Podcasts about Ziti

Type of pasta

  • 84PODCASTS
  • 110EPISODES
  • 43mAVG DURATION
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Ziti

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Best podcasts about Ziti

Latest podcast episodes about Ziti

allora . rencontres italiennes inspirantes
#17 bis - Les inspirations italiennes de Carla Ferrari

allora . rencontres italiennes inspirantes

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2024 17:48


Dans cet épisode, la cheffe et pizzaiola Carla Ferrari continue à nous distiller ses inspirations culturelles italiennes :Le péché mignon de la Cheffe ce sont les Ziti alla Genovese, ces pâtes très longues qui se cassent à la main, cuisinées avec un ragoût d'oignons et de viande !Ses traditions culinaires « di Natale » : le plateau de fruits de mer « alla francese », mais aussi la minestra maritata : une soupe aux choux de mariage divine, qui se savoure aussi durant les fêtes !Le Chef italien dont elle admire la cuisine est Enrico Crippa dont elle a eu la chance de découvrir son univers gastronomique dans son restaurant « Piazza Duomo » à Alba (Trois étoiles au Guide Michelin). Elle recommande de vivre l'expérience du menu « Carrousel » !Les livres qui racontent son Italie : La saga d'Elena Ferrante « L'amie prodigieuse » qui fête les 10 ans de sa sortie en France cette année, et « L'Artusi », l'abécédaire de la cuisine italienne !Le film qui dépeint l'Italie avec le plus de vérité : « C'è ancora domani » de Paola Cortellesi (2023) sur l'instauration du droit de vote des femmes en Italie en 1946.Les comptes Instagram qui illustrent le mieux l'art de vivre à l'italienne : « Il y en a deux que j'adore particulièrement : @italysegreta & @vita________lenta ! Ce sont des vrais moments de vie qui ont été captés avec un œil poétique et artistique. »Les personnalités qui seraient les prochains invités idéaux du podcast : Le chef Simone Tondo du restaurant Racines ou la productrice d'huile d'olive « Le Amantine », Anna Marina Gioacchini.Conçu, réalisé et présenté par Claire PlantinetMontage Générique : François PraudMusique : Happy Clapping Cinematic Score / PaBlikMM / Envato ElementsCréation visuelle : Thomas JouffritPodcast hébergé par Ausha.· Archives épisode :© Extraits Interview Enrico Crippa par S.Pellegrino & Acqua Panna, extrait morceau « Les Quatre Saisons » de Vivaldi -1er mouvement « Le Printemps » (revisité par Max Richter), Film « C'è ancora domani » de Paola Cortellesi (Wildside; Vision Distribution), Morceau « Nella città » BO du film « C'è ancora domani », Morceau « A Summer Place » de Percy Faith & son orchestre.· Contattami, Scrivimi !Retrouvez allora sur Instagram @allora.lepodcast & Facebook @alloralepodcast !Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

The Break Room
Don't Touch That Ziti

The Break Room

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2024 28:42


The Break Room (THURSDAY 12/12/24) 9am Hour 1) It's pretty rare that Tommy can shock his coworkers with what comes out of his mouth but neither Duffy nor Kimmy could believe he volunteered himself to do THIS at his Christmas dinner. 2) Is it finally time for the NFL to make this move?

Mangia
Ziti with Bacon, Arugula, and Tomatoes

Mangia

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2024 2:37


Bacon, lettuce, and tomato is a renowned combination and works every bit as well with pasta as it does between two slices of bread. The lettuce of choice here is definitely arugula. It adds just the right pepperiness and bite. This dish is perfect for a large gathering, and it is easy to make.

Mangia
Ziti with Grilled Zucchini and Red Peppers and Aged Goat Cheese

Mangia

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2024 3:13


There are Greek influences at work here namely, the goat cheese and mint. This salad is filled with flavor and color and is very easy to like. It goes beautifully with any roast meat, especially butterflied marinated lamb on the grill. If you cannot find aged goat cheese, substitute finely chopped ricotta salata. 

Beanzzz & Rice
Bad luck, Omens, and Superstitions -Talking society

Beanzzz & Rice

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2024 77:16


Welcome to "Talking Society" Hosted by Ziti along with Jos, and Jose. In todays episode we discuss Dreams, Fears, Omens, Legends, Myths, Rituals, and superstitions growing up. Thank you for Joining us, and we hope you Enjoy!

Red Line Radio
White Sox Dave Claims He Can Lock-Down Anyone In The Office 1v1

Red Line Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2024 59:10


On today's episode of The Mid Show, we get into Eddie winning MVP in The Dozen and the potential match up between Ziti and Team Chicago. We also get into the debate of Chicago vs New York in basketball, which leads to WSD saying he can guard anyone point guard sized and "lock them down". To which will be put to the test tomorrow 6/12 11am CST.You can find every episode of this show on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or YouTube. Prime Members can listen ad-free on Amazon Music. For more, visit barstool.link/redlineradio

Beanzzz & Rice
Adapting to new Environments as Children

Beanzzz & Rice

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2024 77:31


Welcome to "Talking Society" Hosted by Ziti along with Jos, and Jose. In todays episode we discuss Developing as children, reacting to new environments, and how childhood moments have an everlasting impact in our lives. Thank you for Joining us, and we hope you Enjoy!

Beanzzz & Rice
Do you believe in love at first sight? Managing relationships

Beanzzz & Rice

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2024 84:11


Welcome to "Talking Society" Hosted by Ziti along with Jos, and Jose. In todays episode we debate how love works, at different stages of life, developing relationships, modern dating, and loving family and children. Thank you for Joining us, and we hope you Enjoy!

Boomer & Gio
Boomer Celebrates Tools; Giants Celebrate A Century; Next Year's Knicks; Minnesota Parties Lack Ziti & Heroes; Fan Producers/Hosts Who Don't Listen; Big Game 5 Tonight For Knicks (Hour 4)

Boomer & Gio

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2024 41:37


After the show, Boomer is going to the carpenters union on behalf of DeWalt. They are celebrating 100 years. The NY Giants are also celebrating 100 years this upcoming season. A caller is excited for the Knicks for NEXT year. But they play again tonight at the Garden. A caller in Minnesota said they don't have lasagna, ziti or 6 foot subs at parties. Jerry returns for his final update of the day, but first Gio is surprised at how many people wear shorts to work now. That used to not be allowed. Jerry starts with all of the sound from last night's Rangers loss at the Garden. Jerry has audio from WFAN hosts and the producers who are not listening. The Moment of The Day involves a female caller hitting on BT and asking him to a Knicks game while her husband is out of town. In the final segment of the hour, tonight is an important game five at the Garden tonight. Boomer thinks the Knicks were embarrassed in Indiana and will bounce back.

Outside Looking In w/ Bruce Negrin
Vanderbilt University cost 100,000 Boxes of Ziti

Outside Looking In w/ Bruce Negrin

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2024 39:23


The EV Craze, Chasing service at Chase Bank

Things That Are Blank
Peter Manolo

Things That Are Blank

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 26, 2024 19:11


Another week of TTAB, another consecutive appearance by our long-reigning champ. But will Peter Manolo be the one to take them down? Listen in and find out! CARD 1 CLUE: Not a day in the park CATEGORY: Terms Associated with Football ANSWERS: Sack, Tip, Yard, Muff, Huddle, Scramble, Fumble CARD 2 CLUE: Oh sweetie CATEGORY: Candy ANSWERS: Cotton, Lollipop, Jelly Beans, Caramel, Licorice, Toffee, Chocolate CARD 3 CLUE: Take your top off CATEGORY: Things Associated with Convertables ANSWERS: Car, Open, Down, Windy, Sun, Cloth, Hard CARD 4 CLUE: House of carbs CATEGORY: Types of Noodles ANSWERS: Spaghetti, Penne, Macaroni, Lasagna, Rigatoni, Ziti, Angel Hair CARD 5 CLUE: Uber branding CATEGORY: Everyday Words as Trademarks ANSWERS: Band-Aid, Teflon, Hula-hoop, Spam, Velcro, Rollerblade, Bubble Wrap CARD 6 CLUE: The last in a threesome CATEGORY: Things that POP ANSWERS: Corn, Rice Krispies, Weasel, Pimples, Quizzes, Wheelie, Ear Drums

Podcast: The Ride
The Bucca di Pepcast: Episode 99- Bake Ziti with Claire Jayne and Pethy Squires

Podcast: The Ride

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2024 38:07


Claire Jayne (Stylist) and Pethy Squires (Carrion bog) join me to discuss the classic dish Baked Ziti. And in a shocking development, find out which other items were extremely dry! A rare miss for Bucca di Peppo?! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Jean & Mike Do The New York Times Crossword
Saturday, February 17, 2024 - Here comes the ... ZITI?

