Podcasts about what have we learned

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Best podcasts about what have we learned

Latest podcast episodes about what have we learned

First Baptist Gray
Exodus | Exodus 35:1-40:38

First Baptist Gray

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2024 34:40


In this week's episode, Pastor Randy delivers his final message from the Exodus series in a sermon entitled, "What Have We Learned?"

New Books in Political Science
The Democrats Have a Party: DNC2024

New Books in Political Science

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2024 56:49


On Thursday, Vice President Kamala Harris accepted the Democratic Party's nomination in Chicago. Lilly and Susan talk to two presidential politics scholars to unpack the political impact of the convention. When the Republicans convened in Milwaukee, the presidential race was a rematch between Donald Trump and Joe Biden. The four of us took stock of the race back in June and discussed calls for Biden to leave the race – but a shocking debate performance in late June rattled party faithful and donors. In June, few seemed enthusiastic about Vice President Harris as the person to take on Donald Trump. But on July 21st, President Joe Biden not only announced he was withdrawing. Biden endorsed Harris and she quickly and adroitly established herself as the only candidate. After a few weeks of strong campaigning with her VP Minnesota Governor Tim Walz, Harris and the Democrats went into the 4-day convention. Meena, Dan, Susan, and Lilly have a spiritied discussion! Dr. Meena Bose is the Executive Dean for Public Policy and Public Service Programs at the Peter S. Kalikow School of Government, Public Policy and International Affairs and director of the Peter S. Kalikow Center for the Study of the American Presidency, both at Hofstra University. Dr. Daniel E. Ponder is the L.E. Meador Professor of Political Science and Director of the Meador Center for Politics and Citizenship at Drury University.  We mentioned ·     former Georgia Lt. Governor Geoff Duncan endorsing Harris at the DNC ·     Polling numbers from fivethirtyeight ·     Research by Susanne Schwarz and Alexander Coppock in Journal of Politics, “What Have We Learned about Gender from Candidate Choice Experiments? A Meta-Analysis of Sixty-Seven Factorial Survey Experiments”   Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/political-science

Landscapes
An Alibi for Ecocide

Landscapes

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 28, 2024 73:43


An apparent "success story" of Amazonian forest conservation motivates a 6-years investigation of the land sparing hypothesis. Dr. Gregory Thaler's new book, Saving a Rainforest and Losing the World, reveals a tragic belief that agricultural intensification will solve our problems of enduring extraction of the world's biodiversity. Episode Links Saving a Rainforest and Losing the World: Conservation and Displacement in the Global Tropics. Yale University Press Roser, Max. 2024. Why Is Improving Agricultural Productivity Crucial to Ending Global Hunger and Protecting the World's Wildlife? Our World in Data. Phalan BT. 2018 What Have We Learned from the Land Sparing-sharing Model? Sustainability. 10(6):1760.  Scientists calling the apparent Brazilian halting of deforestation "one of the great conservation successes of the twenty-first century," in Nature Food For an excellent review of the Land Sparing / Land Sharing debate see: Claire Kremen, Ilke Geladi (2024). Land-Sparing and Sharing: Identifying Areas of Consensus, Remaining Debate and Alternatives, Editor(s): Samuel M. Scheiner, Encyclopedia of Biodiversity (Third Edition), Academic Press, 435-451, ISBN 9780323984348.  OR Land Spares Feel Their Oats, Land Food nexus Ritchie, Hannah. 2021. Palm Oil. Our World in Data. An example of the "active land sparing argument." The green revolution: Patel, R. (2013). The long green revolution. The Journal of Peasant Studies, 40(1), 1-63. An argument for the "forest transition model" as it applies to Brazilian forests.   Landscapes is produced by Adam Calo. A complete written transcript of the episode can be found on Adam's newsletter: Land Food Nexus. Send feedback or questions to adamcalo@substack.com or https://bsky.app/profile/adamcalo.bsky.social  Music by Blue Dot Sessions: “Kilkerrin” by Blue Dot Sessions (www.sessions.blue).

Peter Boyles Show Podcast
Peter Boyles Show 1.20.23 Hour 1

Peter Boyles Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2024 51:27


Peter's topic for this week is What Have We Learned? Why is this administration leading us into another war? Have we not gained the knowledge we needed from the Johnson-Nixon or Bush-Cheney years to not be sold on lies that will lead us into conflict? See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

IBM Analytics Insights Podcasts
Back with Roger Premo GM IBM Corporate Strategy and Ventures: How the world has changed in a year! (Replay)

IBM Analytics Insights Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2023 51:36


He's BACK!  Roger Premo, General Manager, Corporate Strategy and Ventures Development at IBM.  How the world has changed in a short year.  Generative AI and more!  02:29 Meet Roger Premo Take 205:52 A Changing World08:18 Generative AI12:48 Both Sides of the Story14:22 Hybrid Cloud and AI20:50 IBM's watsonx25:53 What Have We Learned?27:46 Enterprise Models29:59 Hugging Face31:03 IBM's Differentiation32:23 The 2 min Bar Pitch35:57 Three Questions42:21 An Intentional Hybrid Cloud Architecture 46:40 Responsible AILinkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ropremo/Website: https://www.ibm.com/watsonxWant to be featured as a guest on Making Data Simple?  Reach out to us at almartintalksdata@gmail.com and tell us why you should be next.  The Making Data Simple Podcast is hosted by Al Martin, WW VP Technical Sales, IBM, where we explore trending technologies, business innovation, and leadership ... while keeping it simple & fun. 

Making Data Simple
Back with Roger Premo GM IBM Corporate Strategy and Ventures: How the world has changed in a year! (Replay)

Making Data Simple

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2023 51:36


He's BACK!  Roger Premo, General Manager, Corporate Strategy and Ventures Development at IBM.  How the world has changed in a short year.  Generative AI and more!  02:29 Meet Roger Premo Take 205:52 A Changing World08:18 Generative AI12:48 Both Sides of the Story14:22 Hybrid Cloud and AI20:50 IBM's watsonx25:53 What Have We Learned?27:46 Enterprise Models29:59 Hugging Face31:03 IBM's Differentiation32:23 The 2 min Bar Pitch35:57 Three Questions42:21 An Intentional Hybrid Cloud Architecture 46:40 Responsible AILinkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ropremo/Website: https://www.ibm.com/watsonxWant to be featured as a guest on Making Data Simple?  Reach out to us at almartintalksdata@gmail.com and tell us why you should be next.  The Making Data Simple Podcast is hosted by Al Martin, WW VP Technical Sales, IBM, where we explore trending technologies, business innovation, and leadership ... while keeping it simple & fun. 

The Small Business Show
What Have We Learned in 500 Episodes?

The Small Business Show

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2023 17:46


It's our 500th episode! Join us as we discuss the journey from our first episodes back in 2015 to today. We discuss the power of persistence and listener feedback. Reach out and share your thoughts on the evolution of our show – we would love to hear from you! 00:00:00 […] The post What Have We Learned in 500 Episodes? Business Brain 500 appeared first on Business Brain - The Entrepreneurs' Podcast.

Planet Pointless
E100 - The Return of the Complaint ATM Vestibule

Planet Pointless

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2023 134:14


Shawn says the "c word" within 5 minutes. Everyone loves the hot takes in good fun...until they aren't fun (thanks Reddit). Until next time! Planetpointlesspodcast | Twitter, Instagram, Facebook | Linktree 0:00 - Intro, Cart Narcs 04:10 - Car Corner, Pulling the Curtain Back 18:08 - What Have We Learned over 100 Episodes? 21:17 - Learning to like TOOL, Being Less of a Dick, Misogyny 28:33 - "Elder Emos", Materialism, Lint Jar Fight 34:46 - When We Were Young Fest, Music Discussion, Call of Duty 01:01:04 - Mayochup, Tik Tok vs Reels, The Boondocks, Nutty Fandoms 01:08:32 - Nutty Fandoms Cont'd, Why is Jada Pinkett Smith Talking? 01:13:00 - Reddit Hot Takes, Duels, Daylight Savings 01:19:47 - Polyamory and Jealousy, Trick or Treating, Tattoo Acceptance 01:28:31 - HORRIBLE Reddit Takes (Listener Discretion Advised) 01:34:08 - Self Defense, Parent Discussion 01:37:10 - Music and Movies, B Rated Horror, Meathead Movies 02:03:49 - Bee Stings & Dogshit Facials 02:09:05 - Outro

Dynasty Underdog
Ep.165 What We Learned WK4

Dynasty Underdog

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2023 53:23


2:00 A Legend Passes 3:00 Denver Backfield 4:00 Higgins Ribs & Pickett Knee 7:30 Patty F Hammy 8:00 JT & Kupp off IR 11:00 Justin Herbert Fracture 12:00 Week 4 What Have We Learned??! 40:30 Trades & Non-Trades

Red, Blue, and Brady
Overcoming Hate with Love: Chris Singleton's Path to Advocacy to Prevent Gun Violence

Red, Blue, and Brady

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2023 29:43 Transcription Available


After his mother, Sharonda Coleman-Singleton, was killed in the Mother Emanuel AME church shooting in 2015, Chris Singleton became a beacon of resilience and unity in the face of unthinkable tragedy. His story of losing his mother in a horrific hate crime and then transforming that unimaginable pain into a life dedicated to combating gun violence and racism is both heartbreaking and awe-inspiring. As he takes us on his journey from a grieving teenager to an impassioned advocate, Chris's reflections on his mother's unyielding support during his baseball games and his desire emphasizing love over hate and recognizing our shared humanity above our differences is marked with humor and kindness. You can find Chris' books, including his most recent "Stories Behind Stances," here.  Further reading:5 Years After Charleston Church Massacre, What Have We Learned? (NPR)'Hate Crime': A Mass Killing at a Historic Church (the Atlantic)What Forgiveness Means Nearly 5 Years After Emanuel AME Church Mass Shooting (WBUR)Buffalo slayings hit close to home for former baseball player 900 miles away (NPR)Chris Singleton ‘Changed His Mission' When A White Supremacist Killed His Mother In Charleston Church Shooting (the Village Celebration)Remembering the Mother Emanuel Nine eight years later (WLTX)https://ads.chtbl.com/imp_track/a17dee1a-6b04-4ea6-9df7-f66cca0f469a;ord=%%CACHEBUSTER%%;request_ts=%%TIMESTAMP%%;user_agent=%%USERAGENT%%;ip_address=%%IP%%;idfa=%%IDFA%%;gaid=%%GAID%%;cookie=%%COOKIE%%;publisher=%%PUB_NAME%%;publisher_id=%%PUB_ID%%;station=%%STATION_NAME%%;station_id=%%STATION_ID%%;creative_id=%%CREATIVE_ID%%;buyer_id=%%BUYER_ID%%;episode_id=%%c.episode-id-raw%%;podcast_id=%%c.series-title%%Support the showFor more information on Brady, follow us on social media @Bradybuzz or visit our website at bradyunited.org.Full transcripts and bibliographies of this episode are available at bradyunited.org/podcast.National Suicide Prevention Lifeline: 1-800-273-8255.In a crisis? Text HOME to 741741 to connect with a Crisis Counselor 24/7. Music provided by: David “Drumcrazie” CurbySpecial thanks to Hogan Lovells for their long-standing legal support℗&©2019 Red, Blue, and Brady

IBM Analytics Insights Podcasts
How the world has changed in a short year! Back on with Roger Premo, General Manager, Strategy and Corporate Development at IBM

IBM Analytics Insights Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 2, 2023 51:36


He's BACK!  Roger Premo, General Manager, Strategy and Corporate Development at IBM.  How the world has changed in a short year.  Generative AI and more!  02:29 Meet Roger Premo Take 205:52 A Changing World08:18 Generative AI12:48 Both Sides of the Story14:22 Hybrid Cloud and AI20:50 IBM's watsonx25:53 What Have We Learned?27:46 Enterprise Models29:59 Hugging Face31:03 IBM's Differentiation32:23 The 2 min Bar Pitch35:57 Three Questions42:21 An Intentional Hybrid Cloud Architecture 46:40 Responsible AILinkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ropremo/Website: https://www.ibm.com/watsonxWant to be featured as a guest on Making Data Simple?  Reach out to us at almartintalksdata@gmail.com and tell us why you should be next.  The Making Data Simple Podcast is hosted by Al Martin, WW VP Technical Sales, IBM, where we explore trending technologies, business innovation, and leadership ... while keeping it simple & fun. 

