27 Burst results for "467"

Christine Kim Unpacks Ethereum's Shanghai Upgrade

Unchained

01:30 min | Last week

Christine Kim Unpacks Ethereum's Shanghai Upgrade

"Ethereum has had this kind of long road map toward moving toward proof of stake. And even though that transitions happened, there's still kind of additional things that need to be done to sort of finish out that process. And I wondered if you would just tell us what the Ethereum Shanghai upgrade is and also when it might occur. That's a great question. So it's essence. Shanghai is the activation of staked eth withdrawals on Ethereum. Since the since staking was enabled on Ethereum, which surprise was enabled back in December 2020, two years before the merge even happened. People were not able to withdraw their stake. So the validator life cycle could only get to the point where you can exit the network, stop validating on Ethereum. But you couldn't actually move your staked E back into your wallet or move it to an exchange or really do anything with it. And this was sort of like the training wheels of Ethereum's proof of stake blockchain. And up until now, I would say those training wheels are still on. But Shanghai really represents kind of taking off the training wheels of Ethereum's proof of stake consensus protocol and allowing withdrawals to happen. In terms of timing, developers with the activation of Shanghai on the gourley testnet. Anticipate if gorley the activation of the upgrade on gorilla goes well, then we could see the upgrade activated on mainnet as early as the second week of April.

December 2020 Ethereum Second Week Of April Two Years Before Shanghai
Elitsa Taskova Is One of the Smart Folks in the Crypto Industry

CRYPTO 101

01:50 min | 6 months ago

Elitsa Taskova Is One of the Smart Folks in the Crypto Industry

"We have elites at who is the product lead at next show joining us today. Alicia, welcome to the crypto 101 podcast. Thanks for joining. Thanks for having me. I'm really excited to be here. Yeah, we're gonna get into all sorts of different aspects of the platform, your views on the crypto market. But before we do that, I mean, let's get into your background a little bit. Who are you and, you know, I saw that you had a cognitive science degree and you're one of the smart folks in the crypto industries. So tell us a little bit about what's going on with you personally. So you did your research. Okay. So I started my product career back in 2015. While I was part of one of the biggest shoemaker brands Adidas where I was responsible for the entire payment infrastructure on their global retail stores and that was the moment when I started to realize that we have a huge problem with the current payment metals worldwide because I was leading the team there and we faced issues integrating different payment methods across different locations, for example, Latin America has their Mercado de pago car in Germany after paying Australia and you have a lot of payment methods which work differently and the support for them is very heavy on the technical and not only on technical but operational side. So I started looking into alternatives to improve the product experience and make some optimizations and what came to my mind was is there a distributed payment system that is available globally that is a transparent and yeah, everybody has access to it and you can guess what came to my mind.

Alicia Mercado De Pago Adidas Latin America Germany Australia
"467" Discussed on The Scathing Atheist

The Scathing Atheist

02:00 min | 1 year ago

"467" Discussed on The Scathing Atheist

"I <Speech_Music_Male> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Music_Female> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> <Laughter> <Silence> <Music> know what you're thinking. <Speech_Music_Male> Again, <Speech_Male> he's two. <Speech_Female> So like if <Speech_Female> this works <Speech_Female> as planned, <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> it ends in <Speech_Female> a two year old having <Speech_Female> to ask mommy <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> what an immoral <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> sexual act. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Do you have a puzzle <Laughter> about it? <Silence> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> So okay, <Speech_Male> number 5, <Speech_Male> respect <Speech_Male> for others rights and <Speech_Music_Male> property. Do <Speech_Male> not steal. <Speech_Male> Okay, but <Speech_Male> isn't it justified <Speech_Male> stealing? <Speech_Male> If the system's rigged <Speech_Male> to make you die of poverty, <Speech_Male> for example, really? <Speech_Male> Like a trolley problem, <Speech_Male> I'm too? Jean <Speech_Male> belsen was the bank. <Speech_Male> I was he not, I <Silence> feel like he was the <SpeakerChange> bad guy. <Speech_Male> Number 6, <Speech_Male> creation <Speech_Male> of judicial <Speech_Music_Male> system. <Speech_Male> Pursued justice. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Okay, but what if the <Speech_Male> highest court gets politicized <Speech_Male> and they <Speech_Male> were in favor of just <Speech_Male> pure evil under the <Speech_Male> guise of originalism? <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> My mom <Speech_Male> was the bad <Speech_Male> guy. I'm pretty sure. <Speech_Male> And I <Speech_Male> want to be clear because <Speech_Male> these 7 laws are <Speech_Male> supposed to be drawn from the <Speech_Male> story of Noah. <Speech_Male> So <Speech_Male> they're claiming Noah <Speech_Male> as like the <Speech_Male> father <SpeakerChange> of the <Silence> modern judicial <Speech_Female> system <Speech_Male> based on the <Speech_Male> fact that he's sentenced <Speech_Male> his son's <Speech_Male> offspring <SpeakerChange> to eternal <Speech_Male> slavery <Silence> for seeing his <Speech_Music_Male> dick. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> That's <Speech_Male> what they mean by <Speech_Male> justice. <Speech_Male> Yeah. That <Speech_Male> or they <Speech_Male> want my toddler <Speech_Male> to shoot off a guy's <Silence> dick like RoboCop. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Okay, actually I take that back. <Speech_Male> That would be adorable. <Speech_Male> Yeah, I would love <Speech_Male> to see. <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> That guy was a rapist. <Speech_Male> All right, <Speech_Male> and listener, <Speech_Male> you <Speech_Male> probably don't think that I can <Speech_Male> make this pamphlet <Speech_Male> three times <Speech_Male> as crazy with the last <Speech_Male> bullet point, do you? <Speech_Male> You thought that <Speech_Male> having to tell <Speech_Male> two year olds to keep <Speech_Male> their dicks in their diapers <Speech_Male> was some kind of <Speech_Male> craziness, high <Speech_Male> point, didn't you? <Speech_Male> Well no. <Speech_Male> No, <Speech_Male> number 7. <Speech_Male> Bring it home. <Speech_Male> This will be <Speech_Male> seared into your <Silence> mind forever <Speech_Male> now. <Speech_Male> Respect <Speech_Male> all creatures <Speech_Male> do not <Speech_Male> eat flesh <Speech_Male> of an animal. <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> That <Speech_Music_Male> is still <Speech_Music_Male> alive. <Silence> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Which of the <Speech_Male> cartoon animals <Speech_Male> in the boat <Speech_Male> do you imagine is <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement>

