Podcasts about white papers

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Best podcasts about white papers

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Latest podcast episodes about white papers

The World of Higher Education
Does England's Newest Higher Education White Paper Actually Change Anything?

The World of Higher Education

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2025 23:44


Join Alex Usher and Debbie McVitty, editor at Wonkhe, as they discuss the recent white paper on post-16 education released by the Labor Party in the UK. The episode delves into the current state of higher education, the financial challenges universities face, and the muted response to the proposed reforms. McVitty outlines the sector's strengths and weaknesses, the political tensions around university funding, and the potential impact of the white paper's proposals on the future of English higher education. Don't miss this detailed analysis of what lies ahead for UK universities.

The Daily Poem
George Starbuck's "Sonnet with a Different Letter at the End of Every Line"

The Daily Poem

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2025 5:04


Today's poem is a “row of perfect rhymes” and an absolute delight. Happy reading.You can find the text of the poem here.George Starbuck was born in Columbus, Ohio on June 15, 1931. He grew up in Illinois and California. He attended the University of California at Berkeley for two years, and the University of Chicago for three. He then studied with Archibald MacLeish and Robert Lowell, alongside peers Anne Sexton and Sylvia Plath, at Harvard University. Starbuck won the Yale Younger Poets Prize for his collection Bone Thoughts (1960). He is the author of several other books, including The Argot Merchant Disaster: New and Selected Poems (1982), Elegy in a Country Church Yard (1974), and White Paper (1966). He taught at the State University College at Buffalo, the University of Iowa, and Boston University.Starbuck's witty songs of protest are usually concerned with love, war, and the spiritual temper of the times. John Holmes believed that “there hasn't been as much word excitement ... for years,” as one finds in Bone Thoughts. Harvey Shapiro pointed out that Starbuck's work is attractive because of its “witty, improvisational surface, slangy and familiar address, brilliant aural quality” and added that Starbuck may become a “spokesman for the bright, unhappy young men.” Louise Bogan asserted that his daring satire “sets him off from the poets of generalized rebellion.”After reading Bone Thoughts, Holmes hoped for other books in the same vein; R.F. Clayton found that, in White Paper(1966), the verse again stings with parody. Although Robert D. Spector wasn't sure of Starbuck's sincerity in Bone Thoughts, he rated the poems in White Paper, which range “from parody to elegy to sonnets, and even acrostic exercises,” as “generally superior examples of their kind.” In particular, Spector wrote, when Starbuck juxtaposes McNamara's political language and a Quaker's self-immolation by burning, or wryly offers an academician's praise for this nation's demonstration of humanity by halting its bombing for “five whole days,” we sense this poet's genuine commitment.Starbuck died in Tuscaloosa, Alabama on August 1, 1996.-bio via Poetry Foundation This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit dailypoempod.substack.com/subscribe

HEP Talks
The Education Brief: Teacher Pay and SEND Reform

HEP Talks

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2025 13:46


The Education Brief: Wednesday 5 November 2025 - Top stories include:The DfE's pitch to the STRB is a 6.5% teacher pay rise over three years.The NAO warns Labour's SEND reforms must squarely tackle home-to-school transport.The DfE has lifted the lid on the Strategic School Improvement Capital Budget.School referrals to children's social care hit a record in 2024–25, topping 130,000.Round Up for Schools:The DfE and Ofsted are both leaning heavily into SEND, highlighting the need for reform in the system.Absence at primary is just over 4% in primary and 7% in secondary.New research on summer-born pupils has been released.The plan is to remove all RAAC from affected schools and colleges before the general election.Ofsted has refreshed its AI guidance as well as information on workforce transparency and pupil/parent voice.A/T/V Levels are in focus due to the new Post-16 White Paper.New guidance has been released on students who may be arriving from Gaza.HEP Updates:⁠HEP Inclusion & SEND Conference 2026: Neurodiversity in the classroom⁠https://haringeycreates.com/cultural-education-summit-2025/Watching - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4YTTJPez4zwListening - ⁠https://www.ppfideas.com/episodes/fixing-democracy%3A-tiktok%2C-disinformation-and-distractionReading - https://www.ippr.org/articles/breaking-the-cycle-send-reformAI Tool - https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/groups/cgk3rj0kl55t⁠Music by Slo Pony⁠

Couchonomics with Arjun
The End of Bank Accounts: How Money Is Moving On-Chain

Couchonomics with Arjun

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2025 55:43


What if the future of money isn't about creating new currencies, but redefining what money really is?In this episode, Arjun sits down with Tony McLaughlin, CEO and Founder of Ubyx Inc, to talk about why he believes the bank account is dead and how the next version of money could live on public blockchains.They break down what stablecoins, tokenized deposits, and CBDCs really mean, and how they could quietly replace the systems we've used for decades.

Badlands Media
Rugpull Radio 135: Satoshi & Q Unite to Save the World! Ultimate Bitcoin Q Proofs Exposed! Celebrating Satoshi's White paper 17

Badlands Media

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2025 89:32


GMoney celebrates episode 135 of Rugpull Radio on the eve of Bitcoin's 17th anniversary and the 250th year since 1776, tying together history, prophecy, and technology in one explosive broadcast. He connects the dots between Trump's tariff strategy, the Federal Reserve's 1913 origins, and Bitcoin's rise as the tool to end financial slavery. GMoney argues that true freedom isn't political, it's proof of work, not proof of stake, and that Bitcoin represents the “digital 1776” prophesied in Q drops. From John Perry Barlow's vision of a free Internet to Trump's cryptic speeches and Eric Trump's mining ventures, every thread points to a global shift of power from bankers to individuals. Alongside hilarious ad reads for Soft Disclosure and My Shroom Vibe, GMoney mixes philosophy, tech, and scripture to reveal a digital war centuries in the making, where knowledge, not bullets, wins the day.

Develop This: Economic and Community Development
DT #593 How GrantGuru Helps Communities Compete for Funding

Develop This: Economic and Community Development

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2025 44:52


In this episode of Develop This!, host Dennis Fraise sits down with Adrian Spencer, Co-Founder and Director of GrantGuru, the world's largest aggregator of grants and funding programs. Together, they explore how Grant Guru is transforming the way communities, local governments, and nonprofits access funding opportunities. Adrian shares his unlikely journey from geology to grant funding, the evolution of GrantGuru into a global grants intelligence platform, and how its technology helps simplify and democratize access to more than 163,000 active grants worth over $3.5 trillion. Listeners will learn how economic developers can leverage GrantGuru to identify relevant programs, support local businesses and nonprofits, and strategically use grants as a tool for long-term community growth. Adrian and Dennis also dive into the challenge of keeping grant data current, designing user-friendly tools, and the importance of pairing funding with strategic thinking and local impact. Whether you're a small-town economic developer or part of a regional organization, this conversation offers practical insights into how technology can make the complex world of grants more accessible, transparent, and effective. Key Takeaways Adrian Spencer's unconventional path from geologist to grant funding expert Grant Guru aggregates over 163,000 grants valued at $3.5 trillion worldwide The platform's mission: democratize access to funding for all communities How economic developers can simplify and streamline grant searches The importance of strategic alignment between grants and community goals Insights into how technology and data power modern grant discovery Why maintaining accurate, up-to-date information is key for success Grant funding as a lever for community empowerment and resilience Download our free White Paper here (by providing a name/email): https://pages.grantguru.com/state-of-play-us-2025          Mention that you heard about GrantGuru on                         Develop This! and receive a 20% discount

Queb Podcast
Queb Podcast #95: Skills-based Hiring – Vorstellung unseres Whitepapers

Queb Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2025 16:10


Im heutigen Queb Podcast sprechen wir mit Bernd Schmitz, Ehrenrat im QUEB-Bundesverband und Initiator des neuesten Whitepapers des QUEB Bundesverbands. Wir widmen uns dem „skills-based hiring“. Das Whitepaper hierzu finden Sie online unter https://www.queb.org/aktivitaeten/veroeffentlichungen/

Disability News Japan
Japan student suicides hit record high in 2024 despite overall decline

Disability News Japan

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2025 5:39


Japan's overall suicides fell to 20,320 in 2024, the second-lowest figure on record, but the number of schoolchildren who took their own lives rose to a record 529, government data showed. Suicides among junior high school students reached their highest level since statistics began in 1980, with school-related problems cited as the leading cause. The 2025 White Paper on Suicide Prevention noted that overdoses, including those involving over-the-counter drugs, were a major factor among young people, prompting plans to tighten restrictions on drug sales to minors. Despite the nationwide decline, experts warn the record student suicides reflect deepening mental health and social issues among Japan's youth. Episode notes: ‘Japan student suicides hit record high in 2024 despite overall decline': https://barrierfreejapan.com/2025/10/25/japan-student-suicides-hit-record-high-in-2024-despite-overall-decline/

HR Weekly
Community-Liebling: Welche Skills braucht HR für eine erfolgreiche Zukunft?

HR Weekly

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2025 35:32


HRS - In dieser Episode spreche ich mit Alexandra Barth, CHRO, über die Fähigkeiten, die HR-Teams heute und morgen brauchen. Alexandra teilt ihre Erfahrungen und gibt Einblicke, wie sie ihr Team auf die Herausforderungen der Zukunft vorbereitet. Wir diskutieren, warum strategisches Denken, Technologieverständnis und Change-Management essenziell sind – und wie man diese Fähigkeiten im eigenen Team fördert.Werbepartner der Folge: beyobie Datenchaos im HR-Team? beyobie bringt Klarheit.Wenn es einen Frust hinter Datenanalysen im HR gibt, dann ist es dieser: zu viel Aufwand, zu wenig Aussagekraft. Mit beyobie verbindet ihr ganz einfach eure HR-Systeme und verwandelt eure HR-Daten im Handumdrehen in starke Argumente fürs Management – ganz ohne Excel-Marathon. 

HEP Talks
The Education Brief: Post-16 Education and Skills White Paper

HEP Talks

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2025 14:05


The Education Brief: Wednesday 22 October 2025 - Top stories include:Grammar schools surged to the top of this year's GCSE league tables with schools now ranked by Attainment 8.In Parliament on Monday, the education secretary and her team answered MPs' questions.A new report warns “hundreds of millions of pounds” are being wasted on teacher development.The CST has called for Ofsted's upcoming multi-academy trust inspections to be ungraded.Artificial intelligence could soon help analyse lessons by new teachers under a pilot programme.Deep Dive: Post-16 education and skills white paperRound Up for Schools:Secondary accountability measures (including Progress 8 and Attainment 8)Focus on reading in secondary years to drive up standardsKey stage 4 performance 2025Destinations of key stage 4 and 5 students: 2024STA Assessment UpdateParents supported to navigate early years misinformation onlineBuy musical instruments, equipment and technologyEstimating pupil numbers: how to complete your return for 2026 to 2027HEP Updates:⁠HEP Inclusion & SEND Conference 2026: Neurodiversity in the classroomWatching - https://events.hyve.group/today-is-world-mental-health-day-1Listening - ⁠https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m002k4lnReading - https://jmarriott.substack.com/p/the-dawn-of-the-post-literate-society-aa1?r=1x9c3zAI Tool - https://www.perplexity.ai/hub/blog/a-personal-assistant-for-your-inbox⁠Music by Slo Pony⁠

GainTalents - Expertenwissen zu Recruiting, Gewinnung und Entwicklung von Talenten und Führungskräften
#423 Update zum Thema: Neue Trends und Technologien im Bereich der beruflichen Weiterbildung

GainTalents - Expertenwissen zu Recruiting, Gewinnung und Entwicklung von Talenten und Führungskräften