Jean & Mike Do The New York Times Crossword

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2024 16:45


Spencer Leach and Jem Burch have produced a splendiferous Saturday crossword that entertained, educated, and ... whatever the opposite of enervated is, ah, yes, energized. The highlight of the grid was undoubtedly 60A, Finished, colloquially, DONEZO, although 61A, Drinks are on me!, BARMENU, definitely gave it a run for its money. There was much more to this puzzle, though, and we have all the deets inside.Show note imagery: Speed skater Johann OLAV Koss, winner of 4 Olympic golds and occasional Clark Kent stunt doubleContact Info:We love listener mail! Drop us a line, crosswordpodcast@icloud.com.Also, we're on FaceBook, so feel free to drop by there and strike up a conversation!

Angelo Cataldi And The Morning Team
Is Haason Reddick Done With The Eagles?

Angelo Cataldi And The Morning Team

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2024 17:35


Joe Giglio and Tucker Bagley (and Ziti) discuss Haason Reddick's contract situation and if the star edge rusher has played his last game as an Eagle. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Joe Giglio Show
Is Haason Reddick Done With The Eagles? | 'WIP Daily'

Joe Giglio Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2024 15:21


From 'WIP Daily' (subscribe here): Joe Giglio and Tucker Bagley (and Ziti) discuss Haason Reddick's contract situation and if the star edge rusher has played his last game as an Eagle. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

The Projection Booth Podcast
Special Report: Year End 2023

The Projection Booth Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2023 11:59 Very Popular


Mike looks back at the crazy number of episodes released this year and what to look forward to in 2024 including the Chasing Chevy Chase podcast, What, No F*cking Ziti - a look at the Sopranos, and content exclusive to our Patreon donors: a look at the James Bond series called Rankin on Bond. Get this and a lot more at https://www.patreon.com/projectionboothThanks for a wonderful year!Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/show/the-projection-booth-podcast_2/support.This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/5513239/advertisement

The Projection Booth Podcast
Special Report: Year End 2023

The Projection Booth Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2023 11:59


Mike looks back at the crazy number of episodes released this year and what to look forward to in 2024 including the Chasing Chevy Chase podcast, What, No F*cking Ziti - a look at the Sopranos, and content exclusive to our Patreon donors: a look at the James Bond series called Rankin on Bond. Get this and a lot more at https://www.patreon.com/projectionboothThanks for a wonderful year!Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/show/the-projection-booth-podcast_2/support.This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/5513239/advertisement

Catholic Momcast
Christmas Cast #267

Catholic Momcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2023 33:36


Join Lisa Hendey, Maria Johnson, Barb Szyszkiewicz, Allison Gingras, and Bayleigh Marquis for an early Christmas celebration at Catholic Momcast.     Join us for an early Christmas celebration! This week, we gather our entire Catholic Mom team for a joyful look at the Christmas season and our favorite family traditions. For a bonus, tune into the video recording of this conversation to catch our festive Christmas attire and “meet” us face to face.   Show Notes Links:  Christmas articles at Catholic Mom  Cookie Exchange: Mrs. Wagner's Cookies by Barb Szyszkiewicz  Cookie Exchange: Oreo Cookie Balls by Meg Matenaer  Cookie Exchange: Classic Italian Biscotti by Kate Taliaferro  Cookie Exchange: No-Bake Chocolate Peanut Butter Balls by Jen Frost      Progressive Dinner:  Progressive Dinner: New England Gluten-Free Grown-Up Cocktail by Allison Gingras  Progressive Dinner: Granma's Rolls by Barb Szyszkiewicz  Progressive Dinner: Creamy Roasted Mushroom Soup by Lisa Schmidt  Progressive Dinner: Tuna Macaroni Salad by Sally Hagarty  Progressive Dinner: Roasted Sweet Potatoes with Scallions by Barbara Stein  Progressive Dinner: Chicken, Broccoli and Ziti by Lauri Nienaber  Progressive Dinner: One-Bowl Chocolate Cake by Carolyn Astfalk 

NQLN the Podcast
No F'n Ziti?

NQLN the Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2023 61:11


This week Wes, Matt and Jeff talk Bucees, breakups, Patrick Mahomes and debate the best cheese.

Rocker Dog Podcast
Matt Byrne - Hatebreed

Rocker Dog Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 2023 30:36


This week we welcome another drummer with a ferocious and punishing style who parents two small dogs that are not on brand with his band's loud and aggressive musical style. It's Matt Byrne of Hatebreed and his pasta themed Shitzu's Ziti and his recent addition Ravioli. Hatebreed will be celebrating their 30 year anniversary as a band in 2024. For tour dates and info go to Hatebreed.com. Matt chose to shine a spotlight on the Duchess County SPCA, an independent, 501(c)(3) non-profit, no-kill shelter, whose mission is to shelter animals in need and secure permanent homes for adoptable pets. He also gave a shout out to ShamPooches Doggie Day Spa who provide a safe, low-stress environment where certified groomers give dogs premium baths, haircuts, mani-pedis and more. For pics and clips of this episode follow us on Instagram at @rockerdogpodcast

Kochbuch Check
#41 mit Domenico Gentile // "Pasta von Alfabeto bis Ziti" + "Cucina della Nonna"

Kochbuch Check

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2023 75:18


Il menù con molto amore: Unser Italien Speciale startet klassischer Weise mit Pasta zum primi piatti: "Pasta von Alfabeto bis Ziti", zum secondi wirds noch traditioneller: "Cucina della Nonna", der Abschluss wird launig mit Domenico Gentile! Buon appetito!

EBPL Podcast from the East Brunswick Public Library

Guest Host Josephine Duque Dominique shares some of the final stories from the 2023 "73 Words in the 732" competition. The Moth by Phyllis Francese A moth is trapped between the screen and glass of my patio door. It crawled in through some small hole. It flits about, landing on the glass and then the screen, not remembering how it got in. It flies from screen to glass, glass to screen casting its shadow on the drapes. Perhaps it will find its way out. Perhaps not. Inexperienced by Carol Smith The red and white sail catches the wind and the sunfish flies across Barnegat Bay. With my brother at the rudder, we're two kids having fun, learning something new. Time to turn. Quick, duck. Come about, come about, come about! Blast. In the bay. Hey brother, come back for me! El diablo by Donna Lee Golderg Magenta is a gentle dog. Because she's a fierce barker, Ilan nicknamed her El Diablo. On a recent walk, Magenta and Leah met him and Isabella and their dogs Ziti and Dahlia. Ilan was nervous; he didn't believe Magenta would play with their two dachshunds. Surprise! The doggy trio sniffed, played and walked together. “Amazing,” Ilan announced. ”Magenta needs a new nickname. She's no longer El Diablo. She is now Cachorrita, little puppy.” note: cachorrita is Spanish feminine for puppy.

EBPL Podcast from the East Brunswick Public Library
73 Words in the 732: Donna Lee Goldberg

EBPL Podcast from the East Brunswick Public Library

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2023 1:18


On this episode of 73 Words in the 732, we share the story, "El Diablo" by Donna Lee Goldberg. Magenta is a gentle dog. Because she's a fierce barker, Ilan nicknamed her El Diablo. On a recent walk, Magenta and Leah met him and Isabella and their dogs Ziti and Dahlia. Ilan was nervous; he didn't believe Magenta would play with their two dachshunds. Surprise! The doggy trio sniffed, played and walked together. “Amazing,” Ilan announced. ”Magenta needs a new nickname. She's no longer El Diablo. She is now Cachorrita, little puppy.” note: cachorrita is Spanish feminine for puppy.