"467" Discussed on The Scathing Atheist

The Scathing Atheist

02:49 min | 1 year ago

"467" Discussed on The Scathing Atheist

"To stop me from writing. Right. It starts screaming in tongues and shake it around on the floor just to fuck with them. Gets a little blood pellet. Come on. Girl. There's no rules on our side either girls projectile vomiting all over the place. Right, right. You wanted to do that to her anyway. Yeah. Get set up a lot of fun with that Nancy Pelosi. Come on. What are you doing at this point? You're retiring soon. I know. That'd be fun. All right, well that brings us to the other standout performance from the latest rat event. His name is Scott McKay and he's a QAnon interpreter and anti vaxxer activist who goes by the handle the patriot Street Fighter. No. Fuck yeah. Yes, he does. Yes, he does. And I've pasted pictures of him too, so I mean, just look at him, that's the fucking patriot Street Fighter. Okay. He looks like a guy who drives around the country in a bus that says high octane full throttle truth hammer on the side of that bus. And I said that because he is literally. He looks like Al Roker went through a terrible divorce and took some pickup artistry classes and is now the worst. Take Al Roker. Look at the chaps. He's wearing chaps over his jeans here, yes? Yes. Chaps. He's got a fitted fitted baseball hat backwards, of course. It doesn't quite fit because his face has grown a lot from his probably steroids. And he's wearing tactical sunglasses that wrap around. Oh yeah, for sure. Very tactical. So that's him. Patriot Street Fighter. And he spent most of his speech being mad about the recent death of his friend, Kirsten Weldon, she was a fellow anti vaxxer conspiracy theorist, and apparently she got a really bad case of the hoax and died in the hospital from the alleged COVID hoax. So McKay, went on stage with a literal tomahawk acts. Yep, what? And swung it around while ranting about how his friend got murdered by those doctors in that hospital. Jesus Christ. And how he's going to maybe murder him back or at least expose them for all the murdering that they do and all the doctors and all the hospitals who do a lot of murdering, just like that. According to McKay, quote, any of these doctors or nurses around the country that are involved in the murder of our people, they're going to be spotlighted. I'm dragging them out in the open. I'm going to be naming them by name. I guess he doesn't have their names yet, but I'll do that here. I could name them by color now, but that's not going to be particularly helpful. Right. I wonder what you thought.

Scott McKay Al Roker Nancy Pelosi Kirsten Weldon McKay baseball
"467" Discussed on New Media Show

New Media Show

06:57 min | 1 year ago

"467" Discussed on New Media Show

"Know where the dead bodies our jobs todd your podcast host. I know where the dead bodies are. You know so you know. It's it's because guess who they blame. They always blame the hosts they blame. The hosts all usually usually up and the host says senator problem. Everything's fine when they look at that moment. But in this particular situation apple looks like the culprit but apple apple changed their infrastructure. And how they look at rss feeds as opposed to many others in the industry. Also the way you gotta remember. Wh- mike's the chat. Mike is elite. Maybe still maybe working mike. How many support tickets do you get a week from. Podcasters saying i published my podcast and it hasn't up. This is before the change. This is before apple podcast. Would when you when you were head apple. Podcast app in you were as a listener. Subscribe directly to the feed. When that was the case. How many times. Mike a week would you tell. Podcasters subscribed your own show and see if it's updated and that solve the problem a week. He's gonna come back and say ten times a week. We'd have people that reach out to us and say they would go to apple podcasts. And look for their show it's not updated not even having followed or subscribe to their own show. The didn't go to the app. I they went to the store. I and of course. The store was twenty four hours behind the times and the app would be up to date on the. Oh i'm good. I'm good i'm good yeah. You don't have to worry. They then once they figured that out. Now the cards of switched. We can't tell we can't tell them. We have to say contact apple because it is apple or we have a problem or we always check to make sure we don't have a problem. We do a cursory look at feed to make sure it's good. Make sure it's not airing out. Make sure there's not a validation issue you know. We do our due diligence on a feed that we run. So this is you know the. It's not so james. this has been a problem forever. Nothing new right. And it's surprising. These companies are figuring out that well. They didn't pay attention to the store. They paid attention to their apps. But because this is the kick in the butt because most of the apps out there feed from apple you're going to be delayed everywhere right. That's right that's true. So some happened biters. I'm hearing you're starting to build their own caching system. Imagine that yeah more. And more amar wanting direct submission from podcasters to having having those types of conversations with a few of platforms that have been Only getting shows via their own log in process blueberry has an api if you wanna update your app by the way so i think there's progress and then like we mentioned onstage during our live session that there. We are reaching a point. I think we're getting there. Where most of the major music streaming platforms around the world have or will be embracing podcasts at some point I think once in. We're kind of reaching that saturation point. And then we're going to see john base Topic apps start to incorporate podcasts. Which i think is the next here of listening apps that we're going to start seeing Who are it's starting to trickle. Oh it is i mean. I'm already working with a couple of already. And then there's this other type of listening app which is considered the social networking podcast listening apps which Big emphasis. I think coming out of podcasts. Movement is around the interactive lady level of podcasting which I think you heard a little bit of that from the the fireside folks of trying to get the you know that deeper interactive engagement layer with your audience right and that's the common theme. I think you know in danny talked about that during our session as well about the power of of audience activation And and involvement in your show. And what you do even outside of your show are that promote your your show and your supporters and if you want to hear more about that directly from danny go go listen to the the the live show from podcast movement but I did see an article that came out of one of the the attendees from podcast movement. jenna spinelli Who wrote wrote article on medium talking about her three takeaways for independent podcasters. It's an article that discount of summarize a little bit of the big topics. I think that were kind of overriding the theme from podcast movement. And i think what one of them falls out of. Mr tom webster. Is you know you can't really succeed in podcasting unless you have some idea of who your audiences i think. That's dow's big theme. That came out of tom's presentation as well. You know doing a survey of your audience. Getting an idea of who they are what they're looking for. And then also he's been a big big fan of this concept of making your show unique Don't do show anybody else's doing if at all possible and You know to serve as your audience to learn who who those people are. And that question came up during our session to todd and we talked about that a little bit as well and then the the other big theme that came out of his and it says here the independent podcasters can find strength in numbers. And i think that concept is really.

apple mike Mike amar danny jenna spinelli james Mr tom webster john tom todd
"467" Discussed on RiYL

RiYL

04:24 min | 1 year ago

"467" Discussed on RiYL

"So i just realized like don't i don't i don't know what the analogy is. It'd be like don't you know. Don't don't try to after the gold rush two minutes after you pick up a makuuchi qatar. Like it's not gonna happen. You gotta put miles on. So so. When i would perform i would. I would instead of doing this. Really kind of affected air sat. Stuart lee was just like i guess i'll just kind of be myself but more obnoxious and that'll be it. You know like and so the comedy that i did going forward the performances that i did whether it was cartoon based or pencil sharpening based or when i lived in beacon. My friends salmon. I started doing comedy shows and we would do like two man comedy routines that was just much goofy and much more dislike like on election profit. Makers it's just me exaggerated a little bit when you're doing comics you're gonna compare yourself to dan klaus eight. Oh and you're doing podcasting. You're gonna compare yourself to whatever ivory glasser rogan king joe rogan. Cher time sure marches. Tomorrow all the greats in pencil sharpening. You found a thing that you could be the if not the best in the at like certainly top ten old dirty bastard. There's no father to his style. I don't yeah. I don't know what tradition that was working in. I mean obviously. I guess it's literally humor. And i had some experience with that in brooklyn in the the crew i was rolling around with bashing it is kinda hodgman adjacent in a sense. Yeah yeah and he wrote the foreword to the book you know and he was an early booster early and enthusiastic booster of the pencil sharpening project. I mean that book did okay. But i think like a lot of the other things i've made. It was just a little confusing because it was. It was literally a pencil sharpening manual but obviously got crazier and crazier. The chapters went on and like the final chapters. How sharpen pencil with your mind and just has all. This was all these random asides and weird little tables and charts in it but but it was filled with actual pencil facts and knowledge. You know like you could read it and actually learn about pencils you know. We drove to an antique store that specializes in old office equipment in.