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2025 41:09


Achtung (Werbung in eigener Sache):  Mein neues Buch (in Co-Produktion mit Prof. Dr. Johanna Bath): "Die perfekte Employee Journey & Experience" ist jetzt verfügbar: Springer: https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-662-71420-1 Amazon: https://bit.ly/4q3ZjGk Thalia: https://bit.ly/3KFLXzG Dieses Fachbuch stellt die wichtigsten Elemente der Employee Journey vor – vom Pre-Boarding bis zum Offboarding – und erläutert, wie Verantwortliche in Unternehmen eine gelungene Employee Experience realisieren und nachhaltig verankern können.   Meine Gäste: Tim Beichter ist wissenschaftlicher Mitarbeiter am Fraunhofer-Institut für Arbeitswirtschaft und Organisation IAO in Stuttgart und Heilbronn, in der Projektleitung der Forschungsinitiative Global Upskill und Teil des Steuerungsteams des Heilbronner Forschungs- und Innovationszentrums für Future Skills. Er absolvierte sein Masterstudium in Philosophie an der Universität Stuttgart. Sein Forschungsschwerpunkt liegt auf Fragen rund um die berufliche Weiterbildung, insbesondere auf technologischer Trendidentifikation, Lernkultur und der Anwendung von Gamification. Zuletzt war er maßgeblich an der Veröffentlichung des Upskill Ecosystem Model beteiligt, das ein Rahmenwerk für vernetzte Weiterbildungsökosysteme beschreibt. Dr. Manuel Kaiser ist Mitarbeiter und Projektleiter am Fraunhofer-Institut für Arbeitswirtschaft und Organisation in Stuttgart und Heilbronn. Als Mitglied des Steuerungsteams des Heilbronner Forschungs- und Innovationszentrums für Future Skills beschäftigt er sich mit zentralen Fragen der beruflichen Weiterbildung von Morgen. Seine Forschung verbindet technologische Trends, Innovations- und Lernkultur sowie den Transfer wissenschaftlicher Erkenntnisse in die Praxis. Manuel ist Autor zahlreicher Publikationen, die sowohl in praxisorientierten Whitepapers als auch in internationalen wissenschaftlichen Journalen und auf Konferenzen erschienen sind. Er studierte Betriebswirtschaftslehre in Nürtingen-Geislingen und München und promovierte an der Universität Hohenheim im Fachgebiet Unternehmensgründung.  Thema Mit Dr. Manuel Kaiser und Tim Beichter habe ich wie bereits vor zwei Jahren in der GainTalents-Podcastfolge 423 darüber gesprochen, welche neuen Trends und Technologien die berufliche Weiterbildung verändern werden. Herzlichen Dank an Manuel und Tim für dieses Update zu dem Thema und für das gute Gespräch. Welche Trends und Technologien werden die Vermittlung von Lerninhalten zukünftig verändern? Mindset in Organisationen und vor allem in der Führung zum Thema Lernen, Aus- und Weiterbildung, etc. ist wichtig Führungskultur Fehlerkultur Lernkultur Role-Model-Identifikation und -Förderung Hohe Agilität in Unternehmen ist notwendig: welche Technologien und Formate sind für die Organisation die richtigen  Adaptionsfähigkeit einer Organisation ist wichtig Testen, Ergebnisse analysieren und bewerten Kosten vs. Produktivität und Wissenszuwachs (angewandtes Wissen) Individualisierung der Aus- und Weiterbildung nimmt stark zu weniger klassische Formate (ein Training für alle) mehr individualisierte Formate, die den jeweiligen Trainings-/Wissensstand von Personen in einer Organisation reflektieren zunehmend werden Aus- und Weiterbildung-Formate auch während der Arbeitszeit notwendig sein (Beispiel KI) Neue Learning-Formate, die immer stärker genutzt werden Blended Learning (Kombination aus Offline- und Onlinelearning (auch gerne hybrides Learning genannt)) Adaptives Lernen (nutzt datenbasierte Technologien wie z. B. maschinelles Lernen oder künstliche Intelligenz, um den Lernprozess individuell auf den Nutzer abzustimmen) Microlearnings (basiert auf der Idee, Lerninhalte in kleine, kompakte Einheiten aufzuteilen, die jeweils nur wenige Minuten dauern) Die Rolle der Trainer, Dozenten bzw. ganze Academy-Konzepte werden sich signifikant ändern weg vom Front-up-Classroom Ansatz und hin zu sehr individuellen Austausch-Formaten (personen- oder technologiegestützt) entsprechend werden sich Inhalte zur Gestaltung von Lernformaten ändern viel mobile-unterstützt und auch mit dem Einsatz von Gamification Für die Inhalte zukünftiger Aus- und Weiterbildungsangebote ist es notwendig, die zukünftig erforderlichen Skills vs. der aktuell vorhandenen Kompetenzen im Detail zu evaluieren Gap- und Anforderungsanalysen durchführen  Ableitung eines Zielbildes für Skills und Kompetenzen der Zukunft   #Talententwicklung #ausundweiterbildung #Personalentwicklung #upskill #reskill #arbeitgeberattraktivitaet #Learning #Gaintalentspodcast   Shownotes Links - Manuel Kaiser und Tim Beichter LinkedIn:      https://www.linkedin.com/in/manuel-kaiser-3a9b051a3/ und https://www.linkedin.com/in/tim-beichter-69b96a237/ Studien zum Thema:   Der Transformations- und Innovationsnavigator: https://publica.fraunhofer.de/entities/publication/21e88cce-20a5-4b2d-a267-060202b45851 Upskill Ecosystem Model: https://publica.fraunhofer.de/entities/publication/c552cf68-eb9b-4972-9d6b-10c83700b6e1 Links Hans-Heinz Wisotzky:  Website: https://www.gaintalents.com/podcast und https://www.gaintalents.com/blog Podcast: https://www.gaintalents.com/podcast Bücher: Neu (jetzt vorbestellen): Die perfekte Employee Journey und Experience https://link.springer.com/book/9783662714195 Erste Buch: Die perfekte Candidate Journey und Experience https://www.gaintalents.com/buch-die-perfekte-candidate-journey-und-experience   LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/hansheinzwisotzky/ LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/company/gaintalents XING https://www.xing.com/profile/HansHeinz_Wisotzky/cv Facebook https://www.facebook.com/GainTalents Instagram https://www.instagram.com/gain.talents/ Youtube https://bit.ly/2GnWMFg

HRM-Podcast
GainTalents - Expertenwissen zu Recruiting, Gewinnung und Entwicklung von Talenten und Führungskräften: #423 Update zum Thema: Neue Trends und Technologien im Bereich der beruflichen Weiterbildung

HRM-Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2025 41:09


Achtung (Werbung in eigener Sache):  Mein neues Buch (in Co-Produktion mit Prof. Dr. Johanna Bath): "Die perfekte Employee Journey & Experience" ist jetzt verfügbar: Springer: https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-662-71420-1 Amazon: https://bit.ly/4q3ZjGk Thalia: https://bit.ly/3KFLXzG Dieses Fachbuch stellt die wichtigsten Elemente der Employee Journey vor – vom Pre-Boarding bis zum Offboarding – und erläutert, wie Verantwortliche in Unternehmen eine gelungene Employee Experience realisieren und nachhaltig verankern können.   Meine Gäste: Tim Beichter ist wissenschaftlicher Mitarbeiter am Fraunhofer-Institut für Arbeitswirtschaft und Organisation IAO in Stuttgart und Heilbronn, in der Projektleitung der Forschungsinitiative Global Upskill und Teil des Steuerungsteams des Heilbronner Forschungs- und Innovationszentrums für Future Skills. Er absolvierte sein Masterstudium in Philosophie an der Universität Stuttgart. Sein Forschungsschwerpunkt liegt auf Fragen rund um die berufliche Weiterbildung, insbesondere auf technologischer Trendidentifikation, Lernkultur und der Anwendung von Gamification. Zuletzt war er maßgeblich an der Veröffentlichung des Upskill Ecosystem Model beteiligt, das ein Rahmenwerk für vernetzte Weiterbildungsökosysteme beschreibt. Dr. Manuel Kaiser ist Mitarbeiter und Projektleiter am Fraunhofer-Institut für Arbeitswirtschaft und Organisation in Stuttgart und Heilbronn. Als Mitglied des Steuerungsteams des Heilbronner Forschungs- und Innovationszentrums für Future Skills beschäftigt er sich mit zentralen Fragen der beruflichen Weiterbildung von Morgen. Seine Forschung verbindet technologische Trends, Innovations- und Lernkultur sowie den Transfer wissenschaftlicher Erkenntnisse in die Praxis. Manuel ist Autor zahlreicher Publikationen, die sowohl in praxisorientierten Whitepapers als auch in internationalen wissenschaftlichen Journalen und auf Konferenzen erschienen sind. Er studierte Betriebswirtschaftslehre in Nürtingen-Geislingen und München und promovierte an der Universität Hohenheim im Fachgebiet Unternehmensgründung.  Thema Mit Dr. Manuel Kaiser und Tim Beichter habe ich wie bereits vor zwei Jahren in der GainTalents-Podcastfolge 423 darüber gesprochen, welche neuen Trends und Technologien die berufliche Weiterbildung verändern werden. Herzlichen Dank an Manuel und Tim für dieses Update zu dem Thema und für das gute Gespräch. Welche Trends und Technologien werden die Vermittlung von Lerninhalten zukünftig verändern? Mindset in Organisationen und vor allem in der Führung zum Thema Lernen, Aus- und Weiterbildung, etc. ist wichtig Führungskultur Fehlerkultur Lernkultur Role-Model-Identifikation und -Förderung Hohe Agilität in Unternehmen ist notwendig: welche Technologien und Formate sind für die Organisation die richtigen  Adaptionsfähigkeit einer Organisation ist wichtig Testen, Ergebnisse analysieren und bewerten Kosten vs. Produktivität und Wissenszuwachs (angewandtes Wissen) Individualisierung der Aus- und Weiterbildung nimmt stark zu weniger klassische Formate (ein Training für alle) mehr individualisierte Formate, die den jeweiligen Trainings-/Wissensstand von Personen in einer Organisation reflektieren zunehmend werden Aus- und Weiterbildung-Formate auch während der Arbeitszeit notwendig sein (Beispiel KI) Neue Learning-Formate, die immer stärker genutzt werden Blended Learning (Kombination aus Offline- und Onlinelearning (auch gerne hybrides Learning genannt)) Adaptives Lernen (nutzt datenbasierte Technologien wie z. B. maschinelles Lernen oder künstliche Intelligenz, um den Lernprozess individuell auf den Nutzer abzustimmen) Microlearnings (basiert auf der Idee, Lerninhalte in kleine, kompakte Einheiten aufzuteilen, die jeweils nur wenige Minuten dauern) Die Rolle der Trainer, Dozenten bzw. ganze Academy-Konzepte werden sich signifikant ändern weg vom Front-up-Classroom Ansatz und hin zu sehr individuellen Austausch-Formaten (personen- oder technologiegestützt) entsprechend werden sich Inhalte zur Gestaltung von Lernformaten ändern viel mobile-unterstützt und auch mit dem Einsatz von Gamification Für die Inhalte zukünftiger Aus- und Weiterbildungsangebote ist es notwendig, die zukünftig erforderlichen Skills vs. der aktuell vorhandenen Kompetenzen im Detail zu evaluieren Gap- und Anforderungsanalysen durchführen  Ableitung eines Zielbildes für Skills und Kompetenzen der Zukunft   #Talententwicklung #ausundweiterbildung #Personalentwicklung #upskill #reskill #arbeitgeberattraktivitaet #Learning #Gaintalentspodcast   Shownotes Links - Manuel Kaiser und Tim Beichter LinkedIn:      https://www.linkedin.com/in/manuel-kaiser-3a9b051a3/ und https://www.linkedin.com/in/tim-beichter-69b96a237/ Studien zum Thema:   Der Transformations- und Innovationsnavigator: https://publica.fraunhofer.de/entities/publication/21e88cce-20a5-4b2d-a267-060202b45851 Upskill Ecosystem Model: https://publica.fraunhofer.de/entities/publication/c552cf68-eb9b-4972-9d6b-10c83700b6e1 Links Hans-Heinz Wisotzky:  Website: https://www.gaintalents.com/podcast und https://www.gaintalents.com/blog Podcast: https://www.gaintalents.com/podcast Bücher: Neu (jetzt vorbestellen): Die perfekte Employee Journey und Experience https://link.springer.com/book/9783662714195 Erste Buch: Die perfekte Candidate Journey und Experience https://www.gaintalents.com/buch-die-perfekte-candidate-journey-und-experience   LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/hansheinzwisotzky/ LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/company/gaintalents XING https://www.xing.com/profile/HansHeinz_Wisotzky/cv Facebook https://www.facebook.com/GainTalents Instagram https://www.instagram.com/gain.talents/ Youtube https://bit.ly/2GnWMFg

The Wonkhe Show - the higher education podcast
Skills White Paper special

The Wonkhe Show - the higher education podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2025 52:51


This week on the podcast we get across the Westminster government's post-16 white paper – its headline target of two-thirds of young people in higher-level learning by 25, the plan to index the undergraduate fee cap to inflation (with TEF-linked eligibility), the maintenance package holding to the status quo, and a push for institutional specialisation via research funding alongside changes to access, participation, and regulation.We ask whether these levers add up – will automatic indexation and selective controls actually stabilise university finances while widening opportunity, or do TEF-conditioned fee rises, classroom-based foundation year limits, and OfS expansion risk new “cold spots”, tighter choice, and a tougher deal on student maintenance?Plus we discuss the proposed international student levy and quid-pro-quo on quality; tougher franchising rules and agent oversight; a “statement of expectations” on student accommodation; governance and TPS pressures; and much much more.With Debbie McVitty, Editor, Wonkhe, David Kernohan, Deputy Editor, Wonkhe, Jim Dickinson, Associate Editor, Wonkhe, Michael Salmon, News Editor, Wonkhe, and presented by Mark Leach, Editor-in-Chief, Wonkhe.What is in the post-16 education and skills white paper for higher education?

Priority Talk
State of Theology Finds Stable Theology Among Americans

Priority Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2025 23:02


Greg Overviews findings from the 2025 State of American Theology Study conducted by Ligonier Ministries and Lifeway Research. Topics include what Americans believe about about God, Goodness and Sin, Beliefs about Salvation and Religious Texts, Beliefs about Judgement and Punishment, Beliefs about the Church, and Beliefs about Authority.https://research.lifeway.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/Ligonier-State-of-Theology-2025-White-Paper.pdf10-17-25

Further Together the ORAU Podcast
Strengthening Regional Food System Resilience: A conversation with ORAU experts about their white paper

Further Together the ORAU Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 16, 2025 31:44


ORAU is tackling one of the most pressing challenges of our time: food security. ORAU is seeking a partnership with the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) to lead efforts to strengthen America's food systems against emerging threats like supply chain disruptions and biological hazards. ORAU's recently published white paper, Strengthening Regional Food System Resilience: A Framework for Risk Assessment and Emergency Preparedness outlines a transformative plan to address these challenges. This framework leverages ORAU's interdisciplinary expertise, advanced modeling tools and stakeholder engagement to help USDA identify vulnerabilities and implement targeted interventions. In this conversation, hosts Michael Holtz and Amber Davis talk to ORAU experts Kara Stephens, Matthew Schnupp and Rachel Vasconez about their white paper, the framework they have created, and why it matters now.

FCAT Crypto Briefâ„¢
From White Paper to Wall Street: Crypto's Maturity Moment?

