an Indexer. Similar to other interviews we've had on the podcast, the DappLooker story begins with someone simply using The Graph to get started building in Web3, and then developing the conviction to go deeper and join the community to become a contributor.Show NotesThe GRTiQ Podcast takes listeners inside Web3 and The Graph (GRT) by interviewing members of the ecosystem. Please help support this project and build the community by subscribing and leaving a review.Twitter: GRT_iQwww.GRTiQ.com
Vikash has over 15 years of professional experience in the Technology industry, and he loves solving complex problems at scale. He has a bachelor's degree in Technology and MBA in Marketing & Strategy. He tried different professions before discovering his passion for Product Management. He started as a Software Engineer at Accenture, then worked as a Consulting Manager at Cognizant, Sr. Product Manager at Amazon (Fortune 2 Company), Principal Product Manager at Flavorcloud and currently he is a Director of Product Management at Walmart (Fortune 1 Company). He is very passionate about mentoring and coaching his team, bringing out the best in them at work and making a difference by building products customer love!
In this episode, our guest is Vikash Sinha (Assistant Professor of Management Accounting at Aalto University). During this interview, Vikash covers the principles, practices, and structures of Corporate Governance, why effective corporate governance is important in this times, and why operations professionals should care about it. Accessibility transcripts for podcast episodes can be found from … Continue reading "Episode 10: Insights on Corporate Governance"
We are back with another episode of Meet the Mentor-Vikash Kalra ( Part 2 ) Vikash Kalra is Visual Artist and Sculpture Vikash Kalra transforms the landscapes around him. He creates architectural landscape with its mirror reflection emphasizing that there is always a hidden other to everything. His work has been in many solo, curated as well as group shows in India including Indian art fair 2012 with Art Konsult Travancore Art Gallery, New Delhi, 2008, 60 years of Independence, Rashtrapati Bhawan, New Delhi, 2007, Rang Art Gallery, New Delhi, 2006, Multiple Solo Shows at Visual Arts Gallery @ India Habitat Centre, Dhoomimal Art Gallery, Saffron Art and Easel Stories Art Gallery etc and in the podcast we have Rakesh Jagtiani Director - Voiceline and Virendra Shekhawat Founder Delhi Photography Club.
Vikash Kalra is Visual Artist and Sculpture Vikash Kalra transforms the landscapes around him. He creates architectural landscape with its mirror reflection emphasizing that there is always a hidden other to everything. His work has been in many solo, curated as well as group shows in India including Indian art fair 2012 with Art Konsult Travancore Art Gallery, New Delhi, 2008, 60 years of Independence, Rashtrapati Bhawan, New Delhi, 2007, Rang Art Gallery, New Delhi, 2006, Multiple Solo Shows at Visual Arts Gallery @ India Habitat Centre, Dhoomimal Art Gallery, Saffron Art and Easel Stories Art Gallery etc and in the podcast we have Rakesh Jagtiani Director - Voiceline and Virendra Shekhawat Founder Delhi Photography Club.
Hate waiting to make a left turn at a busy intersection? You're not alone. Vikash Gayah, associate professor in the department of civil and environmental engineering at Penn State University, delves into how to fix these time wasters. Dr. Vikash V. Gayah is an associate professor in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at […]
Welcome to Poetry Walks! A podcast that brings poems from our hearts to your ears. Center yourself through imaginative and calming poems as Arlo guides you through the forest. Step within through these relaxing poems that question existence, friendship, activism, love, and self-worth. For a full transcript of today's episode please visit Arlo's personal website: https://arlotomecek.com/sound/poetry-walks In today's episode, we listen to Vikash Goyal's telling of the seven stages of Samadhi through a poetic framework. To connect with Vikash visit his website or follow him on instagram @Kashivology. For a full transcript of today's episode click here You can email Arlo at arlotomecek@gmail.com Land Acknowledgement: This podcast was recorded on forcibly ceded Mohican land. You can learn more about land acknowledgement through the links below: https://native-land.ca/ https://www.whose.land/en/ https://library.chatham.edu/whoseland Land acknowledgement is a way of showing historical accuracy, transparency, and honoring First Nations of this land. While land acknowledgement is not enough on its own, we invite you do the research and understand the multiplicity of histories under your feet. Thank you for listening to Poetry Walks! To submit your work, you can do so by emailing arlotomecek@gmail.com. To help this podcast, you can review and rate us on Apple Podcasts.
This Thursday on the Route to Networking podcast, Ben Davies our Principal Network Consultant at Hamilton Barnes was joined by Vikash Ramnewash.Vikash Ramnewash is the Managing Director at Deutsche Telekom. Vikash has had an interesting history in the Networking space. He's been part of a variety of impressive companies such as BT and Juniper Networks.From Vikash being in a management role, and Ben's recruitment experience, the pair discussed the key skills that they would look for when hiring young Networking Engineers- including both technical and soft skills. They delve into understanding the technology trends from a customer perspective and predict what tech will be the game changer in the future.Learn more from Vikash:https://www.linkedin.com/in/vikash-ramnewash/
My guest on episode 33 is Emmy-winning editor Vikash “Viks” Patel – who was one of the editors on the hit Netflix series Ozark, which recently concluded its four-season run.Viks was with the show since its inception and was nominated for an Emmy for his work on the episode “Fire Pink” from season 3. He shares how the series was shaped in the cutting room and gives us a look at his approach to editing some of his favorite scenes.His other notable credits include The Morning Show, Five Days at Memorial, Jack Ryan, and Bates Motel. Viks and I also discuss how editing can be a viable and rewarding career, the type of assistants he likes to hire, what it takes to have a successful career in the film industry, his quick transition from unscripted to scripted editing, the importance of finding an editor to mentor you, why you shouldn't rush to get to the editing chair, and how to build a solid relationship with a showrunner.Interested in working in the editorial department of Film and Scripted TV? Get on the waitlist for the next Hollywood Editing Mentor BREAK INTO SCRIPTED course:http://hollywoodeditingmentor.com/waitlist/Original Music: "Apollo's Haze" and "Do You Want" by JesusdapnkFacebook: www.fb.com/jesusdapnkSoundcloud: www.soundcloud.com/jesusdapnkInstagram: @jesusdapnk
Beyond the Rig is back! To kick off Season 2 this week we welcome Vikash Supersad - Deal Lead in Shell's Central Acquisitions, Divestment and New Business Development Team. In this episode, Vikash shares: His journey in the sector, Offers advice for youths considering a career in the energy sector and, Shares how he sees things unfolding locally with climate commitments. Vikash is a qualified Chemical and Process Engineer and has worked within the sector for 20 years with career experience in roles involving CCUS, LNG, Upstream Oil & Gas ad Downstream. He is keen on developing Caribbean talent to pursue the region's Sustainable Development Goals.
The Indian auto industry is going through a gradual but essential change which will continue for the next 10 to 15 years. If the trends are to be believed, the Indian EV industry is estimated to reach USD17 billion in the next five years. In this edition of Founder Thesis, Akshay Datt speaks with Vikash Mishra, Founder and CEO, MoEVing, an electric mobility-focused tech platform working towards accelerating EV adoption in India. With more than 15 years of experience in the energy and mobility industry, Vikash started MoEVing in 2021. The core idea was to build a driver-centric technology platform that provides EV ecosystem solutions, thus contributing to reducing carbon emissions. Tune in to this episode of Founder Thesis to hear Vikash speak about how MoEVing is transforming sustainable mobility in India. What you must not miss! Challenges faced by MoEVing. EV ecosystem solutions. How MoEVing help the driver-partners? MoEVing's revenue model. ----- If you want to be a podcaster, then check out Zencastr.com which is also the generous sponsor for this episode. Zencastr is like a Shopify for podcasters taking care of all your needs from recording to editing to hosting. Show your love for this show by using this link to sign up: https://zen.ai/founderthesis (https://zen.ai/founderthesis)
He is a figure that is difficult to forget as his quality saw him flourish during his stint with the Rossoneri, however brief it was. Vikash Dhorasoo's stay at AC Milan was a flying visit but an unforgettable dream for our French former player.
