10 Burst results for "Dave Develop"

The Autosport Podcast
"dave develop" Discussed on The Autosport Podcast
"And then there's a bit of a scratch on the Magnus M plate. And it's like, nope, you've got to come in straight away. So yeah, I see where you're coming from just like, I get the, yeah, Kevin, he does, he does keep his foot in in situations like that. And that's really cool to see and it does. Okay, it's a high risk high reward situation. But in the case like that, yeah, it was like half a looks at it and went, yeah, it's not too bad. It doesn't seem like it's that much of an issue. So yeah, I think K mag was massively disappointed. But it was yet another opportunity miss for her. And even with my real gutting setback for him. But it's just like the team obviously started the season so well. The arrest the midfield Dave developed, they've taken these big set forward hearts have been much more conservative with their upgrades. It may not be until Hungary they bring their major upgrade packages. That's going to be the last big one for the season. And I kind of feel like the ship might have sailed for them to have really got any massive results this season. They've done very well. Massively better than last year, a real big step forward. But it just kind of feels like they're still going to end up probably 9th again in the constructors championship, which is given all the hype and pre season given how well they started in the early rounds of the year. It just does feel a little bit disappointing. So yeah, I think it's definitely gutting for them, not by their own doing in this race, but yeah, you kind of feel that has the ship sailed and then to get any huge breakthroughs this year. Let's talk a little bit about ocon finishing ahead of Alonso, of course, once the time penalties shake out, how do you feel the race was today for Alpine from your perspective? Because we saw him in Baku, there did really well with the barely there, rear wing, and load down force package and making the most of track positions. Nobody could get past them. You feeling like they over performed underperformed or about where they should be. I think on paper, it's where they should be, isn't it? First measure is you add back in leclerc and Perez into that into that natural pecking order. So that bumps them down. And even if your charitable and take away Alonso's penalty and it's all sort of fair and equal, then what that bumps ocon down to sort of a more natural 8th place. And then you take another step back further from that and you think this is Alpine, which is okay, scratch away that a and it's a diamond for Renault and it's this massive works program and they're still sort of despite the regulation shift. We're a third way through to see some sort of business as usual. And is it even that in terms of their pecking order? They've sort of come to the fore and grabbed the headlines with their top speed at two sort of low down force tracks, but they properly been in that midfield Maya with your Alfred touring Alfa Romeo at other tracks. So that's great thing about that sort of class B battle as you like if you like is a two in a row. Again, it's now being surely you should expect more. I don't know, I'm afraid I had to go and kill a spider up so I put spider up misery while Luke was talking but I don't know if he I don't know if when he was talking about Alonso's ratios that amazing phrase he coined a few podcasts ago, which is a Fernando Alonso tax. I really like that bit of team radio from Alonso sort of late in where he said it despite my engine issue I'm a hundred times faster than ocon, but they're pretty evenly matched again. You've got that you've got that where it's this bunch of races where Alonso has been seen as a star performer or hasn't things got away from him and again ocon's left and left some on the table compared to his teammate, but still finished ahead. Again, where's the inspiration from? I wanted to see your, I want to see you saw Alonso really sort of send it down the inside into turn turn one. And okay, the race played out differently. We had to save to cars signs that a better job than I initially expected. Who wasn't really thinking when Alonso hasn't had a sniff on the first up who's really thinking Verstappen is going to lose this at this point. I want to see a little bit more. And again, to throw it back and I don't want to go around the circle, but to throw it back to the Alpine strategy call. In their situation, I feel like position is critical. And so therefore, you play what's right in front of you, whereas very, very quickly, tuning into the team radio, they decided actually we're racing Hamilton here at that point I think was what 5th at that point there abandoned hopes of the lead or even going for second. They turn their attention to that. And then just to go over what Jess and Luke said, they're very one virtual safety car and a second. At that point, it's a twist as many analogies. The cards are the hands changed. The cards have changed, whatever. You need to play what's in front of you. You need to play the person opposite you. Yeah, they had that strategy and then when you see the virtual safety car, which you can account for it because it's a street circuit, but you don't know when it's going to come. If it's going to come and you see, if you are battling Hamilton and he's taking a new set of tires on lap 9 and then you see him make that pass around the outside of ocon going into turn one, a DRS assisted yes, and you're all of a sudden you go, okay, well there's this big pace advantage there. I know you're coming from. We've talked about midfield teams and et cetera and the battle there. And I've just realized we're over halfway in with three quarters of the way and I've not given you a rundown of the drivers and constructors championship as we like to do. Max Verstappen leads the 175 points, Sergio Pérez 46 points behind as Jess noted on a 129 points. Charles Leclerc in third still behind Perez, despite that Perez DNF, Charles on 126 and then mister consistency, George Russell just keeps pumping in top 5 finishes on a 111 points. Carlos Sainz on a 102 Lewis Hamilton 77. There was a wonderful piece of F one karma. That's the wrong word. Weirdness where earlier today before Alonso's penalty, we had Lewis Hamilton on 77 points in the driver's championship and Valtteri Bottas on 44. They swapped numbers until Alonso got his penalty. And he ruined it all. Thanks Fernando, and in the midfield battle, it really is a midfield battle Red Bull on a heart of 304 Ferrari on 228 Mercedes a 188 and they're nothing until McLaren on 65 points. And so it's two teams out in front. It's one team out in front with Red Bull and then for I Mercedes and then just a big old midfield battle with McLaren all the way down to..

No Agenda
"dave develop" Discussed on No Agenda
"At this and who's also indicated that does not indicated for my goodness. Where was this what hospital. This was in mississippi. I have the hospital name someplace. But i don't have it in front of mississippi okay. It was in mississippi. And they wouldn't because they're gonna buy their protocols. Dave developed at that hospital. But but then i got this last clip. Which is kate dalley. Who is a very very good broadcaster. She's a she's a radio host whose husband ended up with pneumonia day brought. They brought him into the hospital. Name immediately called it cove pneumonia even though it was just a regular case in the monja and she went to a rigmarole. But she's very forceful woman to get the To get them to do what she wanted him to do and especially not put him on a ventilator because they wanted to ventilator him right away when he walked in and they made a big fuss addressing everybody up in an outfit and she makes she. Anyone can find. This clip is kate d. a. l. l. e. wise Discussion of her experiences about forty. Five minutes very entertaining. But it's all the same time as a lot of tips. If you get hospitalized what to do. I just have this small clip of this and this is like short but it's interesting and she's she's a To remind you that other. Rob brunette broadcasting woman's you spend the blaze. I keep forgetting her name. But she's she's just great. I mean you listen to her broadcasting shed two sear face facial expressions as the pro. But listen to this. This was our situation. We get in. And i haven't mazing doctors and the only reason that we succeeded at this i think Besides prayers and blessings were the fact that i had amazing doctors to talk to who urged me right away to get him on. Intravenous high dose vitamin c. This makes a big difference. It's not like you know. A lot of doctors will shame. You think you're silly and owning or vitamin girl. You know that kind of thing but You want just like a little solvable. You know. I want high dose. Intravenous vitamin c. Because it's even known to kill cancer cells at high doses and help with nucleic acid and help with inflammation which is pneumonia and so Oh by the way the rays when they when they did the xrays The xrays were suspiciously like the two thousand seventeen ammonia two thousand. Six monja two thousand pneumonia. All pneumonia looks kind of like each other suspiciously. I think three years ago it just would have been good ole pneumonia but today. It's kobe pneumonia. Hank there might be some big bucks associated with the covert pneumonia. Think so anyway. We're in icu. And we i said. I want vitamin c. High tr- High intraveneous doctors that i'm in contact with the front line. Doctors are telling me get on zinc intervene zinc and a c- high doses of vitamin d. Get everything to help him to combat the pneumonia while they said it wasn't protocol i said doesn't matter i'm i want it and they said well it's not protocol we don't we don't do that. You don't get vitamins. Nutrition to your icu patients. Why and the answer was we. Don't do that not protocol see. There's three hundred. And i think what is it. Three hundred forty one pages sent by the cdc panel to tell the hospitals what to do for their protocol. And here's the bottom line for you if you you like me to get to the end of this before explained the rest. It's not cova. that's killing people. In the protocol over treatment. I wanted to under treat my husband with Nutrients and vitamins to help. Fight what he had so he could breath again. Instead of over treating him overmedicating him and shoving him on a ventilator too early because the death rate of ventilator is up to seventy five eighty percent death rate that's really scary that they were talking ventilator from the minute i got in there and there we. We're back again. And so she's makes the point. That is the protocol. And i was thinking about that. And that's what everybody falls. Back on the cdc trove him out with a protocol which is what they're all three of these clips about is the cdc protocols hospitals. Take they just adopted. Follow the rules in that. Because they don't worry about getting sued. Oh all we follow the protocol. And they're off the hook. Because it's the cdc that has to take the fall at some point okay. Well we're sorry we're government agency. You can't do anything about it and the whole thing is just to cover your ass. Methodology doesn't help anybody that's why they're not gonna go with ivermectin or hydroxy chloroquine or anything else. Because it's not in the cdc protocol which is rigged by pfizer to push everyone towards vaccinations. This is massive scandal and our good friends or do sopher I don't know if you saw it. I know you've had some problems with no agenda social but he was put. He went into the hospital. He'd been on location shoot and he. He wasn't feeling well. A little bit of fever is on location for three or four days and then he He said well. I might as well test for cova. D- tested positive And so now it'd been been traveling working strange hours. And so now. He went into the hospital with wait. Fort kovic pneumonia and He posted some videos. So i think he stayed there one night and he he He posted videos. I'm getting outta here. He has yet a caliber You'll see so as oxygen in his nose and he said i. I'm getting outta here because i can't sleep. It's like they messed with my machine. I had much more trouble breathing this morning all night. Long it's beeping everywhere incessantly beeping. Not even in a rhythm. It's all different. And so he found a doctor through his contacts and the doctor immediately put him on ivermectin. Byu dine or something like that. It's like a thing that's inhaler. Maybe for asthma and zinc the typical things but ivermectin and so so he. He left the hospital as soon as he could. Any went to the pharmacy to get his prescription on now denied. Cvs walgreens they would not give him ivermectin gives no it's not the protocol in so of course it's obtainable and you just have to go to an independent Pharmacy but even that's getting a little more scarce and he posted a half hour about his entire experience. And he's you know he's belabored breathing. But i know it. Pneumonia looks like and yeah. It's great just call it cove. Pneumonia everything changes including the treatment. You might get. It's it's disgusting. I completely agree. I completely.