Stuart lee dan klaus glasser rogan king joe rogan brooklyn
"467" Discussed on RiYL

RiYL

04:43 min | 1 year ago

"467" Discussed on RiYL

"Temp job was so much fun. I was cracking up so hard. Making animated show with john hodgman called dick town. We had so much fun. You know directing actors and being in the studio and add living on mike you know. It's just like really really fun. It was a lot of work but the fun stuff. I think most of the things that i've made i i can. I have a pretty good idea close to the close to the moment of creation of. Oh this is good or like. Oh i'm in. I'm onto something here either. Because i'm like cracking up or maybe i'm confusing myself in an interesting way. That feels fresh. You know i've made cartoons before that. I don't really understand how they work or you know what they're about but it's like really got me like really engaged in wide awake have made fake websites. That really make me laugh. And i don't know why they're funny and it's just something. I don't know where. I don't know why it's tickling me but i'd be like oh this this works in a just world this. This would be a hit. Which i guess is a is again. I must have the must not have imposter syndrome. I think it's the other people who are the imposters. was that line from sunset boulevard. It's like my face didn't get big. It's the pictures that got small or whatever it is like. I'm not the impostor you'd be working imposters. I don't know. I feel like we're circling around. Something in any could tell of. This is just like completely inaccurate. Do you equate success with things. Not being fun anymore yes well. It's i believe that a successful person can also have fun. Doing what has made him or her successful. I think for me. I have a deep seated. I think i have a deep seated belief that is irrational and like i said before. I don't know where it comes from. A deep seated belief that either. I don't deserve to be successful or a don't deserve to be happy and i certainly don't deserve to be happy wellbeing successful now. That would be real. That'd be a real inversion of all that is holy right but the fucked up thing is like i've liked moments when i've been successful..

dick town john hodgman mike
"467" Discussed on Freakonomics

Freakonomics

02:42 min | 1 year ago

"467" Discussed on Freakonomics

"Some point right with his nonprofit green wave. Smith is trying to recruit train and organize an army of kelp farmers. Of course it's got to be financially viable. When i came in the wild price for kelp was twenty. Six cents a pound. I said it at a dollar for my farm. But i was a first mover or outside new york and then it's dropped down to fifty five to sixty cents a pound. No farmer can make a living at that rate. What you need is a floor of two dollars. Don't mean to sound like the man coming after you but if this was telecom firms talking about getting together to discuss a price floor i would say that sounds like collusion on the other hand. If i'm a big firm. I could have to do with the ocean. I could have nothing to do with agriculture. I think these guys have gotten really good at what they do. But they've set the price relatively high. And i can come in and get a couple of billion dollars of venture capital and drive them so under water by pricing much lower than monopolize takeover. So that the outcome that fear. Yes well collusion. No every farmer should collude every day. Like price-fixing is our main tool. But that's why you form cau- right you're allowed to price fixing ochoa up. And sometimes to be fair. The government helps do that with milk. for instance. exactly. That sort of collaboration has been key. But what you're located. Exactly the issue is that we've gone out as small scale. Farmers and de risk the industry and huge amounts of money and big companies like trident. The biggest seafood companies in the world are leasing grounds aiming for vertical integration. I won't be able to stop that right. Society has to stop that halsey being developed state to state right now on regeneration farming seaweed and. There's a huge opportunity to embed certain rules in that policy. For example you can't be an absent owner so it's not like iowa where huge percentage of the hog farm owners. Their companies were outside. You can make sure that seed has to be produced locally within a certain bio region hundred miles or something from where the farms are so. There are certain levers that we can do. My dream would be that we would look like super cuts and the reason for that is super cuts. His never caught on in a place like fairhaven in inner cities and the reason is because there are so many people with barber shops and salons and things that barrett entry so low. It's not that expensive. You want to look like the opposite. A super cuts don't you. I'm ball so i i never go.

twenty new york Smith two dollars hundred miles fifty five Six cents a pound sixty cents a pound iowa first mover trident a dollar couple of billion dollars so many people
"467" Discussed on The Agostinho Zinga Show

The Agostinho Zinga Show

05:01 min | 1 year ago

"467" Discussed on The Agostinho Zinga Show

"That's them so that's going to be pretty cool to see that on sunday. You have anton honey. Ten hour set. That's a banger. That's a good way to end the festival. Dj's always gonna know you're gonna tear up especially not so a festival he's gonna to destroy go number one to u. s. p. f. spf dj. Sem heck oaks and mcm playing under the monarchy of hera swoon. That's on inter-africa say but This raven on in berlin pre show where it quickpoint puerto around the different places. Motorshow sean. don't but that's a pretty good lineup. Rebel of course you represents she's gonna do pretty well there in zero so embedded in burke hind. She was pretty decent knee. Hate of when. I've seen on hold on who are playing on there a couple of times. Robin hood lives going to be awesome. Sharyl ski mosque and steny. Jesus christ made this a sordid lineup. A really dishonor reminds her this lineup reminder of proper clubland this is like a saudi clubland. There's a few big names on it but none of the usual lazy ones. I can media lens and exchange stuff like a. You know maybe less so much because you know he's actually really good. But for the most part the immediate lens bookings just like whenever you see. See a name again. Unanimously news going to be a tired lineup. So this is actually a really solid solid lineup. I'm not going to lie. I think they out presell tickets for people that registered and stuff. But they've obviously all gone so yes says he appreciation. Tickets are now moving far saturday where he sold out of course festival is. You're going to have the book or free days. There's no point guard someone that is about booking. All of it together makes no sense personally. Think especially considering the amount of time we believe on look and you can have to go to festival properly. Which is why. I'm probably considering. Go into primavera for both weekends That lineup is always tough but yet the mental twenty-one one the absolutely smashed it a really diverse lineup. I feel like again. Maybe i'm wrong. But if it was like a lotta names. i don't recognize outside of the ones you mentioned. So that is a good sign. Dissociate love gals on here too. That's a good sign Representational that milwaukee is important just to keep it fresh lesser about the kind of filling quote this thing just at mickey interesting like again. The normans ago had him bay. Plague like had enough. We know he's good. We know what he does fair enough at this kind of festive..

Ten hour sunday Jesus christ saturday both weekends burke hind twenty-one one berlin u. s. inter-africa milwaukee anton mosque Robin hood show Sharyl ski p. steny normans
"467" Discussed on Bertcast's Podcast

Bertcast's Podcast

05:43 min | 1 year ago

"467" Discussed on Bertcast's Podcast

"Tv show and we just we like a lot of moments. Where and i was going through anxiety at the time he added doing that show. We really really connected really bonded. I i still rely close friend. I feel like you'd be a great guy to be around when you're going through something like well because here's the thing i think you have the range of like you can actually have a real moment like you could. You're not afraid to actually just have an emotional moment but also if you just wanna get fucked up and just cruise and just shove the feelings down. The you're you're like one of its like it is insane. How good you are just just getting fucked. Like i remember one of the times that we met was like at in tampa rows with bobby and you were. I think the improv and we'd have we both did cal to show and you were. I was in awe. Because like you know i i know who you were and everything and i was like and you know you. Sometimes you like some of this has to be a bit of a stake like. There's no but you were just legitimately getting fucking seven am. I'm annoyed that i'm awake. You know what i mean. i can't even fucking function. You're just getting fucked up your training for a marathon or you think. I think i was running a half marathon. That you're extent you have maryland and you're like those Didn't you come down with me and jim. You came to the half marathon right. No i didn't come to have maryland the thing. It's like me and bobby we we've had some kind of weird travel thing. And i was just tucker because we we're on tour together right. You're just driving around. And i remember being like i am. I can't do anything but prepare for doing twenty minutes in front of bobby today because i had a rough car ride and you are getting fucking hammered seven. Am you're training for a marathon. Your headlining shows. And then you're like and then we're gonna get fucked up afterwards. And i was like and you were not joke. There was no there was no like Anxiety and you're you're like there was a twinkle in your eye talking about it. And i was like this is fucking insanity. I need to nap. I'm by the way i was like..