“AI has the power to personalize information. At any instance where you are making a wrong investment decision, maybe because of the emotions that (can) overpower your decision, AI will come into effect and tell you - ‘hey, this is not the right time for this decision.' The ability to reach out to each individual, and provide the most personalized service at the right time with a relevant context - from both a personal behavior perspective and a market perspective - is the magic which AI can bring. It can revolutionize the way investors take their investment decisions and manage their portfolio.” Dr. Vikash Raj, Head of Business Analytics and Intelligence at IDFC AMC, has profound expertise in the fields of AI and technology. In this episode of The Moneywise Podcast, he explains how innovations like Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Machine Learning (ML) can transform asset management and finance. He also reveals the way these technologies are leveraged to bring improvements to the finance industry and how it can help investors achieve their investment goals.
I am So ExCiTed to be speaking with yet again, another Incredible Human Being, Vikash Shivdasani, who will also be presenting at the upcoming, "Ultimate Quantum Retreat" this May 13th-15th!!! Our tickets are now only $295!!!! We have lowered the price SO MORE PEOPLE can experience this AhMazing Event!!! The world NEEDS So Much love and healing right now!!!! Come join us!!!!!!!!https://ultimateretreatevents.com/...Vikash is an inspirational speaker, spiritual coach, and bestselling author of the book, "Rolling With It: Lessons Learned While Sitting Down."Rolling With It is a depiction of Vikash's raw and humorous personal spiritual journey that started with an accident that left him a paraplegic at 22 years old. This catalytic event sparked a seeker's journey to understand the relationship between our thoughts and emotions and the reality we are creating because of it.This story isn't like any story you've ever read because this one is about a guy who had to come to terms with a sitting perspective of life, an unwavering curiosity to understand reality, and the hard lessons he received because of it.Vikash is also passionate about helping others gain a better understanding on how to identify and release emotional blocks, power up their intuition, and live from elevated emotions to live the life they truly want to live.So join us this Wednesday LIVE at 1:00pm EST! This will be another phenomenal Empowered Conversation you won't wanna miss!!!!https://linktr.ee/behererightnow...https://behererightnow.com/
In many part of the world, if there's an animal in trouble, there's someone to call to get help, Immediately. That's not the case here for obvious reasons. We can barely take care of our humans… so expecting special treatment for animals is unrealistic. Yes, there are numbers for Cupa, Care, the BBMP, other animal shelters, but there's so much pressure on them with the number of domesticated, freely multiplying animals… that they cannot cope. You could end up waiting forever. The animal could be dead or disappear by the time someone shows up, to die somewhere else, out of sight. It's tragic.So it's fallen on citizens, community by community to come together to create solutions for injured dogs and cats… and even the occasional snake who may find itself where it ought not to be.So you will find specialist dog catchers, snake catchers, bird catchers. Rarely will you find one person who is all kinds of catcher rolled into one.In Bangalore, Vikash Bafna is one such person whose heart is huge and there always seems to be room for one more dog, one more snake, one more pigeon, one more rodent, one more cat, one more buffalo to rescue.As part of several animal squads and groups, Vikash Bafna. Vikash does this work for free. He has a trust called Friend For Animal Trust and will accept donations, if you want to give, but even if you don't, he will come and take care of the eagle that's stuck in the wires outside your building.
Una personalità difficile da dimenticare, delle qualità calcistiche che hanno visto fiorire l'idillio con la maglia rossonera, per quanto breve: l'incantesimo solo sfiorato tra Vikash Dhorasoo e il Milan, un sogno indimenticabile per l'ex calciatore francese.
Vikash Kumar Singh, an alumnus of the batch of 2009 from the Department of Computer Science Engineering, is a fashion and portrait photographer based in London. His works have been published in internationally acclaimed magazines, exhibited in several spots, and have won him several honorable awards. Link to the full article: https://mondaymorning.nitrkl.ac.in/article/2021/11/22/3169-glitter-on-the-lens-vikash-kumar-singh/
Vikash Maurya was diagnosed with bone cancer when he was in 7th grade. However, he did not let that stop him from successfully clearing JEE mains exams and securing a seat at top engineering college. He is very grateful to his family who always stood besides him and motivated him. He also now takes care of his fitness and dreams to participate in bodybuilding competitions in future. Zenonco.io - Making quality integrative oncology cancer care accessible to all. Visit our website: https://zenonco.io/ If you or your loved one has been diagnosed with cancer recently, and need guidance on treatment or have any doubts or queries, please call ZenOnco.io on +91 99 30 70 90 00.
We are each dealt a hand; one that we must learn to accept and embrace. What are you doing with yours? What if you were made to sit down?Would yo fight it... get depressed... get angry... or roll with it? Rolling With It is a depiction of Vik's raw and humorous personal spiritual journey that started with an accident that left him a paraplegic at 22 years old. This catalytic event sparked a seeker's journey to understand the relationship between our thoughts and emotions and the reality we are creating because of it. This story isn't like any spiritual book you've ever read because this one is about a guy who had to come to terms with a sitting perspective of life, an unwavering curiosity to understand reality, and the hard lessons he received because of it. In addition, you will also gain a better understanding on how to identify and release the emotional blocks that are holding you back from living the life you truly want to live.
We are each dealt a hand; one that we must learn to accept and embrace. What are you doing with yours? What if you were made to sit down?Would yo fight it... get depressed... get angry... or roll with it? Rolling With It is a depiction of Vik's raw and humorous personal spiritual journey that started with an accident that left him a paraplegic at 22 years old. This catalytic event sparked a seeker's journey to understand the relationship between our thoughts and emotions and the reality we are creating because of it. This story isn't like any spiritual book you've ever read because this one is about a guy who had to come to terms with a sitting perspective of life, an unwavering curiosity to understand reality, and the hard lessons he received because of it. In addition, you will also gain a better understanding on how to identify and release the emotional blocks that are holding you back from living the life you truly want to live.