Automobile Propre - Le Podcast
"Nous lançons le premier planificateur d'itinéraire pour les professionnels", interview de François Oudot, CEO de BUMP

Automobile Propre - Le Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2023 25:05


⚡  Au sommaire de ce soixante quatorzième épisode du podcast Automobile Propre    Attaquer le marché très concurrentiel de la recharge rapide par les entreprises et les professionnels, c'est le pari de Bump, un opérateur qui possède déjà un réseau de plus de 300 points de charge en France. Bump, créé en 2020, a commencé son déploiement par la fourniture de bornes à des clients BtoB, comme le loueur Ziti, mais aussi des “retailers”, autrement dit des établissements recevant du public, comme par exemple les chaînes de supermarchés ou encore des parkings d'hôtels, parmi lesquelles Intermarché ou Campanile. Une stratégie qui semble gagnante puisque Bump possède aujourd'hui un portefeuille de 400 clients professionnels qui lui garantissent un taux d'occupation optimal de ses bornes et des 3000 points de charge signés et en cours de déploiement. Nous avions déjà rencontré François Oudot, CEO et co-fondateur de Bump, en 2022, mais l'entreprise vient de lancer simultanément deux nouveautés, une offre digitale de gestion de charge pour les flottes d'entreprise, accompagnée d'une application mobile intégrant un planificateur d'itinéraire réservé aux professionnels en déplacement. L'occasion de faire le point et d'en savoir un peu plus sur cette nouvelle offre avec François Oudot. Bienvenue dans le 44ème épisode du podcast Automobile Propre.  Merci à notre sponsor Mister EV.com, vente de câbles et solutions de recharge pour les véhicules électriques. Visitez la boutique ! Toute l'actualité de la voiture électrique est sur https://www.automobile-propre.com/ . Retrouvez également nos autres sites et canaux spécialisés dans l'électromobilité et la transition énergétique : ➡️ Cleanrider  ➡️ Révolution Energétique  ➡️ Notre chaine YouTube  

Salt & Spine
Preserving Tradition, One Nonna at a Time, with Pasta Grannies' Vicky Bennison

Salt & Spine

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2023 33:52


Episode 158: Vicky BennisonIn this week's episode, Vicky and I discuss:* Growing up for several years on a farm in Kenya, where her father was working in agricultural development, and how she formed a relationship with food at an early age;* Her nearly-decade-long project, Pasta Grannies, to document the time-honored techniques and recipes passed down through generations of nonnas, the Italian grandmothers;* The diversity of regional pasta and cooking styles around Italy, and the stories behind these recipes;* Her cookbooks, including her debut award-winning Pasta Grannies: The Official Cookbook that has now been translated into six languages, and her latest, Pasta Grannies: Comfort Cooking.Plus, as always, we put Vicky to the test in our signature culinary game.Pasta Grannies: Comfort Cooking by Vicky Bennison"Heartwarming and deliciously comforting." - Stanley TucciWho better to take inspiration from than Pasta Grannies who have spent their lifetimes plating up comfort and connection. Vicky Bennison, the author of the bestselling Pasta Grannies cookbook, brings you more heart-warming recipes and stories from our favourite Italian grandmothers in this easy-to-follow, crowd-pleasing recipe book that shows you how to make authentic Italian food that everyone will enjoy.We

Who Watches the Watchers?
PILOT LICENSE - Sopranos (1999)

Who Watches the Watchers?

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2023 68:46


New show where we watch pilots from all kinds of TV shows! Vengabus and Ziti come together in our first soaring episode of Pilot License! Did this show deserve to fly? Follow us on Instagram for the love of god: ⁠https://www.instagram.com/wwtwpodcast/

Hill-Man Morning Show Audio
Scheim and Wiggy faceoff over the lead ziti award

Hill-Man Morning Show Audio

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2023 41:48


HOUR 3 Scheim and Wiggy faceoff over the lead ziti award Why is Joe Mazzulla so grumpy with the media? The dogs and kids in restaurants debate gets reignited

Atoosa Unedited
An Iranian Girl with a Jewish Name

Atoosa Unedited

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2022 10:44


I often make light of growing up as an Iranian immigrant in America during the hostage crisis. I'm from a very Red State part of a Blue State, if that makes sense. But I had no color-coded context for it as a kid. All I knew back then was that it was kind of uncomfortable being anything other than white and Irish- or Italian-American where I was from. I lived in a town where neighbors allegedly pooled money to buy a house before they would let a black family buy it. Luckily, I've heard it has become a lot more diverse in the past 30+ years since I've lived there.As a child, I never analyzed it. I just wished I could be like everyone else. I wished my parents didn't have accents and my mom cooked Ziti for dinner instead of the herb heavy stews my clothing always reeked of. I remember begging my friend Anthony to ask his mom why his clothes always smelled so fresh. I still remember the answer. Cheer. His mother used Cheer. I wanted to smell like Cheer instead of Khoreshte Gormeh-Sabzi.In my TEDx talk, I joked about being called Ayatollah Atoosa when I was a kid and having super hairy legs because I wasn't permitted by my mom, for cultural reasons, to shave them. And oh, how I wanted my kinky curls to look feathered like the coolest, most beautiful girls at school. I can laugh about it all today because I ended up growing up to be kind of attractive, successful and tbh…super Americanized.In fact, when I was on the front page of the New York Times Business section, the editors chose to do a little visual storyline of how my long, flowing jet black hair had changed from wild to sleek as I shifted from one magazine (CosmoGIRL!) to another (Seventeen).To be showcased in front of an international audience in this way when the girls back home in Iran had to hide their hair and femininity or risk being jailed or given lashes meant nothing to me at the time. I was so busy trying to fit in. Trying to earn my specialness…my worthiness. So thrilled to finally smell like Michael Kors (at the time) instead of my mother's stew.Today, looking at it from a place of maturity, stability and safety, it hits different. I see the incredible privilege I've enjoyed and continue to enjoy living in America. Listen, I never advocate for falling down news wormholes or doom scrolling because I don't think it's good for anyone's mental health. And I am not suggesting that now. But I encourage you to follow at least one social media account that solidly posts about what's happening in Iran. Some good options are @from___iran, @1500tasvir, @ranarahimpour_bbc, @YasharAli, @samanism, @collectiveforblackiranians And please share. The Islamic Republic shuts down internet access during turbulent times to control the information that gets out of the country and we can use our social media to show solidarity as the Iranians fight for what we enjoy with ease. The American news media is grossly falling short here. But thanks to the democratization of media, we can amplify their voices during these internet blackouts The younger generation, especially, are fighting so hard to break out of the tyranny they were born into...and my family and I narrowly escaped when we moved to America. We cannot see ourselves as advocates for women if we're not advocating for the women of Iran who have been held captive by their religious leaders for so long. And frankly, this isn't just about the women of Iran. This is about freedom of all expression in Iran including the freedom to love who you want, to wear what you want and to say what you want. And speaking of freedom of speech, I'm going to pivot.Unrelated…but related.While I was identified as Iranian for the first part of my life, at exactly the half point, I became Atoosa RUBENSTEIN and from then on, people identified me as Jewish, although I am not actually Jewish. I really enjoyed learning about the Jewish culture but one of the things I did not enjoy is how often I would encounter anti-semitism.I remember stopping for dinner at a TGI Fridays with my husband and our child while we were on a road trip. When they called our last name for a table, a group of teenage boys threw a coin in front of us and waited to see if we would pick it up. I blocked out what they shouted but they made their point abundantly clear.And antisemitism doesn't only happen in low-brow Red State areas. It just looks different.We once spent the summer in Locust Valley while we were in between apartments in the city. Locust Valley is a very wealthy community in Long Island known for its exclusive “waspy” country clubs like Piping Rock. Part of the privilege of having been an Editor-in-Chief is that I kind of assume I'm welcome anywhere.

BoomXers
155 Coax the FUX outta Jimmy

BoomXers

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2022 70:37


It's another Thursday Night Jibber Jabber session with the BoomXers. Jimmy's at home alone, can we get him to use the "F" word? Cindy is keeping her nose to the grindstone. Shari likes Ziti better than Linguini, but Fettuccini comes in a close 2nd. Dave does a deep dive into Jimmy.