twenty minutes today seven am both jim seven one maryland
"467" Discussed on Bertcast's Podcast

Bertcast's Podcast

05:53 min | 1 year ago

"467" Discussed on Bertcast's Podcast

"Is david sedaris greek. Yeah this sedaris has agreed. Yep sit sedaris him. I wonder how i wonder. Have you ever thought about doing your act in greek. Yeah you know. That was something i was thinking about because i saw a lot of people had started. Like touring and athens and i was kinda thinking it would be interesting to go over there and just try some kind of hybrid show and try and maybe do a couple of minutes in greek and then do the rest like advertisers and english show but like have as a safe way to kind of try things out because you know. I'm fluent in greek. But it's like you know comedy is like it's all were like having you got to really think about your words and it's like you gotta really be deliberate about what you say even the dumbest dick joke. It's like if you move a word here. They're completely ruins it. So even though i can get i can talk to people and and my my accent is good so you don't think it doesn't seem like i'm foreign. It seems like i'm a kind of dumb guy that grew up in greece. You know what i mean like. That's how i saw. It doesn't seem like i'm american but it doesn't seem like i'm the fucking sharpest guy you've ever pausing lot i'm stammering. I'm like You know doing that a lot so it will be interesting to see. I definitely am going to try at some point when those. That's it not to fucking so many people dealt with so much worse shit. But i was going to do like a european tour last year. And now he's going to be. I was going to try and sneak that in there and give it a shot but one day one day. We'll do it though we were really good friends with Navarre dollars oh yeah did o'cl. He's fucking her. She is a first ballot. Greek american hall of famer dude. It's our grief after. Be greek hall of famers without question her first of all my big fat greek wedding. Nothing swept through the greek american community. Like my big fat greek wedding. It was insane bro. Like it wasn't wide release. It was all like word of mouth. And it's like in baltimore. They only played it at like the art house theater. For whatever reason so you have all these fucking diner owners..

last year first ballot one day greece english first greek european david sedaris american couple of minutes baltimore Navarre many people greek american Greek american
"467" Discussed on Bertcast's Podcast

Bertcast's Podcast

02:20 min | 1 year ago

"467" Discussed on Bertcast's Podcast

"Extracts and do something about it for hymns is one stop shop hot shopping for hair loss. Skin sexual wellness offerman is time to write a new chapter in your life and this one starts with air. Hymns is may be to that you can be the best version of yourself with light help of licensed masks medical providers with fda approved products. Help you treat hair loss. Not snake oil pills gas station. Remedies israel prescriptions backed by science hymns is created by a guy that knew a lot of these conversations for a man are easier to have online than in person. Like i had to have him..

"467" Discussed on Bertcast's Podcast

Bertcast's Podcast

01:50 min | 1 year ago

"467" Discussed on Bertcast's Podcast

"And then this you get served and octopus that you're like you're like i just came in my pants. I'm an eight year old boy who reach sexual maturity because of these. This octopus right now So that's that's the best part about my family for sharing it's gluttony runs in our. It's so funny to go meet your family and then re recognize things about yourself that you had no idea you had you were just destined like you had no choice like a big thing for me. Was i went to see my telling you like my roommate. His he's greek to his family. His parents came here to go to college right. They didn't come here to work in restaurants for a year to save up to go back degrees. They fun coming back for grad school. So it's a different type of greek. I always in. My head was like greek. People are fucking rude. they're always vulgar. It's like what the hell it's like. We're just a bad fucking country. And then i met his family. And they're the nicest people you've ever met there. Just they they take care of you. And then i go and then go. After meeting his family. I go to see my family for a few days. And the first the first words out of my fat for seven aunts mouth is eh. You want meatballs. You fat faggot. That's how you greet me slur. And telling me i should. I want meatballs. I just came from america. But that's the where you're like you have. I have no chance. I have no choice. There is just like that was what my family was like. They're just they're just rude and they call you fat and they like put you down constantly. Did you know that sixty six percent start losing the hair by the age of thirty five. Look at this. I have a perfect head of hair. Do you know why have a perfect head of hair. Because i started doing something about it before it got too late. If you're noticing it slipping back. Stop the train right there.

america sixty six percent first seven eight year old first words greek a year thirty five
"467" Discussed on Bertcast's Podcast

Bertcast's Podcast

05:48 min | 1 year ago

"467" Discussed on Bertcast's Podcast

"Recollection of what i said no fucking brutal and i go and both times and i always rest my hat on it. I am a good person. I try not to talk shit about people. I do talk yet. I say reckless stuff all the time. Yeah but but But you know how sometimes you play both sides of the fence you have a bad thought and then you'll go. Maybe i should rectify that. And then i don't know what i've said on the podcast twice. People hit me up and been like him. And i wanted to talk to you about what you said about me. And i'm like a yesterday. Was the scariest is is Kumail owner and i and i love camille and but see. That's see that's what. We're i go where i go. I know how i feel about the guy right. I know how i feel about. So i i wouldn't ever say anything negative. You know who knows when when he posted a picture number. One was boston balls. Let's be is the fucking guys like. He's insane what happened to go from a comic from chicago like a an immigrant comedy chicago to like euro fucking marvel superhero. It's weird bro. Let's be honest. It's a copy for your success. But that's your like a weighty like joke writer and now you're like and you could fuck anyone up and you have like klis. Lego man jaw. It's fucking while he looks so like he looked so different than the guy. I met total so different. But but i i. He texted me and he was like. Is this burt. And i was like yup. I knew who it was. Never getting came right right right. And i was like fuck. Yeah i wanted to talk to you about something. And i was like a fucking so. I immediately texted domino's like turning negative about kumail and he was like his like i. Don't think so. Yeah and then. I'm like faulk in the news came in. I really appreciate you defending me. And i'll say oh. Yeah that's right. It did it was it was. It was the first time i understood. Representation really understood it gaining. I understood you know when you see black panther you go not i get it right. But it's such a franchise that you're like gather should be more black movies. But you're talking to a guy who's been obsessed with black movies like my whole life belly. Yeah any any movie. Where baby boy. Anything where there was a hip hop i was. I've always more that shit. Yeah and then you realize but you don't understand what representations and then when cama- i figured it out on the podcast. I was talking and i was like. Yeah why would. Why wouldn't some young pakistani kid be able to go to a marvel movie and see someone that looks like him do something other than type it in the computerized now. I.

cama camille chicago both sides Kumail twice kumail yesterday both times pakistani first time One Lego boston marvel
"467" Discussed on Bertcast's Podcast

Bertcast's Podcast

05:12 min | 1 year ago

"467" Discussed on Bertcast's Podcast

"Feel like i. It's hard for me to to put together the fact that hundreds of thousands of people are listening to us because to me. It's a conversation. I had with my friends. Even when you're telling me that bid it's like bro. i have never thought about it. Come down bit outside of the room that we've done it like maybe there's like three or four that happened to be recurring bits and our friendship that come up a lot but like i i really like i could not tell you. Eighty ninety nine percent of the things that are said that podcast. Because it's exactly like us at lunch being like fucking you know just fucking around and being like oh you know like just i mean the dumbest shit of all time and so i think that's where is like we are guards are totally down because at the beginning no one was listening and we assumed no one would ever listen and now that they are they really are just hearing like a couple of guys that are good at riffing together that have insane like over the top sense of humor being like you know and you're right it's like a friendship well people say about us it's a friendship simulator and it basically is that you know so but it's fun i listen no no complaints here i get to just make so much money doing nothing the top top top five cameo shows kenyan your patriot. I'm sorry patriotic. What what was that is. How did that happen. How did you guys get patriotic. Dude honestly it was. It really was like just lock right place right time because we had friends nick with knicks roommate. Couple of weeks roommates at the time were on a really big. Like like political podcast. That got was the first podcast. Like jump like pop off on patriots on this show chapo trap house and there i like those dudes like we were just friends with these these these dudes and like one girl who Had a big show and they saw that model is something that they can do and this was like in the run-up to like the primaries to the last election. So it's like hillary versus bernie and it's like a big socialist podcasts at a cool at the time it's like things that younger people turning more to the left and shit and they were just like they had a good show that was actually like from a new perspective and they were funny people and their show blew up and they were just like you do patriot and then they also just sort of like They also just and then you know they kind of promoted us and then we went on every comedy podcast. We could go to but it was really the sort of thing that's like. Hey we might as well try. This seems like some people are listening. Maybe we can make some money and then we just did. I mean the total right place. Right time blew up. I mean you guys..