Making Data Simple
How the world has changed in a short year! Back on with Roger Premo, General Manager, Corporate Strategy and Ventures IBM

Making Data Simple

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 2, 2023 51:36


He's BACK!  Roger Premo, General Manager, Corporate Strategy and Ventures Development at IBM.  How the world has changed in a short year.  Generative AI and more!  02:29 Meet Roger Premo Take 205:52 A Changing World08:18 Generative AI12:48 Both Sides of the Story14:22 Hybrid Cloud and AI20:50 IBM's watsonx25:53 What Have We Learned?27:46 Enterprise Models29:59 Hugging Face31:03 IBM's Differentiation32:23 The 2 min Bar Pitch35:57 Three Questions42:21 An Intentional Hybrid Cloud Architecture 46:40 Responsible AILinkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ropremo/Website: https://www.ibm.com/watsonxWant to be featured as a guest on Making Data Simple?  Reach out to us at almartintalksdata@gmail.com and tell us why you should be next.  The Making Data Simple Podcast is hosted by Al Martin, WW VP Technical Sales, IBM, where we explore trending technologies, business innovation, and leadership ... while keeping it simple & fun. 

Information Ecosystems: A Sawyer Seminar at the University of Pittsburgh

Welcome to the fifth and final episode of the third season of the Information Ecosystem podcast, hosted by Grace DeLallo and created in affiliation with the University of Pittsburgh. This episode, “What Have We Learned,” looks at the projects the cohort undertook in this project structure and some of the takeaways, including lessons learned. We look at building ethical relationships, leaving room for transparency, integrating community projects into student work and look at what we can gain through collaboration — all culminating into an outlook for this project and begin to imagine what more we can accomplish with more support and funding. Please follow this link for a transcript of this episode. Thank you to Alison Langmead for supporting this podcast and the DS4SJ PI Sera Linardi for her work in making all of these projects possible.

Binmin Podcast
Ep. 50: Is Christmas Rooted in Paganism... And Should Christians Celebrate It?

Binmin Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2022 16:06


Is mistletoe really a pagan symbol? Where did our Christmas celebration come from? This episode shares the story of Christmas traditions and whether Christians should celebrate it! JOIN the NEWSLETTER SUPPORT Binmin with a tax-deductible gift HERE 0:00 - INTRO 1:29 - WHY ALL THE CONTROVERSY ABOUT CHRISTMAS AND PAGANISM? 2:50 - WHY DO WE CELEBRATE DECEMBER 25 AS JESUS' BIRTHDAY? We don't know the exact date of Jesus' birth. 4:47 - Are there Pagan Rituals Associated with Christmas? Yes and no. Some traditions have their origins in ancient pagan practices, but the meaning of any word, symbol, or custom is determined by current usage, not its origins. 6:56 - SO WHAT SHOULD WE DO ABOUT SOME OF THE CHRISTMAS TRADITIONS THAT SUPPOSEDLY HAVE PAGAN ORIGINS? For us modern Christians, they don't hold relevance anymore (ringing bells, giving gifts, mistletoe, etc.) 10:20 - IS THERE ANY BIBLICAL EVIDENCE OF REDEEMING PAGAN SYMBOLS OR BELIEFS? Yes: Paul appropriated a pagan altar for gospel evangelism in Acts 17:22–24. 11:14 - SHOULD A CHRISTIAN CELEBRATE CHRISTMAS? Whether you choose to celebrate Jesus' birth falls under the category of “Christian liberty” (Rom. 14:5-6; 1 Cor. 10:31). 12:29 - SO WHAT? WHAT HAVE WE LEARNED? CHRISTMAS GLORIFIES GOD. PAGAN ORIGINS OF CHRISTMAS ARE IRRELEVANT 13:29 - WHAT'S YOUR NEXT STEP? GIVE ATTENTION TO JESUS. 14:31 - THANK YOU & WRAP UP CONNECT WITH THE BINMIN TEAM For more info about Binmin & more resources for your spiritual life, visit www.Binmin.org CONNECT WITH THE BINMIN TEAM Instagram: Binmin Instagram Linkedin: Binmin Linkedin Twitter: Binmin Twitter Ask Questions: info@binmin.org PODCAST RESOURCES More from Binmin: Binmin.org Subscribe on Apple Podcasts Subscribe on AnchorFM Subscribe on YouTube PLEASE CONSIDER LEAVING A REVIEW If this podcast is helping you make your spiritual life more important to you, help share it by leaving an Apple podcast review in the “Ratings & Reviews” section at the bottom of the podcast's page. Thank you for sharing!

Callie Harbin Baptist Church
Parallel Paradigm- What Have We Learned?

Callie Harbin Baptist Church

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2022 51:13


Part 9: What Have We Learned? - Justin Trotter

Pastor Jeff Pollard on SermonAudio
What Have We Learned about the Conscience?

Pastor Jeff Pollard on SermonAudio

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2022 86:00


A new MP3 sermon from Mount Zion Bible Church is now available on SermonAudio with the following details: Title: What Have We Learned about the Conscience? Subtitle: A Clear Conscience Speaker: Pastor Jeff Pollard Broadcaster: Mount Zion Bible Church Event: Midweek Service Date: 8/8/2022 Bible: Acts 23:1; Acts 24:16 Length: 86 min.

Conscience on SermonAudio
What Have We Learned about the Conscience?

Conscience on SermonAudio

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2022 86:00


A new MP3 sermon from Mount Zion Bible Church is now available on SermonAudio with the following details: Title: What Have We Learned about the Conscience? Subtitle: A Clear Conscience Speaker: Pastor Jeff Pollard Broadcaster: Mount Zion Bible Church Event: Midweek Service Date: 8/8/2022 Bible: Acts 23:1; Acts 24:16 Length: 86 min.

Let It Roll
What Have We Learned? The Birth & Death of the Cool

Let It Roll

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2022 60:32


Hosts Nate Wilcox and Yuri Campbell revisit our previous discussion with Ted Gioia and the basic premises of his work.Buy the book and support the podcast.Download this episode.Have a question or a suggestion for a topic or person for Nate to interview? Email letitrollpodcast@gmail.comFollow us on Twitter.Follow us on Facebook.Let It Roll is proud to be part of Pantheon Podcasts.

Food Safety Talk
Food Safety Talk 268: Add A Catchy Header

Food Safety Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2022 140:37


With great power comes great responsibility - WikipediaAbout Us — Food Safety TalkIAFP Annual Meeting - International Association for Food ProtectionDirty Harry (2/10) Movie CLIP - Do You Feel Lucky, Punk? (1971) HD - YouTubeIAFP Annual Meeting - International Association for Food ProtectionFlour and Shiga Toxin-Producing Escherichia coli (STEC): What Can be Done to Prevent Outbreaks?Multistate Outbreak of Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli O121 Infections Linked to Flour (Final Update)Ivan Parkin Lecturer - International Association for Food ProtectionCOVID-19: What Have We Learned to Make Our Food Systems More Resilient in the Future?Vermont - WikipediaUSDA Announces Action to Declare Salmonella an Adulterant in Breaded Stuffed Raw Chicken Products | USDAFood Safety Consumer Research Project: Meal Preparation Experiment on Raw Stuffed Chicken BreastsU.S.C. Title 21 - FOOD AND DRUGSChurch Brew Works | Pittsburgh Brewery & Restaurant in an Historic ChurchTotal Party Kill - a podcast from The IncomparableBarsuk Records homeFood Safety Talk 108: Hyperbole and Fire Ants — Food Safety TalkHold the Phone! The Role of Celebrity Chefs and Influencers in Food Safety MessagingIs TikTok's Pink Sauce Safe? There Are Some Unanswered QuestionsPink Sauce Chef Says It Will Be a Hit Despite Safety ConcernsLITERALLY English Definition and Meaning | Lexico.comThe Joker - Steve Miller Band lyrics - YouTube108. Parking Lot Tamales — Risky or Not?Play-Doh - WikipediaAn allergic reaction to Play-Doh in a child with wheat hypersensitivity - Journal of Allergy and Clinical ImmunologyFDA Investigating Lucky Charms Food Poisoning Case ReportsNotetaking.docx - Running head: UNIT 3 ASSESSMENT: NOTETAKING Unit 3 Assessment: Notetaking Ashley DeKind Herzing University 01/26/2020 1 UNIT 3 | Course HeroAccidental Tech PodcastATP Ending Theme (Song A Day #1546) - YouTubeOvercastMichael T. Osterholm, PhD, MPH | CIDRAPR. Buckminster Fuller quote: Whether it is to be Utopia or Oblivion will be…R. Buckminster Fuller - If humanity does not opt for…Welcome to FoodCoVNET | NC State ExtensionDaily Harvest CEO says they have identified tara flour as cause of illnesses | Food Safety NewsMaking hyper-realistic cakes | Bake MagazineMoonshiners: Smoke Ring (TV Series 2021) - IMDbRandy W. Worobo | CALSThe Big Waste | Food Network Specials | Food Network

Gaming and BS RPG Podcast
What Have We Learned

Gaming and BS RPG Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2022 96:03


We look back and reflect upon things we've learned over the last 7+ years. Random Encounter Chris Shorb calls in about Are They Lying? Email from my friend Chris D. Follow up email from Roger Brasslett about hanging it up Audio from Harrigan, friend and moderator of our Discord Die Roll Dwarven Fiasco Covenstead: A... The post What Have We Learned appeared first on Gaming and BS RPG Podcast.

Let's Learn Everything!
12: The Golden Toad Mystery, All the Things we Left on the Moon, and the Oldest Bar Joke

Let's Learn Everything!