#HMBradio Tampa Bay
S1 Ep444: Just eat the ziti

#HMBradio Tampa Bay

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2022 42:55


The Homemade Broadcast this week: Check out the HMBradio Store and get a hat or something or DONATE. We livestream Wednesday evenings around 5-6ish on YouTube, Twitter and Facebook. Keep up to date on where to watch HERE This week: Americans are fleeing to Mexico for cheap rent & some tales of unfortunate deaths in the Tampa Bay area this week. Get in touch with the show and leave a voice or text message at: (813) 693-2124 The #HMB airs Sunday's on Sunshine FM 96.7 in downtown St. Petersburg & anywhere in the world at Radio St. Pete @ 6:10PM & Monday's at 10:15PM or on demand via your favorite podcast app, just search "HMBradio Tampa Bay". Tune into The Johnny B Show every weeknight from 8-10PM & Wednesday from 10PM to midnight on 102.5 The Bone. Catch Anna on the Bubba the Love Sponge Show on weekdays from 6-10 AM. If you're enjoying the podcast, please give it a 5 STAR rating on your podcast app, it only takes a second and really helps out. If you're REALLY enjoying it, consider making a DONATION, thanks and I like you more than a friend. Follow the show and EVERYWHERE Thanks to our sponsors: Truvy Salon & Spa Homemade Podcasts: "Reach clients through Podcasting

Boston Confidential Beantown's True Crime Podcast
Laura Jane Rosenthal-The Burnt Ziti Case-Laura Jane was a new mother, domestic abuse would prevent her from raising her baby

Boston Confidential Beantown's True Crime Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2022 31:29


This is one of Metro-Boston's most infamous murders. Richard Rosenthal was a successful financial analyst at John Hancock Insurance in Boston. He met Laura Jane at work and they later married. The couple appeared to be living the American dream. But inside the home was another story, friends at work would later report, seeing Laura Jane with black eyes on at least two separate occasions. In retrospect she was the classic victim of on-going domestic abuse. In 1994 the duo had a baby boy who died quickly after being born, he had problems with his heart and lungs. Richard Rosenthal blamed his wife and seemingly could not move on, despite the arrival of a healthy baby girl. Richard, holding on to the death of his son, soon killed his wife, he eviscerated the woman he claimed to love. He removed some organs and placed them on a stake in the backyard, which organs were selected? Yes, Laura Jane's heart and lungs. Please be advised this episode contains extreme violence. Tune in for more details.FindLaw-Commonwealth V Rosenthal https://bit.ly/3NEsA5VCelebrate Boston-https://bit.ly/3yCdt8DThe Harvard Crimson- https://bit.ly/3bFmiWd

Borderline Salty
Slip On Out Of Here, Ziti

Borderline Salty

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2022 32:46 Very Popular


On this episode, hosts Rick Martinez and Carla Lalli Music give expert tips on making ganache, share their favorite ways to enjoy tinned sardines, and offer advice on navigating the culinary industry. Also, Carla shares her anti-ziti testimony in this week's No, Thank You, Please.  This week's recipe book: Rick's Chocolate-Dipped Concha Ice Cream Sandwiches Carla on “beans, greens, and sardines” Carla's How-I-Like-It Tuna Salad from That Sounds So Good Rick's guide to never messing up blanching vegetables ever again   As always, we'd love to hear about your cooking conundrums at 833-433-FOOD (3663).  Find us on Instagram @borderlinesalty Find full episode transcripts and more about the podcast on our website borderlinesalty.fm.  If you can't get enough of our hosts – we don't blame you! Subscribe to Carla's newsletters here and find links to her Instagram and YouTube channel at www.carlalallimusic.com.  You can order Rick's cookbook Mi Cocina: Recipes and Rapture from My Kitchen in Mexico here, watch the companion Mi Cocina video series here, and find all of his socials at www.rick-martinez.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Shattering The Single Story

When crisis hits, you need more in your purse than a granola bar.

Screaming in the Cloud
The Demystification of Zero Trust with Philip Griffiths

Screaming in the Cloud

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2022 35:38


About PhilipPhilip Griffiths is VP Global Business Development and regularly speaks at events from DevOps to IoT to Cyber Security. Prior to this, he worked for Atos IT Services in various roles working with C-suit executives to realise their digital transformation. He lives in Cambridge with his wife and two daughters.Links: NetFoundry: https://netfoundry.io/ Blog article: https://netfoundry.io/demystifying-the-magic-of-zero-trust-with-my-daughter-and-opensource/ netfoundry.io/screaminginthecloud: https://netfoundry.io/screaminginthecloud TranscriptAnnouncer: Hello, and welcome to Screaming in the Cloud with your host, Chief Cloud Economist at The Duckbill Group, Corey Quinn. This weekly show features conversations with people doing interesting work in the world of cloud, thoughtful commentary on the state of the technical world, and ridiculous titles for which Corey refuses to apologize. This is Screaming in the Cloud.Corey: Today's episode is brought to you in part by our friends at MinIO the high-performance Kubernetes native object store that's built for the multi-cloud, creating a consistent data storage layer for your public cloud instances, your private cloud instances, and even your edge instances, depending upon what the heck you're defining those as, which depends probably on where you work. It's getting that unified is one of the greatest challenges facing developers and architects today. It requires S3 compatibility, enterprise-grade security and resiliency, the speed to run any workload, and the footprint to run anywhere, and that's exactly what MinIO offers. With superb read speeds in excess of 360 gigs and 100 megabyte binary that doesn't eat all the data you've gotten on the system, it's exactly what you've been looking for. Check it out today at min.io/download, and see for yourself. That's min.io/download, and be sure to tell them that I sent you.Corey: This episode is sponsored by our friends at Oracle Cloud. Counting the pennies, but still dreaming of deploying apps instead of “Hello, World” demos? Allow me to introduce you to Oracle's Always Free tier. It provides over 20 free services and infrastructure, networking, databases, observability, management, and security. And—let me be clear here—it's actually free. There's no surprise billing until you intentionally and proactively upgrade your account. This means you can provision a virtual machine instance or spin up an autonomous database that manages itself, all while gaining the networking, load balancing, and storage resources that somehow never quite make it into most free tiers needed to support the application that you want to build. With Always Free, you can do things like run small-scale applications or do proof-of-concept testing without spending a dime. You know that I always like to put asterisks next to the word free? This is actually free, no asterisk. Start now. Visit snark.cloud/oci-free that's snark.cloud/oci-free.Corey: Welcome to Screaming in the Cloud. I'm Corey Quinn. Today's promoted episode is about a topic that is near and dear to my heart. In the AWS universe, we have seen over time that the networking has gotten more and more capable going from EC2 Classic to the world of VPC network to a whole bunch of other things. But with that capability comes a stupendous amount of complexity, to the point where the easy answer to, “Do you understand how networking works within AWS?” Is, of course, no, “I don't.”I'm joined today by Philip Griffiths, who's the Head of Business Development at NetFoundry. Philip, thank you for joining me.Philip: Pleasure to be here, Corey.Corey: So, NetFoundry has what I would argue to be one of the most intriguing-slash-differentiated approaches to handling that ever-increasing complexity around the networking story, not just in AWS, but a number of different cloud providers, and between them, and that approach is to ignore it completely. Have I nailed the salient approach here with that, I guess we'll call it a flippant statement.Philip: Yeah, I'd probably say so. It's the interesting thing where a lot of people say cloud networking is hard, and from our perspective, it should just be super easy, you should be able to provision it in a few minutes with only outbound ports, and set up your policy so that malicious actors can't get inside it. It should be that easy, and programmable, and it's a shame that the current world is not.Corey: One of the hard problems has always been in, I guess, security, which is the thing that everyone pretends to care about right up front, but in practice, often winds up bolting it on after the fact because, “We care about security,” is sort of the trademark phrase of things that we see, usually an email announcing a data breach when it was very clear that companies did not care about security. It's not just me complaining about how complex the network stack is, but by what directly flows from that. If you aren't able to fit all of that into your head as far as what's going on from a security perspective, the odds of misconfiguration creep in and you don't really become aware of what your risk exposure is. I'm really partial to the idea of just avoiding it entirely. Is NetFoundry, effectively, a network overlay? Is it something that goes a bit beyond that? Effectively, where do you folks start and where do you stop?Philip: Yes, that is precisely correct. We are a network overlay that's been built on the principles of zero trust. What is very unique is the ability to be able to start it wherever you want. So yes, you can deploy it from the AWS Marketplace in a few minutes into your VPC or into your operating system, but we also have the ability to actually put it directly into the application stack itself, which has some very interesting complications. What I find as the most interesting starting point is the oxymoron of secure networking.There are no secure networks. It's not possible. Networks are designed to share information and taking it to first principles, you can only isolate networks. And this is why we had the thought process for if we're going to put our overlay network into stuff and make it secure, we have to start at the application level because then we can actually just isolate it to an application communicating into an application, which has profound implications.Corey: The network part is relatively straightforward. I imagine it just becomes, more or less, what resembles a fairly flat network where everything internal is allowed to talk to each other, and then, in turn, this winds up effectively elevating what should be allowed to talk to what and on what ports and whatnot into something that's a lot closer to the application logic, and transcends whatever provider it happens to be traversing.Philip: Yeah, correct. Following the principles of zero trust, we utilize strong embedded identity as a function of what the endpoints are, what the source and destination is. And therefore you build up your policies and services to say what should communicate to what on the basis that the default the least privileged: Absolutely nothing. Your underlay then, the only thing you need is commodity internet with outbound ports. The whole concept of north-south, east-west, if you're app-embedded, you don't even need public DNS; you don't even need DNS at all. Naming conventions go out the window; you don't need to conform to the standards. You know, you could say, “I want to hit Jenkins.” You go to Jenkins because that can be done.Corey: I would approach this entire endeavor with a fair bit of suspicion and no small amount of alarm if it were something that you had developed internally, as far as, “Well, we're just going to replace what amounts to your entire network stack and just go ahead and trust us. It's fine.” But you didn't do that. You're riding on top of the OpenZiti open-source project. And that basically assuages a whole raft of concerns I would have if something like this were proprietary, and people who know what they're doing—who, let's be clear, aren't me—were not able to inspect it and say, “Okay, this passes muster”—as they have done—or alternately, “No, this is terrifyingly dangerous for a variety of excellent reasons.”And it really feels like a lot of the zero-trust stories that we see these days that are taking advantage of either a network overlay approach or shifting authentication into a different layer, have all taken a somewhat similar tack. I used to think it was a good idea; now I'm starting to suspect it might very well be the only viable model. Do you find that that's accurate, or was this a subject of some contention when you were starting out?Philip: So, there's two very interesting [sigh] thoughts that came to me as you were saying that. The number one is yes, we drove forward with OpenZiti because we've seen open-source just completely dominate the industry and everything new that's been built. If you want to deploy an application, you're building on Linux. And in fact, you're probably [laugh] also running on Kubernetes if you're building new. And our objective was to be able to turn OpenZiti into you know, the open-source, zero-trust private network and equivalent where it's just standard: You'll bake your application with Ziti, by design.It will become a check function that people say you have to comply to. When I look at other vendors and how they look at zero-trust, I broadly see a few things that dishearten me. And again, it's a big market, a lot of people—everyone says they're zero-trust nowadays—but I broadly categorize it into a few ways. You have people who are effectively acting as a proxy and they're adding authentication as a way to check what people should have access to. And they may give access to the whole network, they may do granular; it varies between them. In fact, I've just written a blog on this where I effectively call that no-magic zero trust. It's a blog conceptualized within Harry Potter and [unintelligible 00:07:36] a conversation with my daughter.Corey: Yeah, any way to tell a story that beats the traditional enterprise voice is very much appreciated over in this corner of the world.Philip: [laugh]. Yeah, exactly. You have a second tier, which is what I like to think as semi-magical. And that's where you start saying, I am going to use a software-defined perimeter. So, that it's first packet authenticate, or outbound-only based upon embedded identity. And in my eyes, this is basically an invisibility cloak.You then have app-embedded or magical zero-trust. And this is where you're putting the invisibility cloak inside your application, but you're also giving it a port key so that when it needs to connect to something else on the other side of the world, it just happens; it's transparent. And broadly speaking, I think it's very good that the whole world, including the US government is taking zero-trust incredibly importantly, but the distribution of how people tackle a problem is wildly different. There are some zero-trust solutions, which going in the right direction, but fundamentally, if you're putting it in front of your—I won't name a vendor, but there was a vendor who in December, they released a report that said in 90 seconds, common vulnerabilities are exploited something like 96% of the time. 24-hours, 100%.A few days later, they had a 9.8 CVE on their zero-trust VPN concentrator with a public IP, to which I thought, “If you're not patching that immediately, you've got problems if someone is coming into your network.”Corey: Absolutely. We just completed our annual security awareness training here, and so much of it just… it really made my skin crawl, there was an entire module on how to effectively detect phishing emails, and I got to tell you, if they ever start running spellcheck on their some of their [spear-phishing 00:09:23] campaigns, then we're all doomed because that was what the entire training was here. My position is, is that okay, if someone in your company clicks a bad link and it destroys the company's infrastructure, maybe it's the person who's clicking the link that is not necessarily the critical failure point here. Great, if someone compromises an employee workstation, there should be a way to contain the blast radius, they should not now be inside the walls and able to traverse into whatever it is that they want. There should be additional barriers, and zero trust—though it has become, as you say, a catch-all term—seems to be a serious way of looking at this type of compromise and this sort of mitigation against that sort of behavior.Philip: Definitely. And I think that leads itself to, if you're using the correct zero-trust solution, you're able to close [unintelligible 00:10:12] ports, great, you've now massively reduced your attack surface. But what if someone does get a phishing injection of ransomware or something to their endpoint or into their servers? The two things that I like to think about is that if you're creating your overlay network so that the only communication from your server is outbound into the public IPs of your private overlay, then effectively even if the ransomware gets in there, it can't then connect to its command and control module to then go through the kill cycle to other activities. The other is that if you then look at it [instead 00:10:46] of on the server-side, but actually on the client-side, if someone infects my Mac laptop with ransomware, we use this internal application called Mattermost.And it's basically Slack, but open-source. If my Mattermost is Ziti-fied, even I've got ransomware on my device, it can't side-channel attack into Mattermost because you would actually have to break into the Mattermost application and somehow get that Mattermost application to make a compromised query or whatever to get past the system. So really, when I look at zero-trust, it's not about saying, “We're secure. Job done. You know, fire the security department because we don't need them anymore.” It's all about saying—Corey: Box check. Hand it off to the auditor.Philip: [laugh]. Exactly. It's more about saying the cost of attack, the cost of compromised is increased, ideally, to the point where the malicious actors don't have a return on investment. Because if they don't have a return on investment, they will find something else that's not your applications and your systems to try and compromise.Corey: I want to make sure that I'm contextualizing this properly because we're talking—I think—about what almost looks like two different worlds here. There's the, this is how things wind up working in the ecosystem as far as your server environment goes in a cloud provider, but then we're also talking about what goes on in your corporate network of people who are using laptops, which is increasingly being done from home these days. Where do you folks start? Where do you stop? Do you transcend into the corporate network as well, or is this primarily viewed as a production utility?Philip: We do. One of our original design principles with OpenZiti was for it to be a platform rather than a point solution. So, we designed it from the ground up to be able to support any IP packets, TCP, UDP, et cetera, whether you're doing, client-server, server-server, machine-server, server-initiated, client-initiated, yadda, yadda, yadda. So effectively, the same technology can be applied to many different use cases, depending on where you want to use it. We've been doing work recently to handle, let's call them the hard use cases.Probably one of the hardest ones out there is VoIP. There is a playbook that is currently taking place where the VoIP-managed service provider gets DDoSed by malicious actors; the playbook is to move it onto a CDN so that you move the attack surface and you get respite for a few hours. And there's not really any way to solve it because blocking DDoS attacks at layer 3, layer 4 is incredibly difficult unless you can make your PBX dark. And I've seen a couple of our OpenZitiE engineers making calls from one device to another without going through the PBX by doing that over OpenZiti, and being able to solve some of the challenges that's normally associated with VoIP. Again, it was really one of our design principles: How can we make the platform is so flexible that we can do X, Y, Zed today; we're able to build it, again to become a standard, because it can handle anything.Corey: One of the big questions that people are going to have going into this is, and this may sound surprising is a little bit less about technical risk of things like encryption and the rest and a lot more around the idea of okay, does this mean that what you are building becomes a central point of business risk? In other words, if the NetFoundry SaaS installation and wherever they happen to be using as their primary winds up going down, does that mean suddenly nothing can talk to one another? Because it turns out that, you know, computers are not particularly useful in 2022 if they aren't able to talk to other computers, by and large. “The network is the computer,” as was famously stated. What is the failure mode in the event that you experience technical interruption?Philip: We have this internal sessions, which we call Ziti Kitchens, where our engineering team that are creating Ziti educate on stuff that they're building. And one of them in the Ziti Kitchen was around HA, HS, et cetera, and all of the functions that we've built in so that you have redundancy and availability within the different components. Because effectively it's an overlay network, so we've designed it to be a mesh overlay network. You can setup with one point of failure, but then simultaneously, you can very easily set up to have no points of failure because it can have that redundancy and the overlay has its own mechanisms to do things like smart routing and calculation of underlying costs.That cost in that instance would be, well, AWS has gone down, so the latency to send a packet or flow over it is incredibly high, therefore I'm going to avoid that route and send the traffic to another location. I always remember this Ziti Kitchen episode because the underlying technology that does it is called Terminators—Ziti has these things called Terminators—some of the slide