FCAT Crypto Briefâ„¢

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2025 33:33


Last episode, we asked if crypto is mainstream. Now, with adoption surging and regulation taking shape, the focus shifts: how is crypto reshaping finance, policy, and global markets inside and out? Tune in as our hosts break down what “maturity” means in 2025, tracing crypto's early roots in the late-augts, highlight insititutional and governmental initiatives, and why it could matter for everyone: crypto natives, tradfi leaders, and everyday users alike.   Episode Topics:     [0:00] Intro [03:20] Evolution of Prediction Markets [13:33] Luxembourg's Sovereign Wealth Fund [21:50] Reflections on Crypto's Evolution [28:55] Final Thoughts & Outro       Stay connected with us beyond the podcast by following FCAT on, Instagram, LinkedIn, and X, where we share additional insights and updates on all things emerging tech.   Whether you're crypto-curious or have a crypto foundation, Fidelity may have your next career opportunity. EXPLORE NOW.    Please remember: this podcast is solely for informational and educational purposes and is not investment, tax, legal or insurance advice. Digital assets are speculative and highly volatile and you should conduct thorough research before you invest. To learn more, visit: fcatalyst.com FMR LLC. © 2025 FMR LLC. All rights reserved.   Chapters (00:00:00) - Intro(00:03:20) - Evolution of Prediction Markets(00:13:33) - Luxembourg's Sovereign Wealth Fund(00:21:50) - Reflections on Crypto's Evolution(00:28:55) - Final Thoughts & Outro

The POWER Business Show
South Africa's trade at a crossroads: New white paper reveals opportunities amid global shifts

The POWER Business Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2025 10:14


Tehillah Niselow is in conversation with James Booth, Head of Revenue at VertoSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Standards Show
Audiobook | Report - The Tipping Point: Building trust in the circular economy

The Standards Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 13, 2025 16:45


BSI Reports and Whitepapers provide expert insights, guidance, and analysis on various topics related to standards, compliance, and best practices. They are designed to inform and educate organizations, industries, and policymakers about emerging trends, challenges, and opportunities in areas where standards play a critical role.This episode is an audio-abridged version of the BSI Report - The Tipping Point: Building Trust in the circular economy. Developed with Cambridge Institute for Sustainability Leadership, the report explores how trust can accelerate the move toward a circular economy. Based on global research, it shows that while most people support circularity, concerns about quality, safety, and greenwashing still hold many back. The report highlights five ways to build trust: proof of performance, transparency, independent checks, shared standards, and secure data - key steps to make circular practices credible, mainstream, and profitable.Series | Audiobooks Find out more about the issues raised in this episodeBuilding trust in the circular economyGet involved with standardsGet in touch with The Standards Showeducation@bsigroup.comsend a voice messageFind and follow on social mediaX @StandardsShowInstagram @thestandardsshowLinkedIn | The Standards Show

The Wire - Individual Stories
Aviation White Paper will improve rights of Australians with a disability

The Wire - Individual Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 13, 2025


NAPS Chat
The Evolving Postal Retail Network: Are Post Offices Still Essential?

NAPS Chat

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2025 22:53


Joy Sanzone and David Neu of the US Postal Service Office Of Inspector General (OIG) join Bob to discuss their new "White Paper" that explores the evolution of the USPS' retail network and how the network is adapting, or not adapting, to the the dynamic postal environment.  Joy, David and Bob talk about how the Postal Service's "universal service obligation" informs the postal retail footprint, whether the obligation needs to be more clearly defined and if there is something to learn from the experience of foreign postal authorities. In addition, Bob  references the upcoming Postal Service Health Benefits Program Open Season and the departure of Postal Regulatory Commission Chairman Michael Kubayanda from the agency. 

zeb Sound of Finance
Banksteuerung 2030: Wie Regionalbanken ihre Zukunft sichern

zeb Sound of Finance

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2025 30:22 Transcription Available


In dieser Folge widmen wir uns einem Thema, das die deutsche Bankenlandschaft in den kommenden Jahren maßgeblich prägen wird: die Zukunft der Banksteuerung. Unsere Kolleg:innen Jonas Schneider, Berater, Hanna Schürkmann, Werkstudentin, und Dr. Robert Ellenbeck, Partner, zeb, diskutieren über die zentralen Erkenntnisse aus der diesjährigen Veröffentlichung zur Banksteuerung. Worum geht es? Basierend auf den Erfahrungen unserer Veröffentlichung des Vorjahres haben wir uns die Frage gestellt: Wie entwickeln sich die aktuellen Engpässe weiter, und wie können sich Regionalbanken strategisch für die nächsten fünf bis zehn Jahre aufstellen? Im Whitepaper beleuchten wir nicht nur die Probleme, sondern liefern konkrete Lösungsansätze, wie Banken auch in volatilen wirtschaftlichen Zeiten strukturell resilient bleiben können. Die fünf zentralen Handlungsfelder Das Whitepaper konzentriert sich auf fünf eng miteinander verzahnte Themenbereiche: 1. Finanzielle Stabilität – Eigenkapital, Kundeneinlagen und Risikomanagement 2. Nachhaltigkeit – Integration von ESG-Kriterien in die Geschäftsstrategie 3. Zugang zum Kunden – Kundenbindung in einer digitalisierten Welt 4. Daten- und IT-Management – Die technologische Basis für zukunftsfähige Steuerung 5. Personalstrategien – Demografischer Wandel und Fachkräftemangel Ein besonderer Fokus liegt dabei auf der ganzheitlichen Betrachtung: Viele Themen lassen sich nicht isoliert betrachten, da sie eng miteinander verknüpft sind – etwa finanzielle Risiken, die durch Nachhaltigkeitsziele beeinflusst werden. Praxisnähe durch Dialog Ein wesentlicher Erfolgsfaktor bei der Erstellung des Whitepapers war der kontinuierliche Dialog mit unseren Kunden. Ihre Rückmeldungen und Erfahrungen sind direkt in unsere Analysen eingeflossen und haben sichergestellt, dass wir an den relevanten Themen arbeiten. Ausblick Die Herausforderungen für Regionalbanken sind vielfältig: demografischer Wandel, regulatorische Auflagen, Digitalisierung. Doch wo Herausforderungen sind, entstehen auch Chancen. Mit der richtigen strategischen Basis können Banken nicht nur ihre gegenwärtige Stabilität sichern, sondern nachhaltig wachsen. Um den Austausch zu vertiefen, begleiten wir das Whitepaper mit einer Webinarreihe, die den aktiven Dialog mit unseren Zuhörern und Kunden fördert.

Cognitive Dissidents
The Government Is Coming For Your [insert asset here]

Cognitive Dissidents

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2025 61:58


What if money could make you freer instead of more dependent? Matt McClintock joins the pod to dive into Bitcoin's evolution from digital experiment to geopolitical force - a technology challenging governments, redefining sovereignty, and reshaping how value moves across the world. Matt and Jacob explore what “freedom money” really means, why personal sovereignty now collides with state power, and how the struggle between fiat and crypto reveals the future of economics, trust, and control in a multipolar world.--Timestamps:(00:00) - Introduction and Podcast Overview(00:20) - Addressing Listener Concerns(02:08) - Engaging with the Community(02:49) - Welcoming Back Matt McClintock(03:44) - Bitcoin: A Journey of Discovery(05:53) - Understanding Bitcoin's Evolution(09:41) - Bitcoin's Global Significance(12:59) - Bitcoin's Unique Characteristics(24:28) - Bitcoin as Freedom Money(29:23) - Bitcoin and Economic Freedom(29:56) - Bitcoin's Role in Oppressive Regimes(30:45) - Government Reactions to Bitcoin(32:35) - Personal Security and Bitcoin(34:45) - Bitcoin and Legal Concerns(44:40) - Bitcoin's Sovereignty and Legal Framework(55:30) - Bitcoin's Unique Position in the Financial World(01:00:34) - The Future of Bitcoin and Fiat(01:01:38) - Closing Thoughts and Reflections--Referenced in the Show:Link to White Paper: https://bespokegroup.io/sovereigntyparadox/Link to Matt's Substack: https://mattmcclintock.substack.com/--Jacob Shapiro Site: jacobshapiro.comJacob Shapiro LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/jacob-l-s-a9337416Jacob Twitter: x.com/JacobShapJacob Shapiro Substack: jashap.substack.com/subscribe --The Jacob Shapiro Show is produced and edited by Audiographies LLC. More information at audiographies.com --Jacob Shapiro is a speaker, consultant, author, and researcher covering global politics and affairs, economics, markets, technology, history, and culture. He speaks to audiences of all sizes around the world, helps global multinationals make strategic decisions about political risks and opportunities, and works directly with investors to grow and protect their assets in today's volatile global environment. His insights help audiences across industries like finance, agriculture, and energy make sense of the world.--This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis: Podtrac - https://analytics.podtrac.com/privacy-policy-gdrp

Strength & Solidarity
Best Of: North Korea: What future do Koreans want, and do they agree?

Strength & Solidarity

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 2, 2025 54:03


While Strength&Solidarity is on a break we're taking the chance to re-up some favourite episodes.Back in December we featured an episode about North Korea – but with a twist. Beyond the ritual condemnations of egregious practices under Supreme Leader Kim Jong Un, it's rare to get a close-up view of what the people who escape from North Korea think and feel about their lives and the future they want. Hanna Song, Executive Director of the Database Center for North Korean Human Rights, reflects on what she has learned – a more nuanced and complex picture than is usually painted.And in the Coda, a Zimbabwean human rights lawyer relies on soccer to keep things cordial. Music by Oliver Mtukudzi.Follow us on our new Substack newsletter: strengthandsolidarity.substack.comQuick LinksClick here to read the Episode 48 Transcript.Hanna Song bio: https://www.linkedin.com/in/hanna-song-25055a114/Database Center for North Korean Human Rights (NKDB): https://en.nkdb.org/NKDB: 2024 White Paper on North Korean Human Rights: https://en.nkdb.org/activitynews/?idx=125777386&bmode=viewUN: Report of the commission of inquiry on human rights in the Democratic People's Republic of Korea: https://www.ohchr.org/en/hr-bodies/hrc/co-idprk/reportofthe-commissionof-inquiry-dprk

The Wonkhe Show - the higher education podcast

This week on the podcast, as the dust settles on Labour conference in Liverpool, we unpack what Keir Starmer's new higher education participation target really means – and whether universities have the capacity and funding to meet the moment. We also get into the surprise return of targeted maintenance grants – funded controversially by the levy on international student fees, and we reflect on the wider political atmosphere at the conference – from policy signals to sector perceptions, and what all this might tell us about Labour's emerging offer and forthcoming White Paper. With Gary Hughes, Chief Executive at Durham Students' Union, Eve Alcock, Director of Public Affairs at QAA, Michael Salmon, News Editor at Wonkhe and hosted by Jim Dickinson, Associate Editor at Wonkhe.The PM's announcement on higher level participation is a win for the HE sectorThe fifty per cent participation target is no more. Again.Grants return, the levy staysMaybe the levy just moves money to where it's needed mostThe Augar review is back, baby. Just don't about talk yourselfStudents are being othered again – and everyone loses outHave universities got the capacity and cash to respond to the government's agenda?How much should the new maintenance grant be?Universities should be central to rebuilding communitiesStudents are working harder than ever – because they have toI have a lot of questions about the LLEWho's ready for a debate at 930am on a Sunday?The education policy trap: will the Augar review avoid the mistakes of the past?

orthodontics In summary
Will AI Change Orthodontics? | Orthodontics In Interview | JEAN-MARC RETROUVEY

orthodontics In summary

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2025 47:58


“Will AI it replace the orthodontist? No. Will it replace the bad orthodontist? Hopefully, yes.”  “With AI, you could probably get prediction accuracy down to less than 10% , because it can analyze what the human brain cannot” “Computers are designed to crunch data. That's all they do. The rest is up to you.”  “AI is not going away. There are billions invested in this technology. You better get on with the program.”  “Don't drive your car inreverse… Don't go backwards.”   In this episode of Orthodontics in Interview,I'm joined by Jean-Marc Retrouvey, researcher and innovator in AI-drivenorthodontics. We explore the concept of the “virtual patient” and how artificial intelligence is reshaping orthodontic diagnosis, biomechanics, and aligner staging. Jean-Marc shares his candid thoughts on the pace of change inacademia versus industry, the role of AI in predictions within orthodontics, and how clinicians can embrace AI without losing their judgment. With insightsfrom his work in both universities and industry projects, Jean-Marc offers a compelling vision of how orthodontics will evolve in the AI-era. ·      01:47 What isthe “virtual patient” concept?·      03:39 Wherewill AI impact clinicians, diagnosis vs outcomes?·      07:21 Can AIbe our biomechanics co-pilot?·      10:34 Why arealigner companies behind in AI?·      12:57 Whatpractical changes will AI bring to aligner staging?·      15:20 Why didyou say academia is too cautious for AI's pace?·      19:24 Shouldorthodontic AI education come from industry, and is that biased?·      22:13 DoesRicketts' 1983 “judgment over computers” still hold?·      25:13 Will AIreplace clinician experience and literature in EBP?·      30:44 Are weat risk of data overload with 3D/CBCT integration?·      35:01 How dowe use AI responsibly given its environmental costs?·      37:59 Why movefrom academia to industry, and what are you building at LuxCreo?·      41:11 Whitepapers vs peer-review: what's the real difference?·      44:35 Your one piece of advice toorthodontists? Click on the link below to view previous episodes, to refresh topics,pick up tricks and stay up to date.  Please like and subscribe if you find it useful! Please visit the website for this interview podcast:https://orthoinsummary.com/will-ai-change-orthodontics-orthodontics-in-interview-jean-marc-retrouvey/  Spotify podcasts for other platforms  YouTubehttps://youtu.be/UDfDTtLZm4A #orthodontics #farooqahmed #jeanmarcretrouvey#AIorthodontics#clearalignertherapy #orthodonticsinsummary#orthodonticsininterview  Farooq Ahmed

