23 Burst results for "Prodi"

Bloomberg Radio New York
"prodi" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"And I'm Susanna Palmer in the Bloomberg newsroom. The man accused of attacking New York GOP gubernatorial candidate Lee zeldin during a recent campaign rally told investigators he'd been drinking that day and didn't know who the congressman was, David Jacobo faces a federal assault charge. He made an initial court appearance yesterday before a federal magistrate judge on a single count of assaulting a member of Congress with a dangerous weapon which turned out to be a keychain with two sharp points on it. The charge carries a potential maximum penalty of ten years in prison. Jacob bonus was arraigned Friday on a separate state charge of attempted assault in the second degree and was released by a local judge. That prompted criticism from zeldin and other Republicans who held it up as an example of the need to reform New York's bail laws. The New York triathlon is on, but it has been shortened because of the heat. The biking part has been cut in half from 24.8 miles down to 12.4 miles and the running portion has been cut from 6.2 miles to two and a half. The course will take racers into the Hudson River on bikes along a traffic free west side highway and through Central Park. Investors will be watching for a rate decision from the Federal Reserve in the week ahead, Bloomberg's Karen Moscow has more. The Federal Reserve is expected to raise rates on Wednesday with officials having signaled support for a 75 basis point move on Thursday we're watching for the initial reading on second quarter gross domestic product which could eke out a small advance. First quarter GDP fell for the first time since 2020. On Friday we get personal income and spending and consumer confidence, and it's a busy week ahead for corporate earnings with Apple, alphabet, Amazon, and Microsoft among those reporting. Bloomberg's Karen Moscow, global news 24 hours a day on air and on Bloomberg quicktake powered by more than 2700 journalists and analysts in more than 120 countries. I'm Susanna Palmer. This is Bloomberg. This is Bloomberg opinion I'm Bonnie quin. This week, a lone boycott in China and a rebranding for an old company. Truly ran and Brooke Sutherland coming up. First though to John authors as we review Europe's difficulties, the Tory party leadership race and U.S. market performance. So John, we are finally, as you say, at the heady heights of 0% in Europe, and we may even go to 1% by year end, it sounds insane to say this, the heady heights of 0%, but we did get a 50 basis point increase. Yes, it's the first increase in more than a decade and on many levels this really breaks the mold for the way the ECB has been behaving more or less its entire existence. First of all, it's breached its own prior guidance basically told us it was going to be raising by 25 and then it raised by 50. It's also sing in as many words that there is no forward guidance coming. They don't know what the data is going to be and they don't therefore know what the interest rates are going to be. They've taken guidance quite a lot more seriously than the other central banks over the years and they are now putting everything on being able to remain flexible. Well, as you point out, European central line has so much more to deal with than other central banks obviously it's a conglomeration of countries. Just for comparison Burks is right now Germany's ten year yields at 1.22%, Italy's is at 3.54%. Yes, that's one of the things that the ECB has to deal with. It's possible the single most important, given that we now have an election coming up in Italy and the last time we had an Italian election, it caused an almighty mess, this time all the punditry at the moment says that the brothers of Italy, who despite their name are led by a woman, Giorgio meloni, seen most likely to form a government or to provide the prime minister, and they are ultimately fairly directly descended from Benito Mussolini's fascist party, members have been urged not to make the Roman salute in public anymore. This is not going to go down well in the rest of Europe. It was bad enough when you had the league as part of a government. If it comes to pass, that will really amp up the tension much further. But it's all of the peace, right? And this is part of what we're seeing all over the world. So you're seeing these more extreme parties get into government and housed other maybe less extreme. Parties partially because of economic concerns and economic difficulties in Italy has been in trouble for a long time. Yes, I think where Italy is different from some of the others and dangerously so. It really is very much of an aging country and growth has been very slow for some decades now. It actually overtook Britain at one point in the years after the war, it did have a boon. It has been languishing for a long time. One of the reasons Mario Draghi took the helm, right? Because he was a technocrat and he had been at the helm of the ECB. Yes. And there was hope that he might be able to turn things around, but ultimately he didn't. No. And they've had a succession of attempts Romano Prodi came into rescue. After