there was this little heads over the Terminator with the red eyes, you know, the silver exoskeleton, which always made me laugh.Corey: It's helpful to have things that fail out of band as opposed to—think of the traditional history in security before everything was branded with zero-trust as a prerequisite for exhibiting at RSA; before that was firewalls was the story, and the question always was, if a firewall fails, do you want it to fail open or fail closed? And believe it or not, there are legitimate answers in both directions; depends on context and what you're doing. There are some things for example, IAM in a cloud world where you absolutely never want to fail open, full stop. You would rather someone bodily rip the power cable out the back of the data center rather than let that happen. With something like this, where nothing is able to talk to one another if the entire system goes down, yeah, you want to have the control system that you folks run to be out of band, that is almost always the right answer.As I look at the various case studies that you have on your website and the serious companies that are using what you have built, do you find that they are primarily centralizing around individual cloud providers? Are you seeing that they're using this as a expression of multi-cloud because I can definitely see a story where oh, it helps bring two cloud providers from a networking and security perspective onto the same page, but I can also see, even within one cloud provider, the idea that, hey, I don't have to play around with your ridiculous nonsense? What use cases are you seeing emerge among your customers?Philip: Definitely, the multi-cloud challenge is one that we're seeing as a emerging trend. We do a lot of work with Oracle and, you know, their stated position is multi-cloud is a fact. In fact for them, if we make the secure networking easier, we can bring workloads into our cloud quicker [unintelligible 00:17:21] the main driver between our partnership. We recently did a blog talking about Superclouds and the advent of organizations like Snowflake and HashiCorp and Confluence and Databricks basically building value and business applications which abstracts away the underlying complexity. But you get into the problem of the standard shared security model, where the customer has to deal with DNS and VPNs and MPLS and AWS Private Endpoint or Azure Private Link or whatever they call it, and you have to assemble this Frankenstein of stuff just to enable a VM to communicate to another VM.And the posit of our blog—in fact, we use that exact quote—John Gage—“The computer is the network.” If you can put a network inside the application, you've now given your supercloud superpowers because [unintelligible 00:18:13] natively—I mean, this is very marketing term, but, “Develop once; deploy anywhere,” and be multi-cloud-native.Corey: The idea of being able to adapt to emerging usage patterns without full-on redeploy is handy. What I also would like to highlight, too, is that you are, of course, a network overlay and that is something that is fairly well understood and people have seen it, but your preferred adoption model goes up a couple of steps beyond that into altering the way that the application thinks about these things. And you offer an SDK that ranges from single line of code implementation to I think up to 20, so it's not a massive rewrite of the application, but it does require modification of the stack. What does that buy you, for lack of a better term? Because once you have the application becomes aware of what is effectively its own, “Special network,” quote-unquote, its work to wind up modifying existing applications around something like this. What's the payoff?Philip: So, there's three broad ones that immediately come to my mind. Number one is the highest security that effectively—your private network is inside the app, so you have to somehow break into the app and that can be incredibly complicated, particularly run the app in something like a confidential compute enclave; you can now have a distributed confidential system.The second is what you're getting in programmability. You're able to effectively operate in a fully—even, you know, you get to a GitOps environment. We're currently working on documentation which says, “Hey, you can do all this stuff in GitOps and then it'll go into your CI/CD and that'll talk to the APIs.” And it'll effectively do everything in a completely programmable manner so that you can treat your private networks as cattle rather than as pets.The third is transparency. You used the words earlier of bolt-on networking because that's how we always think about networking security: We bolt it on. As a user, we have to jump through the VPN hoop, we have to go through the bastion, we have to interact with the network. If your private network's inside the application, then you interact with the application. I can have a mobile application on my device and I have no idea that it's part of a private network and that the API is private and the malicious actors can't get to it. I just interact with the application. That is it.That is what no one else has the ability to do and where OpenZiti has its most power because then you get rid of the constant tug of war between the security team that want to lock everything down and the users and the developers who want to move fast and give a great experience. You can effectively have your cake and eat it.Corey: The challenge, of course, with rolling a lot of these things out in a way that becomes highly programmable is that unlocks a bunch of capability, but the double-edged sword there is always one of complexity. I mean, we take a look at the way that AWS networking has progressed, and they finally rolled out the VPC Reachability Analyzer, so when two things can't talk to each other, well, you run this thing and it tells you exactly why, which is super handy. And then just as a way of twisting the knife a little bit, every time you run it, they charge at ten cents for the privilege, which doesn't actually matter in the context of what anyone is being compensated for, until and unless you build this into something programmatic, but it stings a little bit. And the idea of being able to program these things to abstract away a lot of that complexity is incredibly compelling, except for the part where now it feels like it really increases developer burden on a lot of these things. Have you found that to be true? Do you find that it is sort of like a sliding scale? What has the customer experience been around this?Philip: I would say a sliding scale. You know, we had one organization who they started with the OpenZiti Tunnelers, and then we convinced them to use the SDK and [unintelligible 00:21:51], “Oh, this was super easy.” And now they just run OpenZiti on themselves. But then they've also said at some point, we'll use the NetFoundry platform, which effectively gives us a SaaS experience in consuming that. One of the huge focus—well, we've got a few big focuses for product development, but one of the really big areas is really giving more visibility and monitoring so that rather than people having to react to configuration problems or things which they need to fix in order to ensure your perfect network overlay, instead, those things are being seen and automatically dealt with human-in-the-loop if you want it, in order to remove that burden.Because ultimately, if you can get the network to a point where as long as you've got underlay and you've set your policy, the overlay is going to work, it's going to be secure, and it's going to give you the uptime you need, that is the Nirvana that we all have to strive for.Corey: This episode is sponsored in part by our friends at Vultr. Spelled V-U-L-T-R because they're all about helping save money, including on things like, you know, vowels. So, what they do is they are a cloud provider that provides surprisingly high performance cloud compute at a price that—while sure they claim its better than AWS pricing—and when they say that they mean it is less money. Sure, I don't dispute that but what I find interesting is that it's predictable. They tell you in advance on a monthly basis what it's going to going to cost. They have a bunch of advanced networking features. They have nineteen global locations and scale things elastically. Not to be confused with openly, because apparently elastic and open can mean the same thing sometimes. They have had over a million users. Deployments take less that sixty seconds across twelve pre-selected operating systems. Or, if you're one of those nutters like me, you can bring your own ISO and install basically any operating system you want. Starting with pricing as low as $2.50 a month for Vultr cloud compute they have plans for developers and businesses of all sizes, except maybe Amazon, who stubbornly insists on having something to scale all on their own. Try Vultr today for free by visiting: vultr.com/screaming, and you'll receive a $100 in credit. Thats V-U-L-T-R.com slash screaming.Corey: A common criticism of things that shall we say abstract away the network is a fairly common predictable failure mode. I've been making fun of Kubernetes on this particular point for years, and I'm annoyed that at the time that we're recording this, that is still accurate. But from the cloud providers' perspective, when you run Kubernetes, it looks like one big really strangely behaved single-tenant application. And Kubernetes itself is generally not aware of zone affinity, so it could just as easily wind up tossing traffic to the node next to it at zero cost or across an availability zone at two cents per gigabyte, or, God forbid across the internet at nine cents a gigabyte and counting depending upon how it works. And the application-side has absolutely no conception of this.How does OpenZiti address this in the real world because it's one of those things where it almost doesn't matter what you folks charge on top of it, but instead oh wow, this winds up being so hellaciously expensive that we can't use it regardless of whatever benefit it provides just because it becomes a non-starter.Philip: So, when we built the overlay and the mesh, we did it from the perspective of making it as programmable and self-driven as possible. So, with the whole Terminator strategies that was mentioned earlier, it gives you the ability to start putting logic into how you want packets to flow. Today, it does it on a calculation of end-to-end latency and chooses and reroutes traffic in order to give that information. But there's no reason that you couldn't hook it up into understanding what is the numerical in monetary cost for sending a packet along a certain path. Or even what is my application performance monitoring tool saying? Because what that says versus what the network believes could be different things. And effectively you can ingest that information to make your smart routing decisions so all of that logic can exist within the overlay that operates for you.Corey: I will say that really harkens back, on some level, to what I was experimenting with back when I got my CCNA many years ago where there's an idea of routing protocols have built into the idea of the cost of a link. I will freely admit slash confess that at the time of the low-cost link, I assumed this was about what was congested or what would wind up having, theoretically, some transit versus peering agreement. It never occurred to me that I'd have to think about those things in a local network and have to calculate in the Byzantine pricing models of cloud providers. But I've seen examples of folks who are using OpenZiti, and NetFoundry alike, to wind up building in these costing models so that yeah, ideally, it just keeps everything local, but of that path degrades then yes, we would prefer to go over an expensive link than to basically have TCP terminate on the floor until everything comes back up. It sort of feels like there's an awful lot of logic you can bake into that goes well beyond what routing protocols are capable of, just by virtue of exposing that programmability.Well, for this customer because they're on the pre—on the extreme tier, then we want to have the expensive fallback; for low-tier customers, we might want to have them just have an outage until things end. And it really comes down to letting business decisions express themselves in terms of application behavior while in degraded state. I love that idea.Philip: Yeah, I understand. We don't do it today, but there will be a point in the future—I strongly believe—that we'll be able to say, hey, I'll give you an SLA on the internet. Because we'll have such path diversity and visibility of how the internet operates that we'll be able to say within certain risk parameters of what we can deliver. But then you can take it to other logical extremes. You could say, “Hey, I want to build a green overlay. I want to make sure that I'm using Arm instances and in data centers of renewable energy so that my network is green.”Or you can say on a GDPR-compliant overlay so that my data stays within a certain country. You start being able to say—you know, really start dreaming up what are the different policies that I can apply to this because you're applying a central policy to then what is in the distributed system.Corey: One last topic I want to cover before we call it an episode is that you are, effectively, a SaaS company that is built on top of an open-source project. And that has been an interesting path for a lot of companies that early on, figured that if they wrote the software, a lot of the contributors who are doing the lion's share of contribution, that they were clearly the best people to run it. And Amazon's approach towards operational excellence—as they called it—wound up causing some challenges when they launched the Amazon Basics version of that service. I feel like there are some natural defenses built into OpenZiti to keep it from suffering that fate, but I'm very curious to get your take on it.Philip: Fundamentally, our take is that—in fact, our mission is to take what was previously impossible and turn it into a standard. And the only way you can really create standards is to have a open-source that is adopted by the wider community and that ecosystems get built around and into. And that means giving an OpenZiti to absolutely everyone so that they can use it, they can innovate on top of it. We all know that very few people actually want to host their own infrastructure, so we assume a large percentage of people will come and go, “Hey, NetFounder, you provide us the hosting, you provide us the SaaS capability so we don't have to do that ourselves.” But fundamentally in the knowledge that there's something bigger because it's not just us maintaining this project; there's a bunch of people who are doing pull requests and find out cool, fun ways to build further value on what we can build ourselves.We believe the recent history is littered with examples of the new world built on open-source. And fundamentally, we think that's really the only way to be able to change an industry so profoundly as we intend to.Corey: I would also argue that, to be very direct—and I can probably get away with saying this in a way that I suspect you might not be able to—but if AWS had it in their character to simplify things and make it a lot easier for people to work with in a networking sense, what's stopping them? They didn't need to wait for an open-source company to wind up coming out of nowhere and demonstrating the value of this. Customers have been asking it for years. I think that at this point, this is something that is unlikely to ever wind up being integrated into a cloud provider's primary offering. Until and unless the entire industry shifts, at which point we're having a radically different conversation very far down the road.Philip: Yeah, potentially because it opens the interesting thing that if you make it so easy for someone to take their data out, do they use your cloud less? There are some cloud providers that will lean into that because they do see more clouds in the future and others that won't. I see it more myself that as those kind of things happen, it'll be done on a product-by-product basis. For example, we're talking to an organization, and [unintelligible 00:29:49] like, “Oh, could you Ziti-fy our JDBC driver so that when users access our database, they don't have to use a VPN?” [unintelligible 00:29:55], “Yeah. We've already done that with JDBC. We called it ZDBC.”So, we'll just, instead of using the general industry one—probably the Oracle one or something because that's kind of standard—we'll take your one that you've created for yourself and be able to solve that problem for you.Corey: I really want to thank you for taking the time to speak with me today. If people want to learn more, where's the best place to find you?Philip: Best place to go to is netfoundry.io/screaminginthecloud. From there, anyone can grab some free Ziggy swag. Ziggy's our little open-source mascot, cute little piece of pasta with many different outfits. Little sass as well. And you can find further information both on OpenZiti and NetFoundry.Corey: And we will put links to both of those in the [show notes 00:30:40]. Thanks so much for taking the time to speak with me today. I really appreciate it.Philip: It's a pleasure. Thanks, Corey.Corey: Philip Griffiths, Head of Business Development at NetFoundry. I'm Cloud Economist Corey Quinn and this is Screaming in the Cloud. If you've enjoyed this podcast, please leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of choice, whereas if you've hated this podcast, please leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of choice along with an angry comment telling me exactly why I'm wrong about AWS's VPC complexity, and that comment will get moderated and I won't get to read it until you pay me ten cents to tell you how it got moderated.Corey: If your AWS bill keeps rising and your blood pressure is doing the same, then you need The Duckbill Group. We help companies fix their AWS bill by making it smaller and less horrifying. The Duckbill Group works for you, not AWS. We tailor recommendations to your business and we get to the point. Visit duckbillgroup.com to get started.Announcer: This has been a HumblePod production. Stay humble.