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2022 99:54


What happened to the golden toad? How many things did we leave on the moon, and what are they? And what is the oldest recorded bar joke? Support us on Patreon! Join our Discord! We also learn about: The World Wildlife Fund/World Wresting Federation, Agatha Christie's Mystery of the Golden Toad, publication smackdowns, the amphibian apocalypse, outside my jurisdiction, double callback, the african clawed frog (from ep 5!), on this podcast we stan… Michael Collins, moon poop, moon scalpels, 4 undetonated grenades, moonquakes, no on vomitted on the moon, rating moon items, sneaking things on the moon, dogs in sumerian bars only want to open one thing and it's disgusting, how many likes did that tablet have? reading sumerian proverbs, the dog understands take it, but it does not understand put it down. Sources: The Golden Toad Thirty Years After the Last Golden Toad Sighting, What Have We Learned? El Niño–Southern Oscillation Crump, Apparent decline of the golden toad: underground or extinct? Pounds and Fogden, Conservation of the golden toad: a brief history Global Warming Didn't Kill the Golden Toad First Mammal Killed by Global Warming The Chytrid Fungus Stopping the Next Amphibian Apocalypse Hope for the Golden Toad --- List of Lunar Missions WSJ Article of Things we've left on the Moon Nasa Catalogue of Manmade Material on the Moon Lunar Retroreflectors Moonquakes Grenades on the Moon Correction on Moon Vomit Biomedical Results of Apollo Studying Moon Poop Family Photo on the Moon The Moon Museum PBS Moon Museum Investigation Audio Recording of Almost Forgetting to Drop Symbolic Items --- Images of the Tablets Sumerian Animal Proverbs and Fables: Collection Five AskHistorians Thread Proverbs from Electronic Text Corpus of Sumerian Literature

Human Capital Innovations (HCI) Podcast
S34E4 - What Have We Learned? COVID-Inspired Approaches to Teaching and Learning

Human Capital Innovations (HCI) Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2022 62:44


In this HCI Podcast episode, Dr. Jonathan H. Westover (https://www.linkedin.com/in/jonathanhwestover/) shares his Friday March 18, 2022 panel discussion from the Western Academy of Management, What Have We Learned? COVID-Inspired Approaches to Teaching and Learning. Abstract: The COVID-19 pandemic created an environment of rapid change in delivery modality and pedagogical retooling in higher education institutions that was both unprecedented and unexpected. The innovations and new pedagogical approaches developed during the pandemic have the potential to transform teaching and learning in business and management education and accelerate a departure from traditional methods. This session will feature panelists representing the fields of organizational behavior, organizational development, human resources, marketing, ethics, and legal studies. The panelists will share their experiences, insights, and innovations in teaching and learning necessitated by the pandemic and how these transformations can lead to lasting change and prepare students for their future careers.  Please leave a review wherever you listen to your podcasts! Check out the Human Capital Innovations (HCI) Academy: Courses, Micro-Credentials, and Certificates to Upskill and Reskill for the Future of Work! https://hciacademy.talentlms.com/. Check out the LinkedIn Alchemizing Human Capital Newsletter: https://www.linkedin.com/newsletters/alchemizing-human-capital-6884351526333227008/. Check out Dr. Westover's book, 'Bluer than Indigo' Leadership, here: https://www.innovativehumancapital.com/bluerthanindigo. Check out Dr. Westover's book, The Alchemy of Truly Remarkable Leadership, here: https://www.innovativehumancapital.com/leadershipalchemy. Check out the latest issue of the Human Capital Leadership magazine, here: https://www.innovativehumancapital.com/hci-magazine. Ranked #6 Performance Management Podcast: https://blog.feedspot.com/performance_management_podcasts/ Ranked #6 Workplace Podcast: https://blog.feedspot.com/workplace_podcasts/ Ranked #7 HR Podcast: https://blog.feedspot.com/hr_podcasts/ Ranked #12 Talent Management Podcast: https://blog.feedspot.com/talent_management_podcasts/ Ranked in the Top 20 Personal Development and Self-Improvement Podcasts: https://blog.feedspot.com/personal_development_podcasts/ Ranked in the Top 30 Leadership Podcasts: https://blog.feedspot.com/leadership_podcasts/

Human Capital Innovations (HCI) Podcast
S34E4 - What Have We Learned? COVID-Inspired Approaches to Teaching and Learning

Human Capital Innovations (HCI) Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2022 57:14


In this HCI Podcast episode, Dr. Jonathan H. Westover (https://www.linkedin.com/in/jonathanhwestover/) shares his Friday March 18, 2022 panel discussion from the Western Academy of Management, What Have We Learned? COVID-Inspired Approaches to Teaching and Learning. Abstract: The COVID-19 pandemic created an environment of rapid change in delivery modality and pedagogical retooling in higher education institutions that was both unprecedented and unexpected. The innovations and new pedagogical approaches developed during the pandemic have the potential to transform teaching and learning in business and management education and accelerate a departure from traditional methods. This session will feature panelists representing the fields of organizational behavior, organizational development, human resources, marketing, ethics, and legal studies. The panelists will share their experiences, insights, and innovations in teaching and learning necessitated by the pandemic and how these transformations can lead to lasting change and prepare students for their future careers. Please consider supporting the HCI Podcast on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/user?u=69688020. Please leave a review wherever you listen to your podcasts! Check out the Human Capital Innovations (HCI) Academy: Courses, Micro-Credentials, and Certificates to Upskill and Reskill for the Future of Work! https://hciacademy.talentlms.com/. Check out the LinkedIn Alchemizing Human Capital Newsletter: https://www.linkedin.com/newsletters/alchemizing-human-capital-6884351526333227008/. Check out Dr. Westover's book, 'Bluer than Indigo' Leadership, here: https://www.innovativehumancapital.com/bluerthanindigo. Check out Dr. Westover's book, The Alchemy of Truly Remarkable Leadership, here: https://www.innovativehumancapital.com/leadershipalchemy. Check out the latest issue of the Human Capital Leadership magazine, here: https://www.innovativehumancapital.com/hci-magazine. Ranked #6 Performance Management Podcast: https://blog.feedspot.com/performance_management_podcasts/  Ranked #6 Workplace Podcast: https://blog.feedspot.com/workplace_podcasts/  Ranked #7 HR Podcast: https://blog.feedspot.com/hr_podcasts/  Ranked #12 Talent Management Podcast: https://blog.feedspot.com/talent_management_podcasts/  Ranked in the Top 20 Personal Development and Self-Improvement Podcasts: https://blog.feedspot.com/personal_development_podcasts/  Ranked in the Top 30 Leadership Podcasts: https://blog.feedspot.com/leadership_podcasts/

Fundação (FFMS) - [IN] Pertinente
EP 45 | ECONOMIA | A Teoria dos Jogos, na prática

Fundação (FFMS) - [IN] Pertinente

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2022 45:36


A Teoria dos Jogos tem mais aplicações na prática do que aquelas que podemos imaginar: está subjacente aos leilões de arte mas também aos leilões do peixe ou das flores; está por detrás da colocação de professores em escolas ou de médicos em hospitais. Até a turma onde a sua filha foi colocada na Faculdade é determinada por esta teoria que afinal tem aplicações muito mais concretas do que parece.Joana Pais e Hugo Van Der Ding largam o lado teórico e trocam agora a Teoria dos Jogos por miúdos, fazendo jus ao objectivo do IN PERTINENTE: dar respostas às perguntas de todos e contribuir para uma sociedade mais informada.REFERÊNCIAS E LINKS ÚTEIS:Leilões:Krishna, Vijay. Auction theory. Academic press, 2009. Milgrom, Paul Robert. Putting auction theory to work. Cambridge University Press, 2004 Desenho de mercados em geral:Roth, Alvin E. The economist as engineer: Game theory, experimentation, and computation as tools for design economics." Econometrica 70.4 (2002): 1341-1378.Roth, Alvin E. "What Have We Learned from Market Design?." The Economic Journal 118.527 (2008): 285-310. Scott Duke Kominers, Alexander Teytelboym, and Vincent P. Crawford. An invitation to market design. Oxford Review of Economic Policy Matching theory:Gale, David, and Lloyd S. Shapley. "College admissions and the stability of marriage." The American Mathematical Monthly 69.1 (1962): 9-15. Scientific Background on the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel 2012: https://www.nobelprize.org/uploads/2018/06/advanced-economicsciences2012.pdfRoth, Alvin E. "The evolution of the labor market for medical interns and residents: a case study in game theory." The Journal of Political Economy(1984): 991-1016. Alvin Roth, Marilda Sotomayor, Two-sided matching (1990), Cambridge university press (Econometric Society Monograph)Alvin Roth (2015), Who gets what - and why: The new economics of Matchmaking and Market Design, Eamon Dolan / Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Michael A. Rees, Ty B. Dunn, Christian S. Kuhr, Christopher L. Marsh, Jeffrey Rogers, Susan E. Rees, Alejandra Cicero, Laurie J. Reece, Alvin E. Roth, Obi Ekwenna, et al. Kidney exchange to overcome financial barriers to kidney transplantation. American Journal of Transplantation, 17:782–790, 2017.BIOSJOANA PAISJoana Pais é professora de Economia no ISEG da Universidade de Lisboa. Obteve o seu Ph.D. em Economia na Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona em 2005. Atualmente é coordenadora do programa de Mestrado em Economia e do programa de Doutoramento em Economia, ambos do ISEG, e membro da direção da unidade de investigação REM - Research in Economics and Mathematics. É ainda coordenadora do XLAB – Behavioural Research Lab, um laboratório que explora a tomada de decisão e o comportamento económico, político e social, suportado pelo consórcio PASSDA (Production and Archive of Social Science Data). Os seus interesses de investigação incluem áreas como a teoria de jogos, em particular, a teoria da afetação (matching theory), o desenho de mercados, a economia comportamental e a economia experimental.HUGO VAN DER DING Hugo van der Ding nasceu nos finais dos anos 70 ao largo do Golfo da Biscaia, durante uma viagem entre Amesterdão e Lisboa, e cresceu numa comunidade hippie nos arredores de Montpellier. Estudou História das Artes Decorativas Orientais, especializando-se em gansos de origami. Em 2012, desistiu da carreira académica para fazer desenhos nas redes sociais. Depois do sucesso de A Criada Malcriada deixou de precisar de trabalhar. Ainda assim, escreve regularmente em revistas e jornais, é autor de alguns livros e podcasts, faz ocasionalmente teatro e televisão, e continua a fazer desenhos nas redes sociais. Desde 2019 é um dos apresentadores do programa Manhãs da 3, na Antena 3.

CLOUDBUSTING
Episode 128: Cloud Migrations, What Have We Learned?

CLOUDBUSTING

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2022 37:15


In our second episode of the new season, “Cloud Migrations, What Have We Learned?” Marc Weaver joins the Cloudbusting team for a lively talk about Cloud Migrations. Marc was named one of 2020's “Top 20 Cloud Influencers” and in 2021 he was recognized as a top influencer in cloud computing by Simplilearn, the world's #1 online bootcamp. Today, Marc is an AWS cloud migration expert and top-ranked AWS solutions architect who founded the company “databasable,” after 15 years experience working for large financial institutions in London, Sydney and New York.  Join our hosts Dave and Jez as they leap into and unravel cloud migration archetypes while taking a detour through data centers, databases and close with the beloved Ten Second Recommendations. 

New Rocky Creek Baptist Church
What Have We Learned in 2021

New Rocky Creek Baptist Church

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 26, 2021


The post What Have We Learned in 2021 appeared first on New Rocky Creek Baptist Church.