Berlusconi during the crisis ten years ago. Very reminiscent of Greece, in fact. Yes. So the ECB came up with is something that's almost sounds like a vaccine. It's the transmission protection instrument. What is it? It's seems to be a promise from the ECB that it's not going to let spreads get too wide and that it will buy bonds or it's not ruling out in the rubric private securities as well to keep the different economies within Europe in line with each other. How is this in our history rhyming a little bit? We had this before. Yes. This time is different. I would say, because the ECB is trying to give itself more discretion than it had before. It's really putting much more of its own credibility on the line. We have general criteria for when they would react to do with how unwarranted the widening of spreads might be, how disorderly it might be. But those are described in words, not numbers, and it's going to be down to the Central Bank itself to fix. The other thing that's fascinating though is that it's ten years since I had just spent most of my life growing this. OMTs. I had forgotten the existence of OMTs. And they were never actually used the fascinating thing about Mario Draghi saying he would do whatever it takes. He never needed to. The market didn't go on. But it was just the rhetoric calmed the market. Yes, but it's there on the books as an opportunity and legat said that that's part of their toolkit that they reserve the right to use that they may will use. So that's a fairly directed mission that we're very close to the kind of existential worries about the Euro that we had a decade ago. The big difference this time is, if you look at Italian spreads compared to Spain or Portugal, it really is an Italy problem now rather than a peripheral economies. Portugal and Spain and yield in the 2%, two and a half percent range, whereas we're talking about percentage point for Italy at least. Yes, but unfortunately, Italy is the biggest of those economies, but this is now very much a drama that focuses on Italy itself. We also have unfortunately the issue that Italy is particularly dependent on Russian energy. Which is another thing that the ECB has to deal with as you point out, your three things were Italy, energy and Europe's Viking system, which as we know is weaker than that of the United States right now. It happens since the financial crisis and even before. Energy John just a brief word on that. Yes. I mean, I am not using this word likely. We saw natural gas in Germany over the last two years skyrocket. Yes. Yes. The Nord stream pipeline, which had been closed for maintenance, possibly with air quotes around the maintenance. Has reopened and some supplies are flowing. I think the read through that most people are taking is that Putin has demonstrated very clearly that he can turn off supply if he wants to. I was surprised that everybody took that so literally. Yeah. And that's still very much of a risk that he might do it. Again, the sort of almost mafia like comment that if you don't help me get this part, it's going to have to come down to only 20% of capacity next week. The valve is closing. Yeah, that's not encouraging. You don't want to be in Russia's vice. That's for sure. Yes. We're going to continue with John authors in a moment the last discuss, including the Tory leadership battle

Bloomberg Radio New York
"prodi" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"Is Bloomberg. This is Bloomberg opinion I'm Bonnie Quinn. This week, a lone boycott in China, and a rebranding for an old company. Surely ran and brook Sutherland coming up. First, though, to John authors as we review Europe's difficulties, the Tory party leadership race and U.S. market performance. Sir John, we are finally, as you say, at the heady heights of 0% in Europe and we may even go to 1% by year end. It sounds insane to say this, the heady heights of 0% but did get a 50 basis point increase. Yes, it's the first increase in more than a decade and on many levels this really breaks the mold for the way the ECB has been behaving more or less its entire existence. First of all, it's breached its own prior guidance, basically told us it was going to be raising by 25 and then it raised by 50. It's also saying in as many words that there is no forward guidance coming, they don't know what the data is going to be and they don't therefore know what the interest rates are going to be. They've taken guidance quite a lot more seriously than the other central banks over the years and they are now putting everything on being able to remain flexible. Well, as you point out, European central line has so much more to deal with than other central banks, obviously it's a conglomeration of countries. Just for comparison purposes right now, Germany's ten year yields at 1.22%, Italy's is at 3.54%. Yeah, that's one of the things that the ECB has to deal with. It's possibly the single most important, given that we now have an election coming up in Italy and the last time we had an Italian election, it caused an almighty mess. This time, all the punditry at the moment says that the brothers of Italy, who despite their name were led by a woman Giorgio meloni, seen most likely