Triad Podcast Network
At the Table with triadfoodies - Quanto Basta

Triad Podcast Network

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2022 29:47


Pull up a chair and join Kristi Maier from the triadfoodies blog as she visits with Chris Fulk from Quanto Basta in Winston-Salem.  They'll be hosting the next chef's table event on March 23rd! Located on 4th Street, Quanto Basta was opened by Chef Tim Grandinetti and his team to reveal the "rich and comforting flavors of Cucina Italiana" as he remembers from his childhood and upbringing. And who else to bring along to man the ship than Chef Chris, who had already established a legacy of his own in the area. We are excited to once again be partnering with a restaurant owned by Chef Grandinetti and enjoying the amazing food and impeccable service. And we can't wait to see what Chef Chris has in store as he brings Grandinetti's vision to life. From the words of Team QB: Chef Tim Grandinetti's cuisine is naturally beautiful, traditional and honest, earthy and authentic — a “tribute of deliciousness“ to his heritage and his great grandfather, Antonio Bucci. From Antipasto to Ziti, our food celebrates the Italian passion for life, the kitchen, and gathering together. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Rizzuto Show
Ziti Mix Deck Trivia And Wipey

The Rizzuto Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2022 164:09


Follow us because its hot country nights @RizzShow @RizzWow @MoonValjeanHere @Patrico1057 @ jeffburton1057 @KingScottRules http://www.1057thepoint.com/Rizz Book DJ DONUTS choosepatrico@gmail.com Check out Jeff's positive message clothing line BLINESTUFF.com Check out @FreeThe2SG on all socials Check out Moon's bands GREEK FIRE @GreekFire GOLDFINGER @GoldfingerMusic THE TEENAGE DIRTBAGS @TheTeenageDbags and www.moondropscbd.com

everyday nonsense podcast with Mike and Matt
Episode 89 : Ziti And Biscuits

everyday nonsense podcast with Mike and Matt

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 11, 2022 70:26


This episode may be 4 days late and 7 dollars short, but as Socrates said, "You get what you get and you don't get upset!" Do biscuits go with ziti? Ridiculous laws, Guy Smiley's real name, #nonsensicals and This Vs. That.

The Dozen: Trivia Competition
The Dozen: Battle for Arizona: Dave Portnoy & Ziti Take On Frankettes (Round 1, Match 01)

The Dozen: Trivia Competition

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 5, 2022 39:39


The first round of The Dozen: Battle for Arizona trivia tournament is (virtually, not in Arizona) here! The #2 ranked team in The Dozen, Frank & the Frankettes roll in undefeated (5-0-0) trying to shake off their tournament demons after falling in the first round last season. Meanwhile, #12 Ziti (0-2-0) has been pretty solid with Dave Portnoy at the helm, but not in the win department. They've scored points, but have only ever had heartbreak in his performances with the team. Will the Frankettes remain undefeated, or will Ziti pull the upset in round one!? VISUAL COMPONENTS: The Dozen: Trivia Competition airs every Tuesday and Thursday.

From the Pit - The Metal Hardcore Podcast
They're Italian, So I Think It's Lazy for Ziti

From the Pit - The Metal Hardcore Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2021 78:33


Force the Knife, Rat Cage, Self Deconstruction, Incendiaria, Kulta, Cambion, ZEIT, and more featured on this week's episode of From The Pit! From the Pit is a weekly podcast devoted to all things extreme music – whether it's up-and-coming bands, killer new releases, future shows, and festivals, or musings on the scene itself, hosts Phil, Mike, Sam and Frank will make sure that you hear about them. Also, we talk about beer, which is really the most important thing.   **all links available at fthepit.com**

The Dozen: Trivia Competition
Spittin Chiclets Makes Trivia Debut Against Dave Portnoy (The Dozen: Match 160)

The Dozen: Trivia Competition

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2021 45:46


They're back! 13-Spittin Chiclets (0-0-0) returns for their first match of Season 2, after a strong but disappointing result in the first round of The Dozen: Trivia Tournament. On the flip side, they take on Ziti (0-1-0), a team always snake-bitten, no matter how well they play. Can Dave Portnoy continue to lead Ziti to a higher scoring average? And will the inevitable Dave vs. Whitney showdown steal the show? VISUAL COMPONENTS: Round 2, Question 1: https://twitter.com/DozenGraphics/status/1469314063796744193 Round 2, Question 2: https://twitter.com/DozenGraphics/status/1469314140330156037 Round 11, Question 1: https://twitter.com/DozenGraphics/status/1469314396606414850 Round 11, Question 2: https://twitter.com/DozenGraphics/status/1469314478839902210 The Dozen: Trivia Competition airs every Tuesday and Thursday.

The big d z one
Dam good bake ziti!

The big d z one

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2021 11:44


Wow and now I'm half crying only missing my late wife half relaxed --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/bigdcountry/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/bigdcountry/support

Dancing Day Time con Mauro Vay
Ricetta del giorno Ziti spezzati con finferli al bacon

Dancing Day Time con Mauro Vay

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2021 2:22


Dancing Day Time con Mauro Vay
Ricetta del giorno Ziti spezzati con finferli al bacon

Dancing Day Time con Mauro Vay

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2021 2:22


RPL - La tua radio
Una Gemma in Cucina

RPL - La tua radio

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 30, 2021


UNA GEMMA IN CUCINA - 30/10/2021 Dalle 11 alle 11.30, Gemma Gaetani oggi parla di World Pasta Day, di Halloween, della tradizione italiana di Ognissanti e della Commemorazione dei defunti. La gemma della settimana è la cipolla, il libro della BIBLIOTECA DI CUCINA è La scienza della carne di Dario Bressanini, i FOODART sono il film Il secondo tragico Fantozzi, la canzone Con le mani di Zucchero e la tela di Paul Cézanne Natura morta con cipolle La videoricetta: Ziti alla genovese!

RPL - La tua radio
Una Gemma in Cucina 30-10-2021 11:00

RPL - La tua radio

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 30, 2021


UNA GEMMA IN CUCINA – 30/10/2021 Dalle 11 alle 11.30, Gemma Gaetani oggi parla di World Pasta Day, di Halloween, della tradizione italiana di Ognissanti e della Commemorazione dei defunti. La gemma della settimana è la cipolla, il libro della BIBLIOTECA DI CUCINA è La scienza della carne di Dario Bressanini, i FOODART sono il film Il secondo tragico Fantozzi, la canzone Con le mani di Zucchero e la tela di Paul Cézanne Natura morta con cipolle La videoricetta: Ziti alla genovese!

RPL - La tua radio
Una Gemma in Cucina

RPL - La tua radio

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 30, 2021


UNA GEMMA IN CUCINA - 30/10/2021 Dalle 11 alle 11.30, Gemma Gaetani oggi parla di World Pasta Day, di Halloween, della tradizione italiana di Ognissanti e della Commemorazione dei defunti. La gemma della settimana è la cipolla, il libro della BIBLIOTECA DI CUCINA è La scienza della carne di Dario Bressanini, i FOODART sono il film Il secondo tragico Fantozzi, la canzone Con le mani di Zucchero e la tela di Paul Cézanne Natura morta con cipolle La videoricetta: Ziti alla genovese!

The Happel Hour
Episode 66: Plate of Ziti (ft. Matt Hardy)

The Happel Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2021 61:35


This week Rich has on the great Matt Hardy (@AcheGram). They discuss how to come up with different phrases, how to go viral on TikTok, and if ziti has gone extinct.

Tell Me About Your Father
Daddy Issues ft. Alex Scordelis: "And Then He Drove Over the Ziti"

Tell Me About Your Father

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2021 81:57


Alex Scordelis joins Elizabeth and Erin for "Daddy Issues" this week, and this early-fall episode is the equivalent of a therapeutic apple-picking trip. Scordelis, a writer for Billy Eichner's deeply hilarious Billy on the Street, and Eichner and Julie Klausner's Hulu triumph Difficult People, is also a rock journalist and regular contributor to the L.A. Review of Books. Listen as Scordelis tells Elizabeth and Erin about his two-year-old son's enchantment with the Beatles and calling his wife “my boy,” his Neil Young cover band the Cinnamon Boys, and the time he interviewed Courtney Love and she tried to marshmallow-test him by conspicuously placing the manuscript of her still unpublished memoir on a coffee table in front of him and then leaving the room. We also talk about the deadbeat dads of Congress, Mick Jagger at the Thirsty Beaver, the TikTok trend Devious Licks (where kids partake in the time-honored tradition of destroying school bathrooms), Dog the Bounty Hunter, Cazzie David's rebuke of the internet delighting in her father's New York Fashion Week pain, and Erin tells us about the time her husband drove over a ziti in her honor.

Angreement
Pasta, Pee, Paint

Angreement

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2021 88:16


This fortnight, Michelle and Katherine angree about amazon reviews, alien vocal cords (which are really just human vocal cords), have their pasta world-view shattered, discuss criminality, and so much more! “Ducks: and how to make them pay” By William Cook https://archive.org/details/cu31924003102971/page/n9/mode/2up The Science of Singing: The Vocal Folds, Robert Lunte, The Vocalist Studio https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2aCyTWC3iqc “15 Throaty Facts About Vocal Cords” Jordan Rosenfeld, Mental Floss https://www.mentalfloss.com/article/87142/15-throaty-facts-about-vocal-cords “How low can you go? Hear the world's deepest voice” ODN https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AaPtiFO-NLc The Sporkful “Mission impastable” https://www.sporkful.com/tag/mission-impastable/ “Lets Talk About Pasta: Comparing Penne, Ziti, and Rigatoni” Paesana https://www.paesana.com/blog/lets-talk-about-pasta-the-difference-between-penne-ziti-and-rigatoni “Those Fancy Cars He Flaunted on YouTube? A $30 Million Fraud Scheme Paid for Them, U.S. Says” Michael Levenson, The New York Times https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/22/us/bill-omar-carrasquillo-charged.html Lorenzo Lotto's Venus and Cupid https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/436918 “The History of Peeing on Things to Find Out if You're Pregnant” Elizabeth King, Vice https://www.vice.com/en/article/z4jdm3/the-history-of-peeing-on-things-to-find-out-if-youre-pregnant Brené Brown, “Dare to Lead” https://daretolead.brenebrown.com “The Trait Hope Scale” https://ppc.sas.upenn.edu/sites/default/files/hopescale.pdf

How Did We Miss That
Cocktails & Ziti: The murders Mary Cawein & Laura Jane Rosenthal

How Did We Miss That

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2021 47:41


A special episode of murder & mayhem with special guest & loyal listener, Liz! This week we get into the "Carbolic Acid Cocktail Murder" & a baked ziti dinner that goes terribly wrong and ends with a plate of hot, gruesome murder. Thank you so much for your support, we appreciate you! For more on these stories, you can find us at @howdidwemissthat on Instagram & https://www.facebook.com/groups/341782203700776 (Facebook). Keep your heads up and look out for each other...