Hate waiting to make a left turn at a busy intersection? You're not alone. Vikash Gayah, associate professor in the department of civil and environmental engineering at Penn State University, delves into how to fix these time wasters. Dr. Vikash V. Gayah is an associate professor in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at […]
#148: Can babies with cleft lip, cleft palate or cleft lip and palate successfully do baby-led weaning? July is National Cleft and Craniofacial Awareness month and in this episode I'm joined by Vikash K. Modi, MD. Dr. Modi is a Pediatric Otorhinolaryngologist and Co-Director of the Cornell Cleft & Craniofacial Program. He's explaining the difference between cleft lip and cleft palate and why cleft lip babies will have no difficulty with baby-led weaning and starting solids. For babies with cleft palates, there may be more challenges but Dr. Modi shares tips for promoting self-feeding success in these babies, even though the transition to solid foods occurs usually when baby is awaiting cleft palate repair surgery. We also cover drinking for babies with cleft lips and cleft palates and how sippy cup and straw cups are not indicated for cleft palate but why open cup working will work. If you've struggled with feeding your baby breastmilk or formula because of cleft anomalies, please know that things WILL get easier when you make the transition to solid foods. If you're ready to raise an independent eater and prevent picky eating then let's get started learning about baby-led weaning together! Subscribe, rate and review the podcast here. FREE BABY-LED WEANING FOR BEGINNERS ONLINE WORKSHOP: https://babyledweaning.co/workshop?utm_source=Shownotes&utm_medium=Podcast&utm_campaign=Episode%20Link FOLLOW @BABYLEDWEANTEAM ON INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/babyledweanteam/ SHOWNOTES FOR THIS EPISODE: https://www.blwpodcast.com/148 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
#148: Can babies with cleft lip, cleft palate or cleft lip and palate successfully do baby-led weaning? July is National Cleft and Craniofacial Awareness month and in this episode I'm joined by Vikash K. Modi, MD. Dr. Modi is a Pediatric Otorhinolaryngologist and Co-Director of the Cornell Cleft & Craniofacial Program. He's explaining the difference between cleft lip and cleft palate and why cleft lip babies will have no difficulty with baby-led weaning and starting solids. For babies with cleft palates, there may be more challenges but Dr. Modi shares tips for promoting self-feeding success in these babies, even though the transition to solid foods occurs usually when baby is awaiting cleft palate repair surgery. We also cover drinking for babies with cleft lips and cleft palates and how sippy cup and straw cups are not indicated for cleft palate but why open cup working will work. If you've struggled with feeding your baby breastmilk or formula because of cleft anomalies, please know that things WILL get easier when you make the transition to solid foods. If you're ready to raise an independent eater and prevent picky eating then let's get started learning about baby-led weaning together! Subscribe, rate and review the podcast here. FREE BABY-LED WEANING FOR BEGINNERS ONLINE WORKSHOP: https://babyledweaning.co/workshop FREE BABY-LED WEANING RECIPE IDEAS FACEBOOK GROUP: https://www.facebook.com/groups/babyledweaningrecipes/ FOLLOW @BABYLEDWEANTEAM ON INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/babyledweanteam/ SHOWNOTES FOR THIS EPISODE: https://www.blwpodcast.com/148
Tout l'été, l'équipe des Grosses Têtes vous propose de remonter dans le temps. Dans ce podcast, replongez dans les archives de l'émission. Au programme, les premières fois de vos sociétaires préférés dans l'émission de Laurent Ruquier. Dans ce podcast, revivez, presque comme si vous y étiez, la première de Vikash Dhorasso, en janvier 2018. Découvrez la page Facebook Officielle des "Grosses Têtes" : https://www.facebook.com/lesgrossestetesrtl/ Retrouvez vos "Grosses Têtes" sur Instagram : https://bit.ly/2hSBiAo Découvrez le compte Twitter Officiel des "Grosses Têtes" : https://bit.ly/2PXSkkz Toutes les vidéos des "Grosses Têtes" sont sur YouTube : https://bit.ly/2DdUyGg
Difference between Samriddhi and Vikash .Well explained in The Statesman .Listen to our Reading
In this episode Melissa speaks with spiritual coach and #1 best selling author, Vikash Shivdasani about his spiritual journey from party animal to multidimensional healer and coach. Melissa and Vik will help you understand how to empower yourself past the victim into your power. Vik's Bio: Vikash Shivdasani is a speaker, spiritual coach, and bestselling author of the book, "Rolling With It: Lessons Learned While Sitting Down."Rolling With It is a depiction of Vikash's raw and humorous personal spiritual journey that started with an accident that left him a paraplegic at 22 years old. This catalytic event sparked a seeker's journey to understand the relationship between our thoughts and emotions and the reality we are creating because of it. This story isn't like any spiritual book you've ever read because this one is about a guy who had to come to terms with a sitting perspective of life, an unwavering curiosity to understand reality, and the hard lessons he received because of it. Vikash is passionate about helping others gain a better understanding on how to identify and release emotional blocks, power up their intuition, and live from elevated emotions to live the life they truly want to live. Find the book here!Find Vik on Instagram: @behere.rightnowWebsite: www.behererightnow.com
Hard to feel like you belong anywhere when you don't have a home...Limbo is a wry and poignant observation of the refugee experience, set on a fictional remote Scottish island where a group of new arrivals await the results of their asylum claims. It centers on Omar (Amir El-Masry), a young Syrian musician who is burdened by his grandfather's oud, which he has carried all the way from his homeland.This movie, which is now available for purchase on VOD platforms (rent and purchase on Blu-Ray on July 13th) really resonates because it's honest and lets us see real people in these situations rather then trying to make some kind of political statement.We got the unique pleasure to sit down with stars Vikash Bhai, Amir El-Masry and writer/director Ben Sharrock about the making of, inspiration of and genuine humanistic message that comes through in this film...
Join you host Ryan Perez and guest Vikash Bhai as they talk about his journey and his new outstanding film "Limbo" and so much more!! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Actor Vikash Bhai is persistent. When he knows what he wants, he's willing to do what it takes. Bhai tells our presenter how he auditioned 7 times for the role of Farhad, one of the main characters in Ben Sharrock's BAFTA-nominated comedy-drama Limbo (2020). The film centres on four asylum seekers who are staying on a remote island in Scotland, taking cultural awareness classes, whilst waiting for their refugee claims to be processed.CreditsPresenter: Aiysha JebaliArtwork: Richard WilliamsAudio Podcast Editor: Juana RubioThanks to MUBI & CLD Communications
In the first ever episode of Wee Blue Dot, Dr Vikash Tatayah - Conservation Director at the Mauritian Wildlife Foundation - takes us on a journey exploring the Indian Ocean island of Mauritius. We discuss conservation successes and failures, and what life has thrown at the paradise island over the last year. Learn about giant tortoises, endemic plants, island nature reserves, the infamous Dodo.... and the people at the heart of the "birthplace" of conservation. Support the Mauritian Wildlife Foundation and follow their work: Website - www.mauritian-wildlife.org Facebook - @MauritianWildlife Twitter - @mwfWildlife Instagram - @mauritianwildlife MWF LinkedIn Follow Wee Blue Dot - we're social animals! Facebook - @WeeBlueDot Twitter - @weebluedot Instagram - @weebluedot WBD LinkedIn Email - weebluedot@gmail.com Music: "Savannah (Sketch)" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Long stretches at sea are part of life for a merchant seaman so when Indian marine engineer Vikash Mishra accepted a job on a cargo ship in the Gulf, he expected a lengthy period away from his young family. But a few months became years after Vikash's employer ran out of money. They abandoned the broken-down ship, called the Tamim Aldar, 20 miles off the coast of Dubai. Vikash and his crewmates were trapped on the leaky vessel without much in the way of food, fuel or electricity, so they had to learn to survive. When all hope seemed lost, they would make a perilous attempt to reach land. Vikash Mishra and Reverend Andy Bowerman of the Mission to Seafarers speak to Outlook's Kevin Ponniah. Get in touch: outlook@bbc.com Picture: Vikash Mishra Credit: Vikash Mishra
Long stretches at sea are part of life for a merchant seaman so when Indian marine engineer Vikash Mishra accepted a job on a cargo ship in the Gulf, he expected a lengthy period away from his young family. But a few months became years after Vikash's employer ran out of money. They abandoned the broken-down ship, called the Tamim Aldar, 20 miles off the coast of Dubai. Vikash and his crewmates were trapped on the leaky vessel without much in the way of food, fuel or electricity, so they had to learn to survive. When all hope seemed lost, they would make a perilous attempt to reach land. Vikash Mishra and Reverend Andy Bowerman of the Mission to Seafarers speak to Outlook's Kevin Ponniah. Get in touch: outlook@bbc.com Picture: Vikash Mishra Credit: Vikash Mishra
Vox pops on key human rights issues with human rights experts.
A recent Timehop memory reminded me of a Thanksgiving I spent away from my family about a decade ago. I stayed in NYC and hung out with my friend Vikash and we went to the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade and had a non-traditional lunch. It is one of my favorite memories. And it was all uncertain when the day began. http://richarddedor.com http://instagram.com/richarddedor http://twitter.com/richarddedor --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/liveitwellpodcast/message
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Hey Guys! On todays episode, my good friend Vikash shared some great tips on how to become the best version of yourself. These are tips that have worked for him and he believes will work for you too. Some of his tips include: staying positive, keep smiling, look good, and meditates. Listen and Learn!