SaaS Fuel
Parent-Led Autism Therapy: Innovative Techniques Empower Families

SaaS Fuel

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2025 52:36


This week on SaaS Fuel, Jeff Mains dives into radical innovation at the intersection of technology, storytelling, and human impact. Guest Sean Schroeder, exited founder and product strategist, unpacks his journey from digital content platforms to autism therapy and AI-powered brand storytelling. The episode covers Happy Ladders' parent-led autism therapy model, the philosophy behind Reventure Labs' unorthodox venture studio, and the technical artistry fueling Story Cycle Genie—a collective intelligence platform powering authentic brand narratives. If you've ever wondered how SaaS can drive real transformation or how founders can operationalize their own unique “vibe” into assets that scale, this episode delivers actionable insight with heart.Key Takeaways00:00 "Parent-Led Autism Therapy Revolution"04:51 From Content to Autism App09:40 Origin of Our Venture Studio10:31 Audience-Centric Investment Partnerships13:21 Balancing SaaS and Services Tensions19:14 "Off Standards, Off Results"20:24 Streamlined Founder Insight Extraction23:33 Deep Dive into Audience Archetypes27:40 Prioritize Planning Over Execution32:36 Extracting Founder Knowledge33:46 Pre-Investment Business Idea Testing38:24 "Governance for Consistent Conditions"40:08 Seamless Brand Story Coordination43:58 Data Utilization: Next Steps47:25 "Integrating Technical Specs and White Papers"51:18 Recruitment and Innovation InsightsTweetable Quotes“When you're working with AI, you're working at a more atomic level, validating what the genie is giving back—something you'll rarely get in a room just tossing ideas.” — Sean Schroeder“The therapist may only be there for hours, but parents are with their children 24/7. Empowering them turns everyday moments into therapy.” — Sean Schroeder“Founders move quick. Our job is to extract their embedded business intelligence—their real story—without months of ‘brand exercises.'” — Sean Schroeder“StoryCycle Genie lets you build your brand narrative with authentic inputs, not by borrowing someone else's metaphor but by owning your vibe.” — Sean Schroeder“If you're off just 2 degrees at the start, by the time your marketing or messaging hits the world, you'll be a foot away from where you want to be.” — Jeff Mains“Sometimes starting without a rigid plan is freeing—some of the best frameworks are discovered through building, intuition, and iteration.” — Sean SchroederSaaS Leadership LessonsEmpower the Stakeholders Closest to the Problem:Happy Ladders proves that empowering parents—rather than outside experts—can yield faster and more sustainable developmental progress in children.Lead with User-Centric Simplicity:Transform complex frameworks (therapy or branding) into practical, actionable routines that non-experts can implement.Technical Capital is as Valuable as Financial:In the modern venture landscape, providing technical expertise and capabilities can catalyze new ventures more effectively than just cash.Operationalize Authenticity:Authentic storytelling isn't found in vague abstraction but in pulling out and refining the founder's real-world beliefs and experiences.Build Ecosystems, Not Just Assets:A truly scalable brand is underpinned by systems, connected content, and iterative learning, not just standalone artifacts.Adopt a Test-and-Learn Mindset:Start with one asset, test hypotheses quickly (even monetization), and be unafraid to adjust based on feedback and new insightsGuest...

Headline News
China issues white paper on CPC guidelines for governing Xinjiang in new era

Headline News

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2025 4:45


Beijing has released a white paper on the successful practice of the Communist Party of China's strategy for governing Xinjiang in the new era. The document comes as the northwestern autonomous region is marking its 70th founding anniversary.

The Beijing Hour
White paper: Xinjiang's 70th anniversary marked by growth, stability, heritage preservation

The Beijing Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2025 59:45


Beijing issued a white paper outlining the CPC's Xinjiang strategy, highlighting economic growth, stability, cultural heritage protection, and its role as a Eurasian gateway, as the region marks its 70th founding anniversary (01:13). The Beijing Xiangshan Forum closed with calls for multilateralism, dialogue, and respect for sovereignty, stressing cooperation in global governance to advance peace, and address shared international security challenges (10:40). China has condemned another U.S. veto of a UN Gaza resolution demanding ceasefire, aid access, and hostage release (20:50).

The Curated Beauty Podcast
The Growth Factor Glow-Up: Ariessence® PDGF for Faster Healing, Fuller Hair & Longer-Lasting Botox

The Curated Beauty Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2025 21:59


Pure Growth Factor, Pure Confidence: How Ariessence® PDGF Is Changing Skin, Hair & Botox Longevity   After a summer break, Jessica Christy, PA-C, is back with a deep dive into one of the most exciting tools in modern aesthetics—Ariessence® pure PDGF+. In this episode of The Curated Beauty Podcast, Jessica unpacks the brand-new white paper on the safety of exogenously applied rhPDGF-BB, debunks old cancer myths, and explains how recombinant technology means no donor blood or stem cells—just pure, pharmaceutical-grade growth factor.   Jessica shares detailed, practice-tested protocols, including her Hair Renew scalp injections, under-eye and midface rejuvenation with Skinvive + PDGF, and her innovative forehead Vitti Pure blend that may even help Botox last longer through myomodulation. Listeners will also hear how Ariessence accelerates healing and amplifies results after lasers and microneedling—from Moxi and Halo to SylfirmX and SkinPen—while staying fully compliant and cost-effective.   Explore more science at Lynch Regenerative Medicine, and if you're curious which treatments are right for you, take our quick Aesthetic Quiz.   Whether you're a patient curious about regenerative skin care or a provider ready to elevate your treatments, you'll learn why Jessica calls Ariessence a platform product that works better than it should—backed by science, safety, and spectacular real-world results.

Voice Of GO(r)D
A Conversation with Tamie Sue Stuttle of Real Women In Trucking

Voice Of GO(r)D

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2025 75:30


Voice Of GO(r)D is very happy to bring you a conversation with Tamie Sue Stuttle of the advocacy organization Real Women in Trucking, where we discuss many of the usual problems facing truckers, and one in particular that is of import to Lady Truckers.Due to the intransigence of certain of the biggest trucking companies in the country, and their reliance on a wicked and evil training model, a study examining Sexual Abuse and Sexual Harassment in the industry was recently cancelled.As reported on by John Gallagher at FreightWaves not two weeks ago -The Trump administration has canceled a study aimed at addressing sexual harassment and rape in the trucking industry, according to one of the study's developers.“We all put a lot of time and attention into this, and just got an email yesterday telling us not to do any more work, that we've been cancelled,” Anne Balay, a member of the working group overseeing the project, told FreightWaves.“Everyone knows rape and sexual harassment are incredibly common in this industry, and this was an attempt to do an actual study that would have led to suggestions on how to address it and make the industry safer. But it was canceled not to save money – the money had already been spent – but to prevent the results from getting out to the public, ensuring now nothing gets done to change the industry and make it safer for women.”A screenshot of a notice from the administration states that the decision to terminate the study “is because the government's priorities have shifted and this project no longer meets our needs.”As Tamie and I discuss the cancellation, it appears that it is not the governments needs they are concerned with, but those of the members of the American Trucking Association, whose ‘Team Training' programs would be exposed to the scrutiny they need by this study, and possibly bring this stupid training method, and all of the sexual abuse it leads to for women, into the public eye. And, perhaps, result in it being made illegal - which is the correct action, to our minds.Tamie and I also discuss various other issues relevant to woman behind the wheel, and every other trucker out on the road, including a recent study from the ATA's research arm which suggests that more felons be recruited into trucking. What about those convicted of sexual crimes who would now be a problem for women truckers?You can find Tamie on Twitter - https://x.com/tamiesue2Tamie's own podcast - https://truckinwithtamie.com/The canceled SASH study at FMCSA - https://www.fmcsa.dot.gov/research-and-analysis/cmv-driver-sexual-assault-and-sexual-harassment-sashhttps://www.realwomenintrucking.org/Driver Documentary FilmPetition to re-instate the SASH Study -https://www.change.org/p/reinstate-the-fmcsa-study-on-sexual-assault-and-harassment-in-truckingThe disgusting White Paper from ATRI encouraging the recruitment of dangerous ex-cons and Foster Children into trucking -https://truckingresearch.org/2025/07/new-atri-research-highlights-evolving-truck-driver-demographics/Questions, comments, suggestions, corrections and Hate Mail are always welcomed and strongly encouraged - gordilocks@protonmail.com

Your Next Million
What are people buying online today? Online courses? White papers? Just curious what are the hot products right now.

Your Next Million

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2025 3:39


What are people buying online today? And then the question goes a little deeper...is it online courses, white papers? Just curious what the hot products are right now. The short answer to that is everything.

SAP Cloud Platform Podcast
Achieving Clean Core with the updated Clean Core extensibility White Paper | feat. Marco Matha

SAP Cloud Platform Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2025 20:03 Transcription Available


Niklas and Marco break down SAP's new clean core levels using relatable metaphors, explain the evolution from the classic extensibility model, and share practical advice for developers and architects. Learn about essential tools like the SAP Discovery Center, Guidance Framework, and ABAP Test Cockpit, and get actionable best practices for your clean core journey. Whether you're a seasoned SAP developer or just starting out, this episode offers valuable insights, real-world examples, and even a few personal recommendations to inspire your next steps.

SAP Cloud Platform Podcast
Achieving Clean Core with the updated Clean Core extensibility White Paper | feat. Marco Matha

SAP Cloud Platform Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2025 20:03 Transcription Available


Niklas and Marco break down SAP's new clean core levels using relatable metaphors, explain the evolution from the classic extensibility model, and share practical advice for developers and architects. Learn about essential tools like the SAP Discovery Center, Guidance Framework, and ABAP Test Cockpit, and get actionable best practices for your clean core journey. Whether you're a seasoned SAP developer or just starting out, this episode offers valuable insights, real-world examples, and even a few personal recommendations to inspire your next steps.

The Nero Show
Cervélo Answer S5 Aero Controversy & Insta360 GO Ultra Launch | NERO Show Ep. 140

The Nero Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2025 67:59


Cervelo have issues the Nero Show an offical reply to the Tour Magazine testing controversy, some crazy new angles from INSTA360's cameras and Dog or Fast bikes in all shapes and sizes

Holyrood Sources
Nicola Sturgeon's Memoir... analysed by Geoff Aberdein

Holyrood Sources

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 20, 2025 32:15


Nicola Sturgeon's new book is causing controversy. On this episode of Holyrood Sources, Geoff Aberdein - former Chief of Staff to Alex Salmond - directly challenges several claims, including:Did Alex Salmond really leak allegations against himself?Was Salmond disengaged from the 2013 independence White Paper?Did he oppose same-sex marriage?Geoff says these stories are “falsehoods and fabrications” — and sets the record straight.Later, Calum Macdonald, Geoff Aberdein, and Andy Maciver (former Director of Comms, Scottish Conservatives) debate:The fallout for John Swinney as Sturgeon's book dominates headlinesWhat rising concern over immigration means for Scottish politicsEnergy bills, community power, and whether Scotland is missing its renewable energy jackpotJames Hawes' claim that Scottish independence is “inevitable”

The Standards Show
Audiobook | Report - Supporting digital safety for adolescents

The Standards Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2025 11:02


BSI Reports and Whitepapers provide expert insights, guidance, and analysis on various topics related to standards, compliance, and best practices. They are designed to inform and educate organizations, industries, and policymakers about emerging trends, challenges, and opportunities in areas where standards play a critical role.This episode is an audio-abridged version of the BSI Report - Supporting a safe and secure digital world for adolescents. Published in May 2025, the report reveals that nearly half (47%) of young people aged 16 to 21 would prefer to grow up without the internet - a stark reflection of concerns about its impact on their wellbeing. Drawing on a survey of 1,293 UK adolescents, it shows that time spent online has increased since COVID-19, with many spending hours each day on social media and gaming. Despite this, 42% admit to hiding their online activity from parents, and risky behaviours, such as creating fake profiles are common. The findings highlight the urgent need for stronger privacy and safety measures by tech companies and policymakers to protect young users' mental health and online safety.Series | AudiobooksFind out more about the issues raised in this episodeBSI Digital TrustCPINISO COPOLCOGet involved with standardsGet in touch with The Standards Showeducation@bsigroup.comsend a voice messageFind and follow on social mediaX @StandardsShowInstagram @thestandardsshowLinkedIn | The Standards Show

Real Estate Espresso
A New White Paper on Industrial Outdoor Storage

Real Estate Espresso

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 13, 2025 7:01


On today's show we are taking a look at a relatively new product category. This is something that Y Street Capital has been active in for some time. But the industry and the investment community are waking up and taking notice. A recent white paper from the folks at Green Street is entitled : "Industrial Outdoor Storage: A Beautiful Ugly Duckling." Research and data on the sector remain scarce, which frankly can create opportunities. That's the opinion at Green Street, and it's our opinion as well. ------------**Real Estate Espresso Podcast:** Spotify: [The Real Estate Espresso Podcast](https://open.spotify.com/show/3GvtwRmTq4r3es8cbw8jW0?si=c75ea506a6694ef1)   iTunes: [The Real Estate Espresso Podcast](https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/the-real-estate-espresso-podcast/id1340482613)   Website: [www.victorjm.com](http://www.victorjm.com)   LinkedIn: [Victor Menasce](http://www.linkedin.com/in/vmenasce)   YouTube: [The Real Estate Espresso Podcast](http://www.youtube.com/@victorjmenasce6734)   Facebook: [www.facebook.com/realestateespresso](http://www.facebook.com/realestateespresso)   Email: [podcast@victorjm.com](mailto:podcast@victorjm.com)  **Y Street Capital:** Website: [www.ystreetcapital.com](http://www.ystreetcapital.com)   Facebook: [www.facebook.com/YStreetCapital](https://www.facebook.com/YStreetCapital)   Instagram: [@ystreetcapital](http://www.instagram.com/ystreetcapital)  

ZimmComm Golden Mic Audio
AgGateway White Paper - interview with Jeremy Wilson, Executive VP

ZimmComm Golden Mic Audio

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 13, 2025 9:33


iGaming Daily
Ep 565: The Gambling Act White Paper - Are Proposals Already Outdated?

iGaming Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 23, 2025 26:09


In this episode of iGaming Daily, brought to you by Optimove, SBC's Martyn Elliott, Ted Menmuir and Ted Orme-Claye, explore a pivotal moment for UK gambling regulation as the All-Party Parliamentary Group for Gambling Reform reconvenes to launch a new inquiry into the sector's future. Chaired by Conservative Sir Iain Duncan Smith, the inquiry revisits the Gambling Act review white paper to assess whether proposed reforms still meet the evolving demands of public policy and industry accountability.Key topics at the heart of the inquiry include gambling advertising, stake limits, and the role of local authorities in regulating high-street betting. Reform advocates are calling for stricter controls on TV ads, sports sponsorships, and social media promotions, especially to protect younger audiences. Other areas under review may include the statutory levy, financial risk checks, and the creation of a gambling ombudsman to oversee consumer protections.This episode also examines the growing tension between reformist momentum and the gambling industry's lack of a unified political voice. As the UK government faces competing priorities, this inquiry could act as a catalyst for significant change, particularly in high-visibility areas like advertising, where public sentiment may sway policy decisions quickly.Host: Martyn ElliottGuests: Ted Menmuir & Ted Orme-ClayeProducer: Anaya McDonaldEditor: James RossiGaming Daily is also now on TikTok. Make sure to follow us at iGaming Daily Podcast (@igaming_daily_podcast) | TikTok for bite-size clips from your favourite podcast. Finally, remember to check out Optimove at https://hubs.la/Q02gLC5L0 or go to Optimove.com/sbc to get your first month free when buying the industry's leading customer-loyalty service.