No Agenda
"dave develop" Discussed on No Agenda
"The point. I'm trying to get to here. And this is the ivermectin fiasco clip to my left is dr steven farrell. Who is our chief medical officer at the hospital and ness next to miss. Mitchell is mr geoff cooke. Who is chief legal counsel in house counsel for the hospital thanking mr matter western position now. That jordan has a prescription for the hospital willing to administer that the judge still missing position that we cannot than for several reasons. Number one is miss. Denmark is not does not have privileges at this hospital. She is not able to take over the terror of She writing and prescription to be administered by our critical care specialist win which is in direct cop direct conflict with what they perceive their judgment is correct the correct procedure for treatment before miss short i do note however that miss denmark based on her information appears to be affiliated with west medical center If wesley medical center is willing. I'm not so sure that they are based on something. I'm gonna tell you just a second is willing to accept this and miss denmark nurse sponsoring physician are willing to administer. It seems more practical courses to transfer her to wesley into hospital. That is willing to do this type of treatment right now. What they're proposing. Is that a prescription for macy's from a nurse practitioner. Who is not credentialed at this hospital. Who is not privileged to practice medicine at this hospital to treat patients to dictate how we should treat a patient when we've had at least five physicians and since monday there's another physician involved who's also dr unisons looked at this and who's also indicated that does not indicated for my goodness. Where was this what hospital. This was in mississippi. I have the hospital name someplace. But i don't have it in front of mississippi okay. It was in mississippi. And they wouldn't and because they're gonna buy their protocols. Dave developed at that hospital. But but then i got this last clip. Which is kate dalley. Who is a very very good broadcaster. She's a she's a radio host whose husband ended up with pneumonia. They brought they brought him into the hospital. Name immediately called it cove pneumonia even though it was just a regular case in the monja and she went to a rigmarole. But she's very forceful woman to get the To get them to do what she wanted him to do and especially not put him on a ventilator because they wanted to ventilator him right away when he walked in and they made a big fuss addressing everybody up in an outfit and she makes she. Anyone can find. This clip is kate d. a. l. l. e. wise Discussion of her experiences about forty. Five minutes very entertaining. But it's all the same time as a lot of tips. If you get hospitalized what to do. I just have this small clip of this and this is like that short but it's interesting and she's she's a To remind you that other rob brunette broadcasting woman's you spend on the blaze. I keep forgetting her name. But she's she's just great. I mean you listen to her broadcasting shed two sear face facial expressions as the pro. But listen to this. This was our situation. We get in. And i haven't mazing doctors and the only reason that we succeeded at this i think Besides prayers and blessings were the fact that i had amazing doctors to talk to who urged me right away to get him on. Intravenous high dose vitamin c. This makes a big difference. It's not like you know. A lot of doctors will shame. You think you're silly and owning or vitamin girl. You know that kind of thing but You want just like a little solvable. You know no. I want high dose. Intravenous vitamin c. Because it's even known to kill cancer cells at high doses and help with nucleic acid and help with inflammation which is pneumonia and so Oh by the way the rays when they when they did the xrays The x rays were suspiciously like the two thousand seventeen pneumonia. Two thousand six pneumonia. Two thousand pneumonia. So all pneumonia looks kind of like each other suspiciously. I think three years ago it just would have been good ole pneumonia but today. It's kobe pneumonia. Hank there might be some big bucks associated with the covert pneumonia. Think so anyway. We're in icu. And we i said. I want vitamin c. High tr- High intraveneous doctors that i'm in contact with the front line. Doctors are telling me get on zinc intervene zinc and a c- high doses of vitamin d. Get everything to help him to combat the pneumonia while they said it wasn't protocol i said doesn't matter i'm i want it and they said well it's not protocol we don't we don't do that. You don't get vitamins. Nutrition to your icu patients. Why and the answer was we. Don't do that not protocol see. There's three hundred. And i think what is it. Three hundred forty one pages sent by the cdc panel to tell the hospitals what to do for their protocol. And here's the bottom line for you if you you like me to get to the end of this before explained the rest. It's not cova. that's killing people. In the protocol over treatment. I wanted to under treat my husband with Nutrients and vitamins to help. Fight what he had so he could breath again. Instead of over treating him overmedicating him and shoving him on a ventilator too early because the death rate of ventilator is up to seventy five eighty percent death rate that's really scary that they were talking ventilator from the minute i got in there and there we. We're back again. And so she's makes the point. That is the protocol. And i was thinking about that. And that's what everybody falls. Back on the cdc trove him out with a protocol which is what they're all three of these clips about is the cdc protocols hospitals. Take they just adopted. Follow the rules in that. Because they don't worry about getting sued. Oh all we follow the protocol. And they're off the hook. Because it's the cdc that has to take the fall at some point okay. Well we're sorry we're government agency. You can't do anything about it and the whole thing is just to cover your ass. Methodology doesn't help anybody that's why they're not gonna go with ivermectin or hydroxy chloroquine or anything else. Because it's not in the cdc protocol which is rigged by pfizer to push everyone towards vaccinations. This is massive scandal and our good friends do sopher I don't know if you saw a now. You've had some problems with no agenda social. But he was put he went into the hospital. He'd been on location shoot and.

No Agenda
"dave develop" Discussed on No Agenda
"The point. I'm trying to get to here. And this is the ivermectin fiasco clip to my left is dr steven farrell. Who is our chief medical officer at the hospital and ness next to miss. Mitchell is mr geoff cooke. Who is chief legal counsel in house counsel for the hospital thanking mr matter western position now. That jordan has a prescription for the hospital willing to administer that the judge still assigned position that we cannot than for several reasons. Number one is miss. Denmark is not does not have privileges at this hostile. She is not able to take over the terror of miss. She is writing and prescription to be administered by our critical care specialist win which is in direct cop direct conflict with what they perceive their judgment is correct the correct procedure for treatment before miss short i do note however that miss denmark based on her information appears to be affiliated with west medical center If wesley medical center is willing. I'm not so sure that they are based on something. I'm gonna tell you just a second is willing to accept this and miss denmark nurse sponsoring physician are willing to administer. It seems more practical courses to transfer her to wesley into hospital. That is willing to do this type of treatment right now. What they're proposing. Is that a prescription for macy's from a nurse practitioner. Who is not credentialed at this hospital. Who is not privileged to practice medicine at this hospital to treat patients to dictate pow. Treat a patient when we've had at least five physicians and since monday there's another physician involved. Who's also dr unisons looked at this. And who's also indicated that does not indicated for my goodness. Where was this what hospital. This was in mississippi. I have the hospital name someplace. But i don't have it in front of mississippi okay. It was in mississippi. And they wouldn't because they're gonna buy their protocols. Dave developed at that hospital. But but then i got this last clip. Which is kate dalley. Who is a very very good broadcaster. She's a she's a radio host whose husband ended up with pneumonia day brought. They brought him into the hospital. Name called it cove pneumonia even though it was just a regular case in the monja and she went to a rigmarole. But she's very forceful woman to get the To get them to do what she wanted him to do and especially not put him on a ventilator because they wanted to ventilator him right away when he walked in and they made a big fuss addressing everybody up in an outfit and she makes she. Anyone can find. This clip is kate d. a. l. l. e. wise Discussion of her experiences about forty. Five minutes very entertaining. But it's all the same time as a lot of tips. If you get hospitalized what to do. I just have this small clip of this and this is like short but it's interesting and she's she's a To remind you that other. Rob brunette broadcasting woman's you spend on the blaze. I keep forgetting her name. But she's she's just great. I mean you listen to her broadcasting shed two sear face facial expressions as the pro. But listen to this. This was our situation. We get in. And i haven't mazing doctors and the only reason that we succeeded at this i think Besides prayers and blessings were the fact that i had amazing doctors to talk to who urged me right away to get him on. Intravenous high dose vitamin c. This makes a big difference. It's not like you know. A lot of doctors will shame. You think you're silly and owning or vitamin girl. You know that kind of thing but You want just like a little dissolve. -able no i want high dose. Intravenous vitamin c. Because it's even known to kill cancer cells at high doses and help with nucleic acid and help with inflammation which is pneumonia and so Oh by the way the rays when they when they did the xrays The x rays were suspiciously like the two thousand seventeen pneumonia. Two thousand six pneumonia. Two thousand pneumonia. So all pneumonia looks kind of like each other suspiciously. I think three years ago it just would have been good ole pneumonia but today. It's kobe pneumonia. Hank there might be some big bucks associated with the covert pneumonia. Think so anyway. We're in icu. And we i said. I want vitamin c. High tr- High intraveneous doctors that i'm in contact with the front line. Doctors are telling me get on zinc intervene zinc and a c- high doses of vitamin d. Get everything to help him to combat the pneumonia while they said it wasn't protocol i said doesn't matter i'm i want it and they said well it's not protocol we don't we don't do that. You don't get vitamins. Nutrition to your icu patients. Why and the answer was we. Don't do that not protocol see. There's three hundred. And i think what is it. Three hundred forty one pages sent by the cdc panel to tell the hospitals what to do for their protocol. And here's the bottom line for you if you you like me to get to the end of this before explained the rest. It's not cova. that's killing people. In the protocol over treatment. I wanted to under treat my husband with Nutrients and vitamins to help. Fight what he had so he could breath again. Instead of over treating him overmedicating him and shoving him on a ventilator too early because the death rate of ventilator is up to seventy five eighty percent death rate that's really scary that they were talking ventilator from the minute i got in there and there we. We're back again. And so she's makes the point. That is the protocol. And i was thinking about that. And that's what everybody falls. Back on the cdc trove him out with a protocol which is what they're all three of these clips about is the cdc protocols. The hospitals take they just adopted. Follow the rules in that. Because they don't worry about getting sued. Oh all we follow the protocol. And they're off the hook. Because it's the cdc that has to take the fall at some point okay. Well we're sorry we're government agency. You can't do anything about it and the whole thing is just to cover your ass. Methodology doesn't help anybody that's why they're not gonna go with ivermectin or hydroxy chloroquine or anything else. Because it's not in the cdc protocol which is rigged by pfizer to push everyone towards vaccinations. This is massive scandal and our good friends do sopher I don't know if you saw it. I know you've had some problems with no agenda social but he was put. He went into the hospital. He'd been on location shoot and.

No Agenda
"dave develop" Discussed on No Agenda
"Kind of the point. I'm trying to get to here. And this is the ivermectin fiasco clip to my left is Dr steven herrell. Who is our chief medical officer at the hospital and ness next to miss. Mitchell is mr geoff cooke. Who is chief legal counsel in house counsel for the hospital thanking mr matter western position now. That jordan has a prescription for the hospital willing to administer that the judge still assigned position that we cannot than for several reasons. Number one is miss. Denmark is not does not have privileges at this hospital. She is not able to take over. The terror of miss is writing and prescription to be administered by our critical care specialist win which is in direct cop direct conflict with what they perceive their judgment is correct the correct procedure for treatment before miss short. I do note however that miss denmark based on her information appears to be affiliated with west medical center If wesley medical center is willing. I'm not so sure that they are based on something. I'm gonna tell you just a second is willing to accept this and miss denmark nurse sponsoring physician are willing to administer. It seems more practical courses to transfer her to wesley into hospital. That is willing to do this type of treatment right now. What they're proposing. Is that a prescription for macy's from a nurse