VU Hoops: for Villanova Wildcats fans
State of the Nova Nation: The Hawk is Dead (Again), What We've Learned and 'Cuse is Coming

VU Hoops: for Villanova Wildcats fans

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2021 63:49


Emma and Pat break down the positives from Villanova's blowout win over St. Joe's , including Collin Gillespie's second consecutive stellar performance and Justin Moore's much improved defense. Then, the duo introduce a new segment called "What Have We Learned?" to go over all of the action from the week of Big 5 games. Topics include Dhamir Cosby Roundtree's performance, Gillespie's case for All-American honors, Chris Arcidiacono's minutes, Jermaine Samuels' lack of offense and whether turnovers are turning into an issue. Lastly, Emma and Pat preview the highly-anticipated Madison Square Garden match-up between the 'Cats and the surging Syracuse Orange. Be sure to subscribe to the pod, leave a rating and follow us on Twitter @SoNNpod. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Talkin NOIZ
Talkin NOIZ The BIG Leap One Year Later: The Lessons Learned, and The Lessons Still To Learn

Talkin NOIZ

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2021 120:02


The Talkin NOIZ Crew Reflect on The Impending One Year Anniversary of Talkin NOIZ Daily Podcast and The 10 Year Anniversary of NOIZ Media and Entertainment. What Have We Learned and What Are We Still LearningSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

UBC Sermons
What Have We Learned from the Pandemic?

UBC Sermons

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2021


What Have We Learned from the Pandemic?

3rd quarter of life Rearview & Now!!

So, What Have We Learned? Now that life where the author lives has gone back to 80% pre-pandemic living, he ponders; what are we  left with and what have we learned? The author speaks about the crazy pandemic conspiracy theories and  what God’s truths are! SPECIAL MUSIC BY: Harry A. Teabout IV – 2017

Education Talk Radio
ONE YEAR LATER, WHAT HAVE WE LEARNED?

Education Talk Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2021 43:29


ONE YEAR LATER, WHAT HAVE WE LEARNED?: Always an interesting conversation with Ian McCullough of Turnitin who views education and equity  through the lens of academic integrity . Comments or Suggestions :Please feel free to contact host Larry Jacobs at Larry@ace-ed.org Click over to ace-ed.org our Equity Consortium home website to enjoy "Equity & Access PreK12" our official jounral , to listen to older podcasts or to see what the Consortium  doing for equity and access

Motivation Made Easy: Body Respect, True Health
Balancing External Goals & Internal Attunement with Dr. Sapna Doshi, PhD

Motivation Made Easy: Body Respect, True Health

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 29, 2021 62:07


Episode 12. Today on the podcast, I got to talk to my very dear friend and incredibly talented colleague Dr. Sapna Doshi. Dr. Sapna Doshi is a licensed clinical psychologist and owner of Mind Body Health. Dr. Doshi earned her Ph.D. from Drexel University and completed her internship at Duke University Medical Center. In 2015, she opened her private practice, Mind Body Health which now operates in Arlington, VA and Washington, DC and is staffed with 25 psychologists and dietitians. Mind Body Health specializes in providing evidence-based treatment in the areas of eating disorders, insomnia, obesity, chronic pain, anxiety disorders, and mood disorders.  What We Cover What is the field of clinical health psychology doing well?Where are we missing the mark?How can people balance working on improving their relationship to food and their bodies when they have difficulty letting go of weight loss as a goal? Health at Every Size and Intuitive Eating Dr. Doshi talks about the positive effects of the Health at Every Size movement and Intuitive Eating as an alternative approach. We also discuss a controversial topic which is the effect she and I have seen where some members of a social movement can come across as shaming to others. She talked about the environment she has created within her practice where they can have conversations between professionals that are respectful, even if they ultimately disagree. This has created a community where collaboration and focus on the client remains the top priority. Striking the Balance Between External Suggestions and Internal Cues Dr. Doshi talks about the balance and difficulty of this in the real world. She discusses her own personal experience with having a diagnosis of small intestinal bacterial overgrowth (SIBO) and how challenging it is to tune inwards while having to avoid certain foods she enjoys. Considerations for the Body Mass Index in South Asian Community Dr. Doshi talks about her experience as a South Asian woman growing up in the United States. We also talk about her dissertation research and the fact that South Asian women on average actually have higher body fat percentage at a lower body mass index (Doshi, 2012). So again we see the limitations of the body mass index in actually predicting health. She also discussed a finding from her dissertation that more cultural conflict (that is, more conflict between the South Asian and standard American culture) was associated with higher levels of disordered eating (Doshi, 2012). Ways to Improve Cultural Adaptations to Improve Care Dr. Doshi shares a story of her experience being told how to treat her SIBO and the lack of cultural adaptation and flexibility in the standard medical approach. She also shares about the fact that South Asians are underrepresented in the mental health field. Therefore, it's important to work towards increasing diversity in different health professions. Why Does Behavioral Weight Loss so Often Fail? We talked about our experiences with behavioral weight loss trials, and ways in which we were part of methods that were ultimately rarely successful long-term. "Deprivation is not a state we can constantly be living in."Dr. Sapna Doshi, PhD She also discusses the fact that prior weight loss attempts can sometimes be romanticized, leaving people to forget the negative and focus on all the positive (e.g., "I think I was happy... I must have been, I was thin!") Is Long-Term Weight Loss Possible? What Do We Know? We talked about the National Weight Control Registry. This is a registry for people who have lost at least 30 pounds and kept it off for at least a year, though on average they have lost more weight and kept it off longer than that (Thomas et al., 2014). What Have We Learned from this Registry? Regularly activeModifying their eating in some wayMost eat breakfast regularlyThey aren't watching a ton of television

Podcasts – First Unitarian Society of Minneapolis
Coffee & Wisdom #157: What Have We Learned from Religion? Part 5

Podcasts – First Unitarian Society of Minneapolis

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2021 16:48


Rev. Dr. David Breeden January 15, 2021 Weekday wisdom and philosophy with a humanist twist. The post Coffee & Wisdom #157: What Have We Learned from Religion? Part 5 appeared first on First Unitarian Society of Minneapolis.

Podcasts – First Unitarian Society of Minneapolis
Coffee & Wisdom #156: What Have We Learned from Religion? Part 4

Podcasts – First Unitarian Society of Minneapolis

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2021 13:23


Rev. Dr. David Breeden January 14, 2021 Weekday wisdom and philosophy with a humanist twist. The post Coffee & Wisdom #156: What Have We Learned from Religion? Part 4 appeared first on First Unitarian Society of Minneapolis.

Podcasts – First Unitarian Society of Minneapolis
Coffee & Wisdom #155: What Have We Learned from Religion? Part 3

Podcasts – First Unitarian Society of Minneapolis

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2021 12:17


Rev. Dr. David Breeden January 13, 2021 Weekday wisdom and philosophy with a humanist twist. The post Coffee & Wisdom #155: What Have We Learned from Religion? Part 3 appeared first on First Unitarian Society of Minneapolis.

Podcasts – First Unitarian Society of Minneapolis
Coffee & Wisdom #154: What Have We Learned from Religion? Part 2

Podcasts – First Unitarian Society of Minneapolis

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2021 13:22


Rev. Dr. David Breeden January 12, 2021 Weekday wisdom and philosophy with a humanist twist. The post Coffee & Wisdom #154: What Have We Learned from Religion? Part 2 appeared first on First Unitarian Society of Minneapolis.

Podcasts – First Unitarian Society of Minneapolis
Coffee & Wisdom #153: What Have We Learned from Religion? Part 1

Podcasts – First Unitarian Society of Minneapolis

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2021 13:25


Rev. Dr. David Breeden January 07, 2021 Weekday wisdom and philosophy with a humanist twist. The post Coffee & Wisdom #153: What Have We Learned from Religion? Part 1 appeared first on First Unitarian Society of Minneapolis.

A Woman's View with Amanda Dickson
Taking stock of 2020

A Woman's View with Amanda Dickson

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 2020 11:36


At the end of year, it's common for us to take stock of the year that's just passed, look at what we've learned and look ahead to the new year. Perhaps that's even more true this year than in other years. KSL Newsradio's Amanda Dickson asks her guests this week on A Woman's View what they've learned this year as they look back and look ahead. Her guests this week include Chaplain Shantel McBride, Ann House, Coordinator of the Financial Wellness Center at the University of Utah, and Robbyn Scribner, Director of Outreach for RizeNext.  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Unorthodox
Passing it Down: Ep. 247

Unorthodox

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2020 81:36


This week on Unorthodox, we’re recovering from our potentially poisonous etrog-tinis. Our first Jewish guest is actor and comedian Michael Ian Black, best known for "Wet Hot American Summer" and VH1’s “I Love The …” series, whose latest book is "A Better Man," a meditation on masculinity written in the form of a letter to his college-aged son. He tells us about the book, which is far more earnest than you might expect from the comic actor, and why he wants to offer boys and young men a better path than “toxic masculinity.” He also explains the Jewish influences on his thinking and parenting, and tells us about changing his name from Schwartz to Black when he got into showbiz (there was another Michael Schwartz in the Guild already). Our second Jewish guest is Kylie Unell, a Ph.D. student in Jewish thought at New York University and the author of an essay in JTA titled, “My mom is white and my dad is black. Don’t call me a ‘Jew of Color.’” She tells us how growing up in Kansas and then Israel and attending college in New York City shaped her Jewish identity and pushed her to reject other labels—like “Modern Orthodox”—which she felt didn’t fully capture her identity. She also tells us about drawing on Jewish history (like hosting a Moses Mendelssohn-themed Shabbat dinner) to create a new spiritual community for young Jews. Join us for our upcoming virtual events! Thursday 10/22, 6:30 p.m. EDT: Mark will be part of the panel event “What Have We Learned from the Pittsburgh Synogogue Attack?” Register here. Thursday 10/22, 7 p.m. EDT: Stephanie will be interviewing (a different) Ben Cohen as part of Generally Speaking, her interview series with children of Holocaust Survivors, presented by the Museum of Jewish Heritage. Register here. Saturday, 10/24, 7:30 p.m. PT: An Evening with Unorthodox, brought to you by the Stroum JCC Virtual BookFest. Register here. Send us questions and comments at unorthodox@tabletmag.com, or leave us a voicemail at (914) 570-4869. You can also record a voice memo on your smartphone and email it to us. Subscribe to our weekly newsletter to get new episodes, photos, and more. Get a behind-the-scenes look at our recording sessions on our YouTube channel! Join our Facebook group, and follow Unorthodox on Twitter and Instagram. Get your Unorthodox T-shirts, mugs, and baby onesies at bit.ly/unorthoshirt. Sponsors: American Jewish World Service is the leading Jewish organization working to fight poverty and pursue justice in the developing world. In light of the COVID-19 pandemic, AJWS is currently matching all donations tenfold; find out more about the organization and to make your matched donation at AJWS.org/unorthodox. Decision Points is a podcast that examines the key moments and figures that impacted the relationship between Israel and the U.S. The show, which just launched its second season, is hosted by David Makovsky, director of the Project on Arab-Israel Relations at the Washington Institute for Near East policy and a member of the peace team during the Obama Administration. The Bronfman Center at NYU congratulates Rabbi Yehuda Sarna for his 18 years of service to the Bronfman Center and the global Jewish community. Find out more at bit.ly/sarna18. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Voice of the Shepherd – Mater Dei Radio
Episode 151: What Have We Learned

The Voice of the Shepherd – Mater Dei Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 12, 2020 28:00


Archdiocese of Portland in Oregon The post Episode 151: What Have We Learned appeared first on Mater Dei Radio.

