19 Burst results for "AES"

The Bill Simmons Podcast
"aes" Discussed on The Bill Simmons Podcast
"Asterisk, I prick blood out of my finger and put the blood on the back. That's how much I love that bet. Green Bay will have more wins than Chicago this year. I have for this game, I think the Packers are favorite. That's a nice number, by the way. Sorry. That's a nice number considering they're both seven and a half, right? For over under wins. Totally. They're getting a plus for that. Yeah. And, uh, the team has, I know it's largely due to Aaron Rodgers, but bears haven't beaten them since 2018. So yeah, that's a fun one. I think the ownership carries over through quarterbacks. I think it's like when you buy a house and you, if there's spirits in the house or anything else, you just get the spirits Packers. I have packers minus two and a half in Chicago. You went a little high. I went high too. Well, I went the wrong way. It's I had Packers one and a half and it's bears minus one. My goodness. Really? Oh my God. Yeah. Okay. Wow. Well, if you like the plus one 22 or whatever you said it was, I think that's, that's the way to go take the Packers, uh, in this game. But either way, I think this is the strongest candidate for biggest silver reaction game of the week. The very, no matter what happens, this is going to be, yeah. Wow. I just don't agree with that line at all. I'll be interested if the sharps come flying in on Saturday and send in the Packers. Okay. Poop Fekta. We have four games and you know, sadly there's a bunch of Poop Fekta teams this year. I think the Poop Fekta is going to be a little, uh, little, little burgeoning this year. First one. Yeah. Ravens Texans in Baltimore. Who knows? May I, this line is going to be way too high and I'm not betting it. I'm not putting the Ravens in a T it's just saying that coming out of the gate. I have Ravens by nine and I think that might be too low. I had nine and a half and it's 10. I swear I did. And, uh, yeah, again, rookie quarterback on the road, a ton of points early on, but I think I look back seven games. We're decided by nine or more points week one. Um, that said Ravens at home, five and three, five and four, five and three of the last three years. So I don't know, maybe, maybe it is a little high. And a pretty, you know, pretty iffy defense, especially with Humphrey out and a bunch of new people in there and they lost some guys. I don't know. I'm looking, um, I kept the fandom app open and as we guess each one I'm going down and looking. The Texans are, uh, they're plus 10 and plus three 70 for the money line. And to me, this is a possible, you know, fuck it bet. Yeah. I think it's like the value of CJ Stroud on the road at plus three 70 is better than the value of, uh, like Bryce young on the road at Atlanta. Right. So, um, yeah, that might be something to look at. I just think that line's too high. I think that line should be like seven. Um, Vikings are home for the bucks. Do you like this Vikings team? You picked them to win the division. I don't think either of us like this bucks team. Have they announced who the quarterback's going to be? The bucks did they say it's going to be Mayfield, right? I thought it was Baker. Yeah. Yeah. And I love, I love this Minnesota. I absolutely adore how everyone abandoned them this year. I get it that they were 11 and 0 in one score games, but you know, to go from 13 wins to nine wins, which is what would put them over. Uh, I think this is a terrific teaser game. If you guys are into those things and yeah, like you said, Baker 0 and six on the road last year, 11 and 32 on the road is last 43. So nice spot for the Vikings and yeah, I'll guess we haven't guessed the line yet. So what'd you think it was? Well, I have the Vikings by six and a half and I'm going to actually, um, have to physically restrain myself from not putting them in a tease. Like I'm, I'm going to restrain myself. Like my mom and a big gambling straight jacket on this Mayfield thing, that one Thursday night game, when he absolutely screwed us to smithereens in every orifice on that Thursday night game, when they had that crazy comeback, which was so stupid because the game should have been over. And if that doesn't happen, we're all like, wow, Baker Mayfield is never going to be a starting quarterback again. Put them in the broadcast booth. This guy's destined for bigger and better things. Like just let's get it going, forget this quarterback thing. But since they won that game, now he's starting for Tampa. And I think this is one of the great gambling opportunities. These first couple of weeks is they already lost Jensen for the year. Not even sure what their offensive line is going to look like. Uh, Mike Evans has gave them a week one contract deadline or that's it. They're not going to negotiate anymore. And, uh, and I like the bikes in this spot too, but I really don't want to throw them in a tease. I don't have Kirk Cousins and Kevin O'Connell in a tease. No, I'm not going to. I'm not going to restrain myself. I'm going to have them in like a dozen teasers. Nine of them will probably have lost because I'll have them with some Saturday college game that, you know, tennis, the U S open or some nonsense. But, uh, yeah, I think you have to treat Baker as a rookie quarterback. Like if I don't like the rookie quarterbacks on the road, I certainly don't like Baker on the road. And, um, yeah. So I said, I went high though. I said seven and a half. I, that, that ended up being high. What'd you say? Six and a half. Yeah, it's a six. It's only six. So they are, they are trying to really end for sure. Yeah. You got that one. I'm going to wait. I'm going to make one dumb, small prediction each week on guess the lines and Kyle can cut them together at the end of the year. Prediction for week one, Mike Evans ends up on the jets by week six in week one. Oh, by week six, by week six. I have no idea if these predict, I'm just throwing these out there. They're, they're pulling them out of my ass predictions. It just feels like a jetsy move, right? We're all in. We just need one more guy, like Evans, Evans and Wilson. Now, now we're done. And they give up like 13 receivers, don't they? Including a rapper in the practice squad or whatever. I didn't say these were good predictions. I'm just throwing out one weird prediction each week. I want to go like four for 18 in the predictions. Okay. Next one. This is the poop effect. The AES poop effect, the game I can remember Washington hosting the awful Arizona Cardinals who, um, it'd be hard to believe they're not going to be the worst team in the league. After you saw that Jonathan Gana clip, everyone's excited about Washington. This is all the makings of the overreaction game for Washington, right? Where they win like 35 to three and Oh my God, Washington got rid of Snyder. Here we go. 12 wins. And then this is the highlight of the year. I have Washington favored by four and a half and that's probably too low.