bernie Eighty ninety nine percent four three first podcast hundreds of thousands of peopl hillary one girl Couple of weeks kenyan couple of guys top five cameo shows house
"467" Discussed on Bertcast's Podcast

Bertcast's Podcast

05:01 min | 1 year ago

"467" Discussed on Bertcast's Podcast

"I was in the car today. and i'm driving back and forth from this place and and i I have you guys on. And i just realized i was smiling. I was smiling. Yeah forget the conversation was about. It was one of the ones found on youtube. But i was just going to play next. Play next plane play next and It was like anthony hopkins Taunting it was such a fucking hilarious that it was a plot in the movie that he was taunting a gay kid. Basically and i'm just sitting there picking apart. And i'm just smiling and i went. I was thinking every guy. And i think the the majority of our listeners to bears are dudes lot of women to a lot of women to but a lot of dudes. Yeah every guy ultimately has had his best friend that that where they can laugh their asses off together and they've had those moments where they've gone to lunch and you are laughing hysterically and then you come home and try to explain it to your wife and right right right right and the guy's hand was weird and we were like what if we put in a guys asked and they're like what the and it's like. What are you talking about. Tom laid this thing. The other day is one of the hardest. I've ever laughed. And i don't know if it'll get the i don't know if people will get it as hard as we got it like ryan dot it. We were doing Going to certain arab after it but we did a swap cast with bad friends where we did their podcast. They did our podcast for april fools. Right yea they have a young lady named rude rudy. Who's their co host and we were doing. I didn't know we were doing. I fucked up. Because i thought we were doing songs where you sing it. Slow enough so the other person can sing. Along with you are this is called. I have an elephant. And then you're like i And then the other person just tries to the words going to say nagui. He's god big and you're like years years so yeah..

Tom youtube anthony hopkins today rude rudy one of april one arab
"467" Discussed on Bertcast's Podcast

Bertcast's Podcast

04:15 min | 1 year ago

"467" Discussed on Bertcast's Podcast

"And they built up too much of a belief in their son to the point where it led to hilarious moments like telling the headliner. The his food is for the opener. Not even as soon as he says that i said i love this kid. I love this kid. I love this kid. And then and then i saw him saw him. He was on douglas. Movies or something. And i was like. I'm glad he's doing stuff. The my saw his name come up and it was on come down and i started giggling and i went i. I don't need to know anything else about this. Podcast other than i love it. And i just i didn't even realize it. Was you guys until you guys went onto patriot on man. listen like couple episodes. Yeah just going like it was like the casualness of it is. It's a very laid back. Podcast you guys do something that i think. Sometimes me and i actually listened this morning. I listen to a bunch of stuff on on youtube. And i was like man. You guys have such a children's about it. You know each other that like when you guys take apart. Movies are take apart a celebrity or or or talk about having the celebrity on your show or whatever that may be it it you allow yourselves to be in the moment and really whittle apart whereas sometimes i feel like i very much so when i do and i will. I'm going to try to crack this when i'm with tom. I sometimes will the bit. And then And then bail out of it you know. Yeah well i think. Well i will. I do think you guys do a great job of like. I think the appeal for our show. And i think the most successful podcasts is like h truly friends. Hanging out is really what it comes down to like. Your shows are like all the different shit that you do like. Whether it's like you you know you like your crew from mike rogan. Where it's like you guys when you do the like sober october stuff. And then you and tom's like that whole off. shoot of all their shows. It's like the magic is in like friends just chilling. It's like as comedians for us. It's hard to be like. Oh we just gotta be funny. Twenty four seven. But it's like people just kind of like people that legitimately like each other. Who are really funny behaving in natural like the way they naturally would and i think that's our show. It's like it happened that way. Because i thought this thing was gonna i was like. Oh we'll do fuck in seven episodes. This was like this is like six years ago when you remember what everyone was like. Oh podcast done. Everyone was like yeah merrin. Did it like that's over. Like i even was like who gives a fuck like i was. I was making like you know. Barely eking out a living like opening on the rove featuring on the road and like doing like some writing for online websites and shit and and mullins idea to his credit. And i was just like the casualness is from us. Always been like this will never work this. Show fucking socks and on some level every time i do it. I'm like this. Could be the last one and i who fucking cares. You know what i mean. I think i think that's the like the almost the secret tutors at like we don't really give a fuck. We're never going to try hard and it's gotten to the point..

seven episodes mike rogan tom youtube six years ago this morning couple episodes Twenty four seven each
"467" Discussed on Bertcast's Podcast

Bertcast's Podcast

05:35 min | 1 year ago

"467" Discussed on Bertcast's Podcast

"And i've ever met because because because he he like he he he he he. He doesn't deny who he is. But i think bros. go like i think bros. Like rogin fans will see. That's kind of gay guy. You gotta be up. Don't bring it up. just hang out. Fuck do young my face but you you can take a guy out for a shellfish tower and then suck him off in the back of your limousine. But i don't wanna see you know what i mean. That's that's how they want to see. I want to know where your outfits brand of doing off. I thought about that too. Because it's never not funny to me to just like pretend to be like you know what i mean. Just be like oh can i suck you. Just knock on my race be like hey can i suck your dick real fast. Good for last for you know stupid. It's the dumbest thing of all time. Let's be doing the math. It's probably homophobic on some level. It's like so ridiculous that it's funny. You know what i mean. It's it's the most benevolent kind of homophobia. You know what i mean. I wouldn't be offended if i if i was listening to a podcast in two gay guys were like. Yeah well sometimes. I like to knock on my gay friends door and go. hey wanna go get some pussy to laugh hysterically. Yeah can you imagine if that was our lives absolutely no my finger straight is one of the funniest things i've ever seen in my life. They nailed they completely. You know nails But yeah. I don't know man it's it just is also part of the humor is in like it's so funny to think about a guy that is home like what do you mean you're like that was my moving college freshman year of college. I would find like the the guys who had just moved from like you know i will. I grow baltimore. And so i went to. I went to school right. Outside of baltimore is the only place. I get a scholarship and so it was like this. You know it was not a great school. So we just got a lot of like different segments of maryland basically and so there's like a farm boy like the eastern shore there's like you know conservative parts of maryland. Everybody thinks about like baltimore and shit but there's a big. There's a big like conservative. Like you know rural area there and i would just fuck with all those guys and be like i would. Literally you guys sean. A fucking give each other head and they would end these guys thought falker you talking about dude. I would like that's fucked up. Get the fuck. I am i. How is this your response. You like the disgust you that much or they would do like this. I would show gay porn to them on my phone. You know what. I mean or like on my laptop i guess at the time..