Welcome back to Neurotech Pub!In this episode, host and Paradromics CEO, Matt Angle, speaks with Beata Jarosiewicz, Vikash Gilja, Sergey Stavisky, and Frank Willett about how brain computer interfaces can be used to restore communication in patients with tetraplegia. They take a deep dive into state of the art thought-to-text technology compared with the current state of speech decoding.Check out full video with transcript here: https://www.paradromics.com/podcast/neurotech-pub-episode-2-what-weve-got-here-is-failure-to-communicate 1:49 Braingate Clinical Trial Program |2:32 Beata's New Job at Neuralink |2:43 Stanford Neural Prosthetics Translational Laboratory |2:53 Leigh Hochberg |3:05 Andy Schwartz |5:14 2020 BCI Award|8:44 Subjective Experience of Control |10:39 Closed Loop Calibration |12:08 Animal Models for Prosthesis Development |14:21 Keyboard Optimization |15:33 Tablet PC Control Papers | See Also |16:01 Palm Pilot Graffiti |16:24 Frank's Preprint on Handwriting |17:40 Video Abstract on Frank's Work |21:38 Penfield and Boldrey 1937 |22:04 A Quick, Lay Summary of Penfield's Work |24:21 Hand Knob |26:43 Output-Null Neural State Space Dimensions |34:23 Matt Kaufman's Work |38:29 Vikash's work with Paul Nuyujukian |39:07 Mark Churchland |42:01 Review Paper by Eb Fetz |44:18 Chang Lab at UCSF |44:46 Robert Knight's Group on Speech Decoding | Imagined Speech |50:38 Speech Decoding in Hand Knob |50:55 Phoneme Decoding |52:48 Auditory Decoding in NHPs |54:58 Moses et al., 2019|55:12 Makin et al., 2020 |1:07:11 Nir's Paper on Error Signals |Want more? Follow Paradromics & Neurotech Pub on Twitter Follow Matt A and Sergey Stavisky on Twitter
Vom Datensalat zum Website Feature? In dieser Episode des ITCS Pizzatime Tech-Podcasts werden Euch Jannis und Vikash, Data Engineer und Digital Analyst bei OTTO, erklären wie man aus der Analyse und Aufarbeitung von komplexen Datenmengen erfolgsversprechende Features für den Bereich E-Commerce am Beispiel von otto.de ableiten kann. Erfahrt außerdem aus erster Hand, was es bedeutet als Data Engineer und Digital Analyst für einen der bekanntesten und größten deutschen Onlinehändler zu arbeiten! Lust mit dem OTTO Tech-Team zu chatten? Dein kostenloses Ticket für den ITCS Online HH am 6. Nov 2020: https://www.it-cs.io/ Hier gibt´s mehr Infos zu OTTO: - Zum OTTO Tech-Blog: https://www.otto.de/jobs/technology/techblog/ - Offene IT-Stellen bei OTTO:https://www.otto.de/jobs/jobsuche/e-commerce-business-intelligence-it/ - Zur Jobsuche bei OTTO: https://www.otto.de/jobs/ - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/otto_inside/ - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/otto Der ITCS Pizzatime Podcast ist Teil des ITCS und ITCS Online! – Tech Konferenz, IT Jobmesse & Festival – schnapp dir dein kostenloses Ticket hier: https://www.it-cs.io/ Redaktion: Katharina Bauriedel & Matthias Walenda // Moderation: Leonie Peyerl //Produktion: Umbeck & Walenda Media GmbH.
Cette semaine, nous recevons Vikash Dhorasoo, ancien footballeur international français. A travers ses nouvelles ambitions, Vikash nous donne son point de vue sur la société en 2020. Il évoque sa carrière de footballeur, ses différentes rencontres et les problèmes qu'il a pu rencontrer. Cependant, éternel optimiste, il a su se servir de sa détermination pour devenir le consultant qu'il est aujourd'hui. Ses différents combats l'ont également mené vers la politique, il nous raconte. Cet homme bienveillant nous évoque les embûches de son parcours mais nous raconte surtout ses réussites.
La révélation 2019 du festival d'Angoulême libère le TGV de son imagination cartoonesque et nous dessine un futur youplaboum avec champagne à table, salsa au balcon et déconstruction savante des stéréotypes.La folie à tous les coins de rue. Et la réalité qui se dégonde, contaminée par l'imaginaire effervescent et le trait caoutchouc d'Emilie Gleason, 28 ans, autrice belgo-mexicaine de bande dessinée formée aux Arts décoratifs de Strasbourg. « J'aime que ça explose, tout simplement », dit-elle. Révélation 2019 du festival d'Angoulême, sa première histoire longue, Ted drôle de coco (éditions Atrabile), tirait le portrait d'un curieux gugusse librement inspiré de son frère, atteint d'un Trouble Envahissant du Développement (T. E. D.) connu sous le nom d'autisme Asperger ; elle y restituait très bien, par exemple, sa peur panique de l'imprévu via des couleurs en pagaille et des paroles pétaradantes.Cette rentrée, on retrouve avec plaisir son sens du cartoon grand-guignolesque dans J'perds pas la boule, biographie des années foot de Vikash Dhorasoo, coco-signataire du livre publié aux éditions Revival. De son enfance au Havre à l'épopée 2006 des Bleus où il fut le premier joueur d'origine indienne à disputer une Coupe du monde, on voit Vikash éviter un but à l'Inter Milan en prenant la balle en pleine gueule, se passionner pour le blues de Fleetwood Mac, se sentir touriste à Calcutta, tenter d'esquiver la poignée de main de Sarkozy ou dédicacer un roman de Philippe Delerm.Et le roulement TGV de l'imagination d'Emilie Gleason glisse aujourd'hui sur le pont de notre Arche, déboussolée par tant d'idées à la minute. Au programme de son futur : nudisme pour tous, école à « déconstruire les stéréotypes », seniors réalisant « leurs rêves les plus fous avant de mourir », chasseurs « condamnés à vivre dans une réserve, entourés de prédateurs, avec juste un coupe-ongles », champagne à table et bonbons remplacés par « des petits pois congelés » – le sucre étant devenu « interdit aux moins de dix-huit ans »... Jusqu'à la vraie révélation, qui dit tant sur son style : « On vivrait dans le monde de Roger Rabbit, où trottiner de joie remplacerait la marche, de la salsa à chaque balcon, plus aucune publicité sinon de belles fresques colorées, partout ».Image : Qui veut la peau de Roger Rabbit ?, de Robert Zemeckis (1988). See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
durée : 00:22:15 - Le Réveil culturel - par : Tewfik Hakem - Entretien avec la dessinatrice Emilie Gleason et le footballeur scénariste Vikash Dhorasoo, à l’occasion de la sortie de leur bande-dessinée "J’perds pas la boule" (éd. Revival) - réalisation : Vincent Abouchar - invités : Emilie Gleason Auteure illustratrice de bande-dessinée; Vikash Dhorasoo footballeur professionnel, conseiller footballistique
durée : 00:22:15 - Le Réveil culturel - par : Tewfik Hakem - Entretien avec la dessinatrice Emilie Gleason et le footballeur scénariste Vikash Dhorasoo, à l’occasion de la sortie de leur bande-dessinée "J’perds pas la boule" (éd. Revival) - réalisation : Vincent Abouchar - invités : Emilie Gleason Auteure illustratrice de bande-dessinée; Vikash Dhorasoo footballeur professionnel, conseiller footballistique
durée : 00:53:59 - 100% PSG - Un collectionneur de maillot du PSG sera avec nous également.
Vikash Dudhia is the CEO of Arlo International Consulting and works with medical device companies to grow their international footprint. Vikash believes that his particular methodology and skillset enables him to effectively coach teams and individuals in the subtleties of over a hundred markets around the globe. Vikash has over 20 years of experience in international sales and has a network of contacts in over 100 countries in the technology, medical device, pharmaceutical, and dental sectors. Prior to his current consulting role, Vikash was head of sales for North America & Latin America for Prima Dental Group; the largest manufacturer of carbide burs in the world. Prior to that, he was director of international sales for Salter Labs; a US manufacturer of best-in-class respiratory products serving homecare and acute patients in over 75 countries. Prior to that, Vikash had international sales roles at Inspiration Healthcare and Rocket Medical Plc. Vikash holds a Bachelor of Science Honors degree in nursing from DeMontfort University in the United Kingdom and several post-graduate clinical and business qualifications.
Vikash magdani, Executive Director of ACG New York & David Acharya, Partner, AGI Partners discuss the impact of the Corona Virus on the global economy and middle market Private Equity. How is the class responding to the pandemic and how is ACG NY enabling its members and key stakeholders connect in these uncertain times. Support this podcast
In this podcast, Sagar and Vikash talk about their top 5 anime! Tune in to find out. #MyHeroAcademia #DragonBall #HunterXHunter #FullMetalAlchemistBrotherhood --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Nick Hughes is joined by Vikash Gupta of Norecibo from San Antonio, Texas, founder of NoRecibo. NoRecibo is a free receipt management designed to simplify your life. Nick and Vikash chat about how Vikash discovered issues with tracking receipts and making it simple to record them and track them for personal finances. What did he do? Well, he simply decided to learn to code and build the product himself. You will also hear his experience as an entrepreneur balancing his time with family obligations, and some of his tips and lessons he's gained along the way.https://norecibo.com/
Vikash Sharma is a Board-Certified Orthopedic Clinical Specialist (OCS). Vikash has undergone rigorous training and testing to achieve his Certified Orthopedic Manual Therapist (COMT) designation through Maitland Australian Physiotherapy Seminars. He is also a certified Running Coach through The Road Runners Club of America and The United States Track and Field Association. Vikash has a strong passion for continuing education and he is an evidence-driven practitioner committed to remaining at the forefront of the profession. He is a member of the American Physical Therapy Association and The United States Track and Field Association. Vikash has been an avid runner and weight trainer for most of his life and competes in local road races. He also loves to play golf, hike, skateboard, meditate and pretend to be an iron chef in the kitchen. Click here to sign up for the new FREE webinar on December 11th
Startup Story of Go Hoardings in rap form by Abby Viral | Ft.Deepti Awasthi Sharma ft. Vikash sharma ft. Abby Viral in previous podcast you can listen in detailed form amd some exciting a d infotaining and inspiring qna amd learn how to build confidence, how to face failure in life, how to face problems in startup, how face failure in startup also in life and much more. Follow us on Instagram:- @shivamchaurasiaofficial
A lot of us have great ideas… As a matter of fact, they say million dollar ideas are a dime a dozen. However, very few people take the next step and actually work on making the idea a reality. Excuses like time, knowledge, responsibilities and obligations all tend to get in the way. However, one […] The post Show Me The Data | Vikash Patel appeared first on Phaeton4Kast.
durée : 00:32:58 - Mouv' 13 Actu - Vikash Dhorasoo est en studio pour parler de sa pétition pour sauver le city-stade du Square Burq dans le quartier des Abbesses à Paris.
Et si, finalement, échouer permettait d'accéder à sa liberté... La liberté de ne pas être parfait, de ne pas être toujours là où on vous attend, la liberté de prendre un autre chemin ? Vikash Dhorasoo, se définit lui-même comme un "expert en défaite", ça m'a beaucoup fait rire. Surtout quand on sait qu'il a joué au PSG, qu'il a fait partie de l'équipe de France ou encore du mythique club Milan AC... il en faut une bonne dose d'humilité pour dire ça, non ? Eh bien justement, pour lui, tout part d'une défaite, la première, et probablement l'une des plus violentes qu'il ait connue... A vous d'écouter la suite.
Almost all the businesses see highs and lows and ours is no different. Vikash who faced multiple challenges in the business including the financial crisis has built a mobile gaming company worth more than 500 MN USD. Learn from his experiences how to bounce back through difficult phases and still build a profit making company.
Vikash Ravi aka Lil' V is my younger cousin and the kid brother of Bala Baby (see Episode 3). Vikash and I have a wide ranging conversation delving into childhood love at the playground, a youth spent playing games outside with neighborhood friends, playing cello, a love of dance that emerged after watching the film Step Up 2, and being elected Prom Prince. The years of middle school and high school were intense, and a period through which he discovered himself. In college, he continued dancing in both the choreographed dance group 'Fade to Black' and in the free-style dance group 'Fused.' At the end of college, he realized his passion for social work and entered a career that he finds amazingly fulfilling, and one in which he will be able to effect change at both the micro- and macro-levels.
A quelques jours seulement de la Coupe du Monde de Hover-Football, Thomas reçoit le légendaire défenseur de l'équipe de France 98, auteur de la BD “Tous Super-Héros”, ancien ambassadeur de la Fondation contre le racisme, ancien Président de l'AGPFF (Association des Gens qui ont un Prénom Pas Facile Facile), Lilian Thuram ! On parlera pêle-mêle : de son refus de rejouer la demi-finale France-Croatie tous les soirs dans un casino de Las Vegas et du rachat polémique de la FIFA par Elon Musk, du parc du Puy-du-Foot de Vikash de Villiers, du championnat du monde de saut à la perche de selfie, et du scandale du peu d'exposition médiatique des J.N. (Jeux Normaux, ex-J.O.), les jeux sans prothèses.
A quelques jours seulement de la Coupe du Monde de Hover-Football, Thomas reçoit le légendaire défenseur de l’équipe de France 98, auteur de la BD “Tous Super-Héros”, ancien ambassadeur de la Fondation contre le racisme, ancien Président de l’AGPFF (Association des Gens qui ont un Prénom Pas Facile Facile), Lilian Thuram ! On parlera pêle-mêle : de son refus de rejouer la demi-finale France-Croatie tous les soirs dans un casino de Las Vegas et du rachat polémique de la FIFA par Elon Musk, du parc du Puy-du-Foot de Vikash de Villiers, du championnat du monde de saut à la perche de selfie, et du scandale du peu d’exposition médiatique des J.N. (Jeux Normaux, ex-J.O.), les jeux sans prothèses.
Bala, aka 'Bala Baby' is my younger cousin who is currently finishing up his Internal Medicine residency and who is soon to embark on a year-long fellowship in sports medicine. We discuss his early beginnings in Shreveport LA, the glorious arrival of his lil' bro Vikash (who apparently learned all his dance moves from Bala), moving to Houston TX, and summers spent 'Temple Hopping' in India. In high school as part of the ROTC program, he maintained a buzzcut and participated in marching drills, but soon started running amuck after getting his driver's license. After high school, he attended medical school in Manipal India which became a home away from home and a place where he developed some very important friendships. He subsequently made his way to Atlanta GA and then onto NYC to finish his clinical rotations, and during this period he often spent the weekends with our cousin Velan watching football and movies until they had a dramatic falling out. While in residency, he discovered his love of sports medicine and his ultimate goal of practicing while wearing shades and tanktops.
New ZFS features landing in FreeBSD, MAP_STACK for OpenBSD, how to write safer C code with Clang’s address sanitizer, Michael W. Lucas on sponsor gifts, TCP blackbox recorder, and Dell disk system hacking. Headlines [A number of Upstream ZFS features landed in FreeBSD this week] 9188 increase size of dbuf cache to reduce indirect block decompression With compressed ARC (6950) we use up to 25% of our CPU to decompress indirect blocks, under a workload of random cached reads. To reduce this decompression cost, we would like to increase the size of the dbuf cache so that more indirect blocks can be stored uncompressed. If we are caching entire large files of recordsize=8K, the indirect blocks use 1/64th as much memory as the data blocks (assuming they have the same compression ratio). We suggest making the dbuf cache be 1/32nd of all memory, so that in this scenario we should be able to keep all the indirect blocks decompressed in the dbuf cache. (We want it to be more than the 1/64th that the indirect blocks would use because we need to cache other stuff in the dbuf cache as well.) In real world workloads, this won't help as dramatically as the example above, but we think it's still worth it because the risk of decreasing performance is low. The potential negative performance impact is that we will be slightly reducing the size of the ARC (by ~3%). 9166 zfs storage pool checkpoint The idea of Storage Pool Checkpoint (aka zpool checkpoint) deals with exactly that. It can be thought of as a “pool-wide snapshot” (or a variation of extreme rewind that doesn’t corrupt your data). It remembers the entire state of the pool at the point that it was taken and the user can revert back to it later or discard it. Its generic use case is an administrator that is about to perform a set of destructive actions to ZFS as part of a critical procedure. She takes a checkpoint of the pool before performing the actions, then rewinds back to it if one of them fails or puts the pool into an unexpected state. Otherwise, she discards it. With the assumption that no one else is making modifications to ZFS, she basically wraps all these actions into a “high-level transaction”. More information 8484 Implement aggregate sum and use for arc counters In pursuit of improving performance on multi-core systems, we should implements fanned out counters and use them to improve the performance of some of the arc statistics. These stats are updated extremely frequently, and can consume a significant amount of CPU time. And a small bug fix authored by me: 9321 arcloancompressedbuf() can increment arcloanedbytes by the wrong value arcloancompressedbuf() increments arcloanedbytes by psize unconditionally In the case of zfscompressedarcenabled=0, when the buf is returned via arcreturnbuf(), if ARCBUFCOMPRESSED(buf) is false, then arcloanedbytes is decremented by lsize, not psize. Switch to using arcbufsize(buf), instead of psize, which will return psize or lsize, depending on the result of ARCBUF_COMPRESSED(buf). MAP_STACK for OpenBSD Almost 2 decades ago we started work on W^X. The concept was simple. Pages that are writable, should not be executable. We applied this concept object by object, trying to seperate objects with different qualities to different pages. The first one we handled was the signal trampoline at the top of the stack. We just kept making changes in the same vein. Eventually W^X came to some of our kernel address spaces also. The fundamental concept is that an object should only have the permissions necessary, and any other operation should fault. The only permission separations we have are kernel vs userland, and then read, write, and execute. How about we add another new permission! This is not a hardware permission, but a software permission. It is opportunistically enforced by the kernel. the permission is MAPSTACK. If you want to use memory as a stack, you must mmap it with that flag bit. The kernel does so automatically for the stack region of a process's stack. Two other types of stack occur: thread stacks, and alternate signal stacks. Those are handled in clever ways. When a system call happens, we check if the stack-pointer register points to such a page. If it doesn't, the program is killed. We have tightened the ABI. You may no longer point your stack register at non-stack memory. You'll be killed. This checking code is MI, so it works for all platforms. Since page-permissions are generally done on page boundaries, there is caveat that thread and altstacks must now be page-sized and page-aligned, so that we can enforce the MAPSTACK attribute correctly. It is possible that a few ports need some massaging to satisfy this condition, but we haven't found any which break yet. A syslog_r has been added so that we can identify these failure cases. Also, the faulting cases are quite verbose for now, to help identify the programs we need to repair. **iXsystems** Writing Safer C with the Clang Address Sanitizer We wanted to improve our password strength algorithm, and decided to go for the industry-standard zxcvbn, from the people at Dropbox. Our web front-end would use the default Javascript library, and for mobile and desktop, we chose to use the C implementation as it was the lowest common denominator for all platforms. Bootstrapping all of this together was done pretty fast. I had toyed around with a few sample passwords so I decided to run it through the test suite we had for the previous password strength evaluator. The test generates a large number of random passwords according to different rules and expects the strength to be in a given range. But the test runner kept crashing with segmentation faults. It turns out the library has a lot of buffer overflow cases that are usually "harmless", but eventually crash your program when you run the evaluator function too much. I started fixing the cases I could see, but reading someone else's algorithms to track down tiny memory errors got old pretty fast. I needed a tool to help me. That's when I thought of Clang's Address Sanitizer. AddressSanitizer is a fast memory error detector. It consists of a compiler instrumentation module and a run-time library Let's try the sanitizer on a simple program. We'll allocate a buffer on the heap, copy each character of a string into it, and print it to standard output. + The site walks through a simple example which contains an error, it writes past the end of a buffer + The code works as expected, and nothing bad happens. It must be fine… + Then they compile it again with the address sanitizer actived So what can we gather from that pile of hex? Let's go through it line by line. AddressSanitizer found a heap buffer overflow at 0x60200000ef3d, a seemingly valid address (not NULL or any other clearly faulty value). + ASAN points directly to the line of code that is causing the problem We're writing outside of the heap in this instruction. And AddressSanitizer isn't having it. This is definitely one of my favorite indications. In addition to telling which line in the code failed and where in the memory the failure happened, you get a complete description of the closest allocated region in memory (which is probably the region you were trying to access). + They then walk through combining this with lldb, the Clang debugger, to actually interactively inspect the state of the problem when an invalid memory access happens Back to my practical case, how did I put the address sanitizer to good use? I simply ran the test suite, compiled with the sanitizer, with lldb. Sure enough, it stopped on every line that could cause a crash. It turns out there were many cases where zxcvbn-c wrote past the end of allocated buffers, on the heap and on the stack. I fixed those cases in the C library and ran the tests again. Not a segfault in sight! I've used memory tools in the past, but they were usually unwieldy, or put such a toll on performance that they were useless in any real-life case. Clang's address sanitizer turned out to be detailed, reliable, and surprisingly easy to use. I've heard of the miracles of Valgrind but macOS hardly supports it, making it a pain to use on my MacBook Pro. Coupled with Clang's static analyzer, AddressSanitizer is going to become a mandatory stop for evaluating code quality. It's also going to be the first tool I grab when facing confusing memory issues. There are many more case where I could use early failure and memory history to debug my code. For example, if a program crashes when accessing member of a deallocated object, we could easily trace the event that caused the deallocation, saving hours of adding and reading logs to retrace just what happened. News Roundup On sponsor gifts Note the little stack of customs forms off to the side. It’s like I’ve learned a lesson from standing at the post office counter filling out those stupid forms. Sponsors should get their books soon. This seems like an apropos moment to talk about what I do for print sponsors. I say I send them “a gift,” but what does that really mean? The obvious thing to ship them is a copy of the book I’ve written. Flat-out selling print books online has tax implications, though. Sponsors might have guessed that they’d get a copy of the book. But I shipped them the hardcover, which isn’t my usual practice. That’s because I send sponsors a gift. As it’s a gift, I get to choose what I send. I want to send them something nice, to encourage them to sponsor another book. It makes no sense for me to send a sponsor a Singing Wedgie-O-Gram. (Well, maybe a couple sponsors. You know who you are.) The poor bastards who bought into my scam–er, sponsored my untitled book–have no idea what’s coming. As of right now, their sensible guesses are woefully incomplete. Future books? They might get a copy of the book. They might get book plus something. They might just get the something. Folks who sponsor the jails book might get a cake with a file in it. Who knows? It’s a gift. It’s my job to make that gift worthwhile. And to amuse myself. Because otherwise, what’s the point? TCP Blackbox Recorder ``` Add the "TCP Blackbox Recorder" which we discussed at the developer summits at BSDCan and BSDCam in 2017. The TCP Blackbox Recorder allows you to capture events on a TCP connection in a ring buffer. It stores metadata with the event. It optionally stores the TCP header associated with an event (if the event is associated with a packet) and also optionally stores information on the sockets. It supports setting a log ID on a TCP connection and using this to correlate multiple connections that share a common log ID. You can log connections in different modes. If you are doing a coordinated test with a particular connection, you may tell the system to put it in mode 4 (continuous dump). Or, if you just want to monitor for errors, you can put it in mode 1 (ring buffer) and dump all the ring buffers associated with the connection ID when we receive an error signal for that connection ID. You can set a default mode that will be applied to a particular ratio of incoming connections. You can also manually set a mode using a socket option. This commit includes only basic probes. rrs@ has added quite an abundance of probes in his TCP development work. He plans to commit those soon. There are user-space programs which we plan to commit as ports. These read the data from the log device and output pcapng files, and then let you analyze the data (and metadata) in the pcapng files. Reviewed by: gnn (previous version) Obtained from: Netflix, Inc. Relnotes: yes Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11085 ``` **Digital Ocean** Outta the way, KDE4 KDE4 has been rudely moved aside on FreeBSD. It still installs (use x11/kde4) and should update without a problem, but this is another step towards adding modern KDE (Plasma 5 and Applications) to the official FreeBSD Ports tree. This has taken a long time mostly for administrative reasons, getting all the bits lined up so that people sticking with KDE4 (which, right now, would be everyone using KDE from official ports and packages on FreeBSD) don’t end up with a broken desktop. We don’t want that. But now that everything Qt4 and kdelibs4-based has been moved aside by suffixing it with -kde4, we have the unsuffixed names free to indicate the latest-and-greatest from upstream. KDE4 users will see a lot of packages moving around and being renamed, but no functional changes. Curiously, the KDE4 desktop depends on Qt5 and KDE Frameworks 5 — and it has for quite some time already, because the Oxygen icons are shared with KDE Frameworks, but primarily because FileLight was updated to the modern KDE Applications version some time ago (the KDE4 version had some serious bugs, although I can not remember what they were). Now that the names are cleaned up, we could consider giving KDE4 users the buggy version back. From here on, we’ve got the following things lined up: Qt 5.10 is being worked on, except for WebEngine (it would slow down an update way too much), because Plasma is going to want