practitioner. Who is not credentialed at this hospital. Who is not privileged to practice medicine at this hospital to treat patients to dictate how we should treat a patient when we've had at least five physicians and since monday there's another physician involved who's also dr unisons looked at this and who's also indicated that does not indicated for my goodness. Where was this what hospital. This was in mississippi. The hospital name someplace. But i don't have it in front of mississippi okay. It was in mississippi. And they wouldn't and because they're gonna buy their protocols. Dave developed at that hospital. But but then i got this last clip. Which is kate dalley. Who is a very very good broadcaster. She's a she's a radio host whose husband ended up with pneumonia. They brought they brought him into the hospital. Name called it cova pneumonia even though it was just a regular case in the monja and she went to a rigmarole but she's very forceful woman to get the To get them to do what she wanted him to do and especially not put him on a ventilator because they wanted to ventilator him right away when he walked in and they made a big fuss addressing everybody up in an outfit and she makes she. Anyone can find. This clip is kate d. a. l. l. e. wise Discussion of her experiences about forty. Five minutes very entertaining. But it's all the same time as a lot of tips. If you get hospitalized what to do. I just have this small clip of this and this is like short but it's interesting and she's she's a To remind you that other. Rob brunette broadcasting woman's you spend on the blaze. I keep forgetting her name. But she's she's just great. I mean you listened to her broadcasting shed two sear face facial expressions as the pro. But listen to this. This was our situation. We get in. And i haven't mazing doctors and the only reason that we succeeded at this i think Besides prayers and blessings were the fact that i had amazing doctors to talk to who urged me right away to get him on. Intravenous high dose vitamin c. This makes a big difference. It's not like you know. A lot of doctors will shame. You think you're silly and owning or vitamin girl. You know that kind of thing but You want just like a little solvable. You know no. I want high dose. Intravenous vitamin c. Because it's even known to kill cancer cells at high doses and help with nucleic acid and help with inflammation which is pneumonia and so Oh by the way the rays when they when they did the xrays The x rays were suspiciously. Like the two thousand seventeen pneumonia. Two thousand six monja two thousand pneumonia so all. Pneumonia looks kind of like each other suspiciously. I think three years ago it just would have been good ole pneumonia but today. It's kobe pneumonia. Hank there might be some big bucks associated with the covert pneumonia. Think so anyway. We're in icu. And we i said. I want vitamin c. High tr- High intraveneous doctors that i'm in contact with the front line. Doctors are telling me get on zinc intervene zinc and a c- high doses of vitamin d. Get everything to help him to combat the pneumonia while they said it wasn't protocol i said doesn't matter i'm i want it and they said well it's not protocol we don't we don't do that. You don't get vitamins. Nutrition to your icu patients. Why and the answer was we. Don't do that not protocol see. There's three hundred. And i think what is it. Three hundred forty one pages sent by the cdc panel to tell the hospitals what to do for their protocol. And here's the bottom line for you if you you like me to get to the end of this before explained the rest. It's not cova. that's killing people. In the protocol over treatment. I wanted to under treat my husband with Nutrients and vitamins to help. Fight what he had so he could breath again. Instead of over treating him overmedicating him and shoving him on a ventilator too early because the death rate of ventilator is up to seventy five eighty percent death rate that's really scary that they were talking ventilator from the minute i got in there and there we. We're back again. And so she's makes the point. That is the protocol. And i was thinking about that. And that's what everybody falls. Back on the cdc trove him out with a protocol which is what they're all three of these clips about is the cdc protocols hospitals. Take they just adopted. Follow the rules in that. Because they don't worry about getting sued. Oh all we follow the protocol. And they're off the hook. Because it's the cdc that has to take the fall at some point if okay. Well we're sorry we're government agency. You can't do anything about it and the whole thing is just to cover your ass. Methodology doesn't help anybody that's why they're not gonna go with ivermectin or hydroxy chloroquine or anything else. Because it's not in the cdc protocol which is rigged by pfizer to push everyone towards vaccinations. This is massive scandal and our good friends do sopher I don't know if you saw it. I know you've had some problems with no agenda social but he was put. He went into the hospital. He'd been on location shoot and.

No Agenda
"dave develop" Discussed on No Agenda
"Kind of the point. I'm trying to get to here. And this is the ivermectin fiasco clip to my left is dr steven farrell. Who is our chief medical officer at the hospital and ness next to miss. Mitchell is mr geoff cooke. Who is chief legal counsel in house counsel for the hospital thanking mr matter western position now. That jordan has a prescription for the hospital willing to administer that the judge still site position that we cannot than for several reasons. Number one is miss. Denmark is not does not have privileges at this hostile. she is not able to take over. The terror of miss is writing and prescription to be administered by our critical care specialist win which is in direct cop direct conflict with what they perceive their judgment is correct the correct procedure for treatment before miss short. I do note however that miss denmark based on her information appears to be affiliated with west medical center If wesley medical center is willing. I'm not so sure that they are based on something. I'm gonna tell you just a second is willing to accept this and miss denmark nurse sponsoring physician are willing to administer. It seems more practical courses to transfer her to wesley into hospital. That is willing to do this type of treatment right now. What they're proposing. Is that a prescription for macy's from a nurse practitioner. Who is not credentialed at this hospital. Who is not privileged to practice medicine at this hospital to treat patients to dictate how we should treat a patient when we've had at least five physicians and since monday there's another physician involved who's also dr unisons looked at this and who's also indicated that does not indicated for my goodness. Where was this what hospital. This was in mississippi. I have the hospital name someplace. But i don't have it in front of mississippi okay. It was in mississippi. And they wouldn't because they're gonna buy their protocols. Dave developed at that hospital. But but then i got this last clip. Which is kate dalley. Who is a very very good broadcaster. She's a she's a radio host whose husband ended up with pneumonia day brought. They brought him into the hospital. Name called it cova pneumonia even though it was just a regular case in the monja and she went to a rigmarole. But she's very forceful woman to get the To get them to do what she wanted him to do and especially not put him on a ventilator because they wanted to ventilator him right away when he walked in and they made a big fuss addressing everybody up in an outfit and she makes she. Anyone can find. This clip is kate d. a. l. l. e. wise Discussion of her experiences about forty. Five minutes very entertaining. But it's all the same time as a lot of tips. If you get hospitalized what to do. I just have the small clip of this and this is like short but it's interesting and she's she's a To remind you that other. Rob brunette broadcasting woman's you spend on the blaze. I keep forgetting her name. But she's she's just great. I mean you listen to her broadcasting shed sear face facial expressions as the pro. But listen to this. This was our situation. We get in. And i haven't mazing doctors and the only reason that we succeeded at this i think Besides prayers and blessings were the fact that i had amazing doctors to talk to who urged me right away to get him on. Intravenous high dose vitamin c. This makes a big difference. It's not like you know. A lot of doctors will shame. You think you're silly and owning or vitamin girl. You know that kind of thing but You want just like a little solvable. I know i want high dose. Intravenous vitamin c. Because it's even known to kill cancer cells at high doses and help with nucleic acid and help with inflammation which is pneumonia and so Oh by the way the rays when they when they did the xrays The x rays were suspiciously like the two thousand seventeen pneumonia. Two thousand six pneumonia. Two thousand pneumonia. So all pneumonia looks kind of like each other suspiciously. I think three years ago it just would have been good ole pneumonia but today. It's kobe pneumonia. Hank there might be some big bucks associated with the covert pneumonia. Think so anyway. We're in icu. And we i said. I want vitamin c. High tr- a high intraveneous doctors that i'm in contact with the front line. Doctors are telling me get on zinc intervene zinc and a c. high doses of vitamin d. Get everything to help him to combat the pneumonia while they said it wasn't protocol i said doesn't matter i'm i want it and they said well it's not protocol we don't we don't do that. You don't get vitamins. Nutrition to your icu patients. Why and the answer was we. Don't do that not protocol see. There's three hundred. And i think what is it. Three hundred forty one pages sent by the cdc panel to tell the hospitals what to do for their protocol. And here's the bottom line for you if you you like me to get to the end of this before explained the rest. It's not cove that's killing people in the protocol over treatment. I wanted to under treat my husband with nutrients and vitamins to help fight. What he had so he could breath again. Instead of over treating him overmedicating him and shoving him on a ventilator too early because the death rate of ventilator is up to seventy five eighty percent death rate that's really scary that they were talking ventilator from the minute i got in there and there we we're back again and so she's makes the point that is the protocol and i was thinking about that and that's what everybody falls back on the cdc trove him out with a protocol which is what they're all three of these clips about is the cdc protocols hospitals. Take they just adopted. Follow the rules in that. Because they don't worry about getting sued. Oh all we follow the protocol. And they're off the hook. Because it's the cdc that has to take the fall at some point okay. Well we're sorry we're government agency. You can't do anything about it and the whole thing is just to cover your ass. Methodology doesn't help anybody that's why they're not gonna go with ivermectin or hydroxy chloroquine or anything else. Because it's not in the cdc protocol which is rigged by pfizer to push everyone towards vaccinations. This is massive scandal and our good friends do sopher I don't know if you saw it. I know you've had some problems with no agenda social but he was put. He went into the hospital. He'd been on location shoot and.

Interesting If True
"dave develop" Discussed on Interesting If True
"Well. Today we're going to feature a pig in a couple of jack asses you and me sadly this week show is one jack short. So in steve. Stead give you a fantastic tale of a canadian war donkey. Sergeant bill billy goat. He's done a donkey. He's a goat that's true. That's true those animals are not related but that joke necessitated me not knowing that out. I didn't know a word of war donkey was a thing. i guess. That's what this brings us to the i. It turns out that goats and donkeys lake together are the next two animals that are most popular as mascots after dogs and cats like military brands. And things like that okay. Cool actually i. i read recently. Something about donkeys goats goats donkeys goats being like the next fully domesticated house animals. Dogs were like that's been theorized. I don't mind goats that much but they are less cuddly. they've got horns and hooves heightens if your wife got her hands on a pygmy goat. It would be living in sleeping in bed with you and you know it awesome awesome. I sure i'm glad we don't know anybody who has a of goats and jim through glad. I don't know the code to get into your house to leave all those bunches of go. So our story begins in august of nineteen fourteen. Which for those interested started on. Thursday for greg and a wednesday for julian saw charlie chaplin's debut film making a living and that kerfluffle europe was having was picking up steam. I love your many history lessons kind of one of my favorite thing. They're they're they're good. That's important stuff to know. Don't you know and that brings us to broadview a small town in saskatchewan with a goat. Was anyone living in canada. Nineteen fourteen other than this guy with a goat. Yeah there were. All dave was a weird weird. Oh yeah i know david. He's a good guy. I met him down morton. Timmy's he's a buddy friend. Hoya on august twenty third. The soldiers of the freshly formed. V western cavalry expeditionary force had stopped in broadview to pick up some recruits. Wow queuing for the train spotted a girl with a goat. her name was also dave evans. Also dave develop. It's a nice day and wanting it for good luck charm and also because it was nineteen fourteen and you could just take stuff from people. They took the goat from young deasy. Kerr wayne to make it their mascot. They just they said sewri a ton a ton but they still took her took her so sorry. So this is art goto. Yes sorry. Dave oh so. Sorry so sorry. Davis zarko sources all agree. That daisy agreed. Soldiers could have it but there's never any mention of payment or how a group of soldiers from nineteen fourteen demanding a little girl give or pet to the war effort might have influenced her willingness to part with billy. Frankly i find it all suspect. I'm pretty sure some dude stole. They stole it from a little girl. I'm pretty sure they very politely stole ago. Do you think during the war. They'd like they'd like have a really easy missionary. Like god that was like stealing from a little girl right and then with the advent of candy after yield got over being terrible pre stealing candy from babies it was stealing goats from girls So so private. Bill was now properly conscripted. He lived in trained with the fifth in canada and their base. In england they pay for bill to cross the pond. They flew across the pond. Yeah yeah okay which was apparently quite some doing because when we get to the other goat like the british weren't big fans of foreign goats. I didn't. I would have thought so one of those things you don't think about but apparently it was a big deal so the fifth would soon be deployed to the front and i guess no mascots were allowed in the trenches just as like a general rule to the goat is something. They're gonna aim for all around the goat operation. Mutton went well the sheep but whatever so as you can imagine. This didn't set well. With the boys. The fifth who like many other regiments and both world wars found a creative way to endanger the life of their dear animal. Caban gosh do. They put him in a trench coat. Dress them up like a like a general. Like talk to general billy that way he will die. There was some officer related headbutting. We'll get into so according to sergeant herald baldwin author of holding the line quote. We cannot part with billy. The boys argued that we could easily get another colonel but it was too far to the rocky mountains to get another goat. I love that all right. all right. you can't fault as lodge racks tracks. The difficulty was continuing the quote. The difficulty was solved by buying a huge creative oranges from a woman who was doing brisk trade with the boys. I assume that doesn't mean she's a whore but she might be an orange for. Two-horse consists of bricks brisk trade. She was throwing oranges or briskly trading and tundra a continuing. The oranges sold like hotcakes. And in a jiffy. The orange box was converted into a creighton billy with shanghaied into the crate and smuggled aboard the trade. God that poor go-to person was stolen from a bomb. A tiny little girl that it was forced to train in battle and then it was stuffed in a box and then they put it in a box on a train and sent it to world war. One this is a tragic story. Eric why are you bringing such tragedy. This is this is just to say this is not having a great day so there you go now. You're a goat and just like a certain young naive aristocrat from famous askari. You're lost in a world wind of action intriguing warm beer. At least there's beer. Which apparently the soldiers beer rations and paperwork were apparently his favorite foods. All right at least. He got his paper foods. Yeah right like that could have been a lot worse and bill. You know you would go on to have a distinguished career for a goat. Are i mean you know more seriously. Though at this to sound a goat mix. I believe will. Apparently the british called it wires. Bill was found in a shell crater standing over a wounded russian soldier despite having his own shrapnel wounds guard goat guards you. Wow i what how would you feel oppression soldier waking up to a goat standing over your body protecting you in a shell crater. Lucky to be waking up yeah. I don't know what i would do. I would worship goats. I would worship right. I felt like i was trying to take an. It's gotta be warmer under the goat than it is under fire as yes later in the second battle of apis oh private. Bill stood his ground with brave canadian soldiers. Now famous for not retreating from germany's first major deployment of poison gas and despite what should have been a goat ending toxic cloud. He was found the next day no worse for wear like went on tin helmet or something like that some around ten helmet using their their orders. Then yeah that's right off orders. Just he really must have got their goat. Sheep goat for his steadfast valor. He was promoted officially to the rank of sergeant and february of nineteen fifteen at nouveau chappel. So that's nice. it's a good one. I feel like a for a goat. That's a good

Coaching for Leaders
"dave develop" Discussed on Coaching for Leaders
"Being present. How can we be present. How can we be more efficient in the work. We do so that were able to serve well. Our organizations the people we influence and of course be able to have joy and progress in our own careers. Today i'm so glad to welcome an expert. That's going to help us to do that. Effectively i'm glad to introduce you to dave crenshaw. Dave develops productive leaders and fortune. Five hundred companies universities and organizations of every size. He has appeared in time magazine. Usa today fast company and the news. His courses on lincoln learning have been viewed tens of millions of times. His five books have been published in eight languages. The most popular of which is the myth of multitasking. How doing it all gets done. He just released the second edition of the book. Dave so glad to meet you. Thank you so much for joining me. I'll i'm so glad to be here. It's always nice to talk to a fellow. Dave indeed indeed this topic of being present and being efficient our work. It's so important. And one of the lines in the book that i highlighted right away. Is the statistic. Forty percent of knowledge workers never get more than thirty minutes straight of focus time. That is really an extraordinary statement. Yeah well it's it's remarkable. That comes from a study from from rescue time and i find that for some of them. It's far worse. We are constantly getting segment attention. Fact i just saw someone posted online by lincoln profile. She was a consulting a manager. Who said that. She was getting interrupted during her meetings. Eight to ten times because of slack and the proliferation of communication methods that we have are not making us more productive. They're actually doing the opposite..

Oil and Gas Startups Podcast
"dave develop" Discussed on Oil and Gas Startups Podcast
"Be and I put together a little bit of a corm of clients to explore and design a data exchange. We're very public about it Dennis as you guys know the hound brothers They're working on some very covertly and and they reached out to me and i ended up joining that initiative where dennis had a great vision. And it's signed already in progress so we combined. Hey are you know. I brought to the table The corm of clients that i had they had a development going with And the developer. Bruce home and dave how'd and selling and that's where we just trove at all to market and it just made sense. Everybody has something to the table And it wasn't It wasn't until about seven years later that you know. Dave really worked hard at getting dave how to work really hard at making some man wrote in the us. You don't just decide and start a company can say. Hey we're going to the us. Let's go and knock it out. Yeah it just doesn't happen that way. It is a different culture. Different approach So you know. Dave dave worked and worked really well and while respecting on how he broke into the us. Market with chevron and petra hunt Then there was a period of time. I think in oh seven made a bit in the money in in our company and said you know what i'm gonna move down to the us and let's start the office from there You know you had to work in their backyard. Meaning you know where you know the previous that's why i liked about your other podcasts berry with al talking about the backyard they worked in. That's where they grew up and we're just coming in to be visitors in that in that area and we had to explore that and redefine ourselves or find ourselves in their backyard If anything we're visitors back no seven so it was It was a fun time. I always looked at that. I knew the journey that we had to do But when you come down here. I had a great support from the canadian office. From dave develop person everybody but at the end of the day. You're down here working by yourself. And if i can expand on that a little bit the cool part was when you are by yourself you have no one else to rely on in where you we're in i was in houston i had One of the items. I remember on is i had a meeting way down south at petra act and i think you know jeremy back to japan and and Jim those opportunity all right. Yeah that's right. And and i had a. I had a meeting way down. South and and i was late for. There's no way. I'm gonna make from north to south. So i you know i go to my wife and i said you need to hop in the car. We're going into the hov. I gotta make it does doesn't jovi hayek vehicle. You drive to people you get into lane and just that's just go crazy. That's right so you know you gotta go with the resources that you have and you hop down and you make it in time so you know There was great patience on my wife's part to do that. But these are the things to do to accomplish what you're trying to do And you can. You guys did talk about you. Know hiring corey Corey came on board. But some of the parts. You don't know sure you he was in grad. Osu grabbed sorry to be. yeah it..

This Week in Machine Learning & AI
Language Modeling and Protein Generation at Salesforce with Richard Socher
"Hey everyone I am on the line with Richard. Social Richard is the chief scientist and MVP at salesforce Richard. Welcome to the PODCAST. Aloha great to be here to chat. Houston you said. Aloha and I was surprised that you're actually in the bay area. I always see these wonderful photos of you all over the place and I only get to ever see you in person at nerves nowadays and The blacken ai events and stuff like that so great to get a chance to connect with you mid year. How is everything? Life is pretty pretty. Good I'm very grateful of our research can continue working on some research during distresses now would that that is specific to Kobe. Nineteen and But Ryan Large sometimes joked at the PhD. Prepared me for several years. I staying at home eating pasta every day. Working on a computer all day and So so I'm I'm in pretty good spirits trying to have a little bit a positive impact and still go about my work and make sure my team is doing well throughout this crisis. And it's it's a tough time But I'm I'm very grateful for line of research we can work remotely. Who quite well awesome awesome. Glad to hear that it is Don't usually you know do this. But is April tenth that were recording. This what is it week. Four for you for lockdown shelter in place thereabouts right. It's it's crazy to time weirdly. It's slow and fast at the same time days morph into each other The Home Office is just the the home and the office and everything so the ad time definitely does not seem linear going through. This is very strange but before we jump into some of the main topics that we wanNA cover in particular language models and some of the recent work you've been doing applying that to the bio space. You share with us a little bit about your background and how you came to work in a chirp boy. It almost starts in high school when I really liked math and languages and when you think about Those two fields one you would hope is true even if you go light years in some other direction and language is district constantly morphing system. Where every you know teenager could just say Yo lo and boom you have a new word and now the the signs of nestor deal with that and so they marry when you try to use computers use math to try to understand language so I studied linguistics computer science Back in two thousand and early. Two thousands and dad's at the time seem kind of like an orchids kind of cute a niche topic to my parents. I thought man if we can get computers to understand language that would be just incredible all the things they could do. You know especially if you're lazy. He wants to agree. Repetitive tasks to be done by a computer would be quite amazing. And so that kind of more Into a couple of other interests in trying to use eventually initially just the typical machine learning essentially sort of machine machine learning by itself and I More broadly applied to computer vision problems. But I really do think in languages the most interesting manifestation of human intelligence There's some quite incredible visual systems and apparatus in the animal kingdom like the Mantis shrimp all kinds of price focal vision. And so on and each I and all of that animals have quite sophisticated visual systems but language connected thought and culture and society. Information are in so got excited about language. Then two thousand ten I saw a handful of people. Apply NEURAL NETWORK TECHNIQUES And extend them to a computer vision and at the time I had also just become a little bit disillusioned myself around how much time naturally crossing folks spend on feature engineering. So I thought couldn't we use some of these ideas from computer vision and neural networks for natural language processing? It was a not easy in the beginning early days had a lot of rejected papers reviewers just ignoring reasonably good experimental results saying why you submitting neural networks stuff to this conference. This is not the nineties anymore. Stuff doesn't work and so on but eventually more and more people have joined a small core initially was read just Joshua Banjo and Jefferson's labs and rings lap At Stanford and and it expanded more and more and and now it's kind of the default way for doing things to US network of course Not Dave developed more and more novel architectures to and it's it's just been super exciting so now I I work Not just on the research side anymore but also on a lot of applied problems you know in the end. I often think about trying to impact and in the end when you do research you hope that people will pick up the research extent Extended next apply it to some real world problems but if you have the opportunity to both the research and applied to real problems to kind of reduce the variance of the impact that you have and so. I work on a lot of problems. Chat bots and service sales and marketing applications trying to for instance automatic reply to emails or two phone conversations or having chat conversations is a really great one also doing a lot of computer vision trying to identify different objects in supermarket shelves. Doing Complex. Ocr for forms and a lot of interesting things recommendation engines Voice Machine Translation. Now the the group is pretty large and so we get to work on a lot of different things. You know it's a it's a research organization but as part of salesforce which we in no as kind of a new still. I still think of itself as a CRM company Owner than their terms here has kind of expanded and now includes everything that you might do with the customer right so we're just ecommerce platform because customers buy stuff online. I worked obviously the largest Sailed Service Marketing Organization but we also have helped companies integrate all the different data. Now Tableau we help people understand our customer data and do a lot of analytics behind it and then we look at you know where are the customers and we help governments senior citizens as their customers and help them especially now also in this crisis of build software really quickly bill chat bots so they can answer questions? You know the knee and if you go to. Da Department of motor vehicles. You have the question chat bots said. Give the answers. They are also You know our customer there of the DMV. We work with healthcare providers where the patients are customer. So the edition of what a customer is is getting broader and broader. We're in all