two gay guys maryland one funniest rogin
"467" Discussed on Bertcast's Podcast

Bertcast's Podcast

05:40 min | 1 year ago

"467" Discussed on Bertcast's Podcast

"Get ready come boys. I'm taking the come town. That love the name of their podcast. It's nick Adam and starbucks starbucks is on the pa. The first time i ever. It's not all the just rose by the way I would love to get all the cowboys in here and really have like a real comes celebration. First time i ever heard of any other podcasts. I fucking giggled. I'm in. I'm i don't even know what it's about In and their podcast is awesome. It is three dudes hanging out. it's on patriots and they are murdering it on pedroia on its them just hanging out bullshit. It's listening to friends. It's what a great podcast should be. Is just just like you feel like you're on the wall and i have met star bruce. A number of times A couple of times. I did radio with them in tampa. We talk about that. I shouldn't be itching my right now. We did radio in tampa. Are we talking about that. I was partying. He was bobby. He regularly tours. What bobby kelly. His podcast is called come town. He's from baltimore. He grew up in greektown in baltimore. His parents we talk about all this on the podcast. His parents are authentic greek. We talk about the greek hall of famers in our country. We talk about him. Not having a tooth we talked about him losing his hair and keeping that look and and really leaning into it not shaving it off he is. He is a funny dude. I wanted to a podcast. Them person like i really do. Because he just makes me giggle. He's great energy. He's a fantastic comic. And like i said go on youtube. Find some of their come town videos. It's it's fucking hilarious. They really are. And i was lucky to have him on the podcast Without further ado stop healthiest. How we doing doing good man i. I'm obsessed with your hair right now. Oh did thank you. I would love to talk in detail about my hair journey. It's i can. I tell you i so i you know i'm losing my hair. Been losing my hair forever. I've been using rogaine for since i was twenty one years old. Yeah and And my wife's like. I really think you're i liked. I like your hair. Tom and i got offered to get hair. Transplants right. get the fuck outta here. How many hit us up. We'll do both you guys. Holy shit so i wanna see i wanna see the fucking jerry curl. I want you all balls out in. I was going to go. I was going to go john. Mayer like full fucking haired fucking commercial. Yeah but then but then i. I looked at like my wife's like don't do it..

starbucks tampa youtube twenty one years jerry curl Tom greektown both first time john First time baltimore three dudes nick Adam kelly greek star bruce rogaine pedroia
How Fat Burning Actually Works

The Model Health Show

02:19 min | 2 years ago

How Fat Burning Actually Works

"This is the education that i wish i would received in my university nutrition in biology classes in learning truly. How are metabolism actually works. How does the process of fat loss actually work. How does it happen. Where does fat go when you lose it. does it go to another dimension. Is it going to the multi-diverse. Do we need at man to help us figure all this stuff. We're going to dive into that today. And so much more. So we're gonna take you through the process of metabolism a process of fat loss very rudimentary understanding of it. But it's going to put so much power into your hands to truly know how the process works and also we're going to dive into specific nutrients foods that actually assist in the enzymes in the hormones. Involved in a fat loss process the very first thing understand right out of the gate is what are we actually dealing with here when we're talking about burning fat. What are we dealing with here so often in our society today. We're trying to target and to get rid of something that we don't even understand what it is. We don't even know what it is it. We're trying to get rid of in. So the first thing that i want to share with you and this is a very important. Understanding is at body fat itself. Your fat is an oregon. Our body fat is in oregon. We tend to think about it. Like is just scattered droplets of stuff throughout our bodies scattered droplets of unhappiness sometimes scattered throughout our bodies. But it really your fat cells in your fat cell communities which we're gonna talk about. They worked together as an organ much. Like your skin is an organ that really and move throughout your body is a big part of your nervous system. Your body fat is a huge part of your indifferent system right. It works together much. Like in oregon. Your body fat releases and other substances to regulate your body's metabolism by communicating with other organs and tissues. Such as your liver your pancreas muscles and this introduces a critical but overlooked point in how this process actually works in that. Your body fat itself is largely responsible for regulating. your metabolism.

Oregon
Can Language Models Be Too Big  With Emily Bender And Margaret Mitchell

The TWIML AI Podcast

02:21 min | 2 years ago

Can Language Models Be Too Big With Emily Bender And Margaret Mitchell

"Are at everyone. I am here with meg. Mitchell and a researcher and emily bender professor at the university of washington. And we are here to talk about their recent paper on the dangers of casting. Parents can language models. Be too big meghan emily. Welcome to this podcast. Thank you welcome. Thank super excited to jump into this conversation. Let's start out like we always do with. Having you share a little bit about your background meg. We'll have you go first. yeah. I basically studied as a computational linguists like emily i got my phd in computer science. And then i've worked at johns hopkins microsoft research And most recently. Google research worked on computer vision as well. As natural language processing computational linguistics and more recently issues of bias unfairness Awesome and emily. You are on the show too long ago when we talked about is linguistics missing from alpine research. Give us a little bit of your background. And maybe a catch up on what you've been doing for the past year so like you said. I'm a linguist. Studying linguistics at uc berkeley and then stanford and then. I got to come to washington and start the professional. Master's program in computational linguistics. Where meg was a student many years ago. Now i got over then. So i work in a largely in linguistics and competition linguistics but since about twenty sixteen have also been working in the space of. I've tried to avoid the phrase. Actually ethics sends people down these paths into philosophy that i find somewhat less helpful but societal impact of nlp and in that context a lot of the same discussions are relevant that relevant to other things that fall under the umbrella. What it's called a. And yet in the past year. I have continued that work and had this great opportunity to work with megan other members of her team and in particular dr timmy brew and a phd student of mine. engine mcmillan major on a paper looking at the impact of large language models. And we started this in september and submitted in october. And it's the first paper i've ever written. That has been far more work after it was finished than writing it in the first

Emily Bender Meghan Emily MEG Uc Berkeley University Of Washington Mitchell Johns Hopkins Emily Microsoft Stanford Google Washington Dr Timmy Brew Engine Mcmillan Megan
UK Coronavirus Variant Spreading in the US

Seattle's Morning News with Dave Ross

00:54 sec | 2 years ago

UK Coronavirus Variant Spreading in the US

"New CDC director Dr Rochelle Walensky has an update on the covert variance of emerged so far. Variants remain a great concern, and we continue to detect them in the United States with at least 33 jurisdictions recording 471 variant cases as of January, 31st. 467 of these cases are now be 117 variants first detected in the UK in cases of this variant have now been detected in 32 states. Three of the cases are the B 1351 variant first detected in South Africa, two states have reported cases of this variant. This includes one confirmed case in Maryland over the weekend and two confirmed cases from South Carolina last week. CDC has followed up with Maryland to offer technical assistance, including additional case investigation of laboratory

Dr Rochelle Walensky CDC United States UK South Africa Maryland South Carolina
How Covid-19 changed Wine Consumer Behaviors in China

Italian Wine Podcast

06:52 min | 2 years ago

How Covid-19 changed Wine Consumer Behaviors in China

"Today. I'm going to be talking about cove. Ed's impact on china's y market and how those impacts are affected consumers buying behaviors. First of all this year. The buzzword we be hearing is lockdown but in china when we talk about lockdown. It's in the strictest sense you know one house. Hoed can only allow person to go out. Once a day to purchase or the necessities unlike in europe or in the. Us where you have the luxury to go out and do a lot of tours in china. It's really strict on in areas that are most affected by the pandemic. You're not even allowed to go all. There's a community officer who is on standby just to send all the necessities to you to your door. So this is the context where talking about when we want to understand covets impacts on china this is also the circumstance under which a lot of the business have to operate for three months from late january to april. So this is something i want to want. Everyone who's listening in to bear in mind to keep it in the back of her head on back of a mind to understand the couvert impacts. So i applaud. I'm gonna talk about cove ed's impact on china's wine imports so what happened to wine poured by the end of january. China had locked down the whole country as a result restaurants hotels essentially closed and miss the most important chinese new year sales for anyone wondering how big and how important is chinese new year for a lot of wine merchants. A lot of the lot of them who that i talked to toad may chinese new year wine sales account for roughly twenty percent or even up to thirty percent of their new sales so imagine that seven day period was lost okay and then imagine that period was extended for three months. So that's the challenge facing a lot of the importers in china. Of course logistics were delayed because quickly the pandemic spread from china to the rest of the world even when china in may and june recovered from the pandemic countries like france. And you know you us were in the depth of the pandemic so that affected global logistics while okay so we have the latest figures from the china customs at a showed. Import room declined by thirty percent. Thirty point eight percent to three hundred forty seven million leaders in poor value declined roughly thirty percent as well to u. s. one point eight four billion. This is quite significant. Because i want to draw attention to the fact that last year china's one import value already declined. We saw roughly ten percent job in volume terms and one percent in value terms because of the economic slowdown and trade war between china and us so the downturn we are saying this year is a continuation of what happened last year as well so that you know have a projection for what is to expect an what's to calm right okay. So the next one. I am going to talk about because of the job in wine imports on how affected merchants consumers and the price points are with saying on the shelves. Merchants of course when you have stalks that meant to be depleted for chinese new year that still sitting in the warehouse. What do you do when you have uncertainties facing forward more cautious. You becoming more cautious with your spending what to buy how to budget. That's natural response. A market sudden seeing a lot of merchants exiting the market on. Fortunately one of the examples with sane is from jovial. You guys are familiar with jovial. So basically jovial is a wine and agriculture importing company backed by the tech giant noval five years ago when it entered the market to stop important distribution winds. It costs a lot of and naturally they had a peak. I think around twenty key bruns including the world's biggest Organic winery and madonna in in chile and also jong here moi x. families wines earlier this year due to the pandemic it's general manager. Said they're suspended in the wine business. This is not a small one time. Importer were looking at a company. That's actually has quite a scale dots. The direct impact of the pandemic unperfect cards of course a lot of wineries and importers were having zero sales in february In particular consumers when you have job uncertainties because of the pandemic what are you gonna do. You're becoming more cautious with your spending. You're cutting all the non essential standings unfortunate wine is counted as among unlike you know maybe in france or italy or in the us consumers of course they're trading down if they are buying winds at all they. Are you know really budgeting what to buy. You know what is the best value. What is the most affordable wine out in the market. This can be reaffirmed by an expert on expert data. We just saw from burgundy out from january to september export volume to china hong kong jumped by roughly thirty percent and in value terms jumped by roughly around twenty percent and we see some increases in areas where the balaj ablation or shaba lease on those kind of increases Guan crew premier cru in terms of red and white store decreasing price. Wines priced under one hundred orrin. B is the most popular category one hundred. That's about fifteen. Us dollars

China Hoed ED Europe France United States Bruns Jong Madonna Chile Italy Hong Kong Orrin
Local Flowers for California's Wine Country, with Santa Rosa floral designer Olivia Rivas of Papillon

Slow Flowers with Debra Prinzing

04:58 min | 2 years ago

Local Flowers for California's Wine Country, with Santa Rosa floral designer Olivia Rivas of Papillon

"You had been. In this was pre pre. I think that we talked about you had kind of been transitioning to be more of a everyday flower. Go to studio or retail space rather than putting all your eggs in the wedding and event basket is that am I portraying that? Correct? Yeah I kind of got burnt out the wedding. Industrial Complex and had some bridezillas last year and I thought you know. People just don't get it. They're not understanding what I do what I bring. You know I bring a service, I bring my services a form of art to make their debut. But I'm not a servant young. And it has somehow through the years it had changed you know or maybe it was just my bad luck and certain clients just not appreciating. what I do, and it's not just me. I found I was talking to my girlfriend's. The. Same thing across the board like. I, know you know them understanding exactly what I was talking about by you know somebody freaking out over certain color not being the exact color that they were thinking it was or or some flour being included that they never talked about something just something petty. Just bumming me out. So I went I went more full force into the store thinking you know. Now I can really just express myself and not have to worry about. Ruining someone's big gay. Or Yours. Yeah Oh. Yeah. Well, the store the store. Is seemed like you were able to really highlight your aesthetic even in the gift and garden items that you are. You're selecting for your your merchandise I've never been in the store, but I've spent time on your website and I love your quirkiness and. You don't really want reproductions want artisan pieces you want local Items and you're kind of you know to use that tired word curated IRRIT- definitely. Choosing what you're I, what appeals to you and your I What I would like to buy and what What turns me on. So I'm my biggest customer. Pretty good for the bottom line Mirror Olivia. Now. I try to not get myself too big of a discount. So, you're telling me about your space and where it's located in how you like when did you open that space? Opened it last year in June before we were next door is just a small pop up in the front of another another person studio and then the girls who were at my space moved decided to move to Hillsboro. And I was able to take over this beautiful space about the square feet. Gorgeous. Little picture windows in front. Awning I was able to get Nicole skalski sister the artist. She goes by heart and hand creative. She did this a beautiful mural inside of monster eras and tropical plants and we did this funky. funky color scheme of a green and pink. I told her I said I have eighty s Miami vice in my mind and she totally went for it. So cool. She totally nailed it. Oh, and then you mentioning National Skalski she owns is one of the CO owners of California sister in California sister is it Is it Petaluma. What town is she in? As she's in Sebastian Oval. Yeah at the Barlow. And she's hanging in there retail. Wise. Well I met you both on the same trip and I could tell you were kindred spirits and it's cool that you're both in retail forestry and. Not Competitors you're you've figured out how to. Put your friendship I and because you're not really in the same market really are you know we're we're very different I love what Nicole does I can't deal with Nicole does. Her in Katherine, their style is Gosh I don't know how to describe it. It is it is also romantic, but it's in A. It's in a different way she's she's super local in her products in her flowers. Yeah. But I'm more quirky. I'm more funky I don't know what to say like I'm more. You know if we're talking San Francisco, she would be located on Union Square and I would be located on Haight Street. That's a great analogy. It's

Nicole Skalski A. It Katherine California Industrial Complex San Francisco Sebastian Oval Hillsboro Union Square Barlow Petaluma National Skalski Miami
Final Derby Dress Rehearsals