Telecom Reseller
"aes" Discussed on Telecom Reseller
"Hello, everybody. This is Doug Green. I'm the publisher of Telecom Reseller, and today we're going to be doing a podcast, The Evolution of Enterprise Class Call Recording Technology. And we have with us again, Ron Ramancic, who's the Chief Strategy Officer at Call Cabinet. Ron, thank you for joining me today. Thanks, Doug. Pleasure to join you. Well, I'm really excited that we're going to be able to do to talk about this topic very timely. So let's start off with, you know, can you give us an overview of compliance call recording and where it all started? What does that mean? Sure. Well, without going into too much history, I'll go back a little bit. So digital call recording started right around the turn of the century, which sounds kind of bit archaic, but right around the late 90s and early 2000s as on premise systems. As call recording became more of a general business initiative, the focus was around specific markets and specific solutions at the time. Things like contact centers, dispute resolution, financial transactions, as well as air traffic control, government and public safety. So it was really geared around resolving certain specific items as well as being able to, you know, be able to go back and look at different different conversations that were taking place to be able to track events that may have occurred. As technology evolved, call recording became more of a data source rather than an obligation to track interactions. So contact centers were the first to utilize call recording for quality assurance and assess how their agents perform within with customers. However, it was limited as premise based systems only allowed for small sampling of calls rather than in the complete experience. So the reason being is that most of those premise based systems were all configured based on maximum throughput. So in the early days, contact centers, as an example, if they had a thousand agents, they may only be sampling maybe 20 percent or roughly 200 agents across that. So they're getting a very small snippet of that data. It again, it was a technology limitation, and as cloud evolved, though, and cloud based systems continue to grow, those limitations went away. And the reason why they went away is because you have now the ability in the SAS model to be able to expand beyond those capabilities, right? You're able to have a per seat model, which allowed the customers themselves to be able to now sample all thousand agents as opposed to 200 agents and get a more a better picture of what's going on in the contact center. The other thing that has happened with cloud systems and cloud based systems is that limitations and new technologies were introduced, or I was going to say limited those limitations disappeared and new technologies such as screen capture, video calls, omni channel environments and voice analysis became more prevalent in daily operations across conversations in typical contact center. So no longer does the technology limit the amount of data that could be consumed along with the cost dropping in these technologies in the SAS world. So it made it more cost effective to capture and analyze all customer experiences across the enterprise itself. So, you know, data privacy is a big requirement in call recording. So, you know, can you give us some insight about that? Yeah, data privacy is huge right now. And, you know, everybody's talking about what's happening in the data world and being able to certify themselves in cybersecurity. So data privacy and security is a critical driver for call recording. Not no longer are companies recording for convenience purposes, but rather as a method to keep customer conversations safe, secure and easily accessible. When you call into contact centers, you call into a company and may say this conversation may be recorded for compliance purposes. And the reason being is they want to be able to protect the customer's data. Legislation such as HIPAA require that all patient data is protected from being disclosed to unauthorized individuals. Whether it is a stored recording, a screen captured from a health care or insurance workers desk or written information passed through email or fax. Violations are strict and the organization could be fined anywhere from one hundred dollars to fifty thousand dollars per incident. That's huge. In the financial world, just as recently as August 8th, there was an article that was published stating that the SEC and the CFTC issued fines of five hundred and forty nine million dollars against six financial firms over the failure to maintain and preserve communications from their employees personal devices. The firm's employees communicated business matters over text messaging applications and voice conversations on the personal devices where firms failed to maintain and preserve the data in accordance with compliance laws. Before this, the SEC up to that point had issue fines of up to one point one billion dollars between today and twenty twenty one. So, needless to say, not by by not recording and storing data securely financial organization institutions put themselves in jeopardy with this. So the key to protecting data is having a proper cybersecurity program, such as ISO twenty seven thousand one or twenty seven thousand two or 18, et cetera. That sets specific standards in product development, encryption methods and standards, as well as network security and consistent vulnerability testing. Companies like Call Cabinet have implemented those standards internally that far exceed the necessary requirements to ensure our customers data is protected, not only for compliance reasons, but also from cyber attacks. As an example, Call Cabinet, in addition to Microsoft's blob storage encryption, which we utilize, also encrypts each individual call with an AES 256 bit encryption with a rotating methodology. That means if a hacker were to access our storage, they would need to figure out also not only the blob storage piece of it, but also each and every individual call would have to be they'd have to figure out the encryption around that, making it almost impossible to penetrate, which is why it never happened in the call cabinet world. So, Ron, what are the current industry drivers and also latest innovations? So latest innovations again, cloud call, cloud recording has opened up businesses to do more at a fraction of the cost as earlier premise based systems. So SaaS model now allows the customer to cost effectively listen to and protect conversations on customer touch points across many departments, departments such as HR, sales, obviously, customer support, obviously, tech support, billing, a wide range of different areas, which definitely have the customer touch points. With Call Cabinet's cloud technology, where our service is built into the fabric of Microsoft Azure, we can provide our customers with unlimited scalability across multiple communication platforms as well, such as collaboration platforms, hosted PBXs, and even premise based PBX platforms, all providing a single user interface. So now we can, if the environment is a mixed environment, which we're starting to see more and more of as people migrate from the premise to the cloud, that same user experiences is handled across all platforms itself. Also, should this customer have the need to scale up or scale down in size, let's say by seasonal demand, a SaaS platform such as ours provides that capability without having to pay for scale during down periods. The key to migrating to cloud technology is not losing customer data. Typically, if a customer is migrating from a premise based recording system, they are beholden to the recording vendor to keep that data active until it ages out or the customer doesn't need the data anymore. The reason is that most premise based systems have their own proprietary file format that recordings are stored in, thus mandating that the existing system needs to be used. That's an additional expense on the part of the customer to just store and playback the data should it ever be necessary. We eliminate that expense by migrating that data and normalizing it, making it usable data for the customer while storing it in our cloud. Now the customer owns the data, not the recording vendor. So with cloud technology, we have just saved the customer from having to pay for a system they no longer use and have taken the old data and made it usable for that particular customer. As I mentioned earlier, call recording has become a method of capturing customer data. What's difficult to do is to ingest what a person says, as well as the intonation of how they set it into a usable format where the data is accurately depicted and can be analyzed to determine business insights. Call Kevin's voice analytics technology can extract business insights, provide analysis across many communication points while keeping the customer's data safe and secure in our network. Our analytics can automatically evaluate contact center agents, manage customer and employee experience, and offer a fixed low cost SaaS solution. So, you know, as we conclude our podcast today, could you give us an overview? What does the future of compliance call recording look like? Sure. Thanks, Doug. The future is here. The evolution of AI, along with communication analysis and compliance is driving a need for all businesses, large and small, to listen to how their employees are communicating with the outside world. Both Microsoft and Cisco have announced pure collaboration and the use of AI to protect business and personal information while using platforms such as Teams and Webex. You've heard the announcements. Cisco made that announcement last week regarding Webex and Microsoft had also made the announcement a few weeks prior to that. We are on the forefront of this by collaborating with both Microsoft and Cisco to offer an AI driven solution that can monitor conversations and help protect against data loss and driving workflows from our voice analytics to help drive DLP systems. Data loss protection is a huge, huge issue right now. And, you know, there is proprietary information that can possibly be leaked through conversations with customers, with other individuals and even possibly competitors. And the goal is to be able to make sure all that data doesn't leak out to the public when it shouldn't leak out to the public. So AI technologies such as Microsoft Co-Pilot and Azure, Azure OpenAI are technologies that access data and drive workflows. They are driven by text based data where companies like Call Cabinet can take advantage of our voice analytics capability to drive those technologies. What we do is we turn spoken voice into that text along with the scoring of intonation through emotion and sentiment to be able to take that data, push it towards Microsoft Co-Pilot, push it towards Azure OpenAI and be able to manage those conversations accordingly. We can also push that data out to DLP systems where those systems can monitor those particular conversations and provide alerts if there's essential DLP leakage somewhere along the way. The use cases are really unlimited. However, with the expansion of financial regulations, we see security being at the top of the list in driving compliance standards and applying regulations against conversations. So, Ron, I really want to thank you for joining me today. This has been a very interesting eye opening and your opening conversation. A good start, I think, for people to do maybe a deeper dive into some of these matters. Where can we learn more? Where can we learn more about Call Cabinet and some of the things we talked about today? You can visit us at callcabinet.com. A lot of our data is listed there. If you want to find out more and get deeper into the conversations, we have some white papers online as well as you feel free to contact us and we'll be able to sit down and have those conversations with you. Again, it's www.callcabinet.com. And also, I want to recommend to all of our readers and listeners to check out the excellent Call Cabinet, ongoing Call Cabinet blog that appears on TR and also on your pages as well. Don't miss it. They're really interesting articles. I am looking forward to our next podcast. But for now, Ron, thank you very much for your time today. Thanks a lot, Doug. I appreciate it. Thank you.

Telecom Reseller
A highlight from The Evolution of Enterprise-class Call Recording Technology, CallCabinet Podcast
"Hello, everybody. This is Doug Green. I'm the publisher of Telecom Reseller, and today we're going to be doing a podcast, The Evolution of Enterprise Class Call Recording Technology. And we have with us again, Ron Ramancic, who's the Chief Strategy Officer at Call Cabinet. Ron, thank you for joining me today. Thanks, Doug. Pleasure to join you. Well, I'm really excited that we're going to be able to do to talk about this topic very timely. So let's start off with, you know, can you give us an overview of compliance call recording and where it all started? What does that mean? Sure. Well, without going into too much history, I'll go back a little bit. So digital call recording started right around the turn of the century, which sounds kind of bit archaic, but right around the late 90s and early 2000s as on premise systems. As call recording became more of a general business initiative, the focus was around specific markets and specific solutions at the time. Things like contact centers, dispute resolution, financial transactions, as well as air traffic control, government and public safety. So it was really geared around resolving certain specific items as well as being able to, you know, be able to go back and look at different different conversations that were taking place to be able to track events that may have occurred. As technology evolved, call recording became more of a data source rather than an obligation to track interactions. So contact centers were the first to utilize call recording for quality assurance and assess how their agents perform within with customers. However, it was limited as premise based systems only allowed for small sampling of calls rather than in the complete experience. So the reason being is that most of those premise based systems were all configured based on maximum throughput. So in the early days, contact centers, as an example, if they had a thousand agents, they may only be sampling maybe 20 percent or roughly 200 agents across that. So they're getting a very small snippet of that data. It again, it was a technology limitation, and as cloud evolved, though, and cloud based systems continue to grow, those limitations went away. And the reason why they went away is because you have now the ability in the SAS model to be able to expand beyond those capabilities, right? You're able to have a per seat model, which allowed the customers themselves to be able to now sample all thousand agents as opposed to 200 agents and get a more a better picture of what's going on in the contact center. The other thing that has happened with cloud systems and cloud based systems is that limitations and new technologies were introduced, or I was going to say limited those limitations disappeared and new technologies such as screen capture, video calls, omni channel environments and voice analysis became more prevalent in daily operations across conversations in typical contact center. So no longer does the technology limit the amount of data that could be consumed along with the cost dropping in these technologies in the SAS world. So it made it more cost effective to capture and analyze all customer experiences across the enterprise itself. So, you know, data privacy is a big requirement in call recording. So, you know, can you give us some insight about that? Yeah, data privacy is huge right now. And, you know, everybody's talking about what's happening in the data world and being able to certify themselves in cybersecurity. So data privacy and security is a critical driver for call recording. Not no longer are companies recording for convenience purposes, but rather as a method to keep customer conversations safe, secure and easily accessible. When you call into contact centers, you call into a company and may say this conversation may be recorded for compliance purposes. And the reason being is they want to be able to protect the customer's data. Legislation such as HIPAA require that all patient data is protected from being disclosed to unauthorized individuals. Whether it is a stored recording, a screen captured from a health care or insurance workers desk or written information passed through email or fax. Violations are strict and the organization could be fined anywhere from one hundred dollars to fifty thousand dollars per incident. That's huge. In the financial world, just as recently as August 8th, there was an article that was published stating that the SEC and the CFTC issued fines of five hundred and forty nine million dollars against six financial firms over the failure to maintain and preserve communications from their employees personal devices. The firm's employees communicated business matters over text messaging applications and voice conversations on the personal devices where firms failed to maintain and preserve the data in accordance with compliance laws. Before this, the SEC up to that point had issue fines of up to one point one billion dollars between today and twenty twenty one. So, needless to say, not by by not recording and storing data securely financial organization institutions put themselves in jeopardy with this. So the key to protecting data is having a proper cybersecurity program, such as ISO twenty seven thousand one or twenty seven thousand two or 18, et cetera. That sets specific standards in product development, encryption methods and standards, as well as network security and consistent vulnerability testing. Companies like Call Cabinet have implemented those standards internally that far exceed the necessary requirements to ensure our customers data is protected, not only for compliance reasons, but also from cyber attacks. As an example, Call Cabinet, in addition to Microsoft's blob storage encryption, which we utilize, also encrypts each individual call with an AES 256 bit encryption with a rotating methodology. That means if a hacker were to access our storage, they would need to figure out also not only the blob storage piece of it, but also each and every individual call would have to be they'd have to figure out the encryption around that, making it almost impossible to penetrate, which is why it never happened in the call cabinet world. So, Ron, what are the current industry drivers and also latest innovations? So latest innovations again, cloud call, cloud recording has opened up businesses to do more at a fraction of the cost as earlier premise based systems. So SaaS model now allows the customer to cost effectively listen to and protect conversations on customer touch points across many departments, departments such as HR, sales, obviously, customer support, obviously, tech support, billing, a wide range of different areas, which definitely have the customer touch points. With Call Cabinet's cloud technology, where our service is built into the fabric of Microsoft Azure, we can provide our customers with unlimited scalability across multiple communication platforms as well, such as collaboration platforms, hosted PBXs, and even premise based PBX platforms, all providing a single user interface. So now we can, if the environment is a mixed environment, which we're starting to see more and more of as people migrate from the premise to the cloud, that same user experiences is handled across all platforms itself. Also, should this customer have the need to scale up or scale down in size, let's say by seasonal demand, a SaaS platform such as ours provides that capability without having to pay for scale during down periods. The key to migrating to cloud technology is not losing customer data. Typically, if a customer is migrating from a premise based recording system, they are beholden to the recording vendor to keep that data active until it ages out or the customer doesn't need the data anymore. The reason is that most premise based systems have their own proprietary file format that recordings are stored in, thus mandating that the existing system needs to be used. That's an additional expense on the part of the customer to just store and playback the data should it ever be necessary. We eliminate that expense by migrating that data and normalizing it, making it usable data for the customer while storing it in our cloud. Now the customer owns the data, not the recording vendor. So with cloud technology, we have just saved the customer from having to pay for a system they no longer use and have taken the old data and made it usable for that particular customer. As I mentioned earlier, call recording has become a method of capturing customer data. What's difficult to do is to ingest what a person says, as well as the intonation of how they set it into a usable format where the data is accurately depicted and can be analyzed to determine business insights. Call Kevin's voice analytics technology can extract business insights, provide analysis across many communication points while keeping the customer's data safe and secure in our network. Our analytics can automatically evaluate contact center agents, manage customer and employee experience, and offer a fixed low cost SaaS solution. So, you know, as we conclude our podcast today, could you give us an overview? What does the future of compliance call recording look like? Sure. Thanks, Doug. The future is here. The evolution of AI, along with communication analysis and compliance is driving a need for all businesses, large and small, to listen to how their employees are communicating with the outside world. Both Microsoft and Cisco have announced pure collaboration and the use of AI to protect business and personal information while using platforms such as Teams and Webex. You've heard the announcements. Cisco made that announcement last week regarding Webex and Microsoft had also made the announcement a few weeks prior to that. We are on the forefront of this by collaborating with both Microsoft and Cisco to offer an AI driven solution that can monitor conversations and help protect against data loss and driving workflows from our voice analytics to help drive DLP systems. Data loss protection is a huge, huge issue right now. And, you know, there is proprietary information that can possibly be leaked through conversations with customers, with other individuals and even possibly competitors. And the goal is to be able to make sure all that data doesn't leak out to the public when it shouldn't leak out to the public. So technologies AI such as Microsoft Co -Pilot and Azure, Azure OpenAI are technologies that access data and drive workflows. They are driven by text based data where companies like Call Cabinet can take advantage of our voice analytics capability to drive those technologies. What we do is we turn spoken voice into that text along with the scoring of intonation through emotion and sentiment to be able to take that data, push it towards Microsoft Co -Pilot, push it towards Azure OpenAI and be able to manage those conversations accordingly. We can also push that data out to DLP systems where those systems can monitor those particular conversations and provide alerts if there's essential DLP leakage somewhere along the way. The use cases are really unlimited. However, with the expansion of financial regulations, we see security being at the top of the list in driving compliance standards and applying regulations against conversations. So, Ron, I really want to thank you for joining me today. This has been a very interesting eye opening and your opening conversation. A good start, I think, for people to do maybe a deeper dive into some of these matters. Where can we learn more? Where can we learn more about Call Cabinet and some of the things we talked about today? You can visit us at callcabinet .com. A lot of our data is listed there. If you want to find out more and get deeper into the conversations, we have some white papers online as well as you feel free to contact us and we'll be able to sit down and have those conversations with you. Again, it's www .callcabinet .com. And also, I want to recommend to all of our readers and listeners to check out the excellent Call Cabinet, ongoing Call Cabinet blog that appears on TR and also on your pages as well. Don't miss it. They're really interesting articles. I am looking forward to our next podcast. But for now, Ron, thank you very much for your time today. Thanks a lot, Doug. I appreciate it. Thank you.

Bloomberg Radio New York
"aes" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"And what you think about regulation and everything, I noticed that two new groups have joined the, I guess, the competition to try and become the executors of the bankrupt Celsius business. One of them is arrington capital and a whole group of bidders under the name Fahrenheit, I guess, and another one is Gemini and you guys. And you already work closely with the winklevoss crypto business. Why do you want to get into that into that race? Well, the bigger picture here, Matt is that every crypto lender has gone bankrupt and there are multiple bankruptcy cases right now to try to sort out these assets and maximize the return for customers and token holders. We've just saw last week that the bankruptcy judge in the Voyager case allowed that sale to binance to proceed. All the leverage has been brought out of this ecosystem with the bankruptcy of all these lenders and now it's for the bankruptcy courts to clean up the mess and see who can maximize the return for these unsecured creditors. I can confirm the court documents yesterday revealed that two additional bidders have joined as qualified bidders to administer these assets and try to maximize the return for token holders, van aes teamed with Gemini on one of those bids. And we think the details will be clear tomorrow at the auction. Look forward to putting forward the case that we have the best way to administer these assets in a regulatory

The Horse Racing Radio Network Podcast
"aes" Discussed on The Horse Racing Radio Network Podcast
"The win in Dubai on turf last march was really, really strong. That's where I went Bobby, but I'm gonna play kind of against the U.S. sources and against the local horses and in some manner or facet play the Japanese horses. All right, so Dave likes number 7 panther Lhasa who's coming off a group one race in Hong Kong last time out where he ran behind romantic warrior. By the way, romantic warrior runs against golden 60 tomorrow night in Hong Kong at some time around three three 8 3 a.m. three 30 a.m. Eastern Time. I told you I'm a sicko. I know these things. All right, you're going with panthalassa. I'm going with number 6 June lightbulb, who I think is just becoming good at the right time. This was just kind of a listed stake type of horse in Japan for most of his career and suddenly he's turned into a graded stake or group stake type of horse in Japan winning a grade one or a group one last time out. I think he's getting good at the right time. I like that Ryan Moore is aboard. I like June light pole at 8 to one. I think if I'm going to use somebody with taba, that's who it would be of the ones I know tabe is clearly the best. I don't really have any knocks on table. I just think he's going to be a much lower price than what his 5 to two morning line is. Let's head back stateside. In fact, we're going to go to turfway park their featured race tomorrow at turfway is the $125,000 wintergreen stakes for Phillies and mayors going one mile there are four year olds and up here. We've got a field of, well, we've got 14 entered, 12 will run with two AEs, where'd you go? I went with burgoo alley because if the 12 to one morning line is anywhere remotely close to right, I think there's tremendous value. I think this is a fairly open race. Jonathan Wong has opening buzz 5 to two cow bread who is the favorite and I like Wong and I certainly like opening buzzes synthetic form one at Golden Gate, one at turfway park twice. One at del mar on the turf. I think this is a quality horus four of 6, but it's never run more than 7 furlongs gets too turns at turfway on the synthetic tomorrow number 7 Kate's kingdom certainly has good enough races to beat these. Was there an excuse last time as the 6 to 5 favorite did not run well at turfway park, but the previous few were really, really quite excellent. Number 8, public conchita for sheree devoe is a horse that last time out beat Kate's kingdom was 17 to one in that race, quite frankly it just hasn't run quick enough races to beat this group, but maybe is getting good at the right time. Certainly likes synthetic and ROI numbers on devoe on synthetic or great and with the rider are great. But if you really are going to give me double digit odds on burgoo alley and sure, this is a horse that's only run once on synthetic and has been running out in the West Coast. Last time I ran a sprint race, the figs and the quality of races that burglary have been in to just quite frankly are as good or better than everyone else. There's no one else in this race that's been running against a course like going global and burgh walli has not been disgraced against that one. Sure. Burgh Wally has not won since 2021. We don't know about this synthetic. I just think this is a big class drop and a very, very nice value. Okay, so burgoo alley for Dave, I went to the favorite number three opening buzz who I think the sprint races make him make her easily the one to beat if she can handle a mile, I think that's the biggest question mark. She's by Stanford out of an unbridled song there, at least on the damn side, doesn't sound like she'd have any problem. Just stretching out from a sprinter route if she handles it. She's the one to beat. I would use number 5 perfect as well in the wintergreen the featured race tomorrow at turfway park. Gulfstream park stake race tomorrow is the Gulfstream park sprint. These are four year olds and up going 6 furlongs on their main track field of 7 here, Dave, and another race with a ton of speed. Yeah, a ton of speed and you really can go a bunch of different ways. I mean, I understand that candyman rocket is 9 to 5 on the morning line and certainly loves Gulfstream three for three and two for three at the 6 furlong distance, but those aren't stakes races that candyman rocket has won the last couple of times. Now this is, of course, the one the Sam F Davis in 2021 and is certainly capable. I think Beaumont horses tend to get better as they move along in the work on February 13th as of the bullet variety. So if you like candyman rocket, I certainly have no issue with that, but I don't think that's a foregone conclusion by any stretch of the imagination. Lightning Larry number 6, I think, is going to be rolling early right with candyman rocket, uncle Ernie has speed early in the race. I ended up with number one scaramucci, but exactly for the reason you suggested. I think scaramucci is going to run late. I don't love the fact that all of the winds are at parks and last time out at Gulfstream didn't run well, but I'm tossing that. It's a turf race. The two races before that lesser tracks are very, very credible. The figs fit in cure. This is not the horse that I would normally back, but from a pace standpoint and a value standpoint. I think scaramucci fits very nicely. Is candyman rocket the most likely winner? Sure, maybe, but I'm going to try some value and particularly try to beat a horse that I think is going to be a short price racing on a very, very quick tempo. All right, we're on the same horse. I like scaramouche as well. For everything you said, I think the last race is a pitch. I think he should close and erase a ton of speed and 6 to one is a very fair price on a horse who I think on his day is about as good as anybody else in this field we'll see if he gets the right trip getting back to what looks like would be his preferred surface. He's worked well on the Gulf Stream dirt since that debacle on the turf last time out. Scaramucci for Dave and me in the Gulfstream park sprint race 9 tomorrow at Gulfstream. All right, we're going to take another break. When we come back, we're going to head to New York. They've got two stakes on their Saturday card. This is the weekend stakes preview on the horse racing radio network. Sam