Qt 5.10 soon. CMake 3.11 is in the -rc stage, so that is being lined up. The kde5-import branch in KDE-FreeBSD’s copy of the FreeBSD ports tree (e.g. Area51) is being prepped and polished for a few big SVN commits that will add all the new bits. So we’ve been saying Real Soon Now ™ for years, but things are Realer Sooner Nower ™ now. Dell FS12-NV7 and other 2U server (e.g. C6100) disk system hacking A while back I reviewed the Dell FS12-NV7 – a 2U rack server being sold cheap by all and sundry. It’s a powerful box, even by modern standards, but one of its big drawbacks is the disk system it comes with. But it needn’t be. There are two viable solutions, depending on what you want to do. You can make use of the SAS backplane, using SAS and/or SATA drives, or you can go for fewer SATA drives and free up one or more PCIe slots as Plan B. You probably have an FS12 because it looks good for building a drive array (or even FreeNAS) so I’ll deal with Plan A first. Like most Dell servers, this comes with a Dell PERC RAID SAS controller – a PERC6/i to be precise. This ‘I’ means it has internal connectors; the /E is the same but its sockets are external. The PERC connects to a twelve-slot backplane forming a drive array at the front of the box. More on the backplane later; it’s the PERCs you need to worry about. The PERC6 is actually an LSI Megaraid 1078 card, which is just the thing you need if you’re running an operating system like Windows that doesn’t support a volume manager, striping and other grown-up stuff. Or if your OS does have these features, but you just don’t trust it. If you are running such an OS you may as well stick to the PERC6, and good luck to you. If you’re using BSD (including FreeNAS), Solaris or a Linux distribution that handles disk arrays, read on. The PERC6 is a solution to a problem you probably don’t have, but in all other respects its a turkey. You really want a straightforward HBA (Host Bus Adapter) that allows your clever operating system to talk directly with the drives. Any SAS card based on the 1078 (such as the PERC6) is likely to have problems with drives larger than 2Tb. I’m not completely sure why, but I suspect it only applies to SATA. Unfortunately I don’t have any very large SAS drives to test this theory. A 2Tb limit isn’t really such a problem when you’re talking about a high performance array, as lots of small drives are a better option anyway. But it does matter if you’re building a very large datastore and don’t mind slower access and very significant resilvering times when you replace a drive. And for large datastores, very large SATA drives save you a whole lot of cash. The best capacity/cost ratio is for 5Gb SATA drives Some Dell PERCs can be re-flashed with LSI firmware and used as a normal HBA. Unfortunately the PERC6 isn’t one of them. I believe the PERC6/R can be, but those I’ve seen in a FS12 are just a bit too old. So the first thing you’ll need to do is dump them in the recycling or try and sell them on eBay. There are actually two PERC6 cards in most machine, and they each support eight SAS channels through two SFF-8484 connectors on each card. Given there are twelve drives slots, one of the PERCs is only half used. Sometimes they have a cable going off to a battery located near the fans. This is used in a desperate attempt to keep the data in the card’s cache safe in order to avoid write holes corrupting NTFS during a power failure, although the data on the on-drive caches won’t be so lucky. If you’re using a file system like that, make sure you have a UPS for the whole lot. But we’re going to put the PERCs out of our misery and replace them with some nice new LSI HBAs that will do our operating system’s bidding and let it talk to the drives as it knows best. But which to pick? First we need to know what we’re connecting. Moving to the front of the case there are twelve metal drive slots with a backplane behind. Dell makes machines with either backplanes or expanders. A backplane has a 1:1 SAS channel to drive connection; an expander takes one SAS channel and multiplexes it to (usually) four drives. You could always swap the blackplane with an expander, but I like the 1:1 nature of a backplane. It’s faster, especially if you’re configured as an array. And besides, we don’t want to spend more money than we need to, otherwise we wouldn’t be hot-rodding a cheap 2U server in the first place – expanders are expensive. Bizarrely, HBAs are cheap in comparison. So we need twelve channels of SAS that will connect to the sockets on the backplane. The HBA you will probably want to go with is an LSI, as these have great OS support. Other cards are available, but check that the drivers are also available. The obvious choice for SAS aficionados is the LSI 9211-8i, which has eight internal channels. This is based on an LSI 2000 series chip, the 2008, which is the de-facto standard. There’s also four-channel -4i version, so you could get your twelve channels using one of each – but the price difference is small these days, so you might as well go for two -8i cards. If you want cheaper there are 1068-based equivalent cards, and these work just fine at about half the price. They probably won’t work with larger disks, only operate at 3Gb and the original SAS standard. However, the 2000 series is only about £25 extra and gives you more options for the future. A good investment. Conversely, the latest 3000 series cards can do some extra stuff (particularly to do with active cables) but I can’t see any great advantage in paying megabucks for one unless you’re going really high-end – in which case the NV12 isn’t the box for you anyway. And you’d need some very fast drives and a faster backplane to see any speed advantage. And probably a new motherboard…. Whether the 6Gb SAS2 of the 9211-8i is any use on the backplane, which was designed for 3Gb, I don’t know. If it matters that much to you you probably need to spend a lot more money. A drive array with a direct 3Gb to each drive is going to shift fast enough for most purposes. Once you have removed the PERCs and plugged in your modern-ish 9211 HBAs, your next problem is going to be the cable. Both the PERCs and the backplane have SFF-8484 multi-lane connectors, which you might not recognise. SAS is a point-to-point system, the same as SATA, and a multi-lane cable is simply four single cables in a bundle with one plug. (Newer versions of SAS have more). SFF-8484 multi-lane connectors are somewhat rare, (but unfortunately this doesn’t make them valuable if you were hoping to flog them on eBay). The world switched quickly to the SFF-8087 for multi-lane SAS. The signals are electrically the same, but the connector is not. Please generate and paste your ad code here. If left empty, the ad location will be highlighted on your blog pages with a reminder to enter your code. Mid-Post So there are two snags with this backplane. Firstly it’s designed to work with PERC controllers; secondly it has the old SFF-8484 connectors on the back, and any SAS cables you find are likely to have SFF-8087. First things first – there is actually a jumper on the backplane to tell it whether it’s talking to a PERC or a standard LSI HBA. All you need to do is find it and change it. Fortunately there are very few jumpers to choose from (i.e. two), and you know the link is already in the wrong place. So try them one at a time until it works. The one you want may be labelled J15, but I wouldn’t like to say this was the same on every variant. Second problem: the cable. You can get cables with an SFF-8087 on one end and an SFF-8484 on the other. These should work. But they’re usually rather expensive. If you want to make your own, it’s a PITA but at least you have the connectors already (assuming you didn’t bin the ones on the PERC cables). I don’t know what committee designed SAS cable connectors, but ease of construction wasn’t foremost in their collective minds. You’re basically soldering twisted pair to a tiny PCB. This is mechanically rubbish, of course, as the slightest force on the cable will lift the track. Therefore its usual to cover the whole joint in solidified gunk (technical term) to protect it. Rewiring SAS connectors is definitely not easy. I’ve tried various ways of soldering to them, none of which were satisfactory or rewarding. One method is to clip the all bare wires you wish to solder using something like a bulldog clip so they’re at lined up horizontally and then press then adjust the clamp so they’re gently pressed to the tracks on the board, making final adjustments with a strong magnifying glass and a fine tweezers. You can then either solder them with a fine temperature-controlled iron, or have pre-coated the pads with solder paste and flash across it with an SMD rework station. I’d love to know how they’re actually manufactured – using a precision jig I assume. The “easy” way is to avoid soldering the connectors at all; simply cut existing cables in half and join one to the other. I’ve used prototyping matrix board for this. Strip and twist the conductors, push them through a hole and solder. This keeps things compact but manageable. We’re dealing with twisted pair here, so maintain the twists as close as possible to the board – it actually works quite well. However, I’ve now found a reasonably-priced source of the appropriate cable so I don’t do this any more. Contact me if you need some in the UK. So all that remains is to plug your HBAs to the backplane, shove in some drives and you’re away. If you’re at this stage, it “just works”. The access lights for all the drives do their thing as they should. The only mystery is how you can get the ident LED to come on; this may be controlled by the PERC when it detects a failure using the so-called sideband channel, or it may be operated by the electronics on the backplane. It’s workings are, I’m afraid, something of a mystery still – it’s got too much electronics on board to be a completely passive backplane. Plan B: SATA If you plan to use only SATA drives, especially if you don’t intend using more than six, it makes little sense to bother with SAS at all. The Gigabyte