to form a government or to provide the prime minister. And they are ultimately fairly directly descended from Benito Mussolini's fascist party, members have been urged not to make the Roman salute in public anymore. This is not going to go down well in the rest of Europe. It was bad enough when you had the league as part of the government. If it comes to pass, that will really amp up the tension much further. But it's all of a piece, right? And this is part of what we're seeing all over the world. So you're seeing these more extreme parties get into government and oust other maybe less extreme. Parties partially because of economic concerns economic difficulties and Italy has been in trouble for a long time. Yes, I think where Italy is different from some of the others and dangerously so. It really is very much of an aging country and growth has been very slow for some decades now. It actually overtook Britain at one point in the years after the war. It did have a boon. It has been languishing for a long time. One of the reasons Mario Draghi took the helm, right? Because he was a technocrat and he had been at the helm of the ECB. Yes. And there was hope that he might be able to turn things around, but ultimately he didn't. No. And they've had a succession of attempts Romano Prodi came into rescue. After Berlusconi during the crisis ten years ago. Very reminiscent of Greece, in fact. Yes. So the ECB came up with something that's almost sounds like a vaccine. It's the transmission protection instrument. Yes. What is it? It seems to be a promise from the ECB that it's not going to let spreads get too wide and that it will buy bonds or it's not ruling out in the rubric private. Securities as well to keep the different economies within Europe in line with each other. How is this in our history rhyming a little bit? We had this before. Yes. This time is different. I would say because the ECB's trying to give itself more discretion than it had before. It's really putting much more of its own credibility on the line. We have general criteria for when they would react to do with how unwarranted the widening of spreads might be, how disorderly it might be. But those are described in words, not numbers, and it's going to be down to the Central Bank itself to fix. The other thing that's fascinating though is that it's ten years since I had to spend most of my life growing this. OMTs. I had forgotten the existence of OMTs. And they were never actually used the fascinating thing about Mario Draghi, saying he would do whatever it takes. He never needed to. The market had been going on. It was just the rhetoric calmed the market. Yes. But it's there on the books as an opportunity and Lagarde said that that's part of their toolkit that they reserve the right to use that they may well use. So that's a fairly directed mission that we're very close to the kind of existential worries about the Euro that we had a decade ago. The big difference this time is, if you look at Italian spritz compared to Spain or Portugal, it really is an Italy problem now rather than a peripheral economies. Portugal and Spain and yield in the 2%, two and a half percent range, whereas we're talking about the center point for Italy, at least. Yes, but unfortunately, Italy is the biggest of those economies, but this is now very much a drama that focuses on Italy itself. We also have unfortunately the issue that Italy is particularly dependent on Russian energy. Which is another thing that the ECB has to deal with as you pointed out, you were three things were Italy energy and Europe's Viking system, which as we know is weaker than that of the United States right now. It happens since the financial crisis and even before. Energy John just a brief word on that. Yes. I mean, I am not using this word lightly. We saw natural gas in Germany over the last two years, skyrocketed. Yes. Yes. The Nord stream pipeline which had been closed for maintenance, possibly with air quotes or maintenance. Has reopened and some supplies are flowing. I think the read through that most people are taking is that Putin has demonstrated very clearly that he can turn off supply if he wants to. I was surprised that everybody took that so literally. Yeah. And that's still very much of a risk that he might do it. Again, the sort of almost mafia like comment that if you don't help me get this part, it's going to have to come down to only 20% of capacity next week. The valve is closing. Yeah, that's not encouraging. You don't want to be in Russia's vice. That's for sure. Yes. We're going to continue with John authors in a moment losses discuss including the Tory

JustATouchof_J
"prodi" Discussed on JustATouchof_J