Northwest Newsradio
"aes" Discussed on Northwest Newsradio
"Colder and we have a stormy night right now expect these areas of heavy rain and that risk of thunderstorms to keep going, a convergence zone bringing in the risk of some brief snow as we get into the overnight hours as well. It accumulations trace to maybe half an inch and we would see most of that exactly where that convergence zone is, especially east of I four O 5 and also through the night we're going to have some snow from Olympia southward to the points over the coast and into the cascades. A cold day Tuesday to start, but sunshine will break out highs low to mid 40s from the coma four weather center and meteorologist Rebecca Stevenson. Raining in 39° now in Seattle, northwest news time, 6 35. A building contractors are being arrested in turkey, following the collapse of dozens of buildings in last week's earthquake, ABC's Brad milky spoke with ebit some gun food who's on the ground in turkey. At least two property developers have already been arrested at airports prosecutors are accusing them of trying to flee the country. Contractor of many of the collapsed buildings in adiyaman that's one of the cities. Near the epicenter of that earthquake that has seen some of the biggest, most shocking damage that our team has seen here on the ground and he's been arrested while he was trying allegedly to escape to Georgia. Turkish officials targeting more than 130 people allegedly involved in the construction of collapsed buildings that crushed thousands of families as they slept. Another contractor over 14 story luxury apartment building in hatai in another hard hit area here in turkey. Many local outlets reported here that this contractor was also arrested while trying to flee the country. One building stands still and on the next one is down. There is clearly sloppy construction. You're seeing here a lot of anger and frustration over building standards. Although the quakes were powerful, some experts have already come out saying that properly constructed buildings should have been able to stay standing. And we have spoken here to disaster responders, volunteers from AES AD. It's a government disaster response organization. And they're used to dealing with this type of event. And they told us that the problem is in part with the lack of structural components indeed. We've seen ourselves the debris and adiyaman mainly that we've seen collapsed buildings and you can clearly tell that it's just bricks. There were just made of bricks. There was no or very little structural fixative. No steel to reinforce the concrete. And these disaster responders also told us that when there is iron or steel to reinforce it, the diameter of that iron used is often too small to be effective. So there is an issue here on the quality of the building components used, a quality that is below what is required by the law and by these codes that we're supposed to ensure that an earthquake prone regions, those buildings could stand that type of event. And of course, these volunteers also appointed to the corruption, saying that some of these buildings simply shouldn't be built so high, according to regulations, but bribes are often used to counter these restrictions. I'm trying to get a sense of, is this the government saying these people are trying to flee the country, we need to issue charges sooner than later. Or is it the government realizing, hey, we're politically vulnerable right now. And president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan saying, people are angry right now. They're going to start being angry at us if we don't do something. Let's really focus on the contractors. Yes, absolutely. They are realizing that this is turning quickly into a situation that they have to manage people are desperate, but they are getting angry

Home Gadget Geeks
"aes" Discussed on Home Gadget Geeks
"AES two 56 encryption and not use it for all relevant data that you would consider sensitive to me is a big mess here. So that's one area of concern. The second area of concern is really talking about the core technology behind again, how do you store the representation of the master password on disk or in memory. And so there is a cryptographic function standard known as PPK DF two or password based key derivation function version two, which you can go read the RFC four if you're so inclined. But put simply, it's a think of it as a modern cryptographic hashing function that is going to compute iterative hashes to make passwords very resistant to brute force attacks, whether that's dictionary attacks or rainbow attacks. So I want to break this down a little bit further. Traditionally, old school web one stuff, like the traditional don't do this. It's bad is you have a web server, you have a database server, and you store someone's username and password in plain text. Person types in a password in the web form does a post request to the back end and hey, if the password matches the password, authenticate them. Well, after folks got really tired of databases constantly being stolen with plain text passwords, people got a little bit smarter. We started using encryption and hashing functions to essentially say, don't store the password, store a hash in the database. What the hash essentially is, it's a one way function, which means that if I type in my super turbo calculator, password one, two, three. That's not what's getting stored in the database, what's getting stored in the database is a unique cryptographic string that can't be reversed. So I can't use that string to rederive the original password, but if I, if I type that exact password into your cryptographic function, it will always produce the same unique hash string. And that's how I know it's quote your password. Well, what became the problem with that? Was that as computers got more powerful, more sophisticated, more breaches happened. Hashes by themselves became an easy target because instead of just doing dictionary attacks, they did something called rainbow tables and what a rainbow table was is let's pre generate a list of tens of hundreds of millions of passwords and what their hashes are. And when a breach happens, I don't need to go brute force and do a bunch of hash math. I just need to see, hey, does this hash in the database exist in my rainbow table, and if it does, tell me what the plain text was that I originally computed from it. So folks at, okay, all right. So that's when things like salting and introducing randomness got involved to that, you know, the password may be the same, but if you didn't know the salt associated with the hash function, you weren't going to be able to just use a rainbow table against that database unless you had stolen the salts as well. Okay, great. So that's kind of like a classic one O one primer on the evolution of password authentication in web one. Fast forward to password managers and this discussion a little bit, what's going on with the password based key derivative function is that rather than just stopping at I put my password into a hash function that has a salt and I'm done that derivative function takes the output of that first hash and it keeps putting it back into the hash function. And it does this in some cases over a 100,000 times before it stores that final hash output value in a database. What does this actually achieve? It slows down the ability to it makes you more resistant to dictionary rainbow tax, right? It doesn't eliminate them, but it makes it much more resistant because you have to go through all those additional computations for each password or credential. You are going to make a guess against. But furthermore, it counteracts the evolution of hardware, right? So something totally tangential to password managers that you wouldn't intuitively think of these things are related, but think about blockchain, right? Like what's running blockchain right now in Bitcoin, GPUs, why? Because all of a sudden GPUs got really, really good at computing hashes. So yeah, they're really good at running blockchain, but guess what? They're also really good at trying to crack passwords. So as hardware gets more advanced, we need to keep upping the cryptographic standards around hashes. So one of the cool things about PPK DF two is that while these spec and the standard is a known RFC thing, go read about it, go learn about it. The main configurable is how many iterations or how many times do you want to put that hash back through this function before you spit it out and save the result. And so one of the big kind of black eyes for LastPass here, bringing it all the way back to the breech is that in their 2018 posture when they updated to a minimum of 12 characters for the master password, they also updated to a minimum of. A 100,000 iterations, which is kind of now the standard for many password managers for the KDF function. However, up until 2018, it was only 5000, which maybe was a big number back then, but not such a big number now, right? What's worse is that as part of this disclosure, it's become evident that many of the folks who, again, account users pre change in guidance 2018, had KDF iterations as low as 500 in some cases, and they never got migrated to the new standard. And this is not something that a user should have to go in and think about. It should just happen for a 100% of your customers. So if you go look at O wasp, which is kind of an InfoSec industry standard for best practices and basic web security, their latest recommendation right now is 310,000 iterations for this function. So just to give you a sense, we're talking about customers out there now with leaked vaults that maybe had as low as 500 iterations, they're going to be way more susceptible to hackers just sitting there with throwing compute at it to crack that master password than if they had just done the right thing and gotten everyone to a higher KDF standard. So that was really the second big aspect of this. And so when you put it all on a bow, it's just the trickle of smoking gun problems with LastPass. So it's not like today, all your passwords are out there on the plain text, and this is the end of the world. But I think for LastPass is a company, there's a few problems here. Two breaches in a year, which really it's one breach that they didn't contain, but they chose to break it out as two events, which actually made the problem worse, I think, from a public relations standpoint, if nothing else, two, you have a company that's not leveraging the encryption to encrypt all of the things, which is amiss, three, you have not so great configuration standards for things like PPK DF two, which hello, this is a company that focuses on doing nothing but password management. Like get this right, this is not like, this is not negotiable as far as I'm concerned. And so when you add those up in the trickle and now you can go find things like what the vault format looks like and you add this up with some of the other kind of vulnerabilities and techniques that an adversary would use to attack you on LastPass. It just, if you're someone that is storing passwords in the cloud through one of these password managers and you're placing your trust in a company like this, for me, this is enough to be like, no, it's time to make a change. So definitely covered in a wide variety of other info podcasts, news articles, et cetera, but part of what I wanted to walk through at the LastPass breach was not just, hey, here's what happened and here's why folks are upset, but I also want to make sure that folks are following what are kind of some of the basic foundational things that all password managers should be doing really well that are non negotiables. And unfortunately, the consumer doesn't always know what the right question is to ask her to be looking for to make sure that their password managers doing that. And so in the case of LastPass and a lot of the other ones, they publish white papers all day long.

Home Gadget Geeks
"aes" Discussed on Home Gadget Geeks
"Of course we post a show with some world class show notes, and we'll have a few for you tonight. Christians got some great notes out there. We'll post them out there at the out of the average guy TV big thanks to John Maddox, who joined us last week from channels, just a good friend of the show, and we had a fun conversation about what's new at channels. If you haven't checked out yet, head out to the average K TV slash hgg 5 5 8. And you can catch up on that conversation and John, thanks for coming on. Big thanks to our Patreon subscribers, which helped make all the magic happen here on home gadget. And if you're finding value in the podcast and you want to give that value back, of course. You can do that through Patreon, head out to the average guy dot TV slash Patreon. Of course, you guys know another big supporter and big contributor to what we do here is Christian Johnson and Christian. Welcome back to home gadget Gees. Hey, thanks, Jim. It's great to be back and I can't believe that we're in 2023 and we're still talking about password managers as this proverbial difficult technology, but okay. Here we are. In a little bit, so we're going to talk about LastPass and specifically we're going to, as we think about, what do we do next? Christian wanted to talk about bit more, and so that's coming up. Christian, let's back up though just a little bit, because as you say that, I don't think, you know, we're at a spot where we're arguing about what to do anymore. We know password managers are out there. We know why we use them in the complexity of them and such. The problem is, for me, is actually the opposite is that I'm having a hard time like the work effort to come off of one to me seems like a lot. Now, maybe it's easier than I'm thinking and I hope you're going to convince me of that as we're talking through. But let's back up a little bit. Let's talk from what you know, what went wrong at LastPass. I mean, they were friends of the show. They were a sponsor here for a lot of years. We knew them from the inside. A lot of great things going on over there and maybe some purchases and some sales and some other things happening. Let things go a little loose, but what do we know? Yeah. So definitely a lot to unpack on the show tonight. I'm going to do my best to kind of walk you through what's going on with LastPass, what's going on with some of the other password managers that are near and dear to people's hearts. What are some of the things to be looking out for and evaluating them? Because I think a lot of folks have just, there's just this wall of by this password manager by this one, what are the feature differences, et cetera? So I'm really going to try and break down how they are evolving and what are some of the key discriminators for them. I'm also going to talk a little bit about what are some of the principles from a cryptography standpoint around what the password managers in 2023 are doing today and maybe how that differs from what they were doing a decade ago. And then I will also talk about my journey. Migrating from in this case from robo form to bit warden and making that a fairly pain free process. So I believe one of the great things is that if you know what you're doing and you do it correctly and take the right precautions, it actually you can migrate to between any of the big password managers out there with fairly little ease. So I'll make sure we cover that. Tonight as well. But what do we know about LastPass? So this is really what people think of as a second breach and I do want to give a shout out to the almost secure blog just go to palant dot info, PAL, ANT info. A lot of great write up and discussion on both just the last pass sagas as well as a lot of other security topics. They do a really nice job breaking down what's going on in fairly digestible terms. So some of the things I'm going to quote and talk about with just where are we with what happened in December of 22, reference and credit to that blog. So. This really started when LastPass made an updated vulnerability disclosure for lack of a better word or breach disclosure in December, which they couched as this kind of secondary independent event to win their kind of development environment and some of their source code and technical secret sauce got compromised and stolen back in August. And one of the things I really like about what this author characterizes is that it's not really a separate event. It's really clear that they failed to contain the first breach and really clean that up effectively. And so some of what I'm going to talk about with what went wrong with LastPass, I think also is applicable to many of the other password managers over the last ten years. So if you look at other vulnerabilities and problems and write ups that have been done, I'll talk a little bit about some of the ones that happened with robo form as a kind of example as well. But many of them kind of come back to some of these central themes where you would look at a password manager. Let's just say in 2013, 2014, they'd all advertised to kind of the same buzz words, right? So everyone's going to talk about 256 AES encryption and we're using military grade encryption and G doesn't that sound special. We'll see the average guy that doesn't really understand what's behind that. Gee, if it's good enough for the military, it must be good enough for me, right? So that has been one of the most kind of frequent sales pitches that you see in all of this. And the sales pitches have gotten more clever as they take technical primitives and find the right buzzwords to match to them. So some of the other things you'll see that are fun in the last pass breach right up is not only are they talking about 256 bed encryption, but they talk about zero knowledge architecture and so I'm going to talk a little bit about what that means because it's very much the foundation of how all these password managers are working today, especially ones that are the sync from anywhere, which really became a hot feature starting somewhere in the 2014, 2015 era where, hey, I want to be able to store my password securely, no matter what device I'm on and use them everywhere and not worry about having those passwords get owned. So that's where the concept of, well, you need a zero knowledge architecture to do that kind of comes into play. So while that all sounds kind of really assuring and well and good, some of the key things that I think consistently get overlooked if you're not paying attention is that password managers, foundationally rely on one simple thing and one simple thing only, the strength of the master key. And if you have created a master password that is not at the complexity requirement that it should be, it really doesn't matter what option you go with, you're going to end up in trouble. Why? Because the whole concept of what zero knowledge essentially means, zero knowledge encryption is that the password is never stored. So there's no system to go hack the password. It's basically you need to go hack the human if you want to get the password. So the most foundational concept is that your password, it's never stored. What that means is passwords are authentication. They're not encryption. And that's a kind of foundational concept that may get lost in translation for the average guy. So traditionally, passwords deal with authentication once you're authenticated, you can then have certain levels of privilege or access, which we talk about as authorization, but those kind of sit in juxtaposition to cryptography, which really deals with confidentiality, integrity, constructs, and non repudiation. So when we talk about zero knowledge encryption, one of the schemes that's used to provide a kind of zero knowledge architecture is that your master password is used to derive an encryption key locally in your password manager. So what that means is the encryption key isn't actually generated and derived until the master password is known and presented to your local client. And that encryption key stays locally with you on the client. So you're never going to store what the equivalent of a private key is on the server side. So these are two really important primitive foundations to understanding how any password manager like LastPass like their cloud version works. And so what the server should only ever be storing in a password manager is essentially the encrypted bit after it's been encrypted locally, then transmitted on the server. So the tenant is you better already be encrypted at rest before you even transmit those bits over the wire for the remote end server to store it.

Frankrijk Binnendoor
"aes" Discussed on Frankrijk Binnendoor
"Na fraai een vraag roadhuis, dat naast ons hörude siedlage. Naat won kamme koken eet kamme gesing te hebbe, wer een een outgenordert om de trappnart sueteren aafte daalen. Daar hingen een norme poster aakte glas, van een vrau een een wel hil sexy siekje, wer kek al kar ab de trapp op neu an, een haad een niet deiv an och nord de waterstond. Een usgier wer een een tulek voor wanden vat warrens een mit ons van planen een suteren, naat dat weit das neal daalig een bliek niet eenst zijn. Saad een de gewaan een mauje kompleit een raamte onde mit een bar, een bilyard raamte een vanggelder, een seelves een slaapkamer een een baatkamer, een daar van deigt ese ut, das een daar mesel in de zomen man desliepe, as een bovid de warrenwas. Een bokomme waal aafte vraage, vat deis een tuei mes storade, med del lingerie photos een posters de maakade. Een tunge bovid een aapretifgeer een ges hongke, bliek al hil snal hu de voor precise in de stelzad. Een erpan haad een een zag haad, een haad seelves een vitgud raario een TV zag haad, een seid haad een enten lins rie vingles haad, een haad op Marti in de regio gustaan med lingerie, een neu det een van de kinder de lingerie zag, een de res van de avond liefere bison de geselag, een de viek den naar haben wer een top viek haad. Tog, kon ik me een daal van de zit, neu it een viek dwingen, oen me bliek op de kleine de twerpe. Een viek latte, vam open aan de viek aan in de North-Oster van Franckraeg, in de Elsarzond precise de zijn, een flag bij, it's gewellige moye dorupje turkheim, bij trawels eelige avond, om tin hoehr een nagt vakker, mit zondere van halle over de twerpe ronden magt, soit een reinde nagge rusnne bed kong han. Een och be dese zit kreg een wij de outnordiging, om latte rinde weg een aapretiefte kalmen utg, een nandere mitelke kennesten magke. Neu, een dat hebew een geweit. Pussies op de aferspoeket tijt baelder waan, een wir een super hattel kont fangen. Op neu kreg een rondleir in dort huis van de eigen are, een leker op zen France waan zat een grigt. Een mit gefool van hummer, fuit al de hei kommei namme hobbykammer. Vit aver de van kelder een, maar van namler bedoghe een lage, een dar finne kisi maar op, een zat een fleesen in van de gereen omeer de Chateau Magaux, au de Gironde. Een mit feelstift was een en France textel presgräve, een un reveerup een voorne neekwam, shak, gefoolle sitet mit je fijver sesters de vierag, genitre van, malade dese fleesse, leeget totje neegen ter bend, Isabelle A.J. Peay. Naou, hee musdeus die vierag een fleesse lage, leeget ton seneer tusten, een ik fuhren moelteit und was, een naar ik ben obditten mit 5.7, dus ik munt och 15 years jes vat. Een een matrug in de voorne kammer, vielmei een maar jan op, dat een vier sian panje glaas klarstonden, maar dat er ogen taafaget dekt, was mit vier bode en bisteg. Huh? Me kramme ter leen voorne aapretief. Naap ik saal jed heelen van haal bespare, maar dar eeder 3 glaasen krimme en zas gedronke te hebben, danaan een ode vie fran waar de waa, 2 glaasen pinogri, een een flingk beel arma jag at nerden 8en werteag, prusen espresso, gingen weer vieru latte trutten nand zit. Ik alt eeg muito om een slooten gatte vinden, naav vos een fantasti se varing reicher, een top aavond me mense that wijn noch een 8en werteag ookenden, een vie durrifte mueen ookten segge, that franze niet aardag sein. Een wir een werge latte, vobleve een een saude van de Champagne streg in de departmente ob. Een on pe siekste sein, flagmeet, voore een lagdorian. Daakomme doavala sie kierot trutten mit een aparte podkast, maar det ist nietveer van Nederland en Berje, een een top streg aas je van det tour, vandel en vietse out. De meer een dese streg voorne meen een buffer voor waat meevo in de seene, meer dat vraal hoei dus noval ist latte. Waat een gewandert, bein een kleine Dorupje mit een restaurant. Een vos luensteit, een zit leben a gute plan und een nuttert bisteide, mit een luens. Een as sie meen ierste Bockepterleise, wobwold hove tak ses lekke een een Frankereig, daar weigem sie noch dat meen jana nieken Aspach habe, dat een ik aafet för det aavond een te zur, as wien Frankereig sein. Een kolk raag, een Frankereig inspired mee ook meestal, on saavon sie zit lekke ste maaket, dat bein een wei ne de streg past. Maar een kep ook waal iz genzen om niet kolk, een dan be denk ik een list, so ook dese keer. Een stave dus voor om ärgebreiten lunge, een de naar ons van der lien voorte sette. Eet vat een drei hange, meen ud du zur. Een eber ook van der alve ook van dan, een tun ik wieder betana was der reikening, een kruse vijn een kofie, it's van 20 euro. Een wieder kontakt luis med meen iphone betal, een drei euro voor gewe, van de be din ik wer super luk gewiest, eet eet gewan gud. Maar een kreikt oer dat nie kon, een, moor om niet, naar ook meen ier, be ik septir een voor iveet apparat, ook, dat is jammer, wan die kep een kleing hald ook voor gewe. Maar meen niet, dat ist ook helen manit erig, pe funder det heirloog dat jeg beuans gloens heft, een feinde dag, een noch een moor een vanderingfeder. Wieder ook der ook te zegen, dat frans een niet arsein. Een dem dat vie, in a saude van der Champagne zuijk satte, pais dat nah die weg, noch meen a kilo-meter staat, doch nam een lief den weinde ook shabrie, wah we als since nineteen-seventy-nine der greeger Maater kommen. Onse zouen heft de bein a ten-jaar wand, een bein pärge reine meer de weimbe driver veigt. Zijstärge vorgt hei, beit prestiges domijn long de päki, wer een alles lire van aft de weingar, tut inet verkoppe lokal. Een den nah werke de een anter jaar, beit LaRoche weins, dat een zijn teit noch een vamille drive was, van Mysia LaRoche. Reheve zorgtet er de wein pruver eer, een verkoppe in de boutique, een heißen paar jaar lang, de kontakt er underhouden, med afneemers in North-Europe. Een daar dor heb ween der lopde jaar, een bissunder de bamt, een de bühr sein, zwa blijver meesland paar dage. Een de eise kier had er long zien, om es wart lang er de blijver, een blijver dus underhalle verweg, on wir es lekker pättergan in wur muehreven. Baforg al fährle jaar, een bussunder pejekt, op onge versover te kilo meite van sheblij. Bijn dorp shemeit er wandes houwener nam, trenje per oeuse Saint Columb, wot den complete medel eus Kastelgebaut, een dat is Gedelon. Nijn aar geeloges un decking bij den vat fäderleupgeleur Kastelge van Sennvergoe, kommet i deje an oderrollen. De eignar van Sennvergoe, kleer i nerte ien vijvenerter terworte dat rupter ein van sein Kastelge restewern gewonden van een medel eus seburt. Een me fonter ter eigelge is meer daar, muss worte maat. Een det einleuk, kommen opet lumi näus i deje om om plekte zuk in dom reving, wart allen matrijal gewonden konden worte, on van aaf de grond med medel eus se ternike in kompleit de boerte bau. Vat fäder, dus bei trengee per oeuse senkolombe, van pen een boas med in de grond steen, eiser houllen de aard, vater een vadunde hout. Het die dei omer leerplastere maaket wart aute de ternike gebraak konworte, was geboorte. Een eiget een seen neerntig bronnert de voorbräiningen, een sense dien wat de rann geetel longgebaut. Die kapsammen meen meen jaan om des overjaerde pryjek besog, een it is teelen kes vier väsinnerund onte ziem, hoe ver het aga voor det is. Een alles vort med de hant geemagt. Meen meen gommeit overste bauen, kallak een eiser tekune maaket, een med det eiser veer de hantgereisgeap geemagt. Daen werden med kare, maschines, een heiße apparatus meer geemagt. Een fär völkers, kwame ersteis meer mänse veerke en leer, een it is neul meer dan zesten twinter jaar, een een norren oplijden sinstitut wer vakt mänse voor upkleit. Je kunt een besugge, een tat kann ik je zieger aarraar. Net is luik voor ider een, tis voor joungen out, grouten glaen, een ider een voor te sieg vereve ridder auf eidl vrau. Een aes je rondlabt, krägge steis meer respect voor aller aude een medeler oesge bauen die een frangraeg nok steis konsijen. Een naan een besuggen geeder long, begräip je peesis vat meen een voor voor eidmoote dum om een huis, kerik aufkastild te bauen. Je kunt een beslieder je peat reinweg een tat frage stelle, is een een mein aller teit om meer te andwor, som zouken det engels. Een ik sauja de sieger aarraar, om een een geeder long te gan. Dijs beval, meen blok meer een, zap frangraeg bingedoorpunt nel sletz geeder long. Een geeder long sgräfje G-U-A-D-A-L-O-N.Trauens, aas je een seblij auf om häveng bend, dar is een een nal veen wat een klok slaat. Je kunt een zou, zou prächtig vammerlingen in de vein geide market, man een beslug een seblij, ist een tulet mit kompleit sonderersge prufte hebben. In de dorp een direkte om häveng, is een een taal van goede veen domijnen om te prufte. Daal mujhe reiken me houre, teik een je praktis geen goede seblij me kopt under teen oero. Een beikje kwalte tief geuje seblij, gat och hau rikt in de 20 gurup een fläste een geuwortig, maar, aas je eersge prufte een wat fläse een een skaaft, kopje och ustuk je beläveng me. Na tulek kuije beit een groote boutiks een prufelkal in de dorp drecht, maar it is veer lauken, om zelle bein veen bouteg een prufte, een de keann werste besuk. Een hau een van roede veen, dan is een tip om naar moeg leer veen dorp een ransi tegan, niet feer van seblij, waan daav werde gude een betaabaar roede veen ge makt. Een sala bine koten reensen oedger blog een een podkast oer veen makt. Een werden meer weite, over seblij, auf de weenen van een ransi, naar gereven aar frangge bin de dorp een den eel, sukron oep seblij, auf een ransi. Een eerle gefaal, haup een geen, me dese podkast, veer wat neu een inspirational een shet äber gereven, on werden keer na frangge bine dorp. Een werden meer weite, keit dang een vop frangge bin de dorp puntenel, van daav en ge een allen information oer de podcast van frangge bin de dorp, de rees verhaal, uniek roadtrips, een de tulek debukke van frangge bin de dorp. Oer ja, van shet dijse podkast luuk, ab reer dan been Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, of Google Podcasts, of frangge bin de dorp, een jeben een alt eit top de horte new podcasts with my tips. You can find me on frangraeck.nl, slash podcasts, for all my podcasts and videos over frangraeck.

Bloomberg Radio New York
"aes" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"Sport from around the world here's Dan schwarzman. Thanks, Brian. RMC is reporting that Neymar is looking to leave PSG this summer with a club willing to let the 30 year old leave before his contract runs out in 2026. Sources say Juventus has interest in the striker, with Chelsea and Newcastle United also looking to make a move for the Brazil international. AES reports that Neymar's representatives have already begun discussions with Juventus regarding a possible move. Sport in Spain says that Barcelona will make one more offer to Bayern Munich for Robert Lewandowski in the range of €50 million, but the belief being that the Bundesliga giants will finally let the 33 year old lead Germany for a new challenge. Lewandowski has made it clear he does not want to continue with Byron and wants to play in the Catalan capital. Sky Sports though is reporting that Byron is sticking with a firm €60 million valuation for the Poland international. The Colorado avalanche are looking to wrap up the franchise's first Stanley Cup since the 2002 1001 season as the abs are in Tampa facing the two time defending champion lightning in game 6 with Colorado leading the series three games to two. Tampa center brayden point is missing his fourth straight game due to lower body injury originally suffered on May 14th. Atlanta Braves star Ronald lacuna junior is not in the lineup tonight against the LA Dodgers after fouling a ball off his left foot on Saturday. Acuna who returned earlier this year from a torn ACL says, he can't put pressure on the ailing foot. On the season the 24 year old is hitting two 81 is 7 home runs in 18 RBIs in 43 games. I'm Dan sportsman that your Bloomberg world sports op aid. Markets, headlines, and breaking news 24 hours a day. At Bloomberg dot com, the Bloomberg business out and at Bloomberg quick take. This is a Bloomberg business lash. Asian equity futures are higher this morning, part of this is due to the sell off in commodities. Natural gas caught in wheat and nickel all down about 15 to 30% over the past week or two, oil has dropped from more than $120 to about one O 5 one O 6 sibel. The change in the price of some of these commodities can impact headlines CPI numbers, and this could have implications for central banks, not least of which the U.S. Federal Reserve. But has inflation peaked and where does it settle? South Korea and Australia see their inflation issues still worsening. You heard that from Australian treasurer Jim Chalmers and also South Korea's KBS news reports that Solzhenitsyn see the inflation rate at 6% or more in June, that would be the highest level in more than two decades. Treasury yields have retreated on worries about economic growth, although in this last session, they climbed a four basis points for the yield on the two year and the ten year three O 6 and three 13, but we are seeing some improvement in China's economy and that could be a positive for global growth coming up. So here are some of the numbers acting index futures up 9 tenths of a percent similar gains for China futures. S&P E minis, though, down about a quarter percent, EK futures 26, 8 8 5, and that would be about 400 points above the cash close on Friday. That is a check of markets. Headline news now with head Baxter in San Francisco. All right, thank you very much, Ryan, a group of 7 is focused on the global economy, climate change, and Ukraine. And the U.S. UK Japan Canada plan to announce a ban on new gold imports from Russia, Shanghai's declared victory in defending the city from any more damage from

Bloomberg Radio New York
"aes" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"Now, time for a check of sport from around the world. Here's Dan schwarzman. Thanks, Brian. RMC is reporting that Neymar is looking to leave PSG this summer with a club willing to let the 30 year old leave before his contract runs out in 2026. Sources say Juventus has interest in the striker, with Chelsea and Newcastle United also looking to make a move for the Brazil international. AES reports that Neymar's representatives have already begun discussions with Juventus regarding a possible move. Sport in Spain says that Barcelona will make one more offer to Bayern Munich for Robert Lewandowski in the range of €50 million, but the belief being that the Bundesliga giants will finally let the 33 year old lead Germany for a new challenge. Lewandowski has made it clear he does not want to continue with Byron and wants to play in the Catalan capital. Sky Sports though is reporting that Byron is sticking with a firm €60 million valuation for the Poland international. The Colorado avalanche are looking to wrap up the franchise's first Stanley Cup since the 2002 1001 season as the abs are in Tampa facing the two time defending champion lightning in game 6, the car ride a leading the series three games to two. Tampa center brayden point is missing his fourth straight game due to lower body injury originally suffered on May 14th. Atlanta Braves star Ronald Acuna junior is not the lineup tonight against the LA Dodgers after fouling a ball off his left foot on Saturday. Acuna who returned earlier this year from a torn ACL says he can't put pressure on the ailing foot. On the season the 24 year old is hitting two 81 with 7 home runs in 18 RBIs in 43 games. On the enforcement that your Bloomberg won't sports op aid. Markets, headlines, and breaking news 24 hours a day. At Bloomberg dot com, the Bloomberg business app and at Bloomberg quick tape. This is a Bloomberg business line. So we are about an hour and 13 minutes away now from trading in Tokyo Sydney and Seoul. We had quite the rally in U.S. equities in the on the Friday session with the S&P jumping about 3% and that helped the benchmark to its first weekly gain in about a month. The catalyst for that move higher was reported decline in long-term expectations for consumer inflation reported by the University of Michigan. Very little movement in the dollar right now with dollar weakness of the story in the New York session on Friday. We had the Bloomberg dollar spot index dropping about three tenths of 1%. Began is steady here at one 35 15 against the greenback Chicago nikkei futures now. More than 300 points above where we were in the cash market Friday in Tokyo. Now, in addition to the move higher for the overall equity market in the states, we had the NASDAQ golden dragon China index up 4% on Friday. That was a cap to the best week in more than three months, so it's likely that we're going to see positivity carry through to trading in Hong Kong and on the Chinese mainland. Cryptocurrency saw relatively calm over the weekend Bitcoin right now just above 21,000 and crude oil giving back more than 1% here in the electronic session with WTI one O 6 50 still a lot of concern in the oil market about weaker demand given this forecast that we are hearing from a number of different corners about the possibility of recession here in the U.S.. We'll take another look at markets in 15 minutes. Let's check in with Ed Baxter next for a look at global news headlines at all right Douglas thank you group of 7 is focused on the global economy climate change and Ukraine and the U.S. UK Japan and Canada say they plan to announce a ban on gold imports from Russia. Shanghai's declared

Bloomberg Radio New York
"aes" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"Over a 120 countries This is Bloomberg radio Now a global news update this is a special report the Russian invasion of Ukraine Russian forces continue their deadly assault on the Ukrainian port city of marital correspondent Molly hutter says city officials report thousands have been killed by Russian shelling According to the mayor 10,000 people have already died in the incessant the constant Russian bombardment That number is likely much higher This news comes as multiple efforts to get humanitarian aid into the city of failed Russian tanks and forces have surrounded the city which has been left without power and water for days Ukrainian president zelensky is demanding the release of one of Ukraine's mayors He says was kidnapped by Russian forces zelensky called it a crime against democracy video posted on social media shows Melo topal mayor Ivan fedorov being led away by armed men before being accused of terrorist offenses by a Russian backed regional prosecutor Zelensky called the action of war crime that goes against the Geneva convention which prohibits civilian hostages This has been a special report the Russian invasion of Ukraine I'm Chris coraggio This is Bloomberg intelligence with Alex Steele and Paul Sweeney on Bloomberg radio Thanks for joining I'm Nathan Hager Alex Steele and Paul Sweeney are off today Environmental social and governance ESG investing is getting a lot more attention from companies looking to make more of an impact than just on their balance sheets and for their shareholders And when it comes to the funds that are focused on societal factors seems not all of them are created equal For more on this I'm joined by Bloomberg intelligence ESG analyst Shaheen contractor Shane good to have you with us So where are ESG funds putting their money So what we did is we created these portfolios of high and low convection ESG stocks And found that companies like Microsoft companies like Apple these are the ones that are most likely to be ESG friendly or in other words where investors are putting their money while companies like matter and also to some extent Apple these tend to be avoided by ESG fund managers Interesting to see a split in where ESG managers are going in terms of tech Why do you think that is So it's a good looking for first day thinking of our high conviction portfolio tends to have better disclosure But what I thought was really interesting is that these hike conviction baskets they have a lot of tech and consumer discretionary names which tend to be carbon light in a way And you'll find things like utilities energy these dirty sectors make up our low conviction and our exclusion list So I think investors like what I call environmentally life sectors These are the ones that end up in there So environmentally light that sort of points to the idea of focusing on certain aspects of ESG Maybe on the E more than the S or the G or some other way of shuffling the pie around How do you look at that in terms of the investment outlook So again so E light So I think it comes down to carbon and carbon only at least that's what it seems like And although the EDS and the G they spoke so many different things It looks like these energy utilities these sectors are just tend to be carbon heavy They end up in the and of course that's very far removed from where she is which is risk across ES and gene But that's what seems to be factored in right now Are there certain opportunities that ESG funds might be missing a certain companies that could be focused on some of these societal factors that aren't showing up in the fines So very much so so one thing that caught me by surprise was AES a U.S. utility Now the company tends to have a very high carbon intensity which makes sense that it be excluded but one interesting thing is the company has a very ambitious carbon reduction goal Putting it ahead of almost all other U.S. utility beers And I think that's not being factored in This forward looking aspect of carbon rather than more current and backward looking aspect Do you think that investors are putting more weight just generally into societal factors really honing in on that as something they really want to focus on in terms of making a real investment We've been seeing that yes of the first few years I think when we just look at sort of influence in the ESG ETF flows have increased about 70% in 2021 from the year before and that's just a large increase that I think is driven by interest regulation all these things And as we start to see more investment into companies that focus on these factors is there a possibility now that some of these ESG funds that are focused on these things can start to outperform more broad based index funds is this the kind of thing that can make an investor more money in the long term When we get this interesting analysis where we looked at whether ESG friendly stocks traded a premium and we didn't really find that to be the case at least not in the current state These in lectures they might tend to be at a premium because they have these debt consumer discretionary very growth like stocks But all in all ESG friendly stocks know not yet All right thanks for the shaheen good to have you with us That's shaheen contractor ESG analyst for Bloomberg intelligence Now let's turn from virtue to vice More states may be looking for new ways to fill their coffers now that federal pandemic stimulus is mostly going away The easiest targets may come down to three words Gambling ganja and tech Let's bring in Bloomberg intelligence government analyst Andrew silverman for more on this Andrew the tax risk from our worst habits Tell me more Well so states and cities got about $900 billion from the federal government from COVID aid The bipartisan infrastructure act or captured 255 billion of that aid future bills will probably recapture more of it And the other thing about that aid is.

Oil and Gas Startups Podcast
"aes" Discussed on Oil and Gas Startups Podcast
"Exactly and that's really what it comes down to is. It's so complex. No one knows everything. Including that's why it's so tough to have like. That's why i listen to to that has such a strong stance on on whether it's renewable like there's there's so much more underneath the surface of that. Yeah and the one thing that i've noticed is in you know Having these conversations the people that do have less of a strong stance or those who are extremely well educated and have a decent understanding of how it all works. but it's the ones that either again no fault of their own. they just haven't been exposed or have taken. The time to educate themselves are the ones who have a dog. Maddux stance of iconic. Or you know what. I mean really ties into what you're saying. It's it's like the guy that i know in the wind energy Space danny he's a i one to tell me like i love natural gas like i think natural gas is going to get us to a point where we can do this energy transition. And he's pro. Fossil fuels the ease any his whole career in livelihood and kids. You know livelihoods. His family like all depend on wind energy but he is going to tell you we can't depend solely on wind and solar and so it's again like and he has done a vast amount of work in renewables and has never even worked in oil and gas. He understands him appreciates it and again going back to your point like he is a kinda guy can have a conversation with. It will shake hands and drink beer. And he's on wind and i'm in for drilling holes in the ground which naturally think we'd butt heads but we actually have some of the best conversation. I think that's how it should be men. I raised three hundred percent. Yeah it's not this or that it should be this and that and this and this i can't stand this or that the the the black white mentality is like man. We're all at the same table man. Yeah we're all. We're all on the spectrum of gray. But i think that's like of like how society is built is like you pick camps and you fight amongst another you competant let the best man win now instead of being a having some land knicks volcano in a great soil and river. Now it's about like whether you wear a mask or not or whether yeah. Yeah yeah no. It's it's it's interesting but it's fun times man if you were to give Let's let's let's get this wrapped up. I'm getting a little bit a little bit hungry getting tired. You want me hanging not tired. No not tired. I know. I know that you probably school to go to yet. No brainer masoom school thing to to attend on summer break. And i and. I'm trying to get bronzed up for july fourth. I'm definitely going the sun today..

Oil and Gas Startups Podcast
"aes" Discussed on Oil and Gas Startups Podcast
"I've got friends in the directional space and everyone does extremely well and the intrepid is mindset dinner james but Anyway good company. And so i say that again to say those people like myself especially james is traveling ton in so it's cool because you know i always enjoy traveling and going in different cities meeting with people that i hadn't seen whether elsewhere to food's good yeah. I know what like so. When i went from canada to pittsburgh i literally I lived in a hotel again. There's a lot of people that are gonna have done that too. But i'm just saying to say Living a hotel and eating restaurant food for like a year straight. I'm i don't mind going to a nice restaurant. But i would much rather eat at home really. Oh i. i'm just so tired of restaurant food and some people like it. But i i would much rather have a home. Cooked meal need a restaurant food other than like a really nice day or sushi. So what happens. I guess once you once you get your Once you get your degree no what happens after. Like what are you gonna focus your attention on. I mean what are you. Going to pivot your. I guess your energy and attention onto something that you'd like to create or do i really want to get involved with the business aspect of whether it's you know they obviously a doing well. I think there's lots opportunity there You know i. I really wanna get more involved. I wanna get away more from operations and more on the business side. Like i was at look like for you. You actually going in talking about making potential step change within organization or is it more meetings more macro level in more i guess mourn strategy and business type stuff like. Let's say we're trying to evaluate whether or not we should go into a new era. Say a new area figure out like okay how we allocate enough resources to do this. Let's evaluate whether or not it would actually be profitable. They just kinda those types of decisions. I don't going to start applying what you learned it pretty much. Yeah and then. That's a lot of what it is. You know economics and business and You know the science part of what you know. I've learned through school. is is really understanding different energy markets and stuff like that which that would not apply. I mean really. I could probably apply less than half of what i actually learn others. Probably some little skills and stuff through courses that what are you learning about the use of renewable side. I think that's that's a not a misconception but kind of something that you like to introduce the oil and gas industry About the renewable side. That you're then you've picked up and learn during education That's a good question. Thank you we ask good questions do you do it. So a lot of what we've learned is really the i guess. The science in energy conversion takings of the wind turns the motors of the. Yeah i like how all that works. And so one one class we had. That was was pretty interesting as it was called technical aspects.

Oil and Gas Startups Podcast
"aes" Discussed on Oil and Gas Startups Podcast
"That's the only place you need to go to clearly. We know this all information from new so this is like my second podcasts. I'm recording studio. This is bitcoin minor Painting that i just completely admire usually usually like the pot like it's usually like one on one across the table to very open bang. I'm kind of curious about the how you feeling right now. I like it. it's very it's comfort. It is like it's to me. It's comfort. I think i just have to get used to it. No it's it's i mean if you're used to doing it in on a table or desk and you got the headphones on back when you know you're doing was yeah. You sat on kind of like how we are now. Actually with more of a closed was opposed. Yes kind of feels more. Like studio style. What's your what's your set up. Because i know that you're so you got to podcasts yet. The drill down right the flow throw line. Low line flow also though g g n Yeah oil and gas onshore so the only gas onshore is i typically record while here in the canon which this little cannon but in other canon there's these Conference room so. I'll do it in a conference room. So it's like maybe like fifteen by twelve room table. yeah one on one like traditional prep-work before Not much really. I mean the the the person's name name islet gone linked in for a while. And i've like super good at googling and like really just getting to know Like i can look at lincoln profile in pretty much drum up a conversation around that gets pretty easy So it's i mean. I have a method to it. I don't go in with a blank canvas. But i have somewhat of a template that i follow. Do you do the same. Template for both podcast. No totally different. I mean because the the flow line. Podcasts is a is purely an educational platform where we talk about certain drilling fluid topics so it's qna but it's more specific to drilling fluids whereas though the only gas on shores interviews dot com conversation another person it is. Yeah and i mean i. I had you guys on a long time ago which we need to do around to. I would love to do around two. Yeah things have changed. And that's no. We're going to do that. Hereafter this will line up date but Yeah i mean i mean customer to you. 'cause you're what like your hundred deep race or the previous podcast released one hundred three episodes there is three. I didn't release and this one Of released one so far. You've done one hundred plus episodes. You mean you didn't do any prep today. I didn't exactly that you would carry the team will. Yeah no of course easy. Got this like laguardia. I don't know twenty minutes in and you haven't even like you didn't scratch down a single thing on a piece of paper's i would imagine just like you for me i could. I could go into one without any what happens off days. You'd kind of bullshit with someone you're like. I'm like my feeling like it's not always not there like what does that feel like. Yeah it sucks you..

Oil and Gas Startups Podcast
"aes" Discussed on Oil and Gas Startups Podcast
"Like that's like going to like someone. Who did you balls. Check to you. Get your pap. Smears is less intrusive question like you. Don't ask me if flu shot. You and asked me if i if i got you know vaccine when i was a kid. I just think it's a very intrusive question has someone and it's not. I don't think it's okay to ask anyone. That's my personal opinion. I don't truce if it's a private matter. It's a hypothetical like yeah. Why ask them about the about their decision. Mind that yeah no and you have every right to feel like that. And and again. I don't want to be misconstrued to think like i'm dogmatic either way like i think it's not like the and that's the thing too is people will be upset if you don't want to get the vaccine and stuff like that like again like i'm not trying to take aside or what i am pro as i'm pro health and i'm pro. Take care of your goddamn self and then also get the vaccine to because you're double protected but but the fact is there's other issues going on such as obesity such as mean what during during a cove and i had. Dr wwl previous podcast news talk. And he's like you know they. They took the salads off the mcdonald's mundy's you know they closed the gyms but they left. You know mcdonalds open. They left walmart they closed. It's such like an interesting approach that it's not pro health because you're closing down. I remember there was a time to. It's like oh you parks are closed. You can't go walk on the running trail and it was like. Yeah what do you want me to do. Stay at home. Need vitamin d. Like that is a good defense mechanism to increase a lot of other things within your body including your immune system so you're gonna put your in iraq and allow people the personal grand. You can go in your backyard and get some sunshine like obviously but again like that's where is there such a disconnect and if the government was so adamant and companies and people were so adamant about.

Oil and Gas Startups Podcast
"aes" Discussed on Oil and Gas Startups Podcast
"So what i did. Is i strategically married. An american to smooth process right because for those that are huge fans of energy crew like you. Just i've downloaded episodes have been one of them which is great so i'm batting one hundred percent. You're welcome but your wife is actually going to be released before this podcast. And she came on to talk about wicked holdings yes. She crushed she She's a study jonoski. She's gonna be ciardi is more popular than me. She's probably made a lot more money than me She probably believe me when she realizes the potential she has. And i'm okay. Well yeah. I should listen. No actual why not is twenty twenty one. You should be able to post up. Yeah and speaking of twenty twenty one and awoke we are. Did you know that on passports. Now you can self identify. What do you mean so if you go to get your passport which obviously now i can't because i'm fully american. Can you don't have to prove your identity like whether you want to be a male jason. I feel like jason bourne. Like any of those spies like. This is such a loophole form. Like this is perfect. Not only do. I have like all these like ghost passwords. I can use now now. I have this whole selection of whatever. I wanna identify with passports. Yeah yeah right. I mean it's great for spies. So sneaky man hunter no just a bunch of crazy stuff going on you yourself up and like current events nonstop because like. I can't even sleep at night. Are you seri- no. I don't care where you're bringing up all these issues. I mean this is entertainment. Do these things like actually. Like like pissy. Wa i th i is purely entertainment value. You wanna know something else. That's pretty cool. tuesday missy. Elliott turned fifty million. Yeah what about this. Not being goal. Bill cosby got released. I was not cool wall. I'm staying away from that with justin and everyone. That's a that's a wrap we're done with this we're done with this episode Holy shit okay. Let's i'm going to try to recover. Recover this real quick. See.

Oil and Gas Startups Podcast
"aes" Discussed on Oil and Gas Startups Podcast
"Welcome to another episode of Energy crew in with us today. I don't think this guy needs an introduction. This guy's the most well-known podcast in a in the houston area oiling. Gas area to and then So with us today is justin. Go shea amicable cucamonga of unit see happy candidate candidate everyone. So we're actually. This was probably not live but it's not a lie but when it comes out going to give the the canadian audience a little pride in knowing that we filmed recorded this on candidate it actually kind of weirdly worked out that way didn't it. It wasn't planned. And i am so excited. I'm going by canadian bar hopping after this. So you're excited because that's forty syria. Let's hurry this up. Because i have another podcast which is fine. We actually yeah no end so before that. I'm doing bar. Canadian bar hopping ongoing democracies drinking. At least three cokely's and then i'm going to the maple leaf and probably russia's midtown right. Yeah yeah yeah yeah. Okay start this off know. We're gonna talk about today. And i'm fine with that. What is candidate. Can you educate the audience a little bit. What candidate how you actually celebrated so candidates as a party It's basically like canada's independence day. Okay so who cumulus history. Some tell you right now. And i'm totally. Okay with telling you this. I did not pay attention in elementary school. Nor did i pay attention. Much high school okay. there were certain things i did pay attention to none of which involved social studies so for everyone out there. I don't exactly know what candidate today candidate. Day stands for other than it's like independence day and the only memories. i have grown up. Kennedy is Extracurricular activities with lots of friends and not too much family so july. Four other fireworks. No we're not allowed to do that in canada so we do a lot in canada. I know especially right now. I know trudeau's just putting the putting. The hammer doesn't a lot of heat behind that lot. A lot of anger behind the the the leadership in canada. That i'm hearing yeah. I know it's tough..

Tim Conway Jr.
Giant Long Beach AES Battery Storage Facility In Full Operation
"World's largest battery storage systems has powered up in Long Beach. The $1.3 billion rebuild of the ES Alamitos facility has more than one million lithium ion battery units. Yes, Alamitos, Mark Miller says. When fully charged, the plant can produce 400 megawatt hours enough to supply power to tens of thousands of homes in milliseconds. You can operate as a Peking station to provide power at the most critical point during the day, which is right after the sun goes down, and everybody is turning their lights on and appliances, he says. The facility started absorbing energy on the first of the year during low demand off peak hours. Corbin Carson KO Phi knees, Many