The W. Edwards Deming Institute® Podcast
From Student to Colleague: An Insider's View of Deming's World (Part 1)

The W. Edwards Deming Institute® Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2025 83:23


What was it like to learn from Dr. Deming himself -- a decade before his name became legend in U.S. business circles? In this deeply personal episode, William Scherkenbach shares with host Andrew Stotz what it was like to sit in Deming's classroom in 1972, join him for late-night chats at the Cosmos Club, and help ignite transformational change at Ford and GM. Learn how Deming's teachings shaped a lifetime of purpose, and why Scherkenbach, now in his 80th year, is stepping back into the arena with lessons still burning bright. TRANSCRIPT 0:00:02.3 Andrew Stotz: My name is Andrew Stotz, and I'll be your host as we continue our journey into the teachings of Dr. W. Edwards Deming. Today, I'm here with featured guest William Scherkenbach, and he is known as one of the men who has spent a huge amount of time with Dr. Deming, as he mentioned to me previously, starting from 1972, over a thousand meetings and many other activities that he's been involved in. So, Bill, welcome to the show. Why don't you give us a little background about you?   0:00:39.5 William Scherkenbach: Oh, okay. Good to be here, Andrew. Well, I'm going to start with, since it's about Deming, in '72, I was newly married in April, but had been accepted to NYU Graduate School of Business, and I don't know, I never found out who wrote the course syllabus, but whoever did wrote something that it sounded like a darn interesting course, sampling, manufacturing. I was a protocol officer at the United Nations at the time and was going to night school at the New York University Graduate School of Business. So, I said, this sounds like a good course, interesting course. Had no idea who Dr. Deming was, and I walked into the first class, and there was an old, I'm 26, so he was 72 in 1972, and he was one of the first, one of the only old person who didn't say, I used to be, and I don't want to stereotype all of my peers now that I'm 79, but hopefully I don't fall into the, well, I used to be and what happened. But he did tell, I mean, statistics can be a very technical subject, and the way he taught it, I had courses in some theory of sampling, which was one of his books.   0:02:52.2 William Scherkenbach: He had three, I said three courses. The other course that I took was based on his lectures in Japan in 1950, and in fact, two of them. The third course was an extension of that. So, he was, he would teach the statistics, but he was able to tell the history of the people behind all of the thoughts and the formulas and approaches, and I found that extremely, extremely interesting. And he handed out tons of papers and material, and it was just a very, very good experience. I know he had, and he had, in my opinion, a great sense of humor, but then statisticians, what's our status? Yeah, we're like accountants, in any event. .   0:04:12.2 Andrew Stotz: Why was he teaching? I mean, at 72, most men, you know, maybe women also, but most of us are like, it's the twilight of our years, and we now know he had 30 more years to go, but why was he teaching? And also, what's interesting is when I think about Deming, I think about his overall system of what he's teaching, whereas it's interesting to think about how he taught one relatively narrow subject.   0:04:43.7 William Scherkenbach: I'll get to that as to why I think he was teaching. But yeah, back then there were no 14 Points, no glimmer of Profound Knowledge. It was, not theoretical statistics, but applied statistics with a theory behind it. And he still was really expanding on Shewhart 's work with the difference between enumerative and analytic. He used his own. Now, why he was teaching, years later, probably 1987, so yeah, a bunch of years later, when I was at Ford and I had attended at the time, I attended a senior executive week-long get-together in order to get constancy of purpose or more continuity in the senior executive group. One of the people we brought in was Dr. Peter Kastenbaum. And I found as I attended his lecture in that week-long meeting, he was a student of CI Lewis. And CI Lewis, Deming learned about from Walter Shewhart and his work in the epistemology theory of knowledge. And in any event, Deming, when he was asked, and at the time it was still in the '30s, I think, when he was at the School of Agriculture, or the agriculture department, and bringing in Shewhart, he had tried to get CI Lewis to come talk. And CI said, I would love to, but I have a commitment to my students. And so I can't adjust my schedule.   0:07:33.9 William Scherkenbach: And the students, the people who wanted to learn were sacred. And I think that had a huge impact on Dr. Deming. I mean, he spoke about it a lot. And the way, you know, in a lot of the videos that Clare Crawford-Mason did, lovingly called the old curmudgeon. But for students, he had the greatest empathy and charity for, he just didn't suffer fools gladly. If you showed him that you weren't willing to learn, he took great joy in letting them know where they, where they stood.   0:08:43.1 Andrew Stotz: And one of the things when I went into my first Deming seminar in 1990, so now we're fast forwarding 30 years from when you first met him. It was almost like there was a safe harbor for workers, for young people, for people with open minds. I mean, I didn't, I watched as he didn't suffer fools, but I'm just curious, when you go back to 1972 in those classes, I'm assuming that he was pretty gentle with the students, encouraging them and all that was...   0:09:19.0 William Scherkenbach: Oh, absolutely. In my experience, I mean, if you were by, you know, in a student in graduate school, even though the graduate school of business in New York, down on 90 Church Street, Wall Street area, there were very few people going directly from your bachelor's to the master's program. And so these were people that had probably 10 years experience in business doing stuff. And yet by going to the class, absolutely were willing to learn, listen to different points of view, which is absolutely crucial. As you progress with theory of knowledge to be able to get different perspectives on whatever it is you're trying to look at.   0:10:23.2 Andrew Stotz: I would like to continue on this period of time just because it's a snapshot we don't get that often or that easily. You mentioned CI Lewis, a man who lived from about 1880 to about the year I was born, around 1964-65, and he was known for his understanding and discussion about logic and things like that. But why was CI Lewis someone that was interesting to Dr. Deming? What was the connection from your perspective?   0:10:59.6 William Scherkenbach: Well, my understanding is Shewhart referred to him, and Lewis was a professor at Harvard, and he was in the Peirce, I believe it's called. It looks like Peirce, but it's Peirce School of, or Chair of Philosophy, and Charles Sanders Peirce was a huge, huge influence in epistemology. And so that whole chain of thought or train of thought interested Deming, but it really was, he was introduced to it by Walter Shewhart.    0:11:48.3 Andrew Stotz: There's a famous quote, I believe, by Deming about CI Lewis and his book Mind and the World Order.   0:11:56.0 William Scherkenbach: Mind and the World Order, yeah.   0:11:59.9 Andrew Stotz: Deming said he had to read it six times before he fully understood and could apply its insights. And sometimes I think maybe Dr. Deming was truly inspired by that because when I think about his work, I'm still reading it and rereading it. And just listening to the video that you did many years ago with Tim talking about reduced variation, reduced variation, what he was talking about. Sometimes when we see the big picture, there's many different components of Deming's teachings. But if you had to bring it down to kind of its core, you know, he mentioned on that video that I just watched this morning, he mentioned reduced variation, and that will get you lower costs, happier customers, more jobs. How would you say, after you've looked at it from so many different angles over so many different years, how would you say you would sum up Dr. Deming's message to the world?   0:13:01.5 William Scherkenbach: Well, that's a difficult thing to sum up. Back then, when we did the video, which was in the early '80s, maybe '84, again, he had his 14 Points by then, but he hadn't, it hadn't really, the Profound Knowledge part of that wasn't there. Now, he had used what Shewhart said, and he had read, tried to read CI Lewis, and when he spoke about the connection between theory and questions, that's what he got from Shewhart and, well, and from Lewis, and a bunch of other pragmatist philosophers. So, he, you know, he was influenced by it, and, well, that's all I can say.   0:14:27.5 Andrew Stotz: So, let's go back in time. So, you're sitting in this classroom, you're intrigued, inspired. How did the relationship go at, towards the end of the class, and then as you finished that class, how did you guys keep in touch, and how did the relationship develop?   0:14:51.0 William Scherkenbach: Well, that is an interesting story. I usually am, well, I am introverted. So I had, after I moved from New York, I got a job at Booz Allen and Hamilton in Washington, DC. So in '74, when I got the degree from NYU, we moved to Silver Spring. And obviously, he's lived on Butterworth Place since there was a Butterworth Place. So we were able to, one of the things, and this is, well, I will say it, one of his advice to me, although he gave everyone an A, I later kidded him, he didn't remember that he gave me a B. No, he gave me an A. In any event, but one of his piece of advice was, you really don't need to join ASQC. You know more about quality than any of those inspectors. And so he had learned from the '50s in the past 20 years from the 50s that inspection wasn't going to do it. Well, I didn't take his advice, and I joined ASQC, and I was reading...   0:16:36.1 Andrew Stotz:Which for those who don't know is the American Society for...   0:16:41.6 William Scherkenbach: Quality Control, back then, now it's just the American Society for Quality. I had recommended when we did a big recommendations and forecasts for the year 2000 that quality, it should be the Society for Quality worldwide, but it's ASQ now. Let's see.   0:17:07.7 Andrew Stotz: So he recommended you don't join and you didn't follow his recommendation.    0:17:12.1 William Scherkenbach: I don't join, and I read an article, and it was by a professor in Virginia Tech, and he was showing a c-chart and the data were in control, and his recommendations were to penalize the people that were high and reward the people that were low, which is even back then, Dr. Deming was absolutely on track with that. If your process is in control, it doesn't make any sense to rank order or think that any of them are sufficiently different to reward or penalize. And I had never done this, but it was, I wrote a letter to quality progress. I sent a copy to Dr. Deming, and he said, "By golly, you're right on, that's great." And so I think it probably was '75, yeah, 1975. So I had been a year or so out, and he started inviting me over to his place at Butterworth, and we would go to the Cosmos Club. And that was a logistical challenge because at the time he had, well, his garage was a separate, not attached, it was in the backyard and emptied onto an alley. And he had a huge Lincoln Continental, the ones with the doors that opened from the center.   0:19:29.0 William Scherkenbach: And he would get in and drive and then park it in back of the club and someone would watch over it. But those were some good memories. So that was my introduction to keep contact with him. As I said, I had never done that. I don't think I've written a letter to an editor ever again.   0:20:04.8 Andrew Stotz: And you're mentioning about Butterworth, which is in DC.   0:20:12.6 William Scherkenbach: Butterworth Place, yeah.   0:20:14.7 Andrew Stotz: And Butterworth Place where he had his consulting business, which he ran, I believe, out of his basement.   0:20:18.3 William Scherkenbach: Out of the basement, yep, yep, yep.   0:20:21.2 Andrew Stotz: And just out of curiosity, what was it like when you first went to his home? Here, you had met him as your teacher, you respected him, you'd been away for a little bit, he invited you over. What was that like on your first walk into his home?   0:20:38.5 William Scherkenbach: Well, went down the side, the entrance to the basement was on the side of the house, and Seal had her desk set up right by the door. And then, I don't know if you can see, this is neat compared to his desk. It was filled with books and papers, but he knew where everything was. But it was a very cordial atmosphere.   0:21:25.2 Andrew Stotz: So when you mentioned Cecelia Kilian, is that her name, who was his assistant at the time?   0:21:36.3 William Scherkenbach: Yes, yes.   0:21:38.0 Andrew Stotz: Okay, so you...   0:21:38.8 William Scherkenbach: Yeah. For Jeepers. I don't know how long, but it had to be 50 years or so. So I don't, I mean, back in the '70s, I don't know of any other. He might have had, well, okay. He, yeah.   0:22:01.1 Andrew Stotz: I think it's about 40 or 50 years. So that's an incredible relationship he had with her. And I believe she wrote something. I think I have one of her, a book that she wrote that described his life. I can't remember that one right now but...   0:22:14.2 William Scherkenbach: Yeah. A lot of, yeah, it contained a lot of...   0:22:16.6 Andrew Stotz: The World of Dr. W. Edwards Deming, I think was the name of it, yeah.   0:22:20.6 William Scherkenbach: Okay. It contained a lot of his diaries on a number of his visits to Japan and elsewhere.   0:22:32.1 Andrew Stotz: So for some of us, when we go into our professor's offices, we see it stacked full of papers, but they've been sitting there for years. And we know that the professor just doesn't really do much with it. It's just all sitting there. Why did he have so much stuff on it? Was it incoming stuff that was coming to him? Was it something he was writing? Something he was reading? What was it that was coming in and out of his desk?   0:22:55.7 William Scherkenbach: A combination of stuff. I don't know. I mean, he was constantly writing, dictating to seal, but writing and reading. He got a, I mean, as the decades proceeded out of into the '80s, after '82, the NBC white or the '80, the NBC white paper calls were coming in from all over, all over the world. So yeah, a lot of people sending him stuff.   0:23:35.8 Andrew Stotz: I remember seeing him pulling out little scraps of paper at the seminar where he was taking notes and things like that at '90. So I could imagine he was just prolific at jotting things down. And when you read what he wrote, he really is assembling a lot of the notes and things that he's heard from different people. You can really capture that.   0:23:59.0 William Scherkenbach: Yeah. He didn't have an identic memory, but he took notes and quite, you know, and what he would do at the end of the day before retiring, he'd review the notes and commit them to memory as best he could. So he, yeah, very definitely. I mean, we would, you know, and well, okay. We're still in the early days before Ford and GM, but.   0:24:37.6 Andrew Stotz: Yeah. And I want to, if I shoot forward to '90, '92, when I studied with him, I was impressed with his energy at his age and he was just on a mission. And when I hear about your discussion about the class and at that time, it's like he was forming his, you know, System of Profound Knowledge, his 14 Points. When do you think it really became a mission for him to help, let's say American industry?   