The Voice of the Shepherd – Mater Dei Radio
Episode 151: What Have We Learned

The Voice of the Shepherd – Mater Dei Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 12, 2020 28:00


Archdiocese of Portland in Oregon The post Episode 151: What Have We Learned appeared first on Mater Dei Radio.

Food Safety Matters
Ep. 72. David Acheson: The Trouble with Defining “Ready-to-Eat"

Food Safety Matters

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2020 70:38


Dr. David Acheson, is the founder and CEO of The Acheson Group and brings more than 30 years of medical and food safety research and experience to provide strategic advice as well as recall and crisis management support to food companies and ancillary technology companies on a global basis on all matters relating to food safety and food defense.   David graduated from the University of London Medical School and practiced internal medicine and infectious diseases in the United Kingdom until 1987 when he moved to the New England Medical Center and became an Associate Professor at Tufts University in Boston, studying the molecular pathogenesis of foodborne pathogens.   Prior to forming The Acheson Group, David served as the Chief Medical Officer at the U.S. Department of Agriculture Food Safety and Inspection Service and then joined the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) as the Chief Medical Officer at the FDA Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition (CFSAN). After serving as the director of CFSAN’s Office of Food Defense, Communication, and Emergency Response, David was appointed as the Assistant and then Associate Commissioner for Foods, which provided him an agency-wide leadership role for all food and feed issues and the responsibility for the development of the 2007 Food Protection Plan, which served as the basis for many of the authorities granted to FDA by the Food Safety Modernization Act.   From 2009 to 2013, he was a partner at Leavitt Partners where he managed Leavitt Partners Global Food Safety Solutions.  David has published extensively and is internationally recognized both for his public health expertise in food safety and his research in infectious diseases. He is a sought-after speaker and regular guest on national news programs. He serves on a variety of boards and food safety advisory groups of several major food manufacturers. David was previously a guest on Food Safety Matters – episodes 12 and 45. In this episode of Food Safety Matters, we speak to David [11:31] about: Classifying RTE foods and how consumer behavior plays a critical role Challenges related to messaging and marketing tactics displayed on consumer packaging and how it can interfere with food safety perception Consumer vs. manufacturer responsibility when foodborne illness occurs How food processing trends, consumer behaviors, and regulations intertwine Steps a company can take to determine if their product is truly RTE Why consistently negative swabbing results is not a good thing How FDA responds to positive contamination findings in a plant The challenges associated with drilling down traceability to the item level Romaine lettuce and why leafy greens are such a tricky commodity Salmonella and the likelihood that it may officially become an adulterant David Acheson's Contributions to Food Safety Magazine Managing Risks in the Global Supply Chain  What Have We Learned about FSMA Implementation?  Are All Salmonella Created Equal? New Directions in Food Protection   ​Resource: Blog: What Does Marler's Salmonella Citizen Petition Mean to You? News Mentioned in This Episode USA Today: Inspections, Citations, Recalls Slashed: Coronavirus is Testing America's Food Safety Net [4:17] LGMA: Work Underway to Further Strengthen Food Safety Practices for Leafy Greens [9:19] LeafyGreenGuidance.com Keep Up with Food Safety Magazine Follow Us on Twitter @FoodSafetyMag and on Facebook  Subscribe to our magazine and our biweekly eNewsletter We Want to Hear From You! Please share your comments, questions, and suggestions. Tell us about yourself—we'd love to hear about your food safety challenges and successes. We want to get to know you! Here are a few ways to be in touch with us. Email us at podcast@foodsafetymagazine.com Record a voice memo on your phone and email it to us at podcast@foodsafetymagazine.com

Grown Dad Business with Aaron Kleiber
50: #DailyDad LIVE! Episode 50 "What Have We Learned?"

Grown Dad Business with Aaron Kleiber

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2020 15:55


#DailyDad LIVE! Episode 50 "What Have We Learned?" A daily-quarantine-dad-rant-riff-vlog with Aaron Kleiber, a compliment-show of the podcast #GrownDadBusiness! On my porch pretty much in the morning drinking coffee. Do we know each other? Get out of my yard. Watch or Listen to ALL 50 #DailyDad episodes on YouTube.com/AaronKleiber or anywhere you listen to podcasts, a bonus from with my #GrownDadBusiness podcast! --- *Comedy Special "GROWN @%$ Dad" on AMAZON PRIME NOW!* FRIDAY NIGHT LIVE Happy Hour with Aaron Kleiber! 9pm! FB/YouTube live! Drinks, laughs & guests! Weekly Podcast #GrownDadBusiness everywhere you find podcasts! https://linktr.ee/AaronKleiber Hey friends, With the quarantine situation, I’ve lost ALL of income the next couple months, please consider supporting me on via Venmo, CashApp, PayPal or MONTHLY on Patreon - a way to subscribe monthly (just like Netflix!) to your favorite creative people AND get exclusive content! Get early podcast access, post-show-bonus-episodes, stand up audio/video, kidmental original beats, shirts, stickers n more! https://linktr.ee/AaronKleiber

Ankeny Baptist Church
What Have We Learned?

Ankeny Baptist Church

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2020 19:48


What Have We Learned? by Ankeny Baptist Church

Ask the Podcast Coach
Do we have to talk about the virus?

Ask the Podcast Coach

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2020 58:50


Are we allowed to talk about something besides this stupid virus? Is it disrespectful? SPONSOR: Podcastbranding.co Affordable, professionally designed podcast websites and artwork to help your show stand out. Cover Art Logos Websites Social Media ebooks and Lead magnets Blog Check out at www.podcastbranding.co Time Table 00:00:44 Sponsor: podcastbranding.co 00:02:50 What Have We Learned in 8 Weeks 00:07:42 Descript 00:09:47 Is it disrespectful to NOT talk COVID-19 00:13:39 Free Audio Plugin 00:14:25 Does this make you think of Spain? 00:18:03 Music in Podcasts 00:23:33 Social Justice Sponsors 00:26:28 Quibi Podcast 00:31:06 Podcast Movement New Dates 00:33:01 Little Richard Dead at the age of 87 from Cancer 00:34:06 Multiple Feed Tools 00:35:52 Google Podcasts Manager 00:42:35 Awesome Supporters 00:44:28 People Not Showing Up For Interviews 00:48:20 Email Open Rates 00:55:26 Daves Reading List Every week Dave Jackson from the School of Podcasting and Jim Collison from the Average Guy Network answer your podcast questions. This episode 292 is part of the Power of Podcasting Network Ready To Podcast? Go to www.schoolofpodcasting.com/start and use the coupon code ask to save 20%

The Big Idea Box
Ep 26 - 2020 Vision

The Big Idea Box

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2020 70:04


Welcome to 2020 with your favorite cast! In this episode, Tami, Rachael, Bryant and Sebastian reminisce on how far we have come since our launch in February 2019. We discuss the impact this platform has, who we've reached, and what we envision for the new year! Here are the topics addressed and timestamps: 1:31 Welcome back, One Word for 2019, What Have We Learned 15:31 First Time Hosting Podcast Episodes 29:51 Our Favorite Bloopers and Episodes 42:51 Listener Feedback and Listener Reach 51:01 David Martin Co., Marketing Consultation, and Our Values Be sure to share this episode with your friends and family!! Remember to follow us @thebigideabox @thelabmiami on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter! Connect with our hosts and mentions @theonlytamit @ranch.rachael @arrurru @brybellinger Give us feedback with this link: bit.ly/2C3fwFj and enjoy the show!! Show Notes: The LAB Miami Yellow Tail Wine David Martin Co. Episode 1 Learn, Act, Build! Episode 3 Mompreneurs Episode 5 A Hol New World Episode 7 Mindful Dreaming Episode 9 Bathroom Talks 1 Menstruation in the Workplace Episode 11 Destigmatizing Mental Health Episode 13 Financial Responsibility Episode 15 Drinkpreneurs with Five Drinks Co. Episode 21 Gender Neutral

RAW Mike Richards - Newstalk Sauga 960AM
Nov 25, 2019: The Win in Winnipeg - RAW Mike Richards on Newstalk Sauga 960AM

RAW Mike Richards - Newstalk Sauga 960AM

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2019 127:43


The Boys Are Back in Town! Your favourite sports talk radio hosts have a new home in Mississauga, Ontario. RAW Mike Richards and David Bastl on Newstalk Sauga 960AM. What to expect? The WInnipeg Blue Bombers are your 107th Grey Cup Champions! OHL with Matt Cullen, play-by-play announcer for the Mississauga Steelheads, NFL week 12 recap with Bleacher Report’s Brad Gagnon, Raw Mike Richards Theatre, and What Have We Learned with “John Facenda.” Sports, laughter, the occasional dirty look and the GTA’s best and most detailed West End traffic. Your mornings have become more RAW! Monday – Friday 6am – 9am, on Newstalk Sauga 960AM. Stream us LIVE at sauga960am.ca or find us on iTunes, Google Play, Spotify, and now TWITCH! www.twitch.tv/rawmikerichards

RAW Mike Richards - Newstalk Sauga 960AM
Nov 25, 2019: The Win in Winnipeg - RAW Mike Richards on Newstalk Sauga 960AM

RAW Mike Richards - Newstalk Sauga 960AM

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2019 127:44


The Boys Are Back in Town! Your favourite sports talk radio hosts have a new home in Mississauga, Ontario. RAW Mike Richards and David Bastl on Newstalk Sauga 960AM. What to expect? The WInnipeg Blue Bombers are your 107th Grey Cup Champions! OHL with Matt Cullen, play-by-play announcer for the Mississauga Steelheads, NFL week 12 recap with Bleacher Report's Brad Gagnon, Raw Mike Richards Theatre, and What Have We Learned with “John Facenda.”Sports, laughter, the occasional dirty look and the GTA's best and most detailed West End traffic. Your mornings have become more RAW! Monday – Friday 6am – 9am, on Newstalk Sauga 960AM. Stream us LIVE at sauga960am.ca or find us on iTunes, Google Play, Spotify, and now TWITCH!www.twitch.tv/rawmikerichards

Dusty Futon
Oliver James - Dusty Futon Musicians Podcast

Dusty Futon

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2018 57:08


Oliver James et al begin this episode with a LIVE ACOUSTIC PERFORMANCE! We also get an exclusive performance of their new song "Swimming Horses" with drummer Rick Slinkard playing a wearable Cajon.  The group has been together for a year or so, but the Oliver James band has been around for around seven years.  In 2016 their second record, "What Have We Learned," saw the hit single "The More You Love, The More You Live" hit #1 on Internet Radio!  Their new album was yet to be named (as of the recording of this episode) but features a brand new song "Swimming Horses" and we get a LIVE ACOUSTIC performance of it. We chat about everything from playing the fair to the key of "A hashtag minor" and everything in between.  Oliver James is backed up by John Cartmill on Lead Guitar, Brett Lecine on Keys, Paul Backes on Bass, and Rick Slinkard on Drums!  With the new album coming out shortly pay attention to their calendar on OliverJamesMusic.com for details and where to see them!   09:49 - "Seven Billion Hearts" 25:40 - "Swimming Horses" (ACOUSTIC LIVE)44:15 - "The More You Love, The More You Live" The Dusty Futon, LLC is focused on providing free tools and exposure to LOCAL and INDEPENDENT artists in the Southern California through networking.  If you love what we do and want to support us, please consider viewing our Patreon page at Patreon.com/TheDustyFuton.  You can always find us at www.DustyFuton.com and email us at admin@dustyfuton.com

It's a Podcast, Charlie Brown
EPISODE 28: WHAT HAVE WE LEARNED, CHARLIE BROWN? and THE CHARLIE BROWN & SNOOPY SHOW (ep 12)

It's a Podcast, Charlie Brown

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 16, 2018 148:41


What do designer jeans, ducks, crosswalks and World War II soldiers have in common?  They're all here in episode 28 of the podcast! We've got Emmy nominated WHAT HAVE WE LEARNED, CHARLIE BROWN?, which originally aired May 30, 1983 and another CHARLIE BROWN & SNOOPY SHOW from November 26, 1983. We've also got a Peanuts by Schulz called  "A Little Love" and another Random Strip of the Month. Enjoy!  Here's the link to Sean's Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center Facebook photo album That Funny or Die article about the "dirty kid" from Peanuts Thanks, Henry Pope for the use of your "Linus & Lucy" remix. Go to Soundcloud for more of his music here. Thanks to Kevin McLeod at Incompetech.com for creative commons use of his songs "Mining by Moonlight" and "Bass Walker". It's a Podcast, Charlie Brown show notes and more Atari Bytes - come to this show to hear stories (usually funny, sometimes not) made up by me and inspired by classic video games.  Go here to the It's a Podcast, Charlie Brown Patreon page to support the show financially if you are able. Thanks.  

BSD Now
225: The one true OS

BSD Now

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2017 107:06


TrueOS stable 17.12 is out, we have an OpenBSD workstation guide for you, learnings from the PDP-11, FreeBSD 2017 Releng recap and Duo SSH. This episode was brought to you by Headlines TrueOS stable release 17.12 (https://www.trueos.org/blog/trueos-17-12-release/) We are pleased to announce a new release of the 6-month STABLE version of TrueOS! This release cycle focused on lots of cleanup and stabilization of the distinguishing features of TrueOS: OpenRC, boot speed, removable-device management, SysAdm API integrations, Lumina improvements, and more. We have also been working quite a bit on the server offering of TrueOS, and are pleased to provide new text-based server images with support for Virtualization systems such as bhyve! This allows for simple server deployments which also take advantage of the TrueOS improvements to FreeBSD such as: Sane service management and status reporting with OpenRC Reliable, non-interactive system update mechanism with fail-safe boot environment support. Graphical management of remote TrueOS servers through SysAdm (also provides a reliable API for administrating systems remotely). LibreSSL for all base SSL support. Base system managed via packages (allows for additional fine-tuning). Base system is smaller due to the removal of the old GCC version in base. Any compiler and/or version may be installed and used via packages as desired. Support for newer graphics drivers and chipsets (graphics, networking, wifi, and more) TrueOS Version 17.12 (2017, December) is now available for download from the TrueOS website. Both the STABLE and UNSTABLE package repositories have also been updated in-sync with each other, so current users only need to follow the prompts about updating their system to run the new release. We are also pleased to announce the availability of TrueOS Sponsorships! If you would like to help contribute to the project financially we now have the ability to accept both one-time donations as well as recurring monthly donations which wil help us advocate for TrueOS around the world. Thank you all for using and supporting TrueOS! Notable Changes: Over 1100 OpenRC services have been created for 3rd-party packages. This should ensure the functionality of nearly all available 3rd-party packages that install/use their own services. The OpenRC services for FreeBSD itself have been overhauled, resulting in significantly shorter boot times. Separate install images for desktops and servers (server image uses a text/console installer) Bhyve support for TrueOS Server Install FreeBSD base is synced with 12.0-CURRENT as of December 4th, 2017 (Github commit: 209d01f) FreeBSD ports tree is synced as of November 30th (pre-FLAVOR changes) Lumina Desktop has been updated/developed from 1.3.0 to 1.4.1 PCDM now supports multiple simultaneous graphical sessions Removable devices are now managed through the “automounter” service. Devices are “announced” as available to the system via *.desktop shortcuts in /media. These shortcuts also contain a variety of optional “Actions” that may be performed on the device. Devices are only mounted while they are being used (such as when browsing via the command line or a file manager). Devices are automatically unmounted as soon as they stop being accessed. Integrated support for all major filesystems (UFS, EXT, FAT, NTFS, ExFAT, etc..) NOTE: The Lumina desktop is the only one which supports this functionality at the present time. The TrueOS update system has moved to an “active” update backend. This means that the user will need to actually start the update process by clicking the “Update Now” button in SysAdm, Lumina, or PCDM (as well as the command-line option). The staging of the update files is still performed automatically by default but this (and many other options) can be easily changed in the “Update Manager” settings as desired. Known Errata: [VirtualBox] Running FreeBSD within a VirtualBox VM is known to occasionally receive non-existent mouse clicks – particularly when using a scroll wheel or two-finger scroll. Quick Links: TrueOS Forums (https://discourse.trueos.org/) TrueOS Bugs (https://github.com/trueos/trueos-core/issues) TrueOS Handbook (https://www.trueos.org/handbook/trueos.html) TrueOS Community Chat on Telegram (https://t.me/TrueOSCommunity) *** OpenBSD Workstation Guide (https://begriffs.com/posts/2017-05-17-linux-workstation-guide.html) Design Goals User actions should complete instantaneously. While I understand if compiling code and rendering videos takes time, opening programs and moving windows should have no observable delay. The system should use minimalist tools. Corollary: cache data offline when possible. Everything from OpenStreetMaps to StackExchange can be stored locally. No reason to repeatedly hit the internet to query them. This also improves privacy because the initial download is indiscriminate and doesn't reveal personal queries or patterns of computer activity. No idling program should use a perceptible amount of CPU. Why does CalendarAgent on my Macbook sometimes use 150% CPU for fifteen minutes? Who knows. Why are background ChromeHelpers chugging along at upper-single-digit CPU? I didn't realize that holding a rendered DOM could be so challenging. Avoid interpreted languages, web-based desktop apps, and JavaScript garbage. There, I said it. Take your Electron apps with you to /dev/null! Stability. Old fashioned programs on a conservative OS on quality mainstream hardware. There are enough challenges to tackle without a bleeding edge system being one of them. Delegate to quality hardware components. Why use a janky ncurses software audio mixer when you can use…an actual audio mixer? Hardware privacy. No cameras or microphones that I can't physically disconnect. Also real hardware protection for cryptographic keys. Software privacy. Commercial software and operating systems have gotten so terrible about this. I even catch Mac command line tools trying to call Google Analytics. Sorry homebrew, your cute emojis don't make up for the surveillance. The Hardware Core To get the best hardware for the money I'm opting for a desktop computer. Haven't had one since the early 2000s and it feels anachronistic, but it will outperform a laptop of similar cost. After much searching, I found the HP Z240 Tower Workstation. It's no-nonsense and supports exactly the customizations I was looking for: No operating system pre-loaded (Cut out the “Windows tax”) Intel Xeon E3-1270 v6 processor (Supports ECC ram) 16 GB (2x8 GB) DDR4-2400 ECC Unbuffered memory (2400Mhz is the full memory clock speed supported by the Xeon) 256 GB HP Z Turbo Drive G2 PCIe SSD (Uses NVMe rather than SATA for faster throughput, supported by nvme(4)) No graphics card (We'll add our own) Intel® Ethernet I210-T1 PCIe (Supported by em(4)) A modest discrete video card will enable 2D Glamor acceleration on X11. The Radeon HD 6450 (sold separately) is fanless and listed as supported by radeon(4). Why build a solid computer and not protect it? Externally, the APC BR1300G UPS will protect the system from power surges and abrupt shutdowns. Peripherals The Matias Ergo Pro uses mechanical switches for that old fashioned clicky sound. It also includes dedicated buttons along the side for copying and pasting. Why is that cool? Well, it improves secondary selection, a technique that Sun computers used but time forgot. Since we're talking about a home office workstation, you may want a printer. The higher quality printers speak PostScript and PDF natively. Unix machines connect to them on TCP port 9100 and send PostScript commands directly. (You can print via telnet if you know the commands!) The Brother HL-L5100DN is a duplex LaserJet which allows that “raw” TCP printing. Audio/Video I know a lot of people enjoy surrounding themselves with a wall of monitors like they're in the heart of NASA Mission Control, but I find multi-monitor setups slightly disorienting. It introduces an extra bit of cognitive overhead to determine which monitor is for what exactly. That's why I'd go with a modest, crisp Dell UltraSharp 24" U2417H. It's 1080p and yeah there are 4k monitors nowadays, but text and icons are small enough as it is for me! If I ever considered a second monitor it would be e-ink for comfortably reading electronic copies of books or long articles. The price is currently too high to justify the purchase, but the most promising monitor seems to be the Dasung Paperlike. In the other direction, video input, it's more flexible to use a general-purpose HDMI capture box like the Rongyuxuan than settle on a particular webcam. This allows hooking up a real camera, or any other video device. Although the motherboard for this system has built-in audio, we should use a card with better OpenBSD support. The WBTUO PCIe card uses a C-Media CMI8768 chipset, handled by cmpci(4). The card provides S/PDIFF in and out ports if you ever want to use an external DAC or ADC. The way to connect it with other things is with a dedicated hardware mixer. The Behringer Xenyx 802 has all the connections needed, and the ability to route audio to and from the computer and a variety of devices at once. The mixer may seem an odd peripheral, but I want to mix the computer with an old fashioned CD player, ham radio gear, and amplifier so this unifies the audio setup. When doing remote pair programming or video team meetings it's nice to have a quality microphone. The best ones for this kind of work are directional, with a cardioid reception pattern. The MXL 770 condenser mic is perfect, and uses a powered XLR connection supplied by the mixer. Backups We're going dead simple and old-school, back to tapes. There are a set of tape standards called LTO-n. As n increases the tape capacity gets bigger, but the tape drive gets more expensive. In my opinion the best balance these days for the home user is LTO-3. You can usually find an HP Ultrium 960 LTO-3 on eBay for 150 dollars. The cartridges hold 800GB and are about 15 dollars apiece. Hard drives keep coming down in price, but these tapes are very cheap and simpler than keeping a bunch of disk drives. Also tape has proven longevity, and good recoverability. To use old fashioned tech like this you need a SCSI host bus adapter like the Adaptec 29320LPE, supported by ahd(4). Cryptography You don't want to generate and store secret keys on a general purpose network attached computer. The attack surface is a mile wide. Generating or manipulating “offline” secret keys needs to happen on a separate computer with no network access. Little boards like the Raspberry Pi would be good except they use ARM processors (incompatible with Tails OS) and have wifi. The JaguarBoard is a small x86 machine with no wireless capability. Just switch the keyboard and monitor over to this machine for your “cleanroom.” jaguar board: Generating keys requires entropy. The Linux kernel on Tails samples system properties to generate randomness, but why not help it out with a dedicated true random number generator (TRNG)? Bit Babbler supplies pure randomness at a high bitrate through USB. (OneRNG works better on the OpenBSD main system, via uonerng(4).) bit babbler: This little computer will save its results onto a OpenPGP Smartcard V2.1. This card provides write-only access to keys, and computes cryptographic primitives internally to sign and encrypt messages. To use it with a regular computer, hook up a Cherry ST2000 card reader. This reader has a PIN pad built in, so no keylogger on the main computer could even obtain your decryption PIN. The Software We take the beefed up hardware above and pair it with ninja-fast software written in C. Some text-based, others raw X11 graphical apps unencumbered by ties to any specific window manager. I'd advise OpenBSD for the underlying operating system, not a Linux. OpenBSD has greater internal consistency, their man pages are impeccable, and they make it a priority to prune old code to keep the system minimal. What Have We Learned from the PDP-11? (https://dave.cheney.net/2017/12/04/what-have-we-learned-from-the-pdp-11) The paper I have chosen tonight is a retrospective on a computer design. It is one of a series of papers by Gordon Bell, and various co-authors, spanning the design, growth, and eventual replacement of the companies iconic line of PDP-11 mini computers. This year represents the 60th anniversary of the founding of the company that produced the PDP-11. It is also 40 years since this paper was written, so I thought it would be entertaining to review Bell's retrospective through the lens of our own 20/20 hindsight. To set the scene for this paper, first we should talk a little about the company that produced the PDP-11, the Digital Equipment Corporation of Maynard, Massachusetts. Better known as DEC. It's also worth noting that the name PDP is an acronym for “Programmed Data Processor”, as at the time, computers had a reputation of being large, complicated, and expensive machines, and DEC's venture capitalists would not support them if they built a “computer” A computer is not solely determined by its architecture; it reflects the technological, economic, and human aspects of the environment in which it was designed and built. […] The finished computer is a product of the total design environment. “Right from the get go, Bell is letting us know that the success of any computer project is not abstractly building the best computer but building the right computer, and that takes context.” It is the nature of computer engineering to be goal-oriented, with pressure to produce deliverable products. It is therefore difficult to plan for an extensive lifetime. Because of the open nature of the PDP-11, anything which interpreted the instructions according to the processor specification, was a PDP-11, so there had been a rush within DEC, once it was clear that the PDP-11 market was heating up, to build implementations; you had different groups building fast, expensive ones and cost reduced slower ones The first weakness of minicomputers was their limited addressing capability. The biggest (and most common) mistake that can be made in a computer design is that of not providing enough address bits for memory addressing and management. A second weakness of minicomputers was their tendency not to have enough registers. This was corrected for the PDP-11 by providing eight 16-bit registers. Later, six 32-bit registers were added for floating-point arithmetic. […] More registers would increase the multiprogramming context switch time and confuse the user. “It's also interesting to note Bell's concern that additional registers would confuse the user. In the early 1970's the assumption that the machine would be programmed directly in assembly was still the prevailing mindset.” A third weakness of minicomputers was their lack of hardware stack capability. In the PDP-11, this was solved with the autoincrement/autodecrement addressing mechanism. This solution is unique to the PDP-11 and has proven to be exceptionally useful. (In fact, it has been copied by other designers.) “Nowadays it's hard to imagine hardware that doesn't have a notion of a stack, but consider that a stack isn't important if you don't need recursion.” “The design for the PDP-11 was laid down in 1969 and if we look at the programming languages of the time, FORTRAN and COBOL, neither supported recursive function calls. The function call sequence would often store the return address at a blank word at the start of the procedure making recursion impossible.” A fourth weakness, limited interrupt capability and slow context switching, was essentially solved with the device of UNIBUS interrupt vectors, which direct device interrupts. The basic mechanism is very fast, requiring only four memory cycles from the time an interrupt request is issued until the first instruction of the interrupt routine begins execution. A fifth weakness of prior minicomputers, inadequate character-handling capability, was met in the PDP-11 by providing direct byte addressing capability. “Strings and character handling were of increasing importance during the 1960's as scientific and business computing converged. The predominant character encodings at the time were 6 bit character sets which provided just enough space for upper case letters, the digits 0 to 9, space, and a few punctuation characters sufficient for printing financial reports.” “Because memory was so expensive, placing one 6 bit character into a 12 or 18 bit word was simply unacceptable so characters would be packed into words. This proved efficient for storage, but complex for operations like move, compare, and concatenate, which had to account for a character appearing in the top or bottom of the word, expending valuable words of program storage to cope.” “The problem was addressed in the PDP-11 by allowing the machine to operate on memory as both a 16-bit word, and the increasingly popular 8-bit byte. The expenditure of 2 additional bits per character was felt to be worth it for simpler string handling, and also eased the adoption of the increasingly popular 7-bit ASCII standard of which DEC were a proponent at the time. Bell concludes this point with the throw away line:” Although string instructions are not yet provided in the hardware, the common string operations (move, compare, concatenate) can be programmed with very short loops. A sixth weakness, the inability to use read-only memories, was avoided in the PDP-11. Most code written for the PDP-11 tends to be pure and reentrant without special effort by the programmer, allowing a read-only memory (ROM) to be used directly. A seventh weakness, one common to many minicomputers, was primitive I/O capabilities. A ninth weakness of minicomputers was the high cost of programming them. Many users program in assembly language, without the comfortable environment of editors, file systems, and debuggers available on bigger systems. The PDP-11 does not seem to have overcome this weakness, although it appears that more complex systems are being built successfully with the PDP-11 than with its predecessors, the PDP-8 and PDP-15. The problems faced by computer designers can usually be attributed to one of two causes: inexperience or second-systemitis Before the PDP-11, there was no UNIX. Before the PDP-11, there was no C, this is the computer that C was designed on. If you want to know why the classical C int is 16 bits wide, it's because of the PDP-11. UNIX bought us ideas such as pipes, everything is a file, and interactive computing. UNIX, which had arrived at Berkley in 1974 aboard a tape carried by Ken Thompson, would evolve into the west coast flavoured Berkley Systems Distribution. Berkeley UNIX had been ported to the VAX by the start of the 1980's and was thriving as the counter cultural alternative to DEC's own VMS operating system. Berkeley UNIX spawned a new generation of hackers who would go on to form companies like Sun micro systems, and languages like Self, which lead directly to the development of Java. UNIX was ported to a bewildering array of computer systems during the 80's and the fallout from the UNIX wars gave us the various BSD operating systems who continue to this day. The article, and the papers it is summarizing, contain a lot more than we could possibly dig into even if we dedicated the entire show to the topic *** News Roundup Two-factor authentication SSH with Duo in FreeBSD 11 (https://www.teachnix.com/2017/11/29/configuring-two-factor-authentication-on-freebsd-with-duo/) This setup uses an SSH key as the first factor of authentication. Please watch Part 1 on setting up SSH keys and how to scp it to your server. Video guide (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E5EuvF-iaV0) Register for a free account at Duo.com Install the Duo package on your FreeBSD server pkg install -y duo Log into the Duo site > Applications > Protect an Application > Search for Unix application > Protect this Application This will generate the keys we need to configure Duo. Edit the Duo config file using the course notes template vi /usr/local/etc/pam_duo.conf Example config [duo] ; Duo integration key ikey = Integration key goes here ; Duo secret key skey = Secret key goes here ; Duo API host host = API hostname goes here Change the permissions of the Duo config file. If the permissions are not correct then the service will not function properly. chmod 600 /usr/local/etc/pam_duo.conf Edit the SSHD config file using the course notes template vi /etc/ssh/sshd_config Example config ListenAddress 0.0.0.0 Port 22 PasswordAuthentication no UsePAM yes ChallengeResponseAuthentication yes UseDNS no PermitRootLogin yes AuthenticationMethods publickey,keyboard-interactive Edit PAM to configure SSHD for Duo using the course notes template Example config ``` # auth auth sufficient pamopie.so nowarn nofakeprompts auth requisite pamopieaccess.so nowarn allowlocal auth required /usr/local/lib/security/pamduo.so # session # session optional pamssh.so wantagent session required pam_permit.so # password # password sufficient pamkrb5.so nowarn tryfirstpass password required pamunix.so nowarn tryfirstpass ``` Restart the sshd service service sshd restart SSH into your FreeBSD server and follow the link it outputs to enroll your phone with Duo. ssh server.example.com SSH into your server again ssh server.example.com Choose your preferred method and it should log you into your server. FreeBSD 2017 Release Engineering Recap (https://www.freebsdfoundation.org/blog/2017-release-engineering-recap/) This past year was undoubtedly a rather busy and successful year for the Release Engineering Team. Throughout the year, development snapshot builds for FreeBSD-CURRENT and supported FreeBSD-STABLE branches were continually provided. In addition, work to package the base system using pkg(8) continued throughout the year and remains ongoing. The FreeBSD Release Engineering Team worked on the FreeBSD 11.1-RELEASE, with the code slush starting mid-May. The FreeBSD 11.1-RELEASE cycle stayed on schedule, with the final release build starting July 21, and the final release announcement following on July 25, building upon the stability and reliability of 11.0-RELEASE. Milestones during the 11.1-RELEASE cycle can be found on the 11.1 schedule page (https://www.freebsd.org/releases/11.1R/schedule.html). The final announcement is available here (https://www.freebsd.org/releases/11.1R/announce.html). The FreeBSD Release Engineering Team started the FreeBSD 10.4-RELEASE cycle, led by Marius Strobl. The FreeBSD 10.4-RELEASE cycle continued on schedule, with the only adjustments to the schedule being the addition of BETA4 and the removal of RC3. FreeBSD 10.4-RELEASE builds upon the stability and reliability of FreeBSD 10.3-RELEASE, and is planned to be the final release from the stable/10 branch. Milestones during the 10.4-RELEASE cycle can be found on the 10.4 schedule page (https://www.freebsd.org/releases/10.4R/schedule.html). The final announcement is available here (https://www.freebsd.org/releases/10.4R/announce.html). In addition to these releases, support for additional arm single-board computer images were added, notably Raspberry Pi 3 and Pine64. Additionally, release-related documentation effective 12.0-RELEASE and later has been moved from the base system repository to the documentation repository, making it possible to update related documentation as necessary post-release. Additionally, the FreeBSD Release Engineering article in the Project Handbook had been rewritten to outline current practices used by the Release Engineering Team. For more information on the procedures and processes the FreeBSD Release Engineering Team follows, the new article is available here and continually updated as procedures change. Finally, following the availability of FreeBSD 11.1-RELEASE, Glen Barber attended the September Developer Summit hosted at vBSDCon in Reston, VA, USA, where he gave a brief talk comprising of several points relating directly to the 11.1-RELEASE cycle. In particular, some of the points covered included what he felt went well during the release cycle, what did not go as well as it could have, and what we, as a Project, could do better to improve the release process. The slides from the talk are available in the FreeBSD Wiki. During the question and answer time following the talk, some questions asked included: Q: Should developers use the ‘Relnotes' tag in the Subversion commit template more loosely, at risk of an increase in false positives. A: When asked when the tag in the template was initially added, the answer would have been “no”, however in hindsight it is easier to sift through the false positives, than to comb through months or years of commit logs. Q: What issues are present preventing moving release-related documentation to the documentation repository? A: There were some rendering issues last time it was investigated, but it is really nothing more than taking the time to fix those issues. (Note, that since this talk, the migration of the documentation in question had moved.) Q: Does it make sense to extend the timeframe between milestone builds during a release cycle from one week to two weeks, to allow more time for testing, for example, RC1 versus RC2? A: No. It would extend the length of the release cycle with no real benefit between milestones since as we draw nearer to the end of a given release cycle, the number of changes to that code base significantly reduce. FLIMP - GIMP Exploit on FreeBSD (https://flimp.fuzzing-project.org) In 2014, when starting the Fuzzing Project (https://fuzzing-project.org/), Hanno Böck did some primitive fuzzing on GIMP and reported two bugs. They weren't fixed and were forgotten in the public bug tracker. Recently Tobias Stöckmann found one of these bugs (https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739133) (CVE-2017-17785) and figured out that it's easy to exploit. What kind of bug is that? It's a classic heap buffer overflow in the FLIC parser. FLIC is a file format for animations and was introduced by Autodesk Animator. How does the exploit work? Tobias has created a detailed writeup (https://flimp.fuzzing-project.org/exploit.html). The exploit doesn't work for me! We figured out it's unreliable and the memory addresses are depending on many circumstances. The exploit ZIP comes with two variations using different memory addresses. Try both of them. We also noticed putting the files in a subdirectory sometimes made the exploit work. Anything more to tell about the GIMP? There's a wide variety of graphics formats. GIMP tries to support many of them, including many legacy formats that nobody is using any more today. While this has obvious advantages - you can access the old images you may find on a backup CD from 1995 - it comes with risks. Support for many obscure file formats means many parsers that hardly anyone ever looks at. So... what about the other parsers? The second bug (https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739134) (CVE-2017-17786), which is a simple overread, was in the TGA parser. Furthermore we found buffer overreads in the XCF parser (https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=790783) (CVE-2017-17788), the Gimp Brush (GBR) parser (https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=790784) (CVE-2017-17784) and the Paint Shop Pro (PSP) parser (https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=790849) (CVE-2017-17789). We found another Heap buffer overflow (https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=790849) in the Paint Shop Pro parser (CVE-2017-17787) which is probably also exploitable. In other words: The GIMP import parsers are full of memory safety bugs. What should happen? First of all obviously all known memory safety bugs should be fixed. Furthermore we believe the way GIMP plugins work is not ideal for security testing. The plug-ins are separate executables, however they can't be executed on their own, as they communicate with the main GIMP process. Ideally either these plug-ins should be changed in a way that allows running them directly from the command line or - even better - they should be turned into libraries. The latter would also have the advantage of making the parser code useable for other software projects. Finally it might be a good idea to sandbox the import parsers. Dell FS12-NV7 Review – Bargain FreeBSD/ZFS box (http://blog.frankleonhardt.com/2017/dell-fs12-nv7-review-bargain-freebsdzfs-box/) It seems just about everyone selling refurbished data centre kit has a load of Dell FS12-NV7's to flog. Dell FS-what? You won't find them in the Dell catalogue, that's for sure. They look a bit like C2100s of some vintage, and they have a lot in common. But on closer inspection they're obviously a “special” for an important customer. Given the number of them knocking around, it's obviously a customer with big data, centres stuffed full of servers with a lot of processing to do. Here's a hint: It's not Google or Amazon. So, should you be buying a weirdo box with no documentation whatsoever? I'd say yes, definitely. If you're interests are anything like mine. In a 2U box you can get twin 4-core CPUs and 64Gb of RAM for £150 or less. What's not to like? Ah yes, the complete lack of documentation. Over the next few weeks I intend to cover that. And to start off this is my first PC review for nearly twenty years. As I mentioned, it's a 2U full length heavy metal box on rails. On the back there are the usual I/O ports: a 9-way RS-232, VGA, two 1Gb Ethernet, two USB2 and a PS/2 keyboard and mouse. The front is taken up by twelve 3.5″ hard drive bays, with the status lights and power button on one of the mounting ears to make room. Unlike other Dell servers, all the connections are on the back, only. So, in summary, you're getting a lot for your money if its the kind of thing you want. It's ideal as a high-performance Unix box with plenty of drive bays (preferably running BSD and ZFS). In this configuration it really shifts. Major bang-per-buck. Another idea I've had is using it for a flight simulator. That's a lot of RAM and processors for the money. If you forego the SAS controllers in the PCIe slots and dump in a decent graphics card and sound board, it's hard to see what's could be better (and you get jet engine sound effects without a speaker). So who should buy one of these? BSD geeks is the obvious answer. With a bit of tweaking they're a dream. It can build-absolutely-everything in 20-30 minutes. For storage you can put fast SAS drives in and it goes like the wind, even at 3Gb bandwidth per drive. I don't know if it works with FreeNAS but I can't see why not – I'm using mostly FreeBSD 11.1 and the generic kernel is fine. And if you want to run a load of weird operating systems (like Windows XP) in VM format, it seems to work very well with the Xen hypervisor and Dom0 under FreeBSD. Or CentOS if you prefer. So I shall end this review in true PCW style: Pros: Cheap Lots of CPUs, Lots of RAM Lots of HD slots Great for BSD/ZFS or VMs Cons: Noisy no AES-NI SAS needs upgrading Limited PCI slots As I've mentioned, the noise and SAS are easy and relatively cheap to fix, and thanks to BitCoin miners, even the PCI slot problem can be sorted. I'll talk about this in a later post. Beastie Bits Reflections on Hackathons (https://undeadly.org/cgi?action=article;sid=20171126090055) 7-Part Video Crash Course on SaltStack For FreeBSD (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HijG0hWebZk&list=PL5yV8umka8YQOr1wm719In5LITdGzQMOF) The LLVM Thread Sanitizer has been ported to NetBSD (https://blog.netbsd.org/tnf/entry/the_llvm_thread_sanitizer_has) The First Unix Port (1998) (http://bitsavers.informatik.uni-stuttgart.de/bits/Interdata/32bit/unix/univWollongong_v6/miller.pdf) arm64 platform now officially supported [and has syspatch(8)] (https://undeadly.org/cgi?action=article;sid=20171208082238) BSDCan 2018 Call for Participation (https://www.freebsdfoundation.org/news-and-events/call-for-papers/bsdcan-2018-call-for-participation/) AsiaBSDCon 2018 Call for Papers (https://www.freebsdfoundation.org/news-and-events/call-for-papers/asiabsdcon-2018-call-for-papers/) *** Feedback/Questions Shawn - DragonFlyBSD vagrant images (http://dpaste.com/3PRPJHG#wrap) Ben - undermydesk (http://dpaste.com/0AZ32ZB#wrap) Ken - Conferences (http://dpaste.com/3E8FQC6#wrap) Ben - ssh keys (http://dpaste.com/0E4538Q#wrap) SSH Chaining (https://www.bsdnow.tv/tutorials/ssh-chaining) ***

Aspen Ideas to Go
The Future of News: Is There a War on Truth?

Aspen Ideas to Go

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2017 62:05


Is the internet loosening our collective grasp on the truth? Pioneers of digital news once argued that new online sources would bring us new perspectives about the world. They did not anticipate the internet would destroy traditional media gatekeepers and give everyone a chance to indulge in news that confirms their preexisting ideas. How does the mass media fit into this landscape? Does the role of newspaper publisher or local TV station owner now belong to Facebook and Google? How do we sort fact from fiction? Featuring Joshua Johnson, Susan Page, Campbell Brown, and David Leonhardt. Find our companion episode "What Have We Learned from Listening to America?," by clicking here. Find the latest episode of the Aspen Institute's new podcast Aspen Insight here. Follow our show on Twitter @aspenideas and Facebook at facebook.com/aspenideas. Email your comments to aspenideastogo@gmail.com.

Standard Orbit: A Star Trek Original Series Podcast

Standard Orbit 1.0 Finale. All good things must come to an end. Thankfully for you, this is only going to be a change. In the final episode of Standard Orbit 1.0, Mike and Drew reminisce about the times they shared bringing you the past 109 episodes. We talk about the history of the show, the moments that stick out to us, and what we've learned from doing the show. Thanks for everything, and stay tuned for 2.0! Also, we forgot to thank Doug E. Graves for letting us use his TOS.5 Enterprise as our cover image all these episodes! Hosts Drew Stewart and Mike Schindler   Editor and Producer Drew Stewart Executive Producers Norman C. Lao, Matthew Rushing, Charlynn Schmiedt, and C Bryan Jones Associate Producers Renee Roberts and Richard Rutledge, Jr. Production Manager Richard Marquez   Content Manager Will Nguyen   ChaptersHistory of the Show (00:03:16) Favorite Moments (00:14:53) Least Favorite Moments? (00:22:06) Episode Opinion Change (00:26:42) What Have We Learned (00:30:33) Passing It On (00:35:06) Final Final Thoughts (00:37:48) Special Thanks (00:40:22) Closing (00:46:27)  

Our Own Voices Live
Katrina, March on Washington What Have We Learned and Who Speaks for us

Our Own Voices Live

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 29, 2015 31:00


Welcome to Our Own Voices Live with your hosts: Angela Thomas & Rodney Smith   Our Topic(s) today: “Katrina, March on Washington, Watts and Baltimore Riots; What Have We Learned and Who Speaks for us?”             If you have a question, comment or just want to listen, give us a call: (347) 826-9600 Near a computer you can listen in or chat with us here: www.blogtalkradio.com/ourownvoices/2015/08/29/katrina-march-on-washington-what-have-we-learned-and-who-speaks-for-us Our Own Voices Live is a radio show featuring people and stories from our community in Las Vegas, the surrounding area and some place near you. America is the greatest country on earth due to its cultural diversity and not in spite of it. Our mission is to help bridge the cultural and ethnic divide in America by working together to build the greatest bridge in history to unite us

Westminster Town Hall Forum
Elliot Richardson - The UN: After 50 Years, What Have We Learned? - 11/09/95

Westminster Town Hall Forum

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2013 51:57


Elliot Richardson - The UN: After 50 Years, What Have We Learned? - 11/09/95 by westminsterforum

what have we learned elliot richardson
Westminster Town Hall Forum
Elliot Richardson - The UN: After 50 Years, What Have We Learned? - 11/09/95

Westminster Town Hall Forum

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2013 51:57


Elliot Richardson - The UN: After 50 Years, What Have We Learned? - 11/09/95 by westminsterforum

what have we learned elliot richardson
Journey Church Sunday Worship Gathering Audio - Bozeman, Montana

Journey Church - March 6, 2011 - Not Without You #5: What Have We Learned? - Brian Hopkins - Lead Pastor