12 Burst results for "Noura"

"noura" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

06:21 min | 1 year ago

"noura" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"When you look at how much the Euro has overshot in the past, we've come up with a range of anywhere between 9 to 5 and parity. And I think in the current environment, that sort of range is not really unreasonable. Just survey lost the club ahead of FX research at Deutsche Bank seemingly everyone on board with this story now looking for a weaker Euro from New York City this morning, good morning. Tom Keane, Lisa brahmi and Jonathan farrow looking at futures with a bit of a bounce. We're negative a half of 1% on a S&P yield to lower by 7 basis points on the day on a ten year crude at 99 down by 4.75% and Euro dollar. Let's just call it parity. Jordan Rochester of namur Tom looking for 95 by the end of August, more painter camp for that currency pair. When we invented Bloomberg surveillance folks, it's about bringing in the experts John and I think we can say, John, as Jordan, where I just started Nomura, is nuanced and different than George Sarah velis a Deutsche Bank is nuanced and different than the giant Steven anglin or over its standard charter and to talk to all those people to read their research helps us collate around this shock that we have. Should we bring in Jordan Rochester? You bring them in right now. You bring them to interact. Jordan, where'd you get the extra downside from on Euro dollar from where we are down to say 95 in August? Morning, everyone, afternoon, everyone. Well, in terms of why we think you're a carries on. The risk is, of course, these gas flows, but there's also a global recession story building app. So I think most analysts have now only just realized Euro can keep heading lower. There was actually quite a bit of a fight in the sort of sell side community around the one O 6 level when the ECB turn hawkish. Well, now it's quite clear that gas flows dominating and the reason it goes to 95 is probably three reasons. The first one is the gas flows. We think that there's a high chance that Nord stream doesn't resume its operations. And what we're seeing is a fundamental macro story. You're a dollar is heading lower because European importers of gas are buying whatever they can buy from the U.S. from Qatar from Azerbaijan. They are just throwing money at the wall to make sure the EU achieves the 80% gas storage aims. The roughly around 62 or 66% for so they've got a lot more to do. And that's forced you're selling all the way until that target is reached. During the second reason is China. Okay, I'm sorry. Continue. The second reason is China. China's COVID business cycle before the break we had a little first work there telling us that Shanghai might be going into lockdowns again. That's the biggest trading partner for the Euro area. So demand is just come out of the curve for European exports. And the third one is recession risks. The U.S. raising rates the way they have, the way the world has moved to the supply chain and inflation, the ECB is going to raise rates in July, September, October, and so on, but we are talking about rate cuts here at noura next year. I think that's the next trade, and I find it really interesting how there's so much fed cuts price for next year, the curves inverted. But that hasn't happened in Euro yet. So that's the next story and that's going to weigh on Euro as well. So it's not just all about gas flows. It's a bigger story. Two cents spread moving from negative ten to a negative 11 basis points. Get your attention. Jordan, you and I were weaned on reading dually focused Landau Garber. David foker to land over at the big German bank makes real clear at some point. We have to step in using Euro is a proxy. Are we anywhere near on a Jordan Rochester 0.95 where institutions will step in to staunch the dollar strength? It's definitely possible, but I think it's unlikely. It's definitely not my base case, so I can say that. So when the Euro was invented, there was FX intervention. That was the authorities around the world stepped in, the Federal Reserve, the Bank of England and so on to help support the currency that said that it didn't spur a Eurozone crisis in its early infancy. So there was a joint effort there and at the same time inflation was not as much of a problem as it is today. Right now, every Central Bank around the world pretty much wants a stronger currency. It helps tame inflation from import costs. So that's why we're seeing even the likes of the SMB who have for years fought the kerb and tried to not have a stronger currency. They're pretty much asking for one. Well, the Eurozone they can do that via rate hikes. And I think that's the main way that they're going to possibly do that. But as I said earlier, the growth story is much bigger than just the rate hikes is what's going on with gas in China. But FX intervention is being talked about in Japan as well. Another great example, the authorities there say the move is detached from fundamentals where most of the charts we look at say actually the movie is quite in line with fundamentals. That's the same with the Euro. We've had a huge terms of trade shot Tom and German exports have now become very uncompetitive. The cost of electricity and energy in Europe is roughly around 6 times higher than America. So to make a piece of manufactured equipment, you're paying 6 times more in electricity costs. You're uncompetitive versus an American farm. You need a weaker currency to help you out. Jordan, I want to tease out the potential cases that you lay out in your most recent note, 95 is the most likely that you see by mid August or the end of August, I should say, that's according to your latest note. But you said that a 90 print could actually be reasonable to look for over the winter if we do get a Nord stream one cut down, cut off if a Russia does not restore the gas supplies. At what point does something break? At what point is there a level at which you start to see a contagion that perhaps is not linear? Well, I think 95 to 90 is non linear. What breaks? Well, I think credit channels will be much more of the area where things break. So the rise in interest rates we've seen, the drying up of consumer demand. We're going to see a lot of business models really challenged and that's where you'll have something breaks. The irony of that is, if you have credit spreads widen, that leads to a dovish Central Bank typically. And that would mean a lower Euro. So I still think the exchange rate is the release valve, and I don't think the exchange rate is what's going to cause that stress. It's coming from the supply and the demand side of the equation when it comes to those risks. But look, when we get to 95, we're kind of basing that on the Nord stream one flows maybe coming back to 40% of their capacity. What 90 sense is that's the scenario where Nord stream one does not come back on and the Euro area does not get enough gas storage and the German manufacturers get their gas rationed. The bundesbank in Germany have already done the

Jordan Deutsche Bank Tom Keane Lisa brahmi Rochester Jonathan farrow namur Tom George Sarah velis Steven anglin China ECB noura Nomura Landau Garber David foker John
"noura" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

02:30 min | 1 year ago

"noura" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"A foster taper the possibility of two hikes I mean some people are talking about perhaps the most dramatic move in the dot plot that we've ever seen But lots of people tell me not to look at the dot plot I don't know Which bond market will be the most robust in the face of a fervent fed Well I mean the region will perform very well Even in a tiny site even in the tightening cycle So if you look at the bond markets in the region the long bonds they have tended to trade very nicely in the last few weeks There's been almost no impact from this tapering talk on yields The short term has come up a little as you would expect But the bond market itself is really well contained In fact there's a very interesting charge which he had Bloomberg has done showing the resilience of the economies in the region to fed hike relative to other emerging markets And I think that really speaks to the fact that we've got low relative exposure to debt to GDP We've got the currency peg which is well managed So I don't really see too much risk from as long as cause these hikes are a moderate and not off the charts as perhaps Muhammad alerian would like to see He's very fervent in regards to re grasping control of the narrative No more Jordan Rochester your colleague on last week on the European side I mean what's your view in terms of are we going to see the biggest move in the dot plot history of the dot plot history No no no I mean I think chairman Powell has shown himself to be a dove to put it mildly He's trying to talk up the hike cycle if you like to prepare the markets but I very much doubt that we'll see anything more than a slightly accelerated taper announced the next meeting Okay tarik thank you so much Bringing back the dove for Jay Paul terrified of noura asset management My guess this morning aren't Middle East markets breaking news coming through acquisitions of plenty This is CSL They're confirming there and talked to by a pharma company in Switzerland Vi for So CSL agrees to buy vifor The equity value of the trade is 11.7 billion dollars so they had confirmed that they were in discussions CSL will keep the market informed as they said And we have vital move by 14%.

Muhammad alerian chairman Powell Bloomberg Okay tarik Jay Paul noura asset management Rochester Jordan CSL Middle East pharma Switzerland
"noura" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

01:35 min | 2 years ago

"noura" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"UK CPI for the month of October landing at 4.2% That is a ten year high year on year inflation reading Eurozone CPI coming in at 3.7% Some of the catalysts for that high inflation in the UK is the energy price crunch Dutch natural gas futures right now up 3.7% at €97 a megawatt hour the pound was given a balance earlier cable at a one spot 34 handle and UK ten year guilt briefly touched above a 1% yield Elsewhere rising yields overnight treasury is the ten year yielding 1.625% and the U.S. 30 year popping above 2% The bloom McDonough spot index at an 1177 handle it's highest in a year Here in Europe now the footsie 100 is down two tenths of 8% the Dax up a tenth of a percent The cat 40 just in the green Spain's ibex is flat and Italy's 15th Up two tenths of a percent of struggling for direction here on the continent The biggest gaining sector basic resources the biggest Lagarde travel and leisure E minis are up a tenth of 8% after another record close yesterday of 4700 level NASDAQ 100 futures up a tenth of 8% One stock in focus is SSE for utility company down 4% right now in markets capitulating to pressure from the activist investor Elliott they will sell a 25% stake in the distribution network That's the Bloomberg radio business flashes Leanne guerins with the world news morning Leanne Good morning noura and thank you UK inflation has risen.

UK treasury U.S. Europe Spain Italy Leanne guerins Elliott noura Leanne
"noura" Discussed on Your Brain at Work