motherboard comes with half a dozen perfectly good 3Gb SATA channels, and if you need more you can always put another controller in a PCIe slot, or even USB. The advantages are lower cost and you get to free up two PCIe slots for more interesting things. The down-side is that you can’t use the SAS backplane, but you can still use the mounting bays. Removing the backplane looks tricky, but it really isn’t when you look a bit closer. Take out the fans first (held in place by rubber blocks), undo a couple of screws and it just lifts and slides out. You can then slot and lock in the drives and connect the SATA connectors directly to the back of the drives. You could even slide them out again without opening the case, as long as the cable was long enough and you manually detached the cable it when it was withdrawn. And let’s face it – drives are likely to last for years so even with half a dozen it’s not that great a hardship to open the case occasionally. Next comes power. The PSU has a special connector for the backplane and two standard SATA power plugs. You could split these three ways using an adapter, but if you have a lot of drives you might want to re-wire the cables going to the backplane plug. It can definitely power twelve drives. And that’s almost all there is to it. Unfortunately the main fans are connected to the backplane, which you’ve just removed. You can power them from an adapter on the drive power cables, but there are unused fan connectors on the motherboard. I’m doing a bit more research on cooling options, but this approach has promising possibilities for noise reduction. Beastie Bits Adriaan de Groot’s post FOSDEM blog post My First FreeNAS smart(8) Call for Testing by Michael Dexter BSDCan 2018 Travel Grant Application Now Open BSD Developer Kristaps Dzonsons interviews Linus Torvalds, about diving Twitter vote - The secret to a faster FreeBSD default build world... tmate - Instant terminal sharing Tarsnap Feedback/Questions Vikash - Getting a port added Chris Wells - Quarterly Ports Branch FreeBSD-CI configs on Github Jenkins on the FreeBSD Wiki Gordon - Centralised storage suggestions Send questions, comments, show ideas/topics, or stories you want mentioned on the show to feedback@bsdnow.tv
On this episode, Ryan welcomes Brainstorm Golf founder Vikash Sanyal to discuss his company's Happy Putter Eye Align series and why it'll help you make more putts. We also discuss putter innovation, as Vikash's career has seen him lead Odyssey Golf and Never Compromise -- and now Brainstorm Golf -- as innovators in the game. Ryan also starts the show by talking about Paige Spiranac's appearance in the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue. Check out our show sponsors, including [2UNDR](http://2undr.com) (GNN20 at checkout to save 20%), [Ship Sticks](http://shipsticks.com/gnn) (click for 20% off), [Health IQ](http://healthiq.com/19) and [Happy Putter](http://brainstormgolf.com) (GNN10 for a 10% discount) as well [our first GNN audience trip in August to the Myrtle Beach World Am.](https://thegolfnewsnet.com/worldam)
Today there is an unprecedented opportunity to do good using public data. The main bottleneck is that we can't direct enough statisticians to work on humanitarian projects. At MIT we've been developing BayesDB, an open-source platform that addresses some of the these problems. Novice BayesDB users can answer data analysis questions in seconds or minutes with a level of rigor that otherwise requires hours or days of work by someone with advanced training in statistics plus good statistical judgment. This talk will focus on what and why BayesDB is, not how it works. It will use examples from collaborations with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and Boston Children's Hospital, showing how BayesDB can jointly analyze neuroimaging data and survey data collected from kids in slums in India. It will also discuss new initiatives aimed at using BayesDB to build empirical maps of poverty, inequality, and psychological suffering. Examples include data on PTSD vulnerability and resilience in US Army Veterans, including data on adverse events caused by psychotropic medication, and on electronic health record data for members of poor, rural US populations. It will also include a brief review of other AI technology being developed by my lab, the MIT Probabilistic Computing Project.Source: Effective Altruism Global (video).
Kevin Dougherty and Vikash Reddy are the authors of Performance Funding for Higher Education: What Are the Mechanisms What Are the Impacts (Jossey-Bass, 2013). Dr. Dougherty is Associate Professor of Higher Education and Education Policy at Teachers College-Columbia University and Mr. Reddy is a Senior Research Assistant at the Community College Research Center. In their book, the authors explore past research on performance funding in higher education, a practice where state governments tie university or college budget allocation to certain indictors–like graduation rates, remedial education, or drop out rates. This kind of funding has been around since the late 70s, but has not really taken off in the national discussion, even as around 25 states have some kind of performance funding for their higher education system. Dougherty and Reddy chronicle an expansive of past research on performance funding, dating back to 1979. The book provides a sprawling landscape, yet a concise explanation, of the discourse in the higher education sector for this type of budgetary reform policy. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Kevin Dougherty and Vikash Reddy are the authors of Performance Funding for Higher Education: What Are the Mechanisms What Are the Impacts (Jossey-Bass, 2013). Dr. Dougherty is Associate Professor of Higher Education and Education Policy at Teachers College-Columbia University and Mr. Reddy is a Senior Research Assistant at the Community College Research Center. In their book, the authors explore past research on performance funding in higher education, a practice where state governments tie university or college budget allocation to certain indictors–like graduation rates, remedial education, or drop out rates. This kind of funding has been around since the late 70s, but has not really taken off in the national discussion, even as around 25 states have some kind of performance funding for their higher education system. Dougherty and Reddy chronicle an expansive of past research on performance funding, dating back to 1979. The book provides a sprawling landscape, yet a concise explanation, of the discourse in the higher education sector for this type of budgetary reform policy. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Kevin Dougherty and Vikash Reddy are the authors of Performance Funding for Higher Education: What Are the Mechanisms What Are the Impacts (Jossey-Bass, 2013). Dr. Dougherty is Associate Professor of Higher Education and Education Policy at Teachers College-Columbia University and Mr. Reddy is a Senior Research Assistant at the Community College Research Center. In their book, the authors explore past research on performance funding in higher education, a practice where state governments tie university or college budget allocation to certain indictors–like graduation rates, remedial education, or drop out rates. This kind of funding has been around since the late 70s, but has not really taken off in the national discussion, even as around 25 states have some kind of performance funding for their higher education system. Dougherty and Reddy chronicle an expansive of past research on performance funding, dating back to 1979. The book provides a sprawling landscape, yet a concise explanation, of the discourse in the higher education sector for this type of budgetary reform policy. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Kevin Dougherty and Vikash Reddy are the authors of Performance Funding for Higher Education: What Are the Mechanisms What Are the Impacts (Jossey-Bass, 2013). Dr. Dougherty is Associate Professor of Higher Education and Education Policy at Teachers College-Columbia University and Mr. Reddy is a Senior Research Assistant at the Community College Research Center. In their book, the authors explore past research on performance funding in higher education, a practice where state governments tie university or college budget allocation to certain indictors–like graduation rates, remedial education, or drop out rates. This kind of funding has been around since the late 70s, but has not really taken off in the national discussion, even as around 25 states have some kind of performance funding for their higher education system. Dougherty and Reddy chronicle an expansive of past research on performance funding, dating back to 1979. The book provides a sprawling landscape, yet a concise explanation, of the discourse in the higher education sector for this type of budgetary reform policy. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Kevin Dougherty and Vikash Reddy are the authors of Performance Funding for Higher Education: What Are the Mechanisms What Are the Impacts (Jossey-Bass, 2013). Dr. Dougherty is Associate Professor of Higher Education and Education Policy at Teachers College-Columbia University and Mr. Reddy is a Senior Research Assistant at the Community College Research Center. In their book, the authors explore past research on performance funding in higher education, a practice where state governments tie university or college budget allocation to certain indictors–like graduation rates, remedial education, or drop out rates. This kind of funding has been around since the late 70s, but has not really taken off in the national discussion, even as around 25 states have some kind of performance funding for their higher education system. Dougherty and Reddy chronicle an expansive of past research on performance funding, dating back to 1979. The book provides a sprawling landscape, yet a concise explanation, of the discourse in the higher education sector for this type of budgetary reform policy. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices