31 Burst results for "Lomb"

"lomb" Discussed on Workplace Perspective

Workplace Perspective

05:07 min | 1 year ago

"lomb" Discussed on Workplace Perspective

"Being able

"lomb" Discussed on Workplace Perspective

Workplace Perspective

07:36 min | 1 year ago

"lomb" Discussed on Workplace Perspective

"Us. We'll be right back. Take a step toward bringing our country and community together, start a meaningful conversation at love has no labels dot com slash one small step, a message from StoryCorps love has no labels in the ad council. If you enjoyed today's show, do this. Share us like us. Give us a review on your favorite podcast app. It means a lot to us, and it ensures more people tune in and raise the bar at workplaces everywhere. Welcome back, everyone. We are talking with Brian alum about the essential emotions leaders need to create positive change in the workplace. So let's talk about it. What are what are the critical I think you said there's 7? There's 7 critical emotion. I want to hear about him. And so again, this is distilled from over 200 emotions that we are in and the researchers still finding new emotions all the time. But so let me explain them and block of blocks of three. So they're built like a pyramid, the foundation of that pyramid is like empathy, compassion and interest. And empathy drives caring. So any leader must care because if a leader doesn't care, the people that he's leading, I'm not going to trust it later. Right. Now caring alone might not lead to action yet. So let's say I care about you suffering, right? And you need to have. But I might care about it. I might not act on it. But the next thing is then compassion compassion adds the commitment that includes empathy. It builds on empathy, but it adds the commitment to serve the needs of that person. Very critical for any business business that serves clients or the employees. So compassion has that commitment to caring, acting on the caring to serve the needs. Now, leader also needs to understand really deeper issues that the stakeholders have and the needs they have, but also the systems and solutions, and it's really to understand the complexity of it. If you have somebody else care system who wants to transform, the healthcare system, a leader in that space needs to understand deeply the healthcare system how it works. There's an example. So interest is the emotion that drives the understanding. I believe it is not interested in it. You will have a very shallow understanding. So those three empathy compassion and interest build the foundation. Now, based on their understanding of the needs of the stakeholders and the solutions and so on, what is possible now later can look forward and can create a vision. Inspiring vision for the future of the organization of the society of community and so on. And that's requires optimism. Now, that's a tough one. Without optimism, it's not possible. If somebody lives in an emotion of the past, such as the sentiment, the leader can not look forward. It can not be a visionary leader. Now, next, he needs to be able to inspire people to stakeholders investors, for example, if you start a business, right? If you want to hire people, you need to inspire them, you need to mobilize people to join your business and support your vision. So inspiration is the next one. And then if you have people inspired and they join your business and to give you money for it, you've got to coordinate effective actions. You need to set goals and you need to have project plans and you need to execute that requires coordinating actions that requires collaboration and collaboration needs trust, trust in the leader, gust of the leader in the people that he's hiring his mobilizing, or she, but also facilitating and cultivating trust among the people. Without trust, collaboration is not possible. So these are the next three. Optimism inspiration and trust, they try visioning, they drive mobilizing people and coordinating effective actions. Now, as we have seen with the pandemic, you might have a plan as a business owner and you execute perfectly. Let's assume that for a moment, something happens unexpected. Some disruption like a pandemic or this Ukrainian war, horrible. But suddenly, everything changes in the environment and so on, it's disruptive. Now, at this moment, the leader must be resilient, but also the leader must cultivate resiliency and support resiliency in the people in the stakeholders and employees in everybody that he or she is working with. Now the silence is driven by a positive emotions. The opposite is true if the leader in the organization goes into a negative spiral, the organization can not be resilient. Going to fail in that negative spiral. So that's research has shown that in practical experience as well. But positivity is not a single emotion. It's a palette of emotions. I just combined them, but this might be an emotion like joy, gratefulness, hopefulness, and many others that I mentioned before, like interest, optimism and so on are also part of that palette of positive emotion. Now leader can cultivate these emotions. A leader can learn these emotions, they are learnable, the leader can create a shift can learn to be aware of what emotional state am I in a specific leader situation leadership situation. Let's say I want to I need to create an inspiring vision, but if the leader recognizes I'm a very pessimistic state right now or even in a state of let's say the salmon as an example, that's not a good state for me to be a visionary leader. So how can I create this shift? And so in the book itself, I describe how to recognize what emotion is helpful, somebody emotional are you in, and what would be helpful emotion like one of those 7 emotional states that I need to shift to and the practices that I can learn in order to shift to that emotional statement. Let me ask you this. What do you find the most difficult of all of those things that you talked about? Those emotional stages and how they sort of correlate into one another. But what do you find the most difficult for leaders to manifest? It might be different a little bit from leader to leader, but a common one that I see as a challenge. And it is inherent to a leader, leader needs to be visionary, otherwise you can not call somebody a leader, but most struggle with being a visionary leader. Interesting. Especially being able to come up with a vision that inspires the stakeholders. It inspires the people the leader wants to mobilize and he wants to serve and so on. So the reason why I'm saying this is if let's say if I just this week I had a new client and I interviewed the leadership team and I asked everybody said, oh, we are lying on the vision, but when I interviewed every single person, because they had a different understanding of the vision. It showed me that yeah, this was somehow a hidden vision, but they didn't really have a vision. It's interesting because so many things are going through my mind. So is that because the vision has always been some statement on a wall that or in the handbook or in the in the documents for the company that we use to get clients or whatever, or is it because the individual's motivation is not really the vision, it's the benefit that they're getting out of it, the money that the recognition, the money, the salary, whatever it might be that vision is stilted by their own needs, not

Brian alum organization of the society of us
"lomb" Discussed on Workplace Perspective

Workplace Perspective

08:15 min | 1 year ago

"lomb" Discussed on Workplace Perspective

"To our listeners and welcome to workplace perspective right along. Before we get started, why don't you tell our listeners a little bit about you and what you do? Hi, Teresa. So the pleasure to be on your show. Yeah, I'm an executive coach. I focus on leadership development as a focus on innovation and transformational change. I have a background in both being entrepreneur and entrepreneur meetings, starting businesses within large corporations and calling them globally, as well as as an entrepreneur. For the last 15 years, I have been focused on developing leaders that truly enjoy that. Great. Well, it's always a good thing. Leadership changes as the society changes as generations come and go. I think it's really important to focus on the things that you're talking about, which is the emotional, the emotional aspects of being a leader and affecting positive change, which are stuff that we love talking about on this show. And I think that oftentimes the soft skills and the things that often get left behind when we talk about hard driving workplaces and truly effective leaders, those sort of soft skills, the emotional intelligence part of it tends to kind of hide in the background and isn't as in the fore, I think, is that it should be. But from your perspective, I want to know, share with our listeners why you think it's so important. Why is emotional intelligence so important in a leader who wants to affect positive change? Yeah, this is a very good question. And because many people don't think about it, they just take it for granted. Conventional wisdom tells us emotions have no place in business or leadership for many decades, basically. Now, I have been a leader in managing teams across the world, different cultures, and so on. And I can say the things that I achieved in my life, I achieved school people, influencing people, motivating people, inspiring people, coordinating effective actions, and so on. And our success and the success of any business leader of any leader inside the business or outside of business is determined by the behavior of the leader and by the behavior of the people the leader is leading, right? It's time to mobilize to influence and coordinate actions with. And but our behaviors, one of the most powerful drivers of our behaviors, our emotions. Now they are not visible for many people, they don't like we always in an emotional state and typically a mixture of emotions, but very often we are not aware of it. We behave in act, but we are not aware of what is striving that behavior, what is the emotion or the mix of emotion that is driving that behavior. So in my work basically, I discovered emotions many, many years ago as a powerful tool with a bow of powerful skill set to both learn myself, but also encouraging leaders to in order for them to change their behaviors. So this basic idea is, first of all, at any of your listeners can create positive change no matter where they are, they are entrepreneur and a large corporation if they are in society and my great change anybody can preach positive change, but in order to create change, you have to change behavior. Starting with your own behavior and the behavior in order to change behavior, you need to create a shift in emotions, and which can be learned, but there's over 200 emotions that type to learn. It's like a complete complicated language. So where do you start? That is why I distilled the 7 most essential emotions. And made them accessible as fires my reason book and also in my teaching and my coaching, for leaders with learn these 7 essential emotions, they drive the associated behaviors, then you can create positive change in a very effective way. You know what's interesting is a talking, I'm thinking about talking about being emotional and I'm thinking about what are the most from my perspective. What I see in the workplace. And dealing with corporations and all of that, them being on the inside of that. You tend to see at least I tend to see the most common emotions in business tend to be, I would classify them you probably say it better than I am like the harsher emotions. The more black and white emotions, like anger, power, or positive, like attaboy, get on with it. You know, but there's so many emotions that we have there's such a range of emotions, but do you see that as well that those tend to be and is that what you've seen has sort of made leaders less effective is that in business, those emotions tend to get stilted and limited by the drive to achieve whatever it might be. Yeah, and most people and this has to do with our education system. How we are brought up are not have not learned to put a language to emotions, right? We try to have a workaround where we describe what does anger mean, which is an emotion. What is what is a positive, let's say, the emotion of joy, how do we put a language to it and what do we describe? And what does it mean? To a person. But the point is that joy, we obviously we feel anger. It's more observable. We see in the behavior. That's why you pointing those out, probably. But there's a lot of emotions that are not so easily visible. It's kind of like a segment, for example. Resentment is an emotion that is related to anger, but it's more quiet, more inside, like a person is a victim of feels like a victim of something and the Boston give that person a promotion or a client was not treated well by the new served well and has a segment, but doesn't express it necessarily, but internally, the thought process, the communication about the unfairness that happened to me or the perceived unfairness keeps the mental energy in the past and the person, like for example, it's not available for this person to create a vision of the future. To change the situation because it's caught in the Christmas card in the past. So that's an example of an emotion that is very often at visible. And when I coach people, I try to pick up what is the emotional state you actually and what is the mood today you are in because that tells me a story what is possible today for this person and what is not possible. Interesting. Have you ever found a situation where someone where because it's almost psychology? Do you feel that way? What you're asking is you're trying to gauge the emotional status of the person, but then do you find, have you ever found sometimes where it was just too hard to get over? They were too stuck in the past. They were always a way to power through that and to find a way. Yeah. So it literally distinction is between an emotion that is coming up and going. It's coming and going. And the mood, person can be in a mood and just a little bit more subdued, but this more persistent. So if you let's say somebody is an example is a negative mood or a sour mood, we describe it that way. And we see it in the face of a person, but it's more ongoing. It can be actually for if for your listeners in the business, certain businesses or groups of people are in a certain mode, a society can be in a certain mood, in a doing the pandemic, there was a certain, maybe negative mood, but people were in more fearful, maybe more. Well, the same food too, some even more angry, maybe in the traffic we were seeing it. And so on. So what I'm saying, but those emotional states allow easily individual or if this is a mood that is the tolls, the whole can hold a whole organization hostage, basically. Wow. Amazing. Emotions are so powerful. Well, they are. We're going to take a quick break and we come back, I want to hear about these critical these essential emotions that people need to master. So we're going to talk about that coming up. So stay with

Teresa Boston
"lomb" Discussed on The Erick Erickson Show

The Erick Erickson Show

02:21 min | 2 years ago

"lomb" Discussed on The Erick Erickson Show

"Hi there. yes eric. First time. Caller listener yes. My point is i have a. I'm from iran. Coming from your lawn. And i know alternate fiji. Mazy run most of them. They go to turkey and as soon as they get to turkey order. They have to report themselves to. Ua and united nation and from that point on he takes a year or two to place in other countries. How come these refugees. Coming from five countries going through different countries to get to the united states bordering walk-in. That's a great question doing their job. Because the un doesn't care of the un refugee services underfunded understaffed and has been assigned a by the security council to certain parts of the world. The security council has never actually authorized or or had the show up in these areas And in large part by the way you should note. That's an issue with the united states. The united states has never called for it under both republican democratic administrations. Now to also be fair. We've never seen the numbers that we're seeing now. We've never seen those numbers before so that it has something to do with it as well. But that's a great point. Now let let me ask you. 'cause i'm curious having grown up in the middle. So did your family left. Iran in you did go through turkey. I didn't but my friends did saw them three years in turkey waiting for the placement and usually they go to australia or canada or united states. So the major play countries were there except a few. Jeez right well lomb these people walking through side countries to like every what is it. It's a crazy journey. And yeah you're right i'm we the. Un should be involved when we at least keep them south of the border until the process. I gotta let you go there because only got about twenty seconds left but thank you. Thanks for being here to thanks for being a lesser and thanks for calling in Man y'all people from some of my favorite people Generally grew up. One of my best friends was from iran. Wonderful people would an awful government in charge of the people there now. I'm glad that people can get out and you thought these last two years crazy. Welcome to twenty twenty two..

un united states security council republican democratic administ iran fiji eric turkey australia canada Un
"lomb" Discussed on Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition

Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition

04:37 min | 2 years ago

"lomb" Discussed on Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition

"It's really cramming the body priming the even going into the hcl production the stomach You're just really going to enhance what you're getting out of your food in the first place especially if you are already trying to eat organic and you're really paying attention to foods that work well for you and that it's just a. You're doing yourself a disservice. If you're scarfing doubt united giving it a chance. So that's that's something that's really huge. And then this piggybacks. What we're talking about is really taking one to two moments. Do that. box reading Say a prayer give. Thanks just connect with a moment. The people you're sharing the a with adjoining delight and if you're eating something you love psych. Just super healthy that you love to eat and just delicious. Like delighted in that moment in that's going to do so much up your para sympathetic Jests again enhancing all the physiological processes gestion But those two things. I think are free overlooked in so easy But the payoff is is years if we do them consistently yeah yeah. That's that's so so critical so powerful to for sure while lomb yes has been a really really great interview given a lot of great nuggets. Here we talked a lot about terrain theory so danger response And really how to you know just natural easy things that you can do immediately starting tomorrow starting now starting today yet to really take back. Control your health and to turn off the cell danger response to turn on a healing cycle in your body and allow your body to really get back to balance and homies stasis so you can heal and drive so really good stuff hampton any last words of wisdom and working people find out more about you and work with you. Yeah we'll thank you dr joggers for inviting me to have this conversation. That really enjoyed it. And i would leave people with i wanna inspire and give people hope for their health right. I wanna make health simple and a complex world. So i really really really on empower this day and age people to know that you know biology new. The cure is not an inst- you you know. We can work with it in a line with natural principles and truscott in the body's innate is the vet wants to heal. it's always fighting for united institute. Even when symptom seem like that might be contrary. That's actually your body's attempt to heal and and so i just really want to empower people with hope with faith They can't heal and small steps. Lead to big outcomes when done over a long period of time..

lomb dr joggers nuggets hampton united institute truscott
"lomb" Discussed on Scientific Sense

Scientific Sense

03:37 min | 2 years ago

"lomb" Discussed on Scientific Sense

"Senior leaders in the world. Lomb today including Some of the lease and presidents and in existing prime minister's Around the world. I've been up to different. So if the technology is widely available and pretty sure they want to use it absolutely you know. They want to control people. They don't necessarily want people to hear the truth. They want them to hear whatever reality they create. There's no better way to get people to to buy into these realities than feeding directly into their brain then using our. We already see a different groups whether it's russia or other internal groups you know using artificial intelligence to create misinformation to a create conspiracy theories to get people thinking things you know an acting actually behaviorally acting in ways that are potentially against their own self interest even though they don't know it and that are very disruptive to our institutions and our freedoms that we value so much in this country so we are we are going to be faced a with this future world. We're unfortunately unless we take proactive steps. Democracy and our ability to have free speech our ability to have more control over our lives our ability to elect our representatives with you know honestly and fairly that could be at severe at serious risk like we've already seen at risk but These technologies amplify the possibility of of certain parties. Monopolizing the power of these technologies. The thing is the first group. Let's say that doesn't have good intentions. That takes these technologies that are being that will be deployed over the next couple of decades and actually uses them to consolidate power and control society. Will we be able to displace them in the future. Like will they be able to remove all the ability for our our checks and balances and other institutions for people to exercise their free will and actually then remove them. There is a possibility you know. George orwell was predicting when he wrote nineteen eighty-four in the technology in one thousand nine hundred very crude right if you look back but you know. His prediction was essentially that that people will in the future using technologies to control the masses. And i think it's not unrealistic to see that who's ever empower will use the technology to benefit them and and allow them to maintain power To their maximum ability so what forces in what institutions can. We set up now as safeguards. What can we do now to lay the framework in the foundation that solid enough to withstand an attack that we know will be coming. This fear steve so mathematically. I don't really see abaout so if you say you know we. We have different Sovereign nations who could pursue diplomacy's again. They do You could put some constraints on some of them But it does eat sort of makes the problem. Worst in the sense that that is going to do is to push.

Lomb russia George orwell steve
"lomb" Discussed on Firewalls Don't Stop Dragons Podcast

Firewalls Don't Stop Dragons Podcast

03:49 min | 2 years ago

"lomb" Discussed on Firewalls Don't Stop Dragons Podcast

"They don't collect biometric data and then share it anywhere in many ways. This is a similar. There's a similar goal here. And then the last thing. So i i'm i'm kind of puffing up apple here because they deserve a little bit of kudos The the last thing is that they're hashing feature is a little bit better than photo dna. I mentioned earlier the photo. Dna doesn't really have fuzzy matching neural. Hashes built a little bit differently and it kind of does so The best way to our technologists. Who's been focused on this erica. Portnoy gave me an example when you're If you're adding an image to lomb a google opera were dock it kind of snaps into place sometimes depending on where you put it late once you to eight like moves it to the right place. Neural has kind of. Does that for for these photos. So it has a way of kind of determining if a photo has been altered. Recognizing didn't has been but it's it's actually the same. I can't give you anymore. Because i don't understand it right. Lord is proprietary right. I don't i don't think they've released it on so Yeah yeah exactly we. We have the information they put him in papers. And there's a report that it's been kind of gotten the details of how it works but in general. Yeah the the like many things apple. We don't actually know a lot about it except what they've told us heart right. So here's the thing about this. That i think got me and i think this might be at the root of why the people got upset to it. I'm curious to know whether or not this is something that you guys debated With nf and that to me is my my device. That i bought from apple to me is sacrosanct. And then they have made a big marketing. Push of you know what happens on your iphone stays in your iphone. This this technique basically defeats end to end encryption and encryption because within encryption is it's encrypted between the two points but at the points that must be decrypted otherwise i couldn't read the message or see the picture or whatever the case but beat so what i've worried about as a technologist who follows privacy is that that is going to be the solution. That governments are going to figure out that they're going to ask for because they've they've been trying to hamper encryption for decades. They've been trying to have back doors. They've been trying to weaken it. They've been trying to all these things and we well technologist had successfully pushed back against that. So the next phase the next angle would be to okay. You can have your strong encryption. But we want a bug placed on the phone. Basically we want us to subvert the device before it's encrypted or after its decrypted depending i look at it and then i want you to Semi that i want you to tattle on somebody because i am going to install a spy on your device i personally. I think that is why this was fundamentally different. And why a lot of people freaked out. Is that something that you guys discuss it inside the ethanol. I think you're exactly right. I mean one of one of the main issues here is an apple will admit this. They did announce multiple things at the same time and with things kind of function differently. So this instance we're talking about Specifically with i cloud photo matching to nick. Nick database is a real concern. For a lot of reasons. I would say the biggest is that it doesn't take much to change. Let's say to add new hashes to that database if you're in another country One where for instance apple apple servers in control the state like china in the us..

apple Portnoy lomb erica google Lord nick Nick china us
"lomb" Discussed on The ChoNilla Podcast

The ChoNilla Podcast

05:13 min | 2 years ago

"lomb" Discussed on The ChoNilla Podcast

"Word of god the road. This is the road salvation. Stop talking stop stops not okay. Let's go. I'm doing okay. The idea though is okay so they pitched a tent for the orgy and apps. Lomb did that ship. He told her hatchet. We got the room. Oh yeah they know they're going to change in the center. It's so everyone watch joe. All of david's y yeah bags either. Way wives concubines can rip slaves and rape contracts. That's our boy david. David is like the serial Sexual psalter in the bible. Yeah yeah yeah. And and the fall far from the chew watch this saddam scott. Yeah i'm gonna get real trash it's definitely going to be like what trump junior's runs gonna be thirty two back back lenny. I'm not saying this so that way. I'm going ester republics dead. I mean listen. I know living. On top of america's sort of living on a fucking logging. All this is gonna blow up man public address. Forty forty one. We just wait for the chemicals to like mix bad up here. So i mean down here you know and i'm sorry live on top of us. You rented you rented that shit so trust me and apparently the logo indigenous people want what they're fucking invoices receipts only. Yeah yeah yes. Time twenty thirty two. I'm a podcast or give me some so now the tent this set your everyone's looking and i called it an orgy. But i don't know if. I can call it an orgy. Because it wasn't consensual right. So it's what is it gonna ask alice what it is. And he can't hear our discussion gang. Yeah it was awesome. Yes salt abuse. So the bible ends the chapter by saying it's important to note that in those days the word of top advisers was always seen as a divine message from god. So they're saying is aslam's message from his adviser what to rape. These women was supposedly from god because the adviser was typically the priest who was the only one who could enter the holy of holies so the priests were the only ones who were allowed to enter the inner sanctuary. Actually carry the From the tragedy. Lie right right the offer right and so the only ones who can get the messages. So they're the only ones who know if their messages are true. Which spoiler alert is. Why is why the book is called. Sam plot twists plot twist. There's a character coming. You haven't met who's going to answer all this shit all right so we that's the end of chapter sixteen. We fade to black and so fun. Bible facts like i said earlier i did some digging in children's bibles and they cut that shit out. They just like we're not gonna talk about and we're not talking about that. This is what the evangelical mean when they said they wanted to figure..

saddam scott Lomb david lenny joe David aslam america alice Sam
"lomb" Discussed on Newsradio 970 WFLA

Newsradio 970 WFLA

02:30 min | 2 years ago

"lomb" Discussed on Newsradio 970 WFLA

"Man. Napolitano, Fox News News at the top and bottom of every hour. More AM Tampa Bay in moments I'm Chris Trackman NEWS RADIO W F L A W F L A news brought to you by Earth's best natural pest management. After over a year of covid craziness, it's time to take control and search your life. God's way. Come meet and hear Duck Dynasty's Willie Robertson, Tim Tebow and over a dozen leading Christian business speakers in Tampa live and in person events are back and you'll leave with tools to surge your business career, wealth and impact, like never before to find out more go to life surged. Dot com slash talk. That's life surge dot com slash talk Because it's my vision. I take the most studied I vitamin brand because it's my vision. I take the eye vitamin brand backed by 20 years of research because it's my vision I take preservation, age related macular degeneration is the leading cause of vision loss and adults over 60. That's why the National Eye Institute did 20 years of clinical studies on the formula that's found in preservation from The eye experts at Bausch and Lomb Preservation a reds to formula I. Vitamins contain the exact nutrient formula recommended by the National Eye Institute to help reduce the risk of moderate to advanced AMG progression Because it's my vision. I made a plan with my doctor that includes preservation, find preservation and the vitamin aisle available at WalMart. These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease. Are you struggling to find great hires? Snag A job is the only job network in the country designed for hourly work. It's easy to post a job and start receiving quality applicants fast. The snag job pre screening questions bring the best candidates to the top. So you won't waste time Sorting applicants and candidates show up for interviews 90% of the time thanks to our easy to use applicant scheduling and communication tools. Snag a job is the trusted choice of the hourly job. Secret Post your jobs on snag a job today. The latest headlines, Weather and traffic every weekday morning. This is am Tampa Bay on news radio. W F L A It's 8 40 on.