Your Brain at Work

04:39 min | 2 years ago

"noura" Discussed on Your Brain at Work

"Three sixty that is a small number of people. Giving you a deep amount of feedback you obsess but a little bit of regular nudges from a lot of people can be quite powerful. Could be really really helpful. I think it's a really different thing. So i think we think we in a move to a well two more crowdsource to be back. More crowdsource could nudges and insights. And i think that's gonna be interesting. Kristie went away in there on some of these issues accidentally end something he said. I think is critical. When you were talking about three sixties that people do tend to obsess over. Who said this the idea of anonymous feedback and i think at that point. People do wonder more about who it came from as opposed to being able to focus on what was said so. I completely agree with you there day and one other thing that i find really interesting asking for feedback requiring a certain amount of emotional maturity and i agree with that and sometimes i think especially if we have a younger workforce or someone who may not have achieved that same level of maturity there. Some great ways to kind of nudge the question until it becomes a habit of mayors and one example and i have to give credit to noura leadership. This is something that i've experienced working here. It's been wonderful for someone to come to me and say what type of feedback would be helpful. So even if i don't immediately remember to ask or it just asking that can be a way to still make that conversation a little easier. It reminds me to ask for it and steal takes that threat away so there are some ways that you can encourage the question and encourage people to ask for it. If they haven't quite got maryland their own that still going to give them some great information while minimizing that threat and create that culture of constant back. It's great thanks for what about people who've been through trauma like let's saying everyone on the planet. How do you deal with those folks and obviously some people have been through a lot more than others. Some of a really really difficult mine at mejet make joke of that but we will had some trauma to some degree this year but some law and certainly people who've got a high baseline of threat. Which is what happens from trauma. You do want to be a lot more thoughtful about your approach to all of these things to goal setting to feedback to chickens of. You'll be sensitive a lot more asking questions and generating insides Telling a local supportive overall. I didn't talk a lot about chickens but one favorite set of questions. This is more like a weekly standup than a full check in. But i think it's important to differentiate that this sort of weekly check in with a team that sometimes people think this is at. It's you know it's how you. How have you been winning. And what do you need help with three really interesting questions. Sunny in the heat of a pandemic. We were doing that pretty much every week without team. Now people doing better. It's more just kind of have been winning what you need help with. But it's a really really powerful set of questions particularly if people really sensitive people struggling. How are you actually. Make sure people answer that. Have you been winning and what you need help with so those are really good questions for that week to week. Check in particularly sensitive people who've been through a lot from the monthly checking against galls. It's really important that in focusing on progress. Not just results so. That's a key difference that you really checking in on how people are doing on the progress. So you're not just talking about outcomes evaluating progress kristie marshall anything to into the so summarise. Hadn't you get feedback when you you recognize..

noura Kristie maryland kristie marshall
"noura" Discussed on The RCWR Show with Lee Sanders

The RCWR Show with Lee Sanders

07:49 min | 2 years ago

"noura" Discussed on The RCWR Show with Lee Sanders

"In the morning so i humbly apologize is i didn't mean to go that long talking about that particular Topic bites this is how to show work. Sometimes sometimes we get some news in real time and we pretty much got to react to it In that fashion Side think we pretty much got done talking about the. Yeah you know. No we didn't we were talking about the. Wwe new japan pro wrestling thing. Yeah so the same fans that you know are been saying for years they want it for. Wwe reach readouts the promotions and everything. I think it's hilarious. That we have a good vocal majority of fans that are trying to bash. Wwe and look at them. Trying to get on the w bandwagon and seeing our e w is and it's like where you guys been. Wwe as unto aureus reputation for the working with other promotions is just been a case right now where the right wine kind of hasn't been coming on. I mean god fucking say they were working with evolve recently. Fcw over vw. So i i mean let's not try to make it seem like. Wwe is trying to be the popular kid on the block in trying to follow in suit with no. Let's just throw that out the fucking door. It's not even like that at all. It's not even like that at all and not for nothing. But here's some more experience comes in here. I may active member of the wwe fans council and basically a lot of merchandise. That you see that's floating around programming things of that nature. We pretty much get surveyed about all of that shit particularly. I remember a couple years back. Wwe n this really should not surprise. Anybody what i remember about two two. Maybe three years ago there was a survey that was put out for us fan council members and had to do with wwe network programming and wwe one. It's to know. Hey would you be interested in checking out. New japan pro wrestling content on a network. And you know it was interesting. How he pretty much had gave us the information. How everything led up to that goes. I remember one of the questions you know. Hey what what a wrestling promotions do you check out besides wwe. And i remember there was some options there. I think there might have been even in other wine and it was nice. Howie just transitioned into new japan. They asked about new japan. They asked abou- ring of honor. Oh i want to say they even asked about. W i'll try to see during the weekend of i can actually dig up that survey Sure it's somewhere floating around. But they definitely asked about new japan to the point they even had brought up the question of okay pretty much. Hypothetically speaking we get new japan. Let's just say the knee japan content. You know it would be available on a higher tier. Would you be willing to pay a higher tier to be able to watch a new japan. Content was like yeah. And i remember that week. All the podcasts. All dirt sheets. The you just couldn't help but wonder so what's going on here. Is new japan getting ready to do something with. Wwe what what's going on here and remember guys. There was even that one report again long before a w came about there was a report that was floating around the research. Where wwe we was trying to see about acquiring the new japan pro wrestling library. I don't know if they were just trying to get like the entire library like everything that new japan has put out in. Its history or they were only trying to get up to a certain but there is even discussion there where they were trying to see about about obtaining the new japan pro wrestling library And if new japan pro wrestling was for cell or some shit. Like that. And i remember the the japan pro wrestling president. You know he pretty much was like nah. We're good. we're pretty much comfortable doing our own thing right now. You know we appreciate wwe but no. We're we're good you know. We're we're all right khanna. Funny how same fans some years back. That were clamoring and just salivating at that idea. You know now it's you know. Wd brewery all that shit. Tony kahn. He made the news in regards to everything that came about here with these rumors between. Wwe new japan. He called out new ww chief revenue officer nick con over those rumors. And you know yet. A a obviously have a shared name there. But here's what he had to say as we get ready to go live to ninety dynamite on. Tnt just wanted to address as the forbidden door. I just read in the observer today. That new japan pro wrestling has apparently has a had talks with. Wwe's president nick con- well nick. I have to say you've been talking to new japan pro wrestling for two months. You've gotten a lot done just in the last two weeks. I've had yuji nagata ren noura iraqi romero and a w i've reunited ripon device. I've had the new japan. I w gp us champion. Jon moxley defend the title successfully on our show retaining and i have future plans with new japan pro wrestling for the us title. So you must have really gotten a lot done in the two months nick. In fact i think there's only room for one con in the wrestling business. Nick and it's me it's tony. Kahn is not some con man from connecticut. Abbott fund show tonight. Nick see you on dynamite. Then of course you know one show kind of taken a little bit of a of a jab to friday night smackdown in everything Yeah you know i. I'm not surprised. Tony kahn had reacted to this news. I'm not surprised when little bit by it Way to come off way to come off a little bit rattled though. It's like honestly you don't have to suck your own dick. That's my message to anybody. Look when you know. You're doing your business right you handling it right. You should don't stink. You ain't got a broadcast it you know why because it's the people that are around you your loved ones. Your friends your family your colleagues. They're going to be the ones that's going to be seeing your praises. They're going to be talking about. They're going to be talking about everything that you've been achieving within recent weeks in every day.

Jon moxley Nick Tony kahn two months three years ago Kahn today tonight Wwe friday night tony one con wwe one show yuji nagata new japan ww one of nick couple years back
"noura" Discussed on Physical Activity Researcher

Physical Activity Researcher

05:43 min | 2 years ago

"noura" Discussed on Physical Activity Researcher

"How hard it is to present the right emotions at the right times. You know when. I was young plan noura an i still hear this today. People would say well you you gotta play with a smile on your face. Nothing lights emotional labor better than that idea. How summary look like they. They want to be there. How does somebody play with a smile on their face. I found that. So hard. And i reflected on it. I still hear. Those kinds of ideas articulate to. Yeah and if you have an injury and you have an interview. You'll always say that. I'm very optimistic that i will be back next week. That injury skim of being an athlete. Because they've got they've got to learn on this. There is so little breaking from it. But i think you know this is when i talked about earlier about how crushed i am the the sports have these these production processes starting so young. They are learning all of this stuff how to a how to present themselves to pick up on. The facial cues face to face interaction within the changing room with with senior staff knowing how they have to be in front of senior staff. This isn't just happening to the plaza. Course low those young ages is happening for the parents and the guardians as well. You know my find it peculiar because there are very few other occupations where you would think so naturally about starting occupational life from from such a young age in ways that can be so detrimental to for example family life. Think what one of the things that. I've i've realized that this become more important to me listening to the stories of athletes. Not just footballers. But i think always football in sunny in the uk offers the most extreme examples always How people journeys reflect the the enormous step changes for them. I mean we have both been involved in. Studies of career transitions but One of the transitions that nobody really talks about his transitions. In terms of economic and social capital for young footballers for example from quite modest backgrounds and at sixteen. You can suddenly find yourself from struggling in a family. That's making ends meet to flying by private jets. There is a sort of a a step change. In what bordeaux had cohabitants i find fascinating but simaltaneously to a step up in economic capital is a crushed your social capital. The longer you spend in some of these sports the more destructive. The sport.

next week sixteen today one both uk bordeaux One plan noura things
"noura" Discussed on Sandy and Nora talk politics

Sandy and Nora talk politics

03:02 min | 2 years ago

"noura" Discussed on Sandy and Nora talk politics

"When did this happen noura. This happened last week. Like the the last time you and i recorded not tuesday but last sunday this happened last week and i'm taking a look at the english coverage and the first english coverage news seems to have come out on friday like if it takes that long like i know. Journalism is in crisis in canada. But like come the fuck on if it takes that long to get a massive news story from french media to english media like that's part of the issue here and you know i. I'm recalling an article that i read where dr misery dryden. Who's a professor at dalhousie. University discussed that racism and anti black racism are co morbidity That should be considered when we're when we're talking about a covid. Nineteen in the impacts of covid nineteen. And she's absolutely right and i it. It appears that it should be considered with a lot more than just the pandemic absolutely. There's there's really no question and you can cross check. All of the co morbidity is that have been the most fatal from hypertension to respiratory illness to dimension alzheimer's to diabetes like they all the the the most dangerous comb abilities have a higher occurrence which within nonwhite communities. That's there's no question about that. Although when you look at the information about this from an organization like the canadian heart society can you heart institute over there called. They have to rely on american data. They have to say that. Black americans are more susceptible to these illnesses because they don't have the data in canada. Not not that we need data to believe this stuff but like god. We can't even collect that like we can't even get a complete picture in in the the the multiple ways in which our health system is violence is dangerous and and you know because they tuned into the disability filibuster so much. I heard so many stories of disabled people going to the hospital and experiencing really horrific things having nurses suggests that maybe it's their time to die when they're in the hospital with a broken arm murphy really horrific stuff and And i also heard some really like in incredible statistics about like you know if someone has a spinal cord injury how they see their life immediately after their injury. There's a high desire people to end their lives because they can't imagine going on because they've lost the use of their legs or maybe even more than their legs and how One study that looked at spinal cord injury individuals S- put the at five years..

canada last week tuesday five years friday last sunday first Nineteen noura dalhousie One study nineteen misery dryden french canadian english alzheimer american americans
"noura" Discussed on The Joys Of Binge Reading: The Best in Mystery, Romance and Historicals

The Joys Of Binge Reading: The Best in Mystery, Romance and Historicals

07:36 min | 2 years ago

"noura" Discussed on The Joys Of Binge Reading: The Best in Mystery, Romance and Historicals

"Lying in the sun sipping fizzy drinks spat tonight idea that would not lead to guy. She talks about who's successful collaboration with two very close sprains both of them all be selling historical authors. And why she thinks leading tastes have been changing during the pandemic. but before we get to. Lauren just a remind. The shar nights for this episode can be found on the website the joys have been reading dot com. Drop by and say hello to us. We always love to hear from listeners. But now he is lauren. Hollow the lauren and welcome to the sharp. It's great to have you with us. I'm so delighted to be here. Thank you so much for having me. Look lauren youth. Got thirty or more books published to your credit now mainly historical mysteries and historical fiction. You've won all sorts of awards and made it onto numerous be seller lists things like the new york times. List the booksellers based list. You've got rita's wonderful career that you've had but how did you get started on this road doing this for very long time. I made the decision. When i was six but i going to write fiction. Right grew up. it was largely Alga frustration. i had watched the either a valerie noura princess and it finally dawned on me that i couldn't dance and no one was offering me a kingdom which was very inconsiderate of them so i figured i would go with my third option indian novelist instead and having decided that and told everyone in the first grade i had to stick rich. It's just amazing. It's remarkable that you'd such a seats of confidence and decently so young this things but when you keep at something itself perpetuates by by first manuscript off to simon schuster. When i was nine and of course they sent back form letter. I was it but you're having gone down that road. I had to keep cracking away at it and the is i adore historical fiction while all kinds of fiction really and have never watched you anything more that i wanted to live in stories. My own and other people's pets wonderful now. I know you've got a book. That's very soon going to be at band of sisters. We won't talk about that a little later on in our check together but the one we focusing on today as the sama country. Which is your most recent book as we speaking. It's being described as an epic family. Saga simmering with secrets. Just the sort of story. I'm estimate that i love these family. Sagas simmering with secrets and a book. That you've said just big to be russia you almost tried to keep it quiet a knock do it. But it just wouldn't lead to align what at tell us about that well. This was a book that grabbed hold of me and wouldn't let go say departure for me both geographically and in subject matter. Most of my books are set in england and they usually although there's a great deal of drama and some of the dramas usually of the domestic variety. I certainly never mentioned tackle slavery or racism or really big heartbreaking topics but about oh goodness eleven years ago. Now i went on a girl's trip with my best friend from brad squall. We had decided we were just going to lie a warm beach with free drinks in our hands and do nothing but this did not work very well for us. We all spent most of our lives in libraries. One of them was ablest. Another renaissance europe and i was an early modernist. Who was ray writing novels. And so we're used to spending most of our time in libraries and we really weren't used to direct sunlight so we burned rather badly that first day and then decided to look for indoor activities so we found a plantation tour where we were told about. How the plantation had burned down in a fire and the owners portuguese ward had died except bet. She was neither portuguese nor his ward. She was his daughter in slave woman and the rest of the story. We were told that betty was about the plantation owner how he was founded by his daughters gale and spent the rest of his life rocking on the veranda chasing the shade. And you could still hear that rocking chair creaking. On the verandah which was a great gothic goes straight. I love the ghost story but what really caught my imagination. At the time. I really wondered about was. Where was the child's mother. Was she there to the night of the fire. Had she agreed to have. Her child entered the household as a portuguese ward or had the child been torn for her and of course being that horrible person the group. I asked the tour guide. Who couldn't tell me. All they knew was that the mother had been anew unnamed enslaved woman and they had no idea who she was what happened. What the story and that was meant to be that. I went back to new york. I was writing a book. Set during the napoleonic wars light and flippant with lots of antics with napoleon. Behaving badly. And i couldn't get that missing mother out of my head that nameless enslaved woman whose child died in the fire yeah and for years the story i it haunted me particularly when i years later had children of my own and the full impact of what that manche came to me and but it was a stray. That really almost get ridden. Because i i came back. And my ed aroused me. Why watch right next deny supply barbados idea and she was like no. No no no. You cannot write a book. Santa caribbean i thought. Okay well. maybe that's the best. My background is in english history. Nod him caribbean history. I don't know why i'm doing. These are big topics nubia state and every now and then i take off that file and dusted off and then stick away again and it took about. Oh gosh eight years after that initial trip before my agent finally said to me. You have to write the barbados race. You'll stop talking about it. It's peculiar isn't it. It's just one of those things that certain time periods and things dominate the based sailors. You would know that well because some of your books seizure noise periods like world war one and world war took currently while others like you'll carribean stories. You mentioned find that a will have to gain acceptance. I think with socially with publishers but even with read as well what is this is an is their way of breaking through goodness. This is something. I've thought about a lot. It's very funny. Because when i had that discussion with others at the time she said what you can write anything you like as long as it set in england and then she paused for a moment. Thought very seriously and you can write anything you like. As long as it's set in nineteenth century england. Whenever i really want to terrify my agent my academic background is in the english civil war so whenever i coupon to scare my agent i tell her finally go right my big english civil war saga and the thought of my going seventeenth century. Just scares her speechless. But i do have some theories about why this is. I think for some reason. Although i can't really quite put my finger on there are synergies between certain time periods. I mean i. I grew up in the eighties. Which was the era of the victorian saga both Victorian england and a lot of american civil war novels and movies for some reason. The era of big hoop skirts.

lauren Lauren england six seventeenth century world war one nineteenth century today eleven years ago nine new york eighties world war tonight europe simon schuster first grade betty rita One
"noura" Discussed on Inform Me Podcast

Inform Me Podcast

05:55 min | 2 years ago

"noura" Discussed on Inform Me Podcast

"Low now business. Now love yourself. I want to ask you mr trump. You spend on gift make. Does that thinks in love your neighbor. Modinos have list of dongo arrest hashtag. Emphasize protests are so said that valid covid nineteen kubik nineteen low but the congo. He'd no pc cloud nine and santa's abc. They do revolt on. Dissent sweater for relational sarah. But it does congo in you. Ignore police not. I seduce ones if he does listen. Let's them possess spread selective justice nine this one not matter when with the key gas pipeline for a doctor takada gas pipeline winning do go distance caught. Don't finally give emergency order. Say they top pam with immediate effects. Immediate electorate if you move again viticulture. Togo sees maly and depending wendy. I would to contracts. See midday stop that in with immediate effect. Kosher me pass the montana everyday. She has so often geo newcomb. Move to mitchell's. That goes top of the issue of six hundred and seventeen million. Naira loss to contain deposits. Give it to to cook component continent. That was they say way. You'll get a forty feet container. You get to deposit for grant deondraye thousand. If you get twenty feet container deposit one hundred thousand laser to take career. Takara yoga schools go. I've talked to or pity. Weeks supposed comeback. To walk to your to these shipping line boa- my stock save on people not return them immediately and maneuver the deposit. People for fits defeats and whether corporate battles expiry dates dope pass. So even if you return a- unity see so bad idea platform see the concert men. This maternal boo boo for demata night. I said no middle make. Sure say oh. Those window returned. The container from domino dementia emitting busy guy. Brigham the first question when you lift e container. How many weeks. You said that greg for his side. I legal before feet. The combating declaring take on clay. How long do take on comb of melwood equality weeks for them. Say so people don't got enough for the navy. Deliver the dairy told gas six hundred. Seventy million so caused the issue by finally. They don't have research at anytime. Where you bring container mchugh collect call alexia money. Your deposits tubby Coronavirus my mind. Okay what markets were for the week and polarized fall seven thousand robaina. One sees white cotton. I want forty. Why nine hundred. Twenty two thousand era rubber recall now one twenty don for a hundred cagey Robot now one thousand one corner. Hundred nara b.'s. Don't go. I seen as john says the company says they want shine making the now. We'll look being rubber now. One thousand one hundred hundred narrow wear white beans robaina one thousand narrow culpa ondrej nahra beans. Rub on one thousand. Three hundred cope now. Wants twenty below five thousand five hundred one mellon one size on five call now. One touchy engine. Melania one thousand two nine hundred noura grandma. Don't stay calm down. Small twenty liter nine hundred twelve thousand seven hundred forty eight thousand two hundred red oil dot com them read oriana two thousand nara. Why four liter. Now one thousand eight hundred and received on the go again. Show gary na na ten thousand two hundred why land. Not sue tiles on niagara don. The markets were for the week. Gotta go up again because right now for actually be to be say some people get the new figure we have to Some be so. Don't be too hard for them to fi. Have them on. So does the really reduce the number of supply. Wendy komatsu dispute good of little until maybe by nest move when rent a trolley some of these communities when they produce gary gets milwaukee Congratulations and good news. I said docomo for recession well dot com the come see how. Niger komo for recession. Say we don't come. Bets are newseum. Siri fled for streets over swiss. Every ten did they the never return. Reflect full for recession nano everything. Independent market does independent market increased by by by the federal government to finally speak on the price they would say i move around now with the.

Seventy million One thousand forty feet nine hundred one thousand seven thousand trump four liter twenty feet six hundred one hundred thousand twenty liter ten thousand one hundred hundred Hundred nara Wendy komatsu forty Siri swiss One touchy engine
"noura" Discussed on KHVH 830AM

KHVH 830AM

06:10 min | 2 years ago

"noura" Discussed on KHVH 830AM

"The different muscles that are involved in the joints are involved that goes back to stability versus motor control. What are we talking about here? Well, we're talking about In order for Your body to be able to walk upright. You need to have the correct muscle firing patterns. In other words, the muscles need to be Contracting relaxing in a coordinated fashion. You can move smoothly now, if the muscles are not firing in a synchronous pattern. You're not gonna be able to stabilize the joints properly, right? Think about what happens when you're standing. We don't really think about us using muscles were just standing still. It feels like we're not using any mostly just standing there resting on her joints, but actually, there are muscles. Which are constantly Hiring. Help you stand up straight. And those muscle groups need to be firing in a very coordinated way. Now. Moving forward we're talking about Stability and stability has to do with moving through a range of motion. Why you're going against Outside or external factors. Gravity going up a treadmill? Well, not a patrol. No, but, you know, moving against the forces of General going up and down stairs riding a bike, you know, surfing. Uh, you know, Twisting and pivoting on your golf club. The dynamic stability involves being able to control those muscles. A range of motion and that has to be resisted by the impact with the ball with a heavy box. You're lifting We need to make sure that we're not just strengthening the one Area. Where the pain it's, but we need to take a look at one or two joints away as well. So, for example, I can't tell you how many times in the clinic when people come in complaining about shoulder pain. You might have even gotten multiple cortisone shots from there, Doc. They might have even had shoulder surgery. And then they find out you know what Then you have to step back and say, Well, wait a minute. Here. Let's take a look at how stable is that shoulder? Why is it unstable? Is it because there's a rotator cuff injury? You know, and we do a careful evaluation, their physical examination we come to find out. You know what There. There is a rotator cuff injury and part of it could be from overuse. But then we take a close look and find out the reason why that particular shoulder that rotator cuff is vulnerable to overuse. Is that there's nerve compression. Or what's called Noura genic weakness. Perhaps there is some type of nerve injury upstream. Turns out that the number six nerve root controls the muscles around the rotator cuff. And so if you've got nerve compression or Nora genic weakness coming from upstream, of course, the rotator cuff is going to be vulnerable. But guess what. If you get that rotator cuff injected If you get that surgery done, and you don't address the neural genic weakness component what's happened to cause those muscles in the cuff to be weak in the first place? The problem is going to keep coming back. So Yeah, we're getting back to that. That topic of when it comes to exercise. It's so critical to not just get out there and and Question. Move muscle and No. No pain, no gain kind approach. That's something we did about. 30 years ago. These days, the approach is more about training the right muscle groups. It's about maintaining stability. It's about working our range of motion. And when it comes to injured muscles and joints, we need to take a closer look. At what is actually helping those parts of the body to move. So, for example. Maybe you've heard about bursitis. Bursitis is a little pocket of fluid that can build up nearby a joint or attendant where there's Motion. And irritation can cause the fluid to build up and that Area of swelling is painful. And The area nearby. The Joint Is made up of the cartilage. Lines where bones meat bone. It's also made up of the areas where the ligaments ligaments are like thick rubber bands that hold Bones in place. And there's also the capsule. The capsule is like a fiber structure that surrounds the joint and all these structures can become tightened. Were limited. If there's no Range of motion. If the muscles have lost their strength, those other structures, the ligaments, the tendons that joints they lose their elasticity. And that will affect the range of motion that will affect how well the muscles could do their job. So When we're taking a look at a painful problem. We typically doom or at Premier Magen IX than hey, Where's it hurt? We're going to stick a needle here. We need to take a careful look going beyond the pain. Trying to understand structurally what's going on so we can restore that range of motion. And that plays into the exercise component. How do we get the exercise going? Because if you can't do the exercises if it's too painful if you're not making forward progress With the physical rehabilitation Then we need to take a closer look. Maybe we do need to Talk about something. Whether it's a medication or injection to stimulate that healing process. Spin Doctor Dwight here with you and the moving body. Um Course we do. Take.

rotator cuff rotator cuff injury nerve injury Nora genic golf Premier Magen IX Doctor Dwight
Working With Your spouse: Noura Sakkijha, co-founder and CEO, Mejuri