In The Gate

04:48 min | 2 years ago

Final Derby Dress Rehearsals

"The favourite for Saturday's travers stakes is the Belmont stakes winner Tis the law, the owners of the law, a group of fairly regular guys from the Saratoga area they go by Saka. Toga stables are the same guys who owned funny side the winner of the two, thousand, three, Kentucky Derby and preakness they showed up to each triple crown race in a yellow school bus, not a limo. It was a scene to which many of us could relate but I'm going to give you a comparison of two other. Owners of horses running in Saturday's travers they are and Lori Hall who owned the Third Place Finisher in the Belmont Max Player and Orlando and Jonathan Noda who liked their travers entrant I line are the longest of longshots George Hall is the founder of a Hedge Fund, the Clinton Group that company's assets reached a high of five and a half billion dollars in two thousand, sixteen. Orlando Noda is a thirty one year old trainer who co all of his horses with his brother. Jonathan who's in the car business? George Hall and his wife Lori sold a six level. Manhattan penthouse in two thousand seventeen for somewhere around thirty eight million dollars. Orlando notice biggest return on investment so far has been the horse not loves a fight who not claimed for ten thousand dollars in May of two, thousand nineteen and whose win a month later represented his trainers I ever. T loves a fight won four races for his trainer and finished second last week in the John Morrissey at Saratoga. You. Get the idea Max player for George and Lori. Hall won the withers stakes back in February and finished third in the Belmont. STAKES IN JUNE FIRST LINE FOR ORLANDO. Noda just earned his first win in four tries and he's returning on only ten days rest to take on an imposing field. But if his trainers story is any harbinger, don't count first line out and we are pleased to welcome to win the game for the first time the trainer of First Line Orlando Noda what went into the decision to turn this horse around in just ten days. The horse came out of it good and I nominated him prior to even run especially. Like figure that especially wasn't GonNa go I was I was GONNA test my luck there and restaurant him because. The horse had shown me talent ever since I had him and I think got strike while the iron is hot right now and everything is just clicking on all cylinders. So I. Think we're just going to give it a go is not every day that we can have a three year old peak at the right time via because of this corona virus that maybe I might might just be able to pull off the upset and get my derby points that that I high horse up about the beginning. You would said to a couple of racing aficionados over the winter that you had a derby horse and first line what made you think that then Oh no the horses super talented it from the first time that we breathed him. We knew we had something special. I'm not the lightest of riders and horses just noting on track with me and I just can't picture it. Any other way because everything has played out to where it should as he broke his. Maiden here in Saratoga and I think the past two races, six furlongs, it was just the the too short for him for his long strident. He just went comfortable and those fractions buying the mollering Nathan not many horses hold up biting the whole time that they are at the top of the stretch hometown in first line and they've been at it. Right from the START I line on the outside pokes ahead and front hometown continues to battle down at the rail. Now, they're at the eighth bowl it is first line and hometown go to battle for a mile and a furlong here first line hud and front hometown not giving up they come for the finish and first line is first under the wire. Race I'm wondering if he's even cooled out yet from that race, I mean that was affirmed and Alydar Rier Dan Against Jaipur was neck and neck for a mile and an eighth I mean, how do you think that part of a racist going to affect him the ten days notwithstanding? Even fresh I'm not doing much with him and. Keep Afresh to the to the race. Then you gotta show up on the race checking in, and that's how he is all game once it gets onto the track. IS A. Very level-headed. Once once he gets into training just like train I'm just giving just. Keep them -freshing raider fire. For for the drivers.

Orlando Noda George Hall Orlando Jonathan Noda Saratoga Lori Longshots George Hall Kentucky Derby Nathan MAX Hedge Fund Belmont Founder John Morrissey Manhattan Clinton Group George
Apple Watch, wants to help you be healthy

Mac Power Users

02:03 min | 4 years ago

Apple Watch, wants to help you be healthy

"Again, be more informed. Make their decisions be able to talk about their bodies and their health with actual data as opposed to just sort of subject to feelings. Yeah. And I guess the closing point would be, you know, this stuff really can't add years to your life. So he should take it seriously. We've heard from many listener. On this. I mean Federico our friend on relay has, you know, he survived cancer, and he has gone through. He's done a lot of medical stuff. And he's written some very touching posts about it. But all of them focus on how he's use technology to kind of turn things around for him. We'll put those links in the show notes. Zach hall a recent guest we had on MP within the last six months lost fifty pounds. You know, he just decided he didn't like the way he looked in his Christmas card. So he he got serious about using these tools and dropped a bunch of weight. And and we've I've heard from personally I've heard from many listeners whenever I do post about Mike tutor inches of. I always hear from somebody who talks about some life changing effects. This has had for them. So hopefully,

Zach Hall Federico Cancer Mike Fifty Pounds Six Months
Google declares Android phones can have two notches at most

This Week In Google

05:23 min | 5 years ago

Google declares Android phones can have two notches at most

"August fifteenth. And then I leave again to go to bath and then. I know I do anything I can to avoid. Texas Banff is a fortieth birthday present to myself. My best friend. Sounds fun. It will be yes and almost happy birthday. Oh, happy birthday than forty. I. Hey, hey, we're not there yet. Come on and happy Wednesday. How about old? Hey, how do you guys feel about notches? I think I know how. Not shes as it. You just kinda go blind to them, but three notches. Where are they putting all these notches? That was my question. I'm not sure that we'll see three. Well, we definitely won't on Android because apparently only two notches are allowed in Android p they've mandated a requirement of only two notches, only the bottom and top and only one per site. So you couldn't. So in other words, you couldn't have your two notches, both on top, not sure why you would want to do that. But Google has gone to the lengths to make sure that you don't because who in someone might design a phone, it's all notches. Yeah, that's kind of what I was thinking like a like a border, a border much. Why? 'cause we can. This is for the lover. Oh, you don't. Did you guys read it was in logic magazine, I thought this was really fascinating. And here is my copy of logic magazine t- do you actually have that? I've ever heard of it. I was like, do you realize I had never heard of it. So I was like Russia. Shinsen and this whole creation of how Chinese manufacturing is like change. Basically, how Chinese manufacturing has grown to this like wild and crazy world where people just build on top of bills and they're talking about like people designing phones that have a compass that points to mecca and its popular in this logic world, it was just like it felt like science fiction, the the world that they were describing. It was such a fascinating article in. So now I'm sad that I cannot find it, but it was logic magazine letter from Shinsen, I think, and I highly recommend everyone check this out because it was just a glimpse into this culture that. Wow, you know, that's what's the company that makes all the phones. Yeah, Foxconn friend of mine went there for means high executives, and just the story of going into the the belly of the beast and Foxconn is amazing. Yeah. So this is logic, logic MAG, dot. I o. is in this is called letter from Shanzen. At the bottom of the dot, it's called Shanzai, which is. Like knockoffs, but now they're calling it the new Shanzai in. It's like this concept of basically cutting like open source hardware where people just build on top of other stuff like the long tail Chris Anderson's long tail in physical goods in technology. So super crazy Superfund. I wanna live. I kind of made me wanna live there just to see all the crazy stuff, but I don't really wanna live in China casino maternal list. I like saying things uncensored Google. I do like Google. The parallels they were making. Like we think like in urban areas, we might be used all this, but even at super rural areas, these guys are can do all this crazy stuff with their just their mobile phones in. I don't know, go read it and be like, dang it. No wonder China's gonna kick our butts. That'll be included in the shrew that that'll be included in the show notes as well. Let me think here else to well, we're probably also going see. Not that it really matters to very many people anymore. A updated daydream of viewer at the event. I'm guessing because apparently the headset is now seventy dollars off that began today. So they're blowing out the daydream view. It's thirty bucks. Now at Verizon, the description lists the item as e o l. skew so end of life. Imagine that a new daydream viewer is around the corner using it phone though, was opposed, I'm guessing. I mean, they have the standalone one by his Lenovo. I believe, of course it's Oculus. Instead he out the Oculus go, so Dr, Android. What do you think in this pixel watch. Dr Android. I like that. I, I mean, I'm having a hard time getting excited about watch any more. I suppose that the where thing kind of pass me by at this point, but I'm really surprised that up until now. Google hasn't done their own pixel watch of sorts..

Google Foxconn Shinsen China Logic Magazine Chris Anderson Texas Lenovo Verizon Shanzen Russia Seventy Dollars