"lomb" Discussed on Bytemarks Cafe

Bytemarks Cafe

02:06 min | 2 years ago

"lomb" Discussed on Bytemarks Cafe

"Connect and network on on trial and collaborate with with Many operations that already exists there. So it's a wonderful as we always call it a radio playground for agriculture entrepreneurs and You know long may continue. Yeah no that's that's that's great. And i do want to talk a little bit more about some of the companies that have emerged out of the hatch accelerator. I do wanna ask Aurons about the application process and as you had just mentioned win that it was it took a you know me better part of a year and so maybe maybe lawrence maybe you can give me a sense of you. Know what were some of the I don't know roadblocks obstacles things that you had to overcome in order to get this. Get this through the eda process but before we do that. What hold that thought. We'll be right back after this short break to continue our conversation with laurent's some barnier from noha and wayne murphy from hatch and we're talking about the grant funding innovation. This is bite marks. Cafe support for bite. Marks cafe comes from the hp our local talk show fund which helps e public radio sustain and grow its locally produced. Talk shows mahalo to contributors chaminade university and hastings and played well a communication company. Welcome back this is bite marks cafe. I'm bert lomb. If you're just joining us. We're talking to laurent somebody. A deputy director over at the natural energy lab of authority and wayne murphy founder of hatch the aquaculture accelerator and of course ready for a break We're talking about the you know. What hatch does the accelerator. The companies but also wanted to get into a little bit about this. Eda grant process. And it's not something that ransoming you applied and two weeks later they award you the you know. The money i mean wayne mentioned that it was like a year i mean what. Why did.

wayne lawrence two weeks later laurent Marks cafe wayne murphy noha hp bert lomb chaminade university Aurons marks cafe energy
"lomb" Discussed on We Fix Space Junk

We Fix Space Junk

01:56 min | 2 years ago

"lomb" Discussed on We Fix Space Junk

"Last month. I found myself working alone on the outskirts of a small mining planet in vertigo on five. Although i've been told that i was there to fix a generator i quickly realized that there was something else going on. The people all stayed indoors watching me nervously. Three scratched windows. When i go closer to the generator. I realize that what i saw was leaking battery. Fluid was actually lifeforms translucent gooey forms and they were coming closer. I could see where they'd been. It corroded the ground running whatever they found into yet more but i thought quickly and pulled out my buddy buddies personal safety lomb that's easy to carry and simple to use. I take it everywhere. And i'm especially to take it when i'm on my own with a quick poll i sent it off emitting one hundred and seventy decibels siren and flashing strobe light now one hundred and study decibels is enough to her anyone's is but for these blogs it seemed like it was the perfect sound to make them implode into nothing. Then all i had to do was fixed the generator and head back to the sub the bluffs dispelled and the town was safe. One small right now. She's buddy is offering fifteen percent off your first purchase. When you go to she's birdie dot com slash space junk go to. She's buddies spelled s. H. e. s. b. i. r. d. i. e. dot com slash space junk fifteen percent off your first purchase. That's she's buddy dot com slash space junk. Always make sure to the out. During employee's everyone ships contents assurance..

"lomb" Discussed on The Wise Fool

The Wise Fool

03:24 min | 2 years ago

"lomb" Discussed on The Wise Fool

"Is that right. Lomb do express Thinking i am exploring. I want to say. So i guess A multi media artists. Or i see. I always right. Might resumes artists blah blah blah. Whatever it means it's tornado something that represents because there's not a single down at ice stuck to and i worked with will but then the lead the then questioned that lens into is like has that been beneficial or detrimental to your career. I dunno i dunno i think. It let's ask again in forty years. Okay mark the date. Not because i think it's a lot about i mean there are women..

forty years single
"lomb" Discussed on The Mindful Minute

The Mindful Minute

05:04 min | 2 years ago

"lomb" Discussed on The Mindful Minute

"And it's here at home in your body that we stay with the element of earth and we say lomb long long long long love love. Love la la la la Only Ceiling yourself at home in the body. Taking one last momentous simply let the breath flow and the experience. Settle remembering that. It's only when we have all elements functioning together that we could know prosperity. You already you can let your breath deep in.

"lomb" Discussed on The Mindful Minute

The Mindful Minute

05:14 min | 2 years ago

"lomb" Discussed on The Mindful Minute

"Feel completely fluid. This is when the water settles from the water is absorbed into the ground and our awareness drops to the very root of our body the pelvic floor and it's here that we feel the element of earth and in any way that feels fitting for you invited in this experience of rich dark soil. Perhaps you know the smell of earth or the texture or the color. Bring the experience of earth into your body letting yourself feel as full as is comfortable for you knowing that this earth is completely nourished from the elements that came before it. This earth is wide open and expansive in light of your beans so that new growth can happen. And it's here at home in your body that we stay with the element of earth and we say lomb long long long long love love. Love la la la la Only Ceiling yourself at home in the body. Taking one last momentous simply let the breath flow and the experience. Settle remembering that. It's only when we have all elements functioning together that we could know prosperity. You already you can let your breath deep in savoring these next few inhales and allowing these last brats to be that moment. When perhaps you dissolve into radiates. You're ready can wiggle your fingers and your toes remembering your body and its edges draw palms together in front of the heart like a prayer your chin now to one final depressing. Full cy out of the mouth. Thank you guys so much for your practice today near ready. You can really sure palm and blink. Your eyes open.

earth
How to Find Our Elemental Nature

The Mindful Minute

05:14 min | 2 years ago

How to Find Our Elemental Nature

"Feel completely fluid. This is when the water settles from the water is absorbed into the ground and our awareness drops to the very root of our body the pelvic floor and it's here that we feel the element of earth and in any way that feels fitting for you invited in this experience of rich dark soil. Perhaps you know the smell of earth or the texture or the color. Bring the experience of earth into your body letting yourself feel as full as is comfortable for you knowing that this earth is completely nourished from the elements that came before it. This earth is wide open and expansive in light of your beans so that new growth can happen. And it's here at home in your body that we stay with the element of earth and we say lomb long long long long love love. Love la la la la Only Ceiling yourself at home in the body. Taking one last momentous simply let the breath flow and the experience. Settle remembering that. It's only when we have all elements functioning together that we could know prosperity. You already you can let your breath deep in savoring these next few inhales and allowing these last brats to be that moment. When perhaps you dissolve into radiates. You're ready can wiggle your fingers and your toes remembering your body and its edges draw palms together in front of the heart like a prayer your chin now to one final depressing. Full cy out of the mouth. Thank you guys so much for your practice today near ready. You can really sure palm and blink. Your eyes open.

La La
"lomb" Discussed on The Israel Hour Radio Archives

The Israel Hour Radio Archives

04:00 min | 2 years ago

"lomb" Discussed on The Israel Hour Radio Archives

"That song but a big smile on my face. I think i woke up at four o'clock in the morning and said oh my god. I totally forgot about that song. We need to play today. We are celebrating songs about music on today's edition of israel our radio. That was a ton of fun. And we're going to continue with the suggestion from ellen. This is i think kula alums very first video of not who was among the very first videos that cooler lomb ever did and it's a perfect song for cooler lamb. Low luxury talk to sing with you. Originally buy bausch arabian shoshana. Demari vis time with six hundred people all singing together. Allom israel. Our radio a She added a can use me. Give a better. Song is all that who does luxury tough luxury. Thou- what's the official title. That song it was always duets and they go back from luxury to luxury cod. Depending on who's saying it. I wonder what the official title of that song is. Somebody will thanks for tuning.

six hundred people today ellen first video four o'clock in the morning first videos israel bausch arabian
"lomb" Discussed on Progressive Talk 1350 AM

Progressive Talk 1350 AM

01:50 min | 2 years ago

"lomb" Discussed on Progressive Talk 1350 AM

"They tweaked and rebranded the technology to create their own disposable contacts. And they launched that Brandon 1987 under the name Acuvue. 1988 Ciba. I assume that's how we pronounced the name of the company. C I b a created contact lenses using silicone hydrogel. Now the big advantage of the hydrogel material was that it was particularly permeable toe oxygen. So it could allow oxygen to pass through the contact lens and allow the cornea to get that sweet, sweet oxygen it craves so dearly. The first daily disposable lenses would debut in 1995 Ron Hamilton, who was an inventor in Scotland gets credit for creating the first example, which he called the Premier Award lens. Bausch and Lomb would purchase Hamilton's company and rebranded the lens. The saw Flynn's one or the saw Flynn's one day Hamilton would go on to launch a different company called Prove us Now. There have been numerous improvements in materials and processes to contact lenses over the years, But the basic principles remain the same contact lenses bend light so that ISA can focus Which is a little reductive because there are contact lenses that are meant to protect eyes that have been damaged through injury or illness. There's some that are meant to treat disease is not just a problem with vision but actual diseases of the eye. There's also cosmetic contact lenses that don't have any corrective nature to them as well. But I'm going to focus pun intended on corrective contact lenses. Since that's such a common use for them, and that brings us to a couple of questions like How does an optometry determine what prescription you need? When you go to get glasses or contacts? And where did that whole thing come from, anyway? Well, in the next segment, I'll tell you but first Let's take another quick break to.

Ron Hamilton Flynn Brandon Lomb Bausch Scotland
"lomb" Discussed on Pantheon

Pantheon

07:42 min | 2 years ago

"lomb" Discussed on Pantheon

"Guys welcome to rock and roll heaven. Podcast we talk about the legs careers and desa famous musicians. I'm your host el d. This week. I'm joined by will the thrill earlier and tj to the dukes. Well done nice. I was the drink of choice today. Sir oh shutterbugs and a can who. Wow what religion subject matter. Just a good beer. Yeah uh-huh yes that that also sweet delicious delicious texas nectar standard longer. Yes this is sean rohbock. Bigger what they do well. There's no doubt about that. The fruit of cosmos spitzer's loins. Sorta kind of that was weird. Why bear that. That guy invented but whatever i feel feel some stranger about drinking it all right. Well you know what guys who are warmer in okay honey. Beer talk talk they do. They do have a salty. Lomb version this. This is very cold and it is like beer. And it's not viscous i supposed to do. It's supposed to be cold and taste like beer is a very fluid and not viscous which is word to say inside with meal day viscous. Well we're talking about something today. That is not about deaths at all because we're moving into twenty twenty one right now. We're very excited for this. Today were actually doing our twenty twenty one episode draft so we are chains of rock and roll heaven or just a little bit because we now have three mazing hosts while like two and a half amazing hosts some really short but we figured it would be best to do a year of but heavy hitters. So we have so many heavy hitters that we decided we're going to have a fun little draft so gentlemen. Are you ready for twenty twenty one rock and roll heaven. Heavy hitters draft is. I'm really absolutely and so just to kind of coupet a deal where we're going to do multiple part episodes on some of the the biggest names in the history of music who you had just haven't gotten around to doing episodes zone yet just because there are so many you can only do so many of the time obviously exactly all right so the rules for this draft our that. We're going to go in order of people with the most episodes. So i will get first election because i do believe i have about seventy four episodes on everybody else and then mr will. Israel will be second up and then j two is going to round out that series we will be selecting four each and each one of us is allowed one audible that was not on the original list. So are we ready. i'm ready. Oh yeah all right. First up is me and i am selecting with stole twenty twenty rock and roll heaven. Heavy hitters draft l. d. selects david bowie who your prize by. Nobody are right. Mr will have to do a little analysis. Here will all right. So let's say strong a strong draft pick for For team yes. I think that that that will meet projections as far as As place in the lineup chameleon grace many different styles multiple genres film piece Bright sang about sang songs about a space aliens that play guitar left handed and had large. Is's just there's a lot going on here with this. Big married supermodel. They're married a supermodel at kids with strange names. This has all the makings of of a. I would say a nation with the days time take could take and again surprise when you have the number one pick and you take the number one pick shock there all right. Mr will the thrill. Who are you taking traded up for this. I'm going to go. Look at the list here. And i feel like i'm gonna go into a different sort of genre yet. Someone no less impactful due to their contributions to not only the music industry but each film industry as well Several years ago. And by far my favorite beastie boy that will be the late. Mca strong kick. I would say. Yep yep Wilder thrills team Day comes up with some people. Consider this a little bit. But i think he sees something Special potential there. I do believe that the reason why is that. We only have very large coffee. Table book about four documentaries but also We recently went last movie. We actually got this was spring of zachary working brought to us by adamy out so i think this is a great impact on mr life and Let me see good stuff good stuff. I mean if you don't start listening people going to say that saw mainly people that control. I wholly disagree with will not associated yet. Okay so t all right. So i'm picking at the end of the round. But you know what i'm going to get to steal of the draft hair as i go with Noted musician and stone or from the state of florida one music one of my personal musical heroes and life. He fronted the band big mountain. I cake on king of the hill. He also was part of feel the greta supergroup of all times. Let's gentlemen with the third pick in the rock and roll heaven twenty twenty heavy hitters draft. Tj's team selects. Mr tom petty who definitely top free pick. I actually have a book to send you. Then it's good for you if you bought the what you get a free book. I'm sending you a book paper in it. And words to remind pictures of mr petty. Yeah yes yes. Yes without a huge huge fan of eighty sort of when i was there's that period of time usually in your mid teens start listening to your music. You don't listen. Start to break away a bit from what you were. Forced is a youngster by your parents. Luckily at l. d. And i were fed very good music through our youth but One of the first things that really struck me and i gravitated toward was an album. Called full moon saver mothers capacity and then kind of went back and discovered the back catalog after that and then everything that came after. And he's he's one of my favorites. So i'm looking forward to that.

sean rohbock Lomb spitzer Sir Mr david bowie texas Israel Mca Wilder Mr tom petty zachary mr petty Tj florida
Bausch Health to Spin Off Eye-Care Business

News and Perspective with Tom Hutyler

00:17 sec | 3 years ago

Bausch Health to Spin Off Eye-Care Business

"Now. Canada based about health is spinning off its faster growing I care business from its court pharmaceutical operations. The Wall Street Journal reports the transaction could close today, the eye care unit known as Bausch and Lomb. Accounted for nearly half the company's 8.5 $1,000,000 revenue last year about health shares are up

Bausch And Lomb The Wall Street Journal
Speaker System Blocks City Noise

60-Second Science

01:53 min | 3 years ago

Speaker System Blocks City Noise

"Restaurants Schools Dennis Office. They're all keeping more windows open to increase ventilation and hopefully decrease the chances of encountering the corona virus, but letting in fresh air also, let's in more noise. Now researchers come up with a device that's like noise cancelling headphones, but for a building it looks the same principle, so he detects noise coming into the windows and. Considering the. Bon lomb and ACOUSTICAL engineer at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore device looks like a grid of small speakers and fits over an open window, a microphone samples incoming noise, and then sends the Speaker Grid. Instructions on what sort of anti-noise to omit. The result is to cancel out the incoming sound for example. Here's the sound of a commuter train in Singapore with no noise control. Now here's that same sound with the array of noise. Cancelling speakers turned on. Compare that to a closed window. The anti-noise device is almost as good, and it allows air to keep flowing into and out of the window. The details are in the Journal, Scientific Reports The devices just a prototype, so it's still expensive, and it doesn't block out all sounds it only masks sound at frequencies from three hundred thousand Hertz which includes the rumble of freeways, trains and planes, but even that could come in handy in a place like Singapore. Again base a plane flying past. Bond says Singapore already has a lot of green buildings that use natural ventilation, but they don inside this when you have a lot of openings in the building that noise comes in so you need. Some wake managed aid increasing noise. A grid of window speakers could do the trick especially if people prioritize peace and quiet over good view, which folks at home and do all

Singapore Schools Dennis Office Nanyang Technological Universi Bon Lomb Bond Engineer
Mayor of South Korean capital found dead after leaving "sorry" note

Monocle 24: The Globalist

00:14 sec | 3 years ago

Mayor of South Korean capital found dead after leaving "sorry" note

"The mayor of Seoul has been found dead hours after he went missing part one soon's daughter racy Lomb after he'd apparently left a message. His body was found in a northern area of the South Korean capital. The cause of his death has not been made public.

Lomb Seoul
A Live Chat with Two of the Biggest Rabbis in Phoenix

Unorthodox

08:52 min | 3 years ago

A Live Chat with Two of the Biggest Rabbis in Phoenix

"Have two of the biggest rabbis and Phoenix here with US tonight. Rabbi Dr Smelly Yanko. It's the president and Dina validate me Josh and Rabbi Pinchas. Illusion is the founding rabbi of Congregation Beth Safina in Scottsdale Arizona. Come come welcome rebuttal. Don't usually have two guests because things can get really off the rails so we'll see what happens here rabbis. I'm GONNA call you. We'll we'll we'll figure out what we're GONNA call you but let's start with this question for both of you. Why isn't this Jewish community different from all other Stephanie Loud Mark this is why all the people who don't touch the MIC? Don't have problems every house. That better josh all right there we go sorry Stephanie. So let's start off because there's like no spoilers here because only spoilers so rabbis. Why is this Jewish community different from all other Jewish communities? Are you guys even Jewish? You're letting each other speak. It's an excellent question you went on to. I twenty all right so I think for two main reasons number one. It's a community that has just been founded really in the past. Few decades other communities are centuries old. This community is quite new and therefore its future is still very much ahead of it. I think that's why many people are really attracted to the potential of the community year as I was when I first move you thirteen years ago. And it's buzzing with excitement that's number one number two. I also think that it's a community. It's quite diverse and it's diverse in its culture it's diverse in its levels of observance of background. But it's not just the diversity that is attracting and that is quite unique to Phoenix. But it's a unity within the diversity truly feel that we're a united community which can't be said about Kish Committees. That was speaking about before in other places so those are the two main things that I see almost immediately like musing. Yeah well you say when. I was thinking about moving in the middle my seventh year. The two points that people shared as to why I shouldn't consider it. They said it's an intellectual wasteland which is totally untrue. We have people coming out to our learning events every night interesting ideas. And secondly they said it's a moral morally passive community very private very individualistic which is also completely untrue. When we have various activists campaigns people lined up lined up to show support. Who said that? And should we beat them up here? Do you want the crowd here? That can go after them. We the J. Crew here I want. I want to address the thing that you just said. So I'm kind of two minds about the activism angle. There's a part of me that thinks that it's really beautiful and essential for community of face to be very involved in you know social political elements and feel this kind of moral calling and there's another part of me that is a little bit kind of taken aback by how dominant this political discussion. Become just you know. Want to go to show just to hear the Torah just to be together with Jews and worry about that later some other place. How should we be feeling about? Its connection being social justice and question so Rambam my monitors in the third section of his guide for the perplexed. Says what's the purpose of all this stuff and answer is the welfare of the body and the welfare of the soul by which he means the well. If you have to know a little play there which we do. The welfare of the body means just state and the welfare of the sole means the perfection of the intellect so basically the goal of Judaism view is our inner life and our outer life which is to say the inner life is our ritual or beliefs or spirituality stuff. You're touching on and the outer life which he comes to say becomes the priority is that Jews should be on the front and center of fostering the Jus- -ociety and so I think we have a problem. Today I think that The traditional segment of Jewish life prioritizes the parochial and the traditional and not the universal. And I think the more liberal segments of Jewish life prioritize the universal and less of the less attritional and this middle ground of saying yes we care about the world we care society and we care about Jews. That complete package is what we're GONNA do. You agree that he taught us to call them. Yeah that's pleasure. No NOPE BRONCO. Way Back like twenty minutes back calls me peony so all my friends do so no problem. I I would agree with that. I would say though that needs to be a healthy balance of course between the two because if almost like Mark Twain said some people are so open minded that the brain spill out. Sometimes we were so much in open that we forget the message. And so we have to be steeped in the roots of Judaism very much so and yet not forget a calling to go to the outside point out also that if there is an emphasis in Judaism on which side counts the most. It's the outside if you think of the idea of Mitzvah. Most of the six hundred thirteen meets vote are outside oriented. They deal with the world that don't really deal with the internal world. I can only think I don't know maybe you can take more of to mitzvahs on top of the mind that deal with the inside. Prayer Torah study but otherwise everything else really deals with the outside so there is. I do find this emphasis on. Tacona LOMB on trying to rectify the world of course with God's light and with God's message but on the other hand also not forgetting where we come from forgetting to be a steeped in our roots as possible. Something we talk about a lot on the show. Is this idea that a lot of juice today don't necessarily feel like they can just walk into a synagogue and be welcomed or would even feel comfortable. There would even know how to get there. What do you think is the best way to connect with Jews? Who Don't haven't necessarily found their place within the institutional Jewish world thank you. They should go to the valley. Bettman rush to go ahead twenty. I was first before you go second. I'm sorry what did what are these. Mutations Paul Ince Geneva come on these guys could pull off a Juku. They've got the organization got the intellect coming the trail be stealthy. It's a fascinating question and I think that was a really good at alien one another. It's true and I think that the percentages of Jews were not engaged. Not because they're disinterested because they've been alienated is also very high and I think the challenge here is to embrace pluralism which does not bracket are absolutes but creates space for other absolutes. That means that for those of us who are really fervent beliefs. We learn how to create space for others. And those who are more relativistic and actually don't hold. Views are able to cultivate those in our space. I'm worried about those on the margins. I'm worried about single folks who have had had trouble finding partners and we were the people of Color feel alienated those of lower socioeconomic status who feel alienated Those who are converts all types of marginalized Jews that I think are. Establishments can do better being inclusive those with physical disabilities or and really a whole host of others. And I think our community is very good at embracing those who naturally fit in. I would agree also. I think it's an excellent question because he hit it right on the now. I think the biggest challenge we have is rabbis is to make Judaism not just relevant but also accessible and I would say that the lenses I try to wear as rabbi and I think that all Jews should try to wear is the lenses of what my rabbi teaches in his book. We Jews the STEINFELDT He came up with the idea that he was the first one since then. I've heard it many times. But he came up with this idea. That Judaism is not a religion. I don't approach another Jew because of religion nor do I approach another job. Because he's part of my ethnic group. Judaism is not an ethnic group. Judaism is also another nationality. We don't have to live in Israel to be Jewish. What is Judaism? Judaism is a family. I approach another Jew. Because he's my family and yes you could have two Jews and seven opinions but as another Aba of mine taught it's one heart and we can't forget that we do have one hot. We we are part of that. Same family what unites us is much greater than what divides us as the CLICHE goes. But it's not just a cliche it's the truth and therefore not do is better than me. We all have the same soul. No Jew is wiser than me. No Jew is deeper than me. I think every Jew in a way is a part of God and you can't add measurements to divinity to the infinity God is God and Jews that reflection of God he has that Jewish soul and together as a family. That's what unites us. That's what we celebrate. There's that great bit in Michigan where they say that you know. Why did God make us all descended from the same couple so that nobody could say you're better than my father is so so

Phoenix Rabbi Dr Smelly Yanko Josh United States Beth Safina Rabbi Pinchas Arizona President Trump Stephanie Kish Committees Mark Twain Jus- -Ociety Paul Ince Dina Israel Michigan Bettman Juku
Hate-Crime Violence Hits 16-Year High, F.B.I. Reports

NPR News Now

00:59 sec | 4 years ago

Hate-Crime Violence Hits 16-Year High, F.B.I. Reports

"FBI. The I is out with its annual tally of hate crimes in the US it found an overall slight drop last year but the offense is are becoming more violent. As NPR's Hannah lomb reports from two thousand seventeen to eighteen hate crime related homicides rose from fifteen to twenty four the FBI count shows a tiny drop in the total number of bias. Motivated crimes reported reported to authorities seven thousand one hundred twenty. That's fifty five fewer incidents than the previous year but there was also a corresponding dip in the number of agencies reporting to extremism trackers. The most concerning finding is a jump in the level of violence against people as opposed to property crimes. Vandalism attacks on individual search into a sixteen year high in two thousand eighteen. One of the largest increases was an attack against Latinos the F. B. I. report generally reflects national trends but it's considered entered an undercount because participation is voluntary for state and local law enforcement agencies and many do not report Al-Am. NPR

NPR Hannah Lomb FBI Vandalism United States Fbi. Sixteen Year
Navy SEAL seeks to toss slaying case over withheld evidence

WBZ Morning News

00:24 sec | 4 years ago

Navy SEAL seeks to toss slaying case over withheld evidence

"Lawyers for a navy. Seal will argue a military court today for dismissal of charges against him, special operations chief Edward Gallagher is accused of killing his Lomb state prisoner in Iraq in twenty seventeen. His lawyers say the case has been tainted by lies and the withholding of evidence Gallagher's lawyer say, if the case goes forward, the prosecutor and possibly the judge should be

Edward Gallagher Seal Iraq Prosecutor
DNA Kits: Can You Trust Them?

Science Vs

03:03 min | 4 years ago

DNA Kits: Can You Trust Them?

"Of people ascending they DNA to companies like ancestry dot com and twenty three and may and they're hoping to find out where they come from. And what diseases they might end up with these companies save for Mia hundred bucks, or so they can reveal these amazing things about you and your family, which can feel really exciting. Like it did for some of our colleagues at Gimblett. There's this like hole in my family tree. I'd love to fill it. I'm just curious. You know, how I fit in to the rest of humanity. No, one in our family actually seems to know for certain where we come from. Two of our colleagues in particular have a rather mysterious ancestry. Does Alice who looks a lot like her Irish American mum and nothing like her Indonesian dad, like my hair's read, and I have green eyes. And I like look like, I'm from airlines like I present completely white. But my dad does not. And then there's Gabe. Who knows he's got some Irish Puerto Rican in his family. But then there are these big gaps that he is very curious about we realized that we don't know a ton about our family history outside of like the stories that we tell each other. I do think that there's an element there that feels like. I would have a stronger sense of myself knowing where I came from. And because there's blanks in his past. Gabe knows very little about what diseases might be looking in his Dan, a there's just like a lot of questions around. What is our medical history? A you excited about knowing. Or is it scary? It is a little scary. It's like I would rather know than not now the promise of DNA tests is that you can have answers to all these questions and more. And all you have to do is in a little tube signs, Bastos producer rose rim. Lomb walked gave an Alice through this location. We should we get spitting. Yeah. Let's spit. Okay. So you're just going to watch. Watch. And record. You spit is something we want to get on audio spending. Very gracefully didn't great. All right. So I'll see and a couple of weeks. I'm so excited asks you when the results are in. Oh my goodness. While some people can't wait to send off their spit and get some answers, others are more skeptical. They wondering how accurate are these results and hang on a minute. Is it okay to be giving something as personal as DNA to a private company? It just feels weird to me. This makes me ask myself. How like is it worth it? So that's what we're gonna find out today is it worth it by answering the following questions. One. Can these tests really tell you where your family is from two can they reveal diseases hiding in your DNA and three what can these companies do with your DNA once they haven't can they sell it to the highest bidder? The hops your insurance company.

Gabe Alice Gimblett Puerto Rican Producer Lomb DAN
Huawei hurts international relations and the influence of Islam on the Indonesian election

Between The Lines

02:28 min | 5 years ago

Huawei hurts international relations and the influence of Islam on the Indonesian election

"We're talking about the Indonesian elections in April now about half of Indonesia's. What is it about two hundred sixty five million people they younger than thirty extrordinary? Greg feely to what extent today? Subscribe to a more conservative interpretation of Islam. I think it's a divided. So that's a large group of people many teens millions of people and they feed across a religious political spectrum. So there are certainly these erasing trained of puritanism amongst many in that millennial group the why they can chew religion is much more conservative than what they parents obeying sorts of people who wear extremely modest clothing who disapprove of homosexuality and the like, but however, if we look more closely those people as individuals, we often find that their private lives, a still actually quite cosmopolitan. And so things are not quite as I say when we look at the reporting in newspapers when we look at surveys when we go to people's houses when we talk to them about what kinds of things I during the. Providence what Kanda personal relations? I have secure relations. I have often we find it's far more complex picture, but nonetheless of rule the chain these towards conservatism, Greg will agree with that. I think just because people publicly manifesting themselves as as more sly make doesn't mean fanatic. I don't think this sort of trained that you sing Indonesians being played at another society's appeal uniquely Indonesian one even in western societies in some ways and Saudis young people becoming more Christians in some places. So I think as in complex -ociety people look back to their traditions and old cultures. Sometimes cherry pick speaks of them and sort of return to them. Okay. So the consensus he is that we should really be allowed by these developments in Indonesia Gregg fairly. What are the implications? He for our relationship with Jakarta over the next five years. Well, I think one of the things to emphasize his both of the leading the prison candidates are not particularly Slavic figures. Even though they go to. Trouble to court these limit vote. And if he's Lomb was on a con of fundamentalist surge in Indonesia, you would say the presidential candidates, not the boss presidential candidates, but the presidential candidates having that kind of slamming fly, and I dont nonetheless for country Laka strata, we have to fact Islam elements more in our into our diplomacy.

Indonesia Greg Feely Kanda Jakarta Cherry Five Years
Novartis hands investors Alcon spin-off and $5 billion share buyback

Bloomberg Daybreak: Europe

04:06 min | 5 years ago

Novartis hands investors Alcon spin-off and $5 billion share buyback

"Novartis is to spin off its alcon eye care business and commence a share buyback of up to five billion dollars by the end of two thousand nine hundred nineteen a strategic review by nevada has concluded that a one hundred percent spinoff of alcon is in the best interests of shareholders and consistent with the company's strategy of focusing on medicines alcon is expected to be incorporated in switzerland now let's get more details on that story let's bring into the conversation sampras ellie bloomberg's director of research for emir and large farm analysts at bloomberg intelligence thank you so much then sam for joining us this wasn't a surprise in that they've been reviewing the status of this business for a very long time was the final decision on the timing surprise sam two i didn't expectation was that decision by the end of the year which i think most people that interpreted we'll hear about what they decide to do closer to the end of the air so it's it's it's interesting that we've got that decision made which i think is good for clarity and just the business is still taking relatively nicely because it's been a painful novartis over the past few years project to and that's positive nevada's bought alcorn in stages for on fifty billion dollars per but the unit so they have they've dropped off what might the valuation of this business actually be than what we actually know about that the best we can look back and see years ago a walking bausch and lomb full which is a bit of a stretch in terms of trying to evaluate we do have a relatively compatible company out there in in group a vision that could be used as a yardstick for my living alcon if you plugging the numbers in terms of anti value to to operating profit assuming some operating margin improvement should be cooking would be conservative twenty would be a pretty meaningful number to go for it could get a bit more if there's obviously interest so i i would say we should look around the average two billion dollar mark does it do analysts believe do you believe this is the right move novartis to focus on prescription drugs then sam of course this is we've moved on a couple of since daniel vasella put this company together with with alcon inez and now we've got nara narasimhan making different strategic decisions does this make sense so investors pleased absolutely makes sense any which is why the companies i think doing it but reasons why the company they trust focus if this is what they can go and buy assets themselves don't need companies type for them companies at supposedly drug development and a key issue a special some businesses that you can hold and there's some kind of possible strategic overlap go here there's no one business can create for the other timing development approach development approach completely that was completed coaching the when the investor confidence said that they had back in a month or so ago the attitude of the management of allow completely different to that of the drug development i think it is absolutely the right thing that these two business should be separate bloomberg intelligence director of research for a mia and large pharma analyst thank you very much.

Novartis Fifty Billion Dollars Five Billion Dollars One Hundred Percent Two Billion Dollar
Death toll in DRC Ebola outbreak now at 27

24 Hour News

02:02 min | 5 years ago

Death toll in DRC Ebola outbreak now at 27

"A swearing in ceremony for new cia director gina hospital this morning president trump praised the agency she leads it is a true honour to stand here today before the most elite intelligence professionals on the planet earth nobody even close hours before the ceremony trump blasted former director john brennan suggesting he's to blame for the for the russia probe after months of battle syrian forces have captured a neighborhood in southern damascus from islamic state militants syrian military is declaring the capital and its surroundings completely secure president trump is hailing a truce with china on trade saying in a tweet that he expects barriers and tariffs to come down in a big boost for american farmers that's boosting the mood on wall street where stocks have been higher all day i'm ben thomas a nurse has died from bola in congo now bringing the death toll from the disease to twenty seven according to congress health minister the country also faces nearly two dozen confirmed cases of the disease with several more probable cases to patients have recovered in headed home congas health delegation and representatives of the world health organization and united nations launched a vaccination campaign against the disease a legal argument about the size of eyedrops has failed to catch the eye of the supreme court drug companies allergan bausch and lomb merrick and pfizer have all asked the court to get involved in the case they were sued by patients using their eye drops because they say the eye drops are too big and that leads to waste the patients say they'd wind up spending less money if the bottles were designed to dispense smaller eyedrops now that the supreme court's passed a lower court decision to let the lawsuit go forward will stand former polish president and anti communist elect for when sir met with disabled people and their parents who've been staging a sitting in the parliament for more than a month.

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Apple, Samsung and Astor discussed on Daily Tech News Show

Daily Tech News Show

02:02 min | 5 years ago

Apple, Samsung and Astor discussed on Daily Tech News Show

"Loading without having to open a mobile browser in the longest running patent were i've ever covered apple wants about one billion dollars from samsung in damages from very long running smartphone patent infringement dispute where samsung was early found to have infringed on three of apple's design patents and two utility patents in a retrial to determine what samsung actually does apple samsung astor's to limit that amount to twenty eight million the cases presided over by us district judge lucy coe in san jose california a guardian investigation in conjunction with the danish broadcasting corporation reports that facebook allows advertisers to target users it thinks are interested in subjects such as sexual preference is lomb or liberalism although religion sexuality and political beliefs explicitly are marked as sensitive information under new data protection laws with gdp are going into effect on may twenty fifth sensitive categories will require special conditions around how they can be collected and processed those category include preventative or medicine to protect the vital interests of the data subject or the data subject has given explicit consent whole foods launched a loyalty program that offers special discounts to amazon prime customers including ten percent off hundreds of sale items and rotating weekly specials discounts are now available to customers in florida and will roll up to other stores starting this summer in other prime perks amazon previously announced free two hour delivery from whole foods stores for prime members and finally twitter is giving the bella pers a little more time to adjust to its new api platform account activity after some developers said that the original api's originally slated for a june nineteenth shutdown would force them to stop their services the new date for those depreciated api's is wednesday august sixteenth twenty eighteen you've got two months faith star for more discussion of tech news of the day subscribe to daily tech new show dot com daily tech headlines is supported by you thank you to everyone who supports the show at peach.

Apple Samsung Astor California Facebook Twitter Lucy Coe San Jose Danish Broadcasting Corporatio Amazon Florida One Billion Dollars Twenty Fifth Ten Percent Two Months Two Hour
Samsung wants you to care about every little tidbit in its phones so it won't have to pay Apple $1 billion

Daily Tech Headlines

02:02 min | 5 years ago

Samsung wants you to care about every little tidbit in its phones so it won't have to pay Apple $1 billion

"Loading without having to open a mobile browser in the longest running patent were i've ever covered apple wants about one billion dollars from samsung in damages from very long running smartphone patent infringement dispute where samsung was early found to have infringed on three of apple's design patents and two utility patents in a retrial to determine what samsung actually does apple samsung astor's to limit that amount to twenty eight million the cases presided over by us district judge lucy coe in san jose california a guardian investigation in conjunction with the danish broadcasting corporation reports that facebook allows advertisers to target users it thinks are interested in subjects such as sexual preference is lomb or liberalism although religion sexuality and political beliefs explicitly are marked as sensitive information under new data protection laws with gdp are going into effect on may twenty fifth sensitive categories will require special conditions around how they can be collected and processed those category include preventative or medicine to protect the vital interests of the data subject or the data subject has given explicit consent whole foods launched a loyalty program that offers special discounts to amazon prime customers including ten percent off hundreds of sale items and rotating weekly specials discounts are now available to customers in florida and will roll up to other stores starting this summer in other prime perks amazon previously announced free two hour delivery from whole foods stores for prime members and finally twitter is giving the bella pers a little more time to adjust to its new api platform account activity after some developers said that the original api's originally slated for a june nineteenth shutdown would force them to stop their services the new date for those depreciated api's is wednesday august sixteenth twenty eighteen you've got two months faith star for more discussion of tech news of the day subscribe to daily tech new show dot com daily tech headlines is supported by you thank you to everyone who supports the show at peach.

Apple Samsung Astor California Facebook Twitter Lucy Coe San Jose Danish Broadcasting Corporatio Amazon Florida One Billion Dollars Twenty Fifth Ten Percent Two Months Two Hour
Royal baby boy: Duchess Kate and Prince William welcome No. 3

All News, Traffic and Weather

01:05 min | 5 years ago

Royal baby boy: Duchess Kate and Prince William welcome No. 3

"The world the newest addition to the british royal family royal baby number three has been born kate middleton wife of prince william has delivered their third child a son the baby born at saint mary's hospital in west london in the private lindo wing also delivered prince george and prince charlotte kensington palace says when kate went into labor earlier today the duke and duchess of cambridge as the couple are officially known drove from their home in kensington palace in central london to the hospital in west london again a royal baby boy has been born the third child of prince william and kate i'm mona rivera this has been a special report from abc news wbz news time eight thirty to a man involved in the twenty fifteen paris attacks sentenced to twenty years in prison for the gunfire which led to his arrest saw lomb was found guilty of attempted murder after he shot at officers pursuing him in belgium four months after the attacks in paris this lamas currently in jail in france where he is also due to face trial over the attacks which killed one hundred and thirty people wbz news.

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