0:25:09.0 William Scherkenbach: Oh, well, I think it was a mission when Ford began its relationship with him. The ability of a large corporation, as well, and Ford at the same time Pontiac, the Pontiac division, not the whole GM, but Pontiac, was learning as well. But the attachment to Ford was that you had Don Peterson at the time was president of Ford, and he was intellectually curious, and he and Deming were on the same frequency. Now, I don't want to jump ahead, but if anyone has, well, you've read my second book there, you'll know that I have mentioned that the way to change is physical, logical, and emotional. And when you look at the gurus back then, there was Deming, who was the logical guru. You had Phil Crosby, who was the emotional guru. You go to the flag and the wine and cheese party, and Deming would say, "No," and Joe Juran, who was interested in focusing on the physical organization, you report to me kind of a thing. And so each of these behemoths were passing each other in the night with the greatest respect. But, but, and so they had their constituents. The challenge is to be able to broaden the appeal.    0:27:33.8 Andrew Stotz: So we've gone through '72, and then now '75, you've written your piece, and he's brought you into the fold. You're starting to spend some time with him. I believe it was about 1981 or so when he started working with Ford. And at that time, the quality director, I think, was Larry Moore at the time. And of course, you mentioned Donald Peterson. Maybe you can help us now understand from your own perspective of what you were doing between that time and how you saw that happening.   0:28:13.4 William Scherkenbach: Well, I had, my career was, after Booz Allen, mostly in the quality reliability area. I went from Booz Allen and Hamilton to, I moved to Columbia, Maryland, because I can fondly remember my grandfather in Ironwood, Michigan, worked at the Oliver Mine. There's a lot of iron ore mines up in the UP. ANd he would, and his work, once he got out of the mines later on, was he would cut across the backyard, and his office was right there. And so he would walk home for lunch and take a nap and walk back. And I thought that really was a good style of life. So Columbia, Maryland, was designed by Rouse to be a live-in, work-in community. And so we were gonna, we moved to Columbia, and there was a consulting firm called Hitman Associates, and their specialty was energy and environmental consulting. So did a bunch of that, worked my way up to a vice president. And so, but in '81, Deming said, you know, Ford really is interested. He was convinced, and again, it's déjà vu, he spoke about, when he spoke fondly about his lectures in Japan in 1950 and onward, that he was, he was very concerned that top management needed to be there, because he had seen all the excitement at Stanford during the war, and it died out afterwards, because management wasn't involved.   0:30:42.8 Andrew Stotz: What do you mean by that? What do you mean by the excitement at Stanford? You mean people working together for the efforts of the war, or was there a particular thing that was happening at Stanford?   0:30:51.7 William Scherkenbach: Well, they were, he attributed it to the lack of management support. I mean, they learned SPC. We were able to improve quality of war material or whatever, whoever attended the Stanford courses. But he saw the same thing in Japan and was lucky to, and I'm not sure if it was Ishikawa. I'm just not sure, but he was able to get someone to make the call after a few of the seminars for the engineers to make the call to the top management to attend the next batch. And he was able, he was able to do that. And that he thought was very helpful. I, I, gave them a leg up on whatever steps were next. I'm reminded of a quote from, I think it was Lao Tzu. And he said that someone asked him, "Well, you talk to the king, why or the emperor, why are things so screwed up?" And he said, "Well, I get to talk to him an hour a week and the rest of the time his ears are filled with a bunch of crap." Or whatever the Chinese equivalent of that is. And he said, "Of course the king isn't going to be able to act correctly." Yeah, there are a lot of things that impacted any company that he helped.   0:33:07.6 Andrew Stotz: It's interesting because I believe that, I think it was Kenichi Koyanagi.   0:33:15.8 William Scherkenbach: Koyanagi, yes, it was.   0:33:17.8 Andrew Stotz: And it was in 1950 and he had a series of lectures that he did a series of times. But it's interesting that, you know, that seemed like it should have catapulted him, but then to go to where you met him in 1972 and all that, he still hadn't really made his impact in America. And that's, to me, that's a little bit interesting.   0:33:44.4 William Scherkenbach: Yeah, and quite, my take, I mean, you could tell even in '72 and '3 in classes, he was very frustrated that he wasn't being listened to. I mean, he had, his business was expert testimony in statistical design of surveys. He did road truck, truck transport studies to be able to help the interstate commerce commission. And made periodic trips back to Japan, well known in Japan, but frustrated that no one really knew about him or wasn't listening to him in the US. And that was, I mean, for years, that was my, my aim. And that is to help him be known for turning America around, not just Japan. But it's usually difficult. I mean, we did a great job at Ford and GM and a bunch of companies, but it's all dissipated.   0:35:25.9 Andrew Stotz: It's interesting because it's not like he just went as a guest and gave a couple of guest lectures. He did about 35 lectures in 1950. About 28 or almost 30 of them were to engineers and technical staff. And then about seven of them were to top level executives. And, you know, one of the quotes he said at the time from those lectures was, "the problem is at the top, quality is made in the boardroom." So just going back, that's 1950, then you meet him in 1970, then in '72, then you start to build this relationship. You've talked about Booz Allen Hamilton. Tell us more about how it progressed into working more with him, in particular Ford and that thing that started in, let's say, 1981 with Ford.   0:36:22.0 William Scherkenbach: Well, again, he was very enthusiastic about Ford because Peterson was very receptive to this, his approach. And again, it's, I think the British philosopher Johnson said, "there's nothing like the prospect of being hung in the morning to heighten a man's senses." So he, Ford had lost a couple billion bucks. They hadn't cashed in like Chrysler. GM lost a bunch too, but that, and Japan had lost a war. So does it take a significant emotional, logical, or physical event? For some folks it does. So he was very encouraged about what he was seeing at Ford. And he had recommended that Ford hire someone to be there full time to coordinate, manage, if you will. And I was one of the people he recommended and I was the one that Ford hired. So I came in as Director of Statistical Methods and Process Improvement. And they set it up outside, as Deming said, they set it up outside the quality. Larry Moore was the Director of Quality and I was Director of Statistical Methods. And that's the way it was set up.   0:38:08.0 Andrew Stotz: Were you surprised when you received that call? How did you feel when you got that call to say, "Why don't you go over there and do this job at Ford?"   0:38:18.6 William Scherkenbach: Oh, extremely, extremely happy. Yeah. Yeah.   0:38:23.1 Andrew Stotz: And so did you, did you move to Michigan or what did you do?   0:38:27.7 Andrew Stotz: I'm sorry?   0:38:29.4 Andrew Stotz: Did you move or what happened next as you took that job?   0:38:32.0 William Scherkenbach: Oh yeah, we were living in Columbia. We moved the family to the Detroit area and ended up getting a house in Northville, which is a Northwest suburb of Detroit.   0:38:49.9 Andrew Stotz: And how long were you at Ford?   0:38:53.8 William Scherkenbach: About five and a half years. And I left Ford because Deming thought that GM needed my help. Things were going well. I mean, had a great, great bunch of associates, Pete Chessa, Ed Baker, Narendra Sheth, and a bunch of, a bunch of other folks. Ed Baker took the directorship when I left. That was my, well, I recommended a number of them, but yeah, he followed on. Deming thought that there was a good organization set up. And me being a glutton for punishment went to, well, not really. A bunch of great, great people in GM, but it's, they were, each of the general managers managed a billion dollar business and a lot of, difficult to get the silos to communicate. And it really, there was not much cooperation, a lot of backstabbing.   0:40:25.0 Andrew Stotz: And how did Dr. Deming take this project on? And what was the relationship between him and, you know, let's say Donald Peterson, who was the running the company and all the people that he had involved, like yourself, and you mentioned about Ed Baker and other people, I guess, Sandy Munro and others that were there. And just curious, and Larry Moore, how did he approach that? That's a huge organization and he's coming in right at the top. What was his approach to handling that?   0:41:02.1 S2  Well, my approach was based on his recommendation that the Director of Statistical Methods should report directly to the president or the chairman, the president typically. And so based on that, I figured that what I would, how we would organize the office, my associates would each be assigned to a key vice president to be their alter ego. So we did it in a, on a divisional level. And that worked, I think, very well. The difficulty was trying to match personalities and expertise to the particular vice president. Ed Baker had very good relations with the Latin American organization, and, and he and Harry Hannett, Harold Hannett helped a lot in developing administrative applications as well. And so we sort of came up with a matrix of organization and discipline. We needed someone for finance and engineering and manufacturing, supply chain, and was able to matrix the office associates in to be able to be on site with those people to get stuff, to get stuff done.   0:43:09.5 Andrew Stotz: And what was your message at that time, and what was Dr. Deming's message? Because as we know, his message has come together very strongly after that. But at that point, it's not like he had the 14 Points that he could give them Out of the Crisis or you could give them your books that you had done. So what was like the guiding philosophy or the main things that you guys were trying to get across?   0:43:35.9 William Scherkenbach: Well, I mean, he had given in, I think, Quality, Productivity, Competitive Position back in the late '70s, and he was doing it through George Washington University, even though Myron Tribus at MIT published it. But it was a series of lectures, and he didn't really, even in the later 70s, didn't have the, the, the 14 Points. And so those came a couple years later, his thinking through, and Profound Knowledge didn't come until much later over a number of discussions of folks. But the, I mean, the key, I mean, my opinion of why it all dropped out is we dropped the ball in not working with the board. And at Ford, we didn't, weren't able to influence the Ford family. And so Peterson retires and Red Poling, a finance guy, steps in and, and everything slowly disintegrates. At least not disintegrates, well, yes. I mean, what was important under Peterson was different. But that happens in any company. A new CEO comes on board or is elected, and they've got their priorities based, as Deming would say, on their evaluation system. What's their, how are they compensated?   0:45:46.8 William Scherkenbach: And so we just didn't spend the time there nor at GM with how do you elect or select your next CEO? And so smaller companies have a better, I would think, well, I don't know. I would imagine smaller companies have a better time of that, especially closely held and family held companies. You could, if you can reach the family, you should be able to get some continuity there.   0:46:23.5 Andrew Stotz: So Donald Peterson stepped down early 1995. And when did you guys make or when did you make your transition from Ford to GM?   0:46:38.5 William Scherkenbach: '88.   0:46:39.6 Andrew Stotz: Okay, so you continued at Ford.   0:46:42.1 William Scherkenbach: The end of '88, yeah, and I left GM in '93, the year Dr. Deming died later. But I had left in, in, well, in order to help him better.   0:47:07.8 Andrew Stotz: And let's now talk about the transition over to General Motors that you made. And where did that come from? Was it Dr. Deming that was recommending it or someone from General Motors? Or what...   0:47:21.4 William Scherkenbach: Yeah, Deming spoke with them and spoke with me. And I was a willing worker to be able to go where he thought I could be most helpful.   0:47:41.9 Andrew Stotz: And was he exasperated or frustrated that for the changes that happened in '95 when Peterson stepped down, he started to see the writing on the wall? Or was he still hopeful?   0:47:55.4 William Scherkenbach: No, Deming died in '93, so he didn't see any of that.   0:47:58.9 Andrew Stotz: No, no, what I mean is when Peterson stepped down, it was about '85. And then you remain at Ford until '88.   0:48:08.0 William Scherkenbach: No, Peterson didn't step down in '85. I mean, he was still there when I left.   0:48:14.0 Andrew Stotz: So he was still chairman at the time.   0:48:17.3 William Scherkenbach: Yeah.   0:48:17.6 Andrew Stotz: Maybe I'm meaning he stepped down from president. So my mistake on that.   0:48:20.3 William Scherkenbach: Oh, but he was there.   0:48:24.3 Andrew Stotz: So when did it start...   0:48:25.9 William Scherkenbach: True. I mean, true, he was still there when Deming had died.   0:48:31.3 Andrew Stotz: Yeah, okay. So did the whole team leave Ford and go to GM or was it just you that went?   0:48:39.1 William Scherkenbach: Oh, just me. Just me.   0:48:42.8 Andrew Stotz: Okay. And then.   0:48:44.0 William Scherkenbach: Yeah, because we had set up something that Deming was very pleased with. And so they were, everyone was working together and helping one another.   0:48:59.5 Andrew Stotz: Okay. So then you went to General Motors. What did you do different? What was different in your role? What did you learn from Ford that you now brought to GM? What went right? What went wrong? What was your experience with GM at that time?   0:49:16.5 William Scherkenbach: Well, I've got a, let's see. Remember Bill Hoagland was the person, Hoagland managed Pontiac when Deming helped Pontiac and Ron Moen was involved in the Pontiac. But Bill Hoagland was in one of the reorganizations at GM was head of, he was group, group vice president for Buick, Oldsmobile, Cadillac. And so I went over and directly reported to him and each of the, I mean, Wendy Coles was in, Gypsy Rainey, although Gypsy was temporary, worked for powertrain and Pontiac and still, but powertrain was where a lot of the expertise was and emphasis was, and then Buick and Cadillac and so, and Oldsmobile. So we, and in addition to that, General Motors had a corporate-wide effort in cooperation with the UAW called the Quality Network. And I was appointed a member of that, of that and, and helped them a lot and as well as the corporate quality office, but focused on Buick, Oldsmobile, Cadillac.   0:51:18.6 Andrew Stotz: And then tell us about what was your next step in your own personal journey? And then let's now get into how you got more involved with Deming and his teachings and the like.   0:51:32.8 William Scherkenbach: Well, I mean, he would be at GM two and three days a month, and then every quarter he'd be here for, just like Ford, for a four-day seminar. And while at Ford and at GM, I took uh vacation to help him as he gave seminars and met people throughout the world. Even when he was probably 84, 85, I can remember, well, one of the, he always, not always, but he would schedule seminars in England over the Fourth of July because the English don't celebrate that, although he said perhaps they should, but right after the Ascot races. And so he would do four-day seminars. And on one case, we had one series of weeks, the week before Fourth of July, we did a four-day seminar in the US and then went to London to do another four-day seminar. And he went to South Africa for the next four-day seminar with Heero Hacquebord. I didn't go, but I went down to Brazil and I was dragging with that, with that schedule. So he was able to relish and enjoy the helping others. I mean, enjoy triggers a memory. We were at helping powertrain and Gypsy was there, Dr. Gypsy Rainey.    0:53:59.2 William Scherkenbach: And she, we were talking and goofing around and he started being cross at us. And Gypsy said, "Well, aren't we supposed to be having fun?" And Deming said, "I'm having fun." "You guys straighten out." Enjoy, enjoy, enjoy, yeah.   0:54:40.6 Andrew Stotz: And for the typical person to imagine a man at the age of 80, 85, traveling around the world. And it's not like you're traveling on vacation in London, you're walking into a room full of people, your energy is up, you're going and it's not like he's giving a keynote speech for an hour, give us a picture of his energy.   0:55:09.5 William Scherkenbach: And over in London, it was brutal because the hotel, I forget what hotel we're in. When he started there, I think it was Dr. Bernard that he wanted to help. And Bernard wasn't available. So he recommended Henry Neave. And so Henry was a good student, a quick learner. So he helped on a few of them. And I can still remember, I mean, the air, it was 4th of July in London and the humidity was there. There's no air conditioning in the hotel. I could remember Henry, please forgive me, but Henry is sitting in his doorway, sitting on a trash can, doing some notes in his skivvies. And it was hot and humid and awful. But so it reminded Deming a lot of the lectures in Japan in 1950, where he was sweating by 8 AM in the morning. So, yeah.   0:56:30.6 Andrew Stotz: What was it that kept him going? Why was he doing this?   0:56:39.5 William Scherkenbach: I think he, again, I don't know. I never asked him that. He was very, to me, he was on a mission. He wanted to be able to help people live better, okay, and take joy in what they do. And so he was, and I think that was the driving thing. And as long as he had the stamina, he was, he was in, in, in heaven.   0:57:21.1 Andrew Stotz: So let's keep progressing now, and let's move forward towards the latter part of Dr. Deming's life, where we're talking about 1990, 1988, 1990, 1992. What changed in your relationship and your involvement with what he was doing, and what changes did you see in the way he was talking about? You had observed him back in 1972, so here he is in 1990, a very, very different man in some ways, but very similar. How did you observe that?   0:57:56.6 William Scherkenbach: Well, toward the end, it was, I mean, it was, it was not, not pleasant to see him up there with oxygen up his nose, and it just, there had to have been a better way. But Nancy Mann was running those seminars, and they did their best to make life comfortable, but there had to have been a better way to, but I don't know what it was. He obviously wanted to continue to do it, and he had help doing it, but I don't know how effective the last year of seminars were.   0:59:01.1 Andrew Stotz: Well, I mean, I would say in some ways they were very effective, because I attended in 1990 and 1992, and I even took a picture, and I had a picture, and in the background of the picture of him is a nurse, and for me, I just was blown away and knocked out. And I think that one of the things for the listeners and the viewers is to ask yourself, we're all busy doing our work, and we're doing a lot of activities, and we're accomplishing things, but for what purpose, for what mission? And I think that that's what I gained from him is that because he had a mission to help, as you said, make the world a better place, make people have a better life in their job, and help people wake up, that mission really drove him.   0:59:57.8 William Scherkenbach: Yeah, and it, it really did. But for me personally, it was just not pleasant to see him suffering.    1:00:09.6 Andrew Stotz: And was he in pain? Was he just exhausted? What was it like behind the scenes when he'd come off stage and take a break?   1:00:18.7 William Scherkenbach: Yeah, yeah.   1:00:20.8 Andrew Stotz: And would he take naps or?   1:00:23.2 William Scherkenbach: In the early days, we'd go to, well, at Ford and GM, we would go out to dinner just about every night and talk and enjoy the conversation. We'd, my wife Mary Ellen, went many, many times. He enjoyed Northville, some of the restaurants there, and enjoyed the Deming martinis after the meetings at the Cosmos Club. So very, very much he enjoyed that, that time off the podium. So, but he couldn't do that in the, in the later years.   1:01:28.7 Andrew Stotz: And let's now try to understand the progression as you progress away from General Motors and did other things. How did your career progress in those years until when you retired or to where you are now? Maybe give us a picture of that.   1:01:51.4 William Scherkenbach: I tried to help. I've developed my view on how to operationalize change, worked for, was vice president of a company in Taiwan, spent a couple of, and before that had helped Dell, and would spend probably ending up a couple of years in PRC and Taiwan, and growing and learning to learn, in my opinion, there's too much generalization of, well, Asians or Chinese or whatever. There are many, many subgroups, and so change has to be bespoke. What will work for one person won't work for another. For instance, trying to talk to a number of Chinese executives saying, drive out fear, and they will, oh, there's no fear here. It's respect. And so, yeah. But that was their sincere belief that what they were doing wasn't instilling fear. But it broadened my perspective on what to do. And then probably 10 years ago, my wife started to come down with Alzheimer's, and while we lived in Austin, Texas, and that I've spent, she died three years ago, but that was pretty much all-consuming. That's where I focused. And now it's been three years. I'm looking, and I'm a year younger than Deming when he started, although he was 79 when he was interviewed for the 1980 White Paper.   1:04:36.3 William Scherkenbach: So I'm in my 80th year. So, and I'm feeling good, and I also would like to help people.   1:04:46.6 Andrew Stotz: And I've noticed on your LinkedIn, you've started bringing out interesting papers and transcripts and so many different things that you've been coming out. What is your goal? What is your mission?   1:05:02.3 William Scherkenbach: Well, I also would like to take the next step and contribute to help the improvement, not just the US, but any organization that shows they're serious for wanting to, wanting to improve. On the hope, and again, it's hope, as Deming said, that to be able to light a few bonfires that would turn into prairie fires that might consume more and more companies. And so you've got to light the match somewhere. And I just don't know. Again, I've been out of it for a number of years, but I just don't know. I know there is no big company besides, well, but even Toyota. I can remember Deming and I were in California and had dinner. Toyoda-san and his wife invited Deming and me to a dinner. And just, I was blown away with what he understood responsibilities were. I don't know, although I do have a Toyota Prius plug-in, which is perfect because I'm getting 99 miles a gallon because during my, doing shopping and whatever here in Pensacola, I never use gas. It goes 50 miles without needing to plug in.   1:07:00.6 William Scherkenbach: And so I do my stuff. But when I drive to Texas or Michigan, Michigan mostly to see the family, it's there. But all over, it's a wonderful vehicle. So maybe they're the only company in the world that, but I don't know. I haven't sat down with their executive.   1:07:26.4 Andrew Stotz: And behind me, I have two of your books, and I just want to talk briefly about them and give some advice for people. The first one is The Deming Route to Quality and Productivity: Roadmaps and Roadblocks, and the second one is Deming's Road to Continual Improvement. Maybe you could just give some context of someone who's not read these books and they're new to the philosophy and all that. How do these books, how can they help them?   1:07:58.8 William Scherkenbach: Well, the first book, Deming asked me to write in, I think it was '84. And I don't remember the first edition, but it might be '85, we got it out. But he asked me to write it, and because he thought I would, I could reach a different audience, and he liked it so much, they handed it out in a number of his seminars for a number of years. So.   1:08:40.7 Andrew Stotz: And there's my original version of it. I'm holding up my...    1:08:47.0 William Scherkenbach: Yeah, that's a later version.   1:08:49.7 Andrew Stotz: And it says the first printing was '86, I think it said, and then I got a 1991 version, which maybe I got it at one of the, I'm sure I got it at one of the seminars, and I've had it, and I've got marks on it and all that. And Deming on the back of it said, "this book will supplement and enhance my own works in teaching. Mr. Scherkenbach's masterful understanding of a system, of a process, of a stable system, and of an unstable system are obvious and effective in his work as well as in his teaching." And I know that on Deming's Road to Continual Improvement, you do a good amount of discussion at the beginning about the difference between a process and a system to try to help people understand those types of things. How should a reader, where should they start?   1:09:42.8 William Scherkenbach: Well, not with chapter six, as in CI Lewis, but well, I don't know what... I don't remember what chapter six is. As I said, the first book, and a lot of people after that did it, is essentially not regurgitating, but saying in a little bit different words about Deming's 14 Points. What I did on the first book is arrange them in the order that I think, and groupings that I think the 14 Points could be understood better. The second book was, the first half was reviewing the Deming philosophy, and the second half is how you would go about and get it done. And that's where the physiological, emotional, and all of my studies on operationalizing anything.   1:10:55.4 Andrew Stotz: And in chapter three on page 98, you talk about physical barriers, and you talk about physical, logical, emotional. You mentioned a little bit of that when you talked about the different gurus out there in quality, but this was a good quote. It says, Dr. Deming writes about the golfer who cannot improve his game because he's already in the state of statistical control. He points out that you have only one chance to train a person. Someone whose skill level is in statistical control will find great difficulty improving his skills.   1:11:32.1 William Scherkenbach: Yeah. Well, yeah, I mean, well, you're old enough to know the Fosbury Flop. I mean, for all high jumpers did the straddle in jumping and made some great records, but many of them had difficulty converting their straddle to the Fosbury Flop to go over backwards head first. And that's what got you better performance. So anything, whether it's golf or any skill, if you've got to change somehow, you've got to be able to change the system, which is whether you're in production or whether it's a skill. If you're in control, that's your opportunity to impact the system to get better.   1:12:40.3 Andrew Stotz: Yeah, and this was Dick Fosbury in 1968, Mexico City Olympics, where he basically went in and blew everybody away by going in and flipping over backwards when everybody else was straddling or scissors or something like that. And this is a great story.   1:12:57.0 William Scherkenbach: You can't do that.   [laughter]   1:12:58.8 Andrew Stotz: Yeah, and it's a great story of something on the outside. An outsider came in and changed the system rather than an existing person within it. And that made me think about when you talked about Ford and having an outsider helping in the different departments. You know, what extent does that reflect the way that we learn? You know, can we learn internally, or do we need outside advice and influence to make the big changes?   1:13:29.7 William Scherkenbach: Yeah. I mean, we had a swim coach, Higgins, at the Naval Academy, and he was known for, again, following in Olympic swimming. And I'm probably going to get the strokes wrong, but there was no such thing as a butterfly stroke. And he used it in swimming the breaststroke, and supposedly the only criteria was recovery had to be underwater with two hands. But I'm screwing up the story, I'm sure, but Higgins rewrote, rewrote the book by doing something a little bit different or drastically different.   1:14:25.4 Andrew Stotz: I'd like to wrap up this fascinating discovery, or journey of discovery of you and your relationship also with Dr. Deming. Let's wrap it up by talking about kind of your final memories of the last days of Dr. Deming and how you kind of put that all in context for your own life. And having this man come in your life and bring you into your life, I'm curious, towards the end of his life, how did you process his passing as well as his contribution to your life?   1:15:08.1 William Scherkenbach: That's, that's difficult and personal. I, he was a great mentor, a great friend, a great teacher, a great person, and with, on a mission with a name and impacted me. I was very, very lucky to be able to, when I look back on it, to recognize, to sign up for his courses, and then the next thing was writing that letter to the editor and fostering that relationship. Very, very, very difficult. But, I mean, he outlived a bunch of folks that he was greatly influenced by, and the mission continues.   1:16:34.1 Andrew Stotz: And if Dr. Deming was looking down from heaven and he saw that you're kind of reentering the fray after, you know, your struggles as you've described with your wife and the loss of your wife, what would he say to you now? What would he say as your teacher over all those years?   1:16:56.3 William Scherkenbach: Do your best.   1:16:59.0 Andrew Stotz: Yeah, wonderful.   1:17:01.4 William Scherkenbach: He knows, but he knows I know what to do. So, you need to know what to do and then to do the best. But I was, I mean, he was very, he received, and I forget the year, but he was at Ford and he got a call from Cel that his wife was not doing well. And so we, I immediately canceled everything and got him to the airport and he got to spend that last night with his wife. And he was very, very appreciative. So I'm sure he was helping, helping me deal with my wife.   1:17:56.4 Andrew Stotz: Yeah. Well, Bill, on behalf of everyone at the Deming Institute and myself personally, I want to thank you for this discussion and opening up you know, your journey with Dr. Deming. I feel like I understand Dr. Deming more, but I also understand you more. And I really appreciate that. And for the listeners out there, remember to go to Deming.org to continue your journey. And also let me give you, the listeners and viewers, the resources. First, we have Bill's book, which you can get online, The Deming Route to Quality and Productivity. We have Deming's Road to Continual Improvement, which Bill wrote. But I think even more importantly is go to his LinkedIn. He's on LinkedIn as William Scherkenbach and his tagline is helping individuals and organizations learn, have fun, and make a difference. So if you want to learn, have fun, and make a difference, send him a message. And I think you'll find that it's incredibly engaging. Are there any final words that you want to share with the listeners and the viewers?   1:19:08.9 William Scherkenbach: I appreciate your questions. In thinking about this interview, we barely scratched the surface. There are a ton of other stories, but we can save that for another time.   1:19:26.1 Andrew Stotz: Something tells me we're going to have some fun and continue to have fun in these discussions. So I really appreciate it and it's great to get to know you. Ladies and gentlemen.   1:19:36.7 William Scherkenbach: Thank you, Andrew.   1:19:37.7 Andrew Stotz: You're welcome. This is your host, Andrew Stotz, and I'm going to leave you with one of my favorite quotes from Dr. Deming, and that is that "people are entitled to joy in work."    

Bitcoin Magazine
Bitcoin, Stablecoins and America's Debt Endgame w/ Avik Roy | Bitcoin Politics Ep. 1

Bitcoin Magazine

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2025 57:24


Avik Roy joins Bitcoin Magazine Political Correspondent Frank Corva for a discussion on the passage of the GENIUS Act, the future of Bitcoin in Washington as well as the macroeconomic picture when it comes to U.S. Treasury issuance, stablecoins, and why he believes bitcoin may become the focal asset in years to come.He breaks down the implications of various U.S. debt default scenarios, programmable currency surveillance, and the central tension between free markets and central planning in the digital age.Avik is the Founder & CEO of the Foundation for Research on Equal Opportunity (FREOPP) and is also the President & CEO of the National Institute for Health Care Management. He is also a Senior Advisor at the Bitcoin Policy Institute and an incoming Board Member at STRIVE Asset Management.

Voices of VR Podcast – Designing for Virtual Reality
#1569: Family of Storytellers Creates an AR Memorial of Black Poet Nikki Giovanni with Epic Organic Garden Installation

Voices of VR Podcast – Designing for Virtual Reality

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2025 46:19


I spoke with Michèle Stephenson, Joe Brewster, & idris brewster about There Goes Nikki at Tribeca Immersive 2025. See more context in the rough transcript below. (Photo by Mikhail Mishin courtesy of Onassis ONX) Tribeca Immersive 2025 Selection #1567: Tribeca Immersive Curators on the 2025 Selection of Impact Projects Curated by Onassis ONX, Agog, & Tribeca #1569: Family of Storytellers Creates an AR Memorial of Black Poet Nikki Giovanni with Epic Organic Garden Installation #1570: "The Founders Pillars and The Power Loom" Uses AR to Recontextualize Wall Street History Through African Textiles and Myths #1571: "Uncharted VR" Explores the Spatialization of African Languages and Knowledge through Immersive Architecture and Adowa Dance #1572: "The Innocence of Unknowing" Uses Socratic Dialogue with AI & Video Essay to Deconstruct Root Cases of Gun Violence #1573: Muslim Futurist "New Maqam City" Invites Users to Play with Mystic Sufi Beats to Imagine States of Flourishing #1574: Part 1: Co-Creation with XR for Building Community with "A Father's Lullaby" (2023) #1575: Part 2: Co-Creation with XR for Building Community with "A Father's Lullaby" (2025) Boreal Dreams Scent Onassis ONX Summer Showcase & Other Interviews #1579: The Backstory of ONX Studios and the Onassis Foundation's Support for XR Art & Innovation #1580: "Neuro-Cinema: From Synapse to Montage" Explores Bioethics Moral Dilemmas & BCI-Controlled Editing & Robotics #1581: The Story Behind "The Orixa Project" Series of XR Experiences #1582: Shawn Taylor on Fandom for Social Change, Polychronic Time, Worldbuilding & Future Dreaming #1583: From XR Storytelling to Museum to Ice Cream to AI: Michaela Ternasky-Holland's Entry into Immersive #1584: White Paper on XR for Impact Campaign Activation for "On the Morning You Wake to the End of the World" #1585: Debating AI Project and a Curating Taiwanese LBE VR Exhibition at Museum of Moving Image #1586: Academic Research on Immersive Storytelling with Philippe Bedard, co-editor of "States of Immersion Across Media: Bodies, Techniques, Practices" book #1587: "Space-Time Adventure Tour" AR Guided Tour to NYC Central Park Monuments #1588: Excurio on Bringing their High-Throughput, XR LBE Theaters to North America #1589: Using VR to Paint Dreams for Active Imagination, Collaborative Dreamwork, and Symbolic Contemplation This is a listener-supported podcast through the Voices of VR Patreon. Music: Fatality

Voices of VR Podcast – Designing for Virtual Reality
#1584: White Paper on XR for Impact Campaign Activation for “On the Morning You Wake to the End of the World”

Voices of VR Podcast – Designing for Virtual Reality

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2025 26:20


I spoke to Michaela Ternasky-Holland at the New Images Festival 2023 about the white paper titled "Deepening Engagement and Learning Impact through Virtual Reality Activations: Case Study Project: On the Morning You Wake (to the End of the World." See more context in the rough transcript below. This is a listener-supported podcast through the Voices of VR Patreon. Music: Fatality

Specifically for Seniors
Episode 104: Memory Lane TV, calming videos for dementia management, with Alban Maino

Specifically for Seniors

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2025 43:20


I don't usually invite a sponsor on to a podcast, but today I'm going to do just that because I think it's important for you to hear what my guest has to say about his product.Regular listeners to Specifically for Seniors realize that I have accepted a sponsor for the podcast and, hopefully, it will help keep us on the air. I've held off because I wanted to make sure that any product or service that we recommended was validated by clinical research. Memory Lane TV was that product.I know many of you are saying “Yuh, we've heard that before” - a commercial is just that a commercial. So I'm going to take a chance and let you judge for yourself.Our guest on the podcast today is Alban Maino, founder and CEO of Memory Lane TV.    Alban spent ten years developing something that traditional television simply couldn't provide— clinically-validated, multi-sensory content that's showing remarkable results in reducing anxiety and improving quality of life for both individuals with dementia and their caregivers and we're going to give you a chance to validate that for yourself by providing access to research documentation and the organizations that have worked to prove it. This podcast was more important than I had imagined. Alban's approach to the betterment of the lives of both those suffering with dementia and their caregivers is admirable. His ultimate goal is to be able to offer his video content to all that need it free of charge is obvious. He pleaded for the help of a philanthropist or organization willing to help reaching that goal especially since the current administration has negated the grants under which he and his company have been working. For now, however, the subscription fee will help keep the program in operation.Please contact me directly from the contact section of this podcast from our web site specificallyforseniors.com and I will put you in touch directly with him.For the benefit of those who would like to share in the research that validates his approach there is a White Paper entitled “Sensory Stimulation as a Means of Managing Behavioral and Psychological Symptoms of Dementia” that Alban will make available upon request. Drop me a note from the contact section of this podcast from our web site specificallyforseniors.com and I will send you his email address.ARTICLEhttps://www.linkedin.com/posts/albanmaino_memory-care-innovation-award-winner-alban-activity-7325190241588236288-uC7A?utm_source=share&utm_medium=member_desktop&rcm=ACoAABMrH0QByj043fv_Hrpv7l0OYIv07Xhl1scSOCIAL MEDIATwitter: https://x.com/forgetdementiaInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/memorylanetv/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC031n0ORReeIUIBchB0AccQLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/albanmaino/Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/memorylanenetwork/Tiktok: https://www.tiktok.com/@memorylanetvIMDB: https://www.imdb.com/name/nm6480753/MEMORY LANE INFORMATIONWeb Pagehttps://www.memory-lane.tvFor Individuals, Family and Caregivershttps://bit.ly/4mtTG2hThere is a 30% discount for annual subscriptions, please use code SFORSENIORS in the promo box.For Professional Care Facilitieshttps://www.memory-lane.tv/contact-adult-carePlease place "Specifically for Seniors" in the Ambassador LineResearchhttps://www.memory-lane.tv/research

The John Batchelor Show
PREVIEW: JAPAN SELF-DEFENSE FORCE: Colleague Grant Newsham comments on the imminent Japan defense white paper that is likely to disappoint. More to come.

The John Batchelor Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 10, 2025 1:09


PREVIEW: JAPAN SELF-DEFENSE FORCE: Colleague Grant Newsham comments on the imminent Japan defense white paper that is likely to disappoint. More to come. 1920S TOKYO

Are they 18 yet?â„¢
Executive functioning assessment, late ADHD diagnosis, and proactive support (with Dr. A. Jordan Wright)

Are they 18 yet?â„¢

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2025 56:54


In this eye-opening episode, I sit down with Dr. A. Jordan Wright, psychologist who brings both professional insight and lived experience to the conversation—having been diagnosed with ADHD in college. Together, we explore the often-overlooked stories of kids who manage to compensate for ADHD symptoms well into adolescence or adulthood, only to receive a diagnosis later in life.We also dive into why early educational settings are crucial for embedding executive functioning supports and how these skills can be proactively taught rather than reactively addressed. Our guest offers a compelling argument for why executive functioning should be considered the new social-emotional learning—essential, foundational, and deeply tied to lifelong success.We also spend a good portion of the episode discussing best practices for assessing executive functioning in a way that is robust and sensitive to diverse learning needs—moving to deeper understanding.Topics Covered:✅ Being diagnosed with ADHD in college and why high-performing kids with ADHD are often missed✅ The case for embedding executive functioning support into early education✅ Executive functioning as the new SEL: What educators need to know✅ Best practices for executive functioning assessment, including surveys, non-standardized methods, and optimal functioning measures. Dr. A. Jordan Wright is the Chief Clinical Officer at Parallel Learning and leading clinical psychologist who specializes in psychological assessment (including learning disabilities and ADHD) and therapy. Dr. Jordan received his Ph.D. from Columbia University. He is on faculty at New York University, where he leads the Clinical/Counseling Psychology PhD program, training doctoral students in psychological assessment and counseling, and he founded and runs the Center for Counseling and Community Wellbeing, the low-fee community mental health training clinic at NYU.Dr. Jordan has authored multiple widely-used books on psychological assessment, including Conducting Psychological Assessment: A Guide for Practitioners (2nd ed.; Wiley, 2020); Essentials of Psychological Tele-Assessment (with Susie Raiford; Wiley, 2021); Essentials of Psychological Assessment Supervision (Wiley, 2019); and, with Gary Groth-Marnat, the sixth edition of the Handbook of Psychological Assessment (Wiley, 2016), the most widely used text in graduate training on assessment. His most recent book is Essentials of Culture in Psychological Assessment (Wiley, 2024), which focuses on areas of diversity, culture, privilege, and oppression in how we evaluate and understand individuals.You can learn more about Parallel Learning's comprehensive services for providers on their website here: https://www.parallellearning.com/You can find Dr. Jordan's free White Papers from Parallel Learning on executive functioning assessment, self-care for clinicians, telehealth best practices, plus much more here: https://www.parallellearning.com/white-papersIf you're a clinician looking for new career opportunities, you can take a look at Parallel Learning's “Careers” page here: https://www.parallellearning.com/careersIn this episode, I mentioned “The School Leader's Guide to Executive Functioning Support”, a 7-day course to help school leaders launch their executive functioning implementation plan. You can learn more about the course here : https://drkarenspeech.lpages.co/school-leaders-guide-to-executive-functioning-support/ We're thrilled to be sponsored by IXL. IXL's comprehensive teaching and learning platform for math, language arts, science, and social studies is accelerating achievement in 95 of the top 100 U.S. school districts. Loved by teachers and backed by independent research from Johns Hopkins University, IXL can help you do the following and more:Simplify and streamline technologySave teachers' timeReliably meet Tier 1 standardsImprove student performance on state assessments

Eversheds Sutherland – Legal Insights (audio)
UK Immigration: Government White Paper Special

Eversheds Sutherland – Legal Insights (audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 27, 2025 15:42


Listen to our Government White Paper Special podcast

Friday Night Comedy from BBC Radio 4
The News Quiz: Ep 5. An Island of Strangers

Friday Night Comedy from BBC Radio 4

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2025 28:37


Andy Zaltzman is joined by Alasdair Beckett-King, Sara Barron, Daliso Chaponda and ITV Deputy Political Editor Anushka Asthana. Discussion points include this week's immigration White Paper, tighter controls on international students looking for gainful employment, the elusive definition of a 'skilled job', chimpanzees utility in medical emergencies, and the returns policy on a returns hub.Written by Andy Zaltzman.With additional material by: Samira Banks, Catherine Brinkworth, and Cody Dahler. Producer: Rajiv Karia Executive Producer: Pete Strauss Production Coordinator: Jodie Charman Sound Editor: Marc WillcoxA BBC Studios Audio Production for Radio 4.

Remarkable Results Radio Podcast
Gamification and Engagement: Innovative Tools to Retain Top Talent [RR 1039]

Remarkable Results Radio Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2025 28:51


Thanks to our Partners, NAPA Auto Care and NAPA TRACS  The episode explores key strategies for improving technician retention in the automotive industry, focusing on work-life balance, continuous education, open communication, and positive workplace culture. David Boyes highlights the Today's Class app, which uses short, gamified, daily learning for technicians and service advisors to boost engagement. He also discusses his blog, An Automotive Shop Owner's Roadmap to Technician Retention, which outlines a six-step approach to retention, emphasizing culture, communication, and career development. David Boyes, President of ‘Today's Class”  An online learning organization that has been supporting the automotive industry for more than 20 years. David's previous episodes HERE Show Notes Watch Full Video Episode Optimize training with Today's Class: In just 5 minutes daily, boost knowledge retention and improve team performance. Find Today's Class on the web at https://www.todaysclass.com/ https://www.todaysclass.com/blog/tips-recruit-talent-tech-shortage  Introduction and Welcome (00:00:00) Engagement with Technicians (00:01:55) Gamification in Training (00:02:04) Daily Engagement Process (00:02:52) Continuous Education Importance (00:03:38) White Paper on Technician Retention (00:04:37) Overview of Retention Strategy Steps (00:04:47) Impact of Employee Turnover (00:07:10) Cultural Challenges in Retention (00:08:19) Sharing Success Stories (00:09:31) Building a Career Path (00:14:33) Developing a Retention Strategy (00:15:06) Unlimited PTO Discussion (00:16:11) Work-Life Balance Challenges (00:17:01) Importance of Training (00:18:05) Measuring Success (00:19:10) Seasonality in Business (00:20:25) Communication via the App (00:24:45) Company Evolution (00:24:04) Thanks to our Partners, NAPA Auto Care, NAPA TRACS and Automotive Management Network Learn more about NAPA Auto Care and the benefits of being part of the NAPA family by visiting https://www.napaonline.com/en/auto-care NAPA TRACS will move your shop into the SMS fast lane with onsite training and six days a week of support and local representation. Find NAPA TRACS on the Web at http://napatracs.com/ Connect with the Podcast: -Follow on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/RemarkableResultsRadioPodcast/ -Join Our Virtual Toastmasters Club:

AMERICA OUT LOUD PODCAST NETWORK
CCP's white paper can’t erase its accountability for releasing COVID-19 bioweapon

AMERICA OUT LOUD PODCAST NETWORK

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2025 57:00


Dr. Li-Meng Yan w/ The Voice of Dr. Yan – Beneath the noise lies the real core: COVID-19 was not a natural accident nor a lab leak but a deliberate release of a weaponized low-fatality virus developed by the CCP. Though the high transmissibility was underestimated in the lab, and the Wuhan outbreak was a result of being “out of control,” the pandemic was designed for strategic disruption on a global scale...