Skimm'd from The Couch

02:22 min | 3 years ago

Working With Your spouse: Noura Sakkijha, co-founder and CEO, Mejuri

"Your co founder is your husband. You're not the first person on this show. Who's coders their spouse. But i really like. It's something that. I cannot fathom working with your partner so and i know what it is like to have a co founder but i also am very protective around like keeping keeping parts of my life separate. So what is that. Like to work with your husband. It's crazy for us. To be honest. I think a lot of people do it says together because it's so hard to start a business that i used to work sixteen seventeen hours a day and so if my partner wasn't in a similar lifestyle i don't know how things would have worked out to be honest with us. I think in that sense. It was really a positive. Obviously you know it gets stuff because we had to put rules around the separation exactly like you said going back home in going on a date. I don't necessarily wanna talk about strategy. We really had to set boundaries and and really be honest with each other like. I don't wanna talk about work now. Can we talk about something else and so try to figure out. How do we create the separation. But i think over time it just becomes part of your lifestyle like i. I just think of juries part of us and so we became a lot more comfortable especially as the company grew and we started to have our own vary obvious roles and responsibilities. And i think that is actually something that i would recommend for anyone. Who's working with their partners to make sure that you have clear roles and responsibilities. And who essentially is that decision maker on certain areas versus the other. How do you split up the responsibilities. So he's The presidency oh and he works on all the revenue generating areas of the business. And i have all of the other areas. We essentially put the strategy together. We worked closely together. But we have very different cassettes. I'm like i said i'm an engineer. He's more he's from finance background. I have knowledge in the jewelry. Industry saw work closely with creative with product culture in hr a ceo whereas magid is really focused with the marketing team at retail and international expansion. And so there's definitely a division that didn't happen overnight as the company grew. It was more obvious where we wanna put revenue generation. Where do we wanna put the structure of the company the culture and so that's how essentially things came boat. The good thing between us is that we have difference consents.

Magid
VCs and Startups Consider HaaS Model for Consumer Devices

Techmeme Ride Home

04:09 min | 3 years ago

VCs and Startups Consider HaaS Model for Consumer Devices

"All familiar with software as a service right in a way. SAS has taken over the world. For software and all sorts of enterprise and consumer settings, but even increasingly. In all consumer settings as consumers have gotten used to. You know paying for digital things. I mean you can think of Netflix. As software as a service in a way. Well, are you ready for hardware as a service? Let me give you an example. Noura is a company that makes high. End earphones the NRA phone. For example is what the company calls the world's smartest headphones. You can buy the neuro phones today for three hundred ninety nine dollars, or if you pay ninety nine dollars, ninety nine cents up front and subscribed to pay nine dollars ninety nine cents a month. You can also own the near Afon. This is not rent to own. This is subscribed to us. As long as you keep paying, you can get a new neuro phone device every twenty four months. You can get the over the air software updates that keep the device improving, and Oh, yeah, keep the device working because if you stop paying, the device shuts off. Remember when there was that whole Brouhaha about Sonos end of lifing support for their earliest speaker systems. Yeah, get ready to hear a lot more about hardware service quoting techcrunch. In a recent email exchange Duncan Turner general partner at the x accelerator, which backed Noura described Hass hardware as a service as a great way to keep in contact with your customers and up sell them on new features most importantly for startups, recurring revenue is critical for scaling business with venture capital, and we'll help appeal to a broad set of investors, Haas also often has a low churn as easier to put. Put onto long term contracts and quote the upside to consumers clear. Don't pay for everything all up front, and your freer to experiment with new devices in ways you wouldn't have been otherwise. This is especially important in a world where brick and mortar experience is increasingly rare, even before retail ground to a halt courtesy of covid nineteen. There's also a clear appeal for those who are inclined to frequently upgrade devices quote. It's providing continuous value than it should be worth paying for Y combinator partner Eric Makovsky, tells tech crunch, if not stop using it and move on, it also is more sustainable hardware. These days requires a lot of software to work and the development and maintenance of that software costs money companies that have a continuous source of revenue will be able to continue to improve their product offerings through software updates and quote in two thousand eighteen. Eighteen study analysts parks associates noted a potential hurdle, however quote while a consumer reluctance to pay subscription fees is well documented. Haas models may get more traction. Where more value can be offered at less financial risk to the consumer, the challenges to create a service bundle with clear value that consumers find attractive consumers will pay for services that they perceive as valuable and complete tasks that they cannot or prefer not to do themselves unquote. As another VC is quoted, saying in the peace and I've seen myself over the last few months, startups don't have to be talked into Haas into this new sort of business model. Providing consumers can be talked into buying in as well if there is a new hotness right now in startup pitches at the moment it is basically subscription, but for x that sort of the new uber, but for X, and it's easy to see why this is so attractive to start ups. We've spoken endlessly before about how reliable and easily anticipated revenue is provided by subscriptions. But also if you have a subscription business, consider that you could achieve scale, not at the end of some years long slog through the Dark Valley of losing, money. Imagine, you could achieve scale and essentially bootstrap your way to it off. Your own cash flows from basically day one.

Hass Hardware Haas Noura SAS Netflix Afon NRA Dark Valley Covid Duncan Turner Partner General Partner Eric Makovsky