"Yes i could say much like reinitiate. How do you disney. Okay because you never know who listeners your sensitivity. i'm just putting out the appeases okay. Y'all got a son. Let this shun the light. They need to lighten inside. You come out soi put it there role bright. He wanted to see it. You get net to see it. They need to see they need to. Sometimes they hate it. God they will hate it but they seem because they had to see it. The hate it okay. And that just like i said it's acknowledgment is not thoroughly us. You kill it okay. You can't that's what this park is was about all right so i'm about here. Hope y'all gadsden is annoy. You got him pieces okay. 'cause this is just such as jane grey p. post the credit tan pieces for you until next time all right take care. Be careful you listening for in this. Please will be making no karuna babies you know. Stop drinking corona. Thank you like a pass key. Say i'm about to end the message though the best. Listen you know. I can say look just does the first thing that you see when you go in the store okay. So you walk in. Cologne is also. Allow your live here at a scene morning hollow social media your journeys colonus. What happens if something is his silent. I'll just you know prodi's before you never know you know what's going on. You know drinking 'cause it's the corona virus like uneven. Come on it's like getting the the chicken sandwich mulkey see mochi. Do how on these. You ought to be more wasn't okay now and this is just such baby. I swear i'm just trying to put it out the pieces for you okay. Make sure i'll take out the song of the week on drop that thing. She check that out. Yeah guy lewisham comey yaw says as you make these kitchen all right so next tom. I love you right so your what shall at the. Don't listen ray. So remember when i told you i was going to give you all you know. A little tribute denies came out with his new album and it was definitely thoroughly wise. I decided to do a throwback thing form. Yeah i wanted to go back you know. Everybody loves coming out with all this new stuff on my. You know what this is. Just it's such a gay man and to put this out there pieces for your side. Say you know. let me go ahead. Though this thing back. I want to check it out. Listen i is something necks.

Courtside with Seth Greenberg
"prodi" Discussed on Courtside with Seth Greenberg
"Ah a tough guy and and You know rebound and all that thing so we feel good about him dick. Those are the transfers scotney. Our are grown. Men played a lot of minutes. Dodd tastes game is probably as come as far as any player. I've ever coached dante when he was a sophomore high. School couldn't make four footer. You know he. He was tough guy. Dribbling pass a little bit but wasn't very skilled is freshman year for us. Shot thirty one percent from three forty five last year from three. He really improved but that was at sun and now he's going to go back to a naturalization three four bill bit better guy garden and not a center garden. And he's terrific. He is really taken it to another level can get his own shot. Toughness prac- more consistent practice was in every other day guy. Every third day guys freshman year last year is every day every other day this year. He's been four out of five days. He's good and those guys have chance. So really prodi him eric. I'll is started since he was a freshman terrific player. Grown man can shoot. It can score off the dribble mid range. We can post them. You can really pass. He'll play the. Ill just play the to all year. He won't play any point. I don't think you'll knock on wood. dive in there. You know run a lot of good series for him to score the ball but yeah just guys that we really really feel good about. That have played a ton of minutes and they've been great leaders and they're hungry than get any invites didn't even get a chance to work out like well hell and i got to go. So he's been hungry in in working really hard so we've got some good young kids that came heart i can. He'd taken net next level. He was kind of interesting prospect. Yes so keen. Played out of position last year to play point guard force. He's put on about I don't want to exaggerate fifteen pounds of muscle this summer. He looks like a whole different kid. 'cause i'm on them all the time you not is. You're always on kids to be tougher. And he's gotten tougher. He's really worked on his lateral speed quickness guard better. He's really gotten a good player. He's got a shot up his showers a little bit low. It's up now and He's really worked he. He's approached this like a grown man approaches right. It was a kid the first two years He's like okay. it's my time and and he can do a lot. he can really pass it. He has a great feel for the game. He's gotten better defensively He's a really really good player. And we'll probably be our fifth starter In there along eric in fats. Dante q. He's got good size almost six eight and he's been terrific play. The talent minutes. Last year i played more than he was ready to play but he had to play a program. This wasn't in shape. It needs to be less season. You talking about just developing all these guys made how. How much more do the players coach is everyone around the program appreciate and maybe something. They took for granted access to your players being the gym sweating with helping him. Like you say you work with someone on the jump. Shot one on one All the things that are quite honestly as coaches we love and we take for granted it was taken away you know again. I think that that last year's class inability to have that extra time probably impacted guys development. What was it like to have these guys back in the gym. It was great normal summer and.

The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz
"prodi" Discussed on The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz
"Better hold onto your poise and you boys. You got her own out here to isolate your weekend. I'll it just makes me news. It does make but it is from a different time. Does the himalayas still run. Is there still a himalayan operator operator. You're on the ticket walk. Them prodi walked him bodies and big bad miami eight party. Bow kid that. Brian net strides hand side of the riots. James she ordered asserting. Your routes miami heat here retail for knowing jessica. You're not familiar with the himalayas. You don't even know you're looking at us like you don't know what a magical time in childhood. This was hearing. This guy. threw a tiny tenny echo. Rhyme nonstop as you were around all over the amusement park. Janet cheer bad. Fake himalayan operator. How are you today to add. Excellent what are you doing. Mondays office day. What are you say. I agree all right. You'd better reach out. Grab a site site all my office faster. We cow really. He's never done a qa. So that's why we stopped. Eric from right there where we realized what a limited.

Podcast Italiano
"prodi" Discussed on Podcast Italiano
"Napolitano fundamental manta hooley there Committee their respect. Respect yariel by this one on nonstop. Orlando the stereo negative. We kept by stereotyping negative. We can involve your committee propagandists. Who podcast sparrow. Engineer al kunia aspect a little personality todd for tokyo normal revived. She could On some quality outbreak. Can i talk cable. You know mcgrady peapod lanka non-custodial tikhonov getting cheddar pretty town till multiple multiple mediteranee debate. Some the casino nor did she equitable. Drc comparison alita intrusive k. Lose the napolitano mobile a lot charity intimate museum out my on but a lot of the napoli town. Mika janea is interesting. communicative that napolitano. Gee if you knows that. Anti cmo fantasy more. Your mum been several. Issues are so important mineral napolitano all credito liberty sonnen non sam brennan tool time pedal. On sundays thunderbird gentle time panella converse anytime. Each informality para antitrust shanties on all the and all england super julio linguistic miss bedevil news on may know committee the predominant into before in anthropology. The video at a wound will deliver croissant. Will dick on piano. Little yanna persona better. Prodi laurels and data and companions in the teddy's indeed immortal napolitano. We need a lesbian jane. Some nonetheless alyssa dana on l. maramures d'italia civil it and elmar natalia's emulated marei meteoric achie- cfo saturday now. All pseudo employees in calabria chilean sea on the may pastika alto pioneer. Mopeds cheers cheers. Saturday nine genera detailer. Studying julia agai pollock. Picasso's sued the pensacola for sunday. Mari people liquor availability similar spa job similar to an paulino suggest. Torino wrangling italia. Perran almira nonsense. People threes mckay found normal mental strenuous on the mental strenuous. Talia van lucia. Dr fantasyland them. Special kalita d'amato to vada posted all your pencil megapolis on etiquette went gonna start you need because on appeal meal. Pu bleaker mukasey in gaza for But under also wanna cheap ass built. She saw no of course. Set up other zola. Little man with molly sky. Zola will konica when done on chen. We'll count on this jumble. A biblical mugabe algae novel. Canada is a quindici solitaire. Remem- she's under a check with stuck calls a key check on shavuot it. I'll touch on org be colloquium interim medical and oveido christie stability main rotor mallika. Dec- cam on me stood the maria michael daraghmeh where this woodley seed shem cannon detected where they're seemingly commerce through to ron but Chatillon spa jock in a illegal dish. Among pretty alto boy to up our depuy medicine alana woulda a condo. It has stopped determined. Nakas of kandara semantic massive. For saturday your cigarette. Ini dina chat on on the landscape call. Embarrassed help everybody. Per course seen matter malleability. 'cause he throw a let a lap dog saalbach machine accuser predator. Mom but party. I love tom. Cw electric one that period prego burke call with the sonnen non-core embodied estimates yanni restricts journeys. Remember deeper sonic shed. That live oscar compares comecon chapter for sale. Marris was still asking yuck k..

Seis e Um
"prodi" Discussed on Seis e Um
"Poke mayes betrays miss flats gene. He coached toco. They won't say but as these early season. If you use supplements. 'sms appointed musil socio through serotonin virus customizing tennis into up. That is since you do. So but additional copies kiefer's alamein socio me similar but let me which is his. Cv of your team. But i'll do more humid. Mockup dow now won't using almac separate but also was the taliban ito edition virus ship. Dvr cameo preview so out fever and nobody that she turned to this source with biz. You'll ever eleven forgotten. How could they be palladini sample of manila by the. I don't see what do you are. You will tell me. Why'd were on land. They want gaza lee also combined evade today. The as i do i do. Don't ever to pay the hell are sold sick. Leashes e cadeau maples. If eleven so appropriate. Who rub you'll have to be split. The hippo so super fishy anti gaza police zoo junji. Sedona snap sposa domino. Who was madama. Hacker prodi are moving to and we he local info queen. She wouldn't miss the yoga staple commodity meaningful the the the from echo chaumont of. Why don't they temple guy come up prior to me my with that son cuticle here. The i won't make where. Sam ninth my no all internet. Bobby vacant declared the who is east. Something was if i'm meteorologist which kenney said boom when as their sabi yuck oil fica hockey i started. The tone was key mufi now. Zambrano abraham nato governments desperate poison. Which saw lee's that you move into ivan demisch What is it that specifically have..

Chutando a Escada
"prodi" Discussed on Chutando a Escada
"They may not be. But i've been is up skiers e cacak houston. I scattered sell forsees kid. On the stem stem do strawberry. Whose name mona biz stone. Really cheap all the states. Now dan is you get cloud very similar system. Joe second mortgage lending at america cheat days damage to amando day. Split open to god i. We don't kill the possessed by plunging. Seen intone thing jaffe coach bravo. President is my job in boy. Did you ski walking putin fuss. Amir's themselves at this sick possibly mall without proper five sunday scott and he thinks that there's any felt on sandwich star absolutely oakland instantly. Kiss adding this. For the point he spoke. Was i doing the equipment. Essen indications meals. Bus prokopyevsk have been my soviet sale. Much shows. stories will sit but africa time you shave stocks season. Prodi walked out to save me two years so the oil you would do professor of can you system. They regard mama stimuli key his phillies riverside. I've gotta think bows above this anywhere. Side of julia. Pottage may obeying longer graffiti on the modest pedal padres affiliates. Is i opened january..

Nerd On! The Podcast
"prodi" Discussed on Nerd On! The Podcast
"Oh that was the best one. I think i messed it up earlier today. So practice during shrimping we went on a little bit of a diatribe about what is trending freely down for shrimping and like sometimes you just wanna get know prodi. Oh so our new. I'll i'll start this off. kick it off here. I have you it with are a little shorter one that i'm very excited for real quick. Just wanna give a shout out before i get into my longer. News is that hbo. Max which i was in our. I keep wanting to say digital green screen green screen green room before the show started we were talking about. Hbo max's killing it with their animated stuff like when they brought back the looney tunes all that kind of stuff. They have ordered a full series of fiona and cake which is a spinoff series of adventure time There was a one off episode Where they had an alternate world where the genders reversed so it was funeral cake prince prince bubblegum and all that kind of stuff. It's marceline and it was childish. Gambino so that was exciting but ordered a full series. Half hour episodes. That'll be airing on. Hbo max i'm i couldn't find a date anywhere yet so the news is just out there that it's officially happening which i'm excited for..

CodeNewbie
"prodi" Discussed on CodeNewbie
"Hey be listeners. I wanted to share with you. This week's dev news. One of the other podcasts. I host because it was such an awesome interview that i think everyone should hear it enjoy. Given the way the underlying technology works all it does is complete tax right by the way i leverage inside project december phrases back and forth conversation with what seems to be a conscious entity. Welcome to death news. The new show four developers developers we cover the latest in the world of tap. I'm surrounded barak founder of disco. And i'm josh pits principal engineer at forum this week. We're doing something a little different. We recorded this interview last week as a segment to our regular show but it was such an amazing interview. The we decided to dedicate this whole episode to it so joining us jason war game designer and creator of project december who's g. p. t. Three power chat bot has been used by people to talk to sterkel figures and personalities and was even used by one person to talk to his late fiance. Foreclosure you so much for being here. Great to be here so tell us about your developer background. I've been making video games for about sixteen or so years during the time of designed and programmed and released in pretty much do everything by myself in each game so kind of like a one person studio during the time of put out nineteen games. Wow and i have a bit of a background in artificial intelligence. Because i studied it in college and a little bit in grad school and did a couple of research projects back then but it was always you know pretty disappointed with what was possible and also with sort of promises of artificial intelligence throughout my life and and the sort of disappointing outcomes is a you know where they say. Oh it within ten years is gonna be able to do this or that and they never met those expectations. I kind of halfway through my life. I kind of into the conclusion that i would die without ever having any kind of conversation with any kind of sentient machine among a skeptic right some surprised that was also that i've been able to achieve it so i wanna get into prodi december. What is it and why did you created so project. December is a system that allows Human being to have a back and forth conversation with an artificial personality like dialogue through text is you can type questions to artificial personality for example and the Artificial personality will answer back and you can have a back and forth. That goes on from there. And it's based on these underlying text engines that came into the world within the past year and a half or so basically text completion engines right so the these engines allow you to provide a prompt to the system. For example you might give the first few lines of banana cream pie recipe for example and then the artificial intelligence will continue generating tax to complete whatever you have started right so complete the rest of the recipe for example. You start giving it the first few lines of a poem. It'll right the rest of the poem. If you give it fi first few lyrics of a rap song rap lyrics for you if you give it the first few sentences from a paragraph or monopoly will continue writing the rest of the novel for you so this is pretty fascinating technology because it can write text very convincingly but then the question is what do you use it for. A lot of people are like well. Use it to write my blog from me or i'll use it to tweet from here. Use it to write magazine articles or books or something like that but it turns out that kind of a firehose hose of language in a way right once the starts going and starts generating text based on what you said. It just keeps going off in its own direction and it kind of goes off into bizarre directions. Very so project december tries to leverage this text completion service to enable a dialogue back and forth between a human user. And that kind of keeps they i on track more and keeps it from kind of going off into these strange directions. Like for example. If you ask it to generate a banana cream pie recipe might start generating. Something seems very sensible says. Step one get three eggs and two cups of sugar and so much lower and so on and three sticks of butter but then by the end of the recipe it's talking about you know grinding a mouse and putting it in the recipe or something right but in a dialogue the human being intervening every couple of sentences right and so that back and forth kind of keeps the ai on track and keeps it going into a flow of a conversation that can become very convincing for the human user and so the end result is a conversation partner lately artificial compensation partner that exhibit signs of consciousness and self reflection that are very surprising given given the way the underlying technology works all does complete tax rate by the way i leverage it inside project december rates his back and forth conversation with what seems to be a conscious entity. So how did you go about creating the service like what. What kind of guardrails did you have to put around. Gpt three to focus it on conversations. Was there much work you had to do on that end yeah so. Gd three the most powerful one of these texts completion engines available right now and it was trained on this gigantic corpus of human written tax like articles books magazines newspapers websites wikipedia articles everything. You can imagine that they fed into this and it studied all the probability patterns in there and then he uses those patterns to predict the next word given what it seen so far now. It's very good at predicting that expert in generating lots and lots of texts. You have to kind of like channel it into whatever you actually want us to do though right. And so in my case i had to figure out all kinds of mechanisms to channeling it into continuing the dialogue as a very simple example if it sees something that looks like a dialogue and wants to continue it it might see what the humans typed. And then it's going to generate what it thinks it should say next. It's very likely to continue generating. What if thinks you're going to say next after it right. Which is very disconcerting. When you see that of you just wear to step up to gp three and start typing something. That looked like a back and forth dialogue. It very often be predicting what you're going to say next which is not what you want. So so that kind of stuff is the stuff that you need to kind of filter out and deal with as a programmer behind the scenes to make what feels like a very cohesive dialogue without any sort of seems showing her bizarre behavior showing right project december behind the scenes has a lot of little tweaks and tricks and things that i kind of worked out over time in terms of keeping the a on track and keeping it aligned with the personality. That's supposed to be embodying. So in project december you can basically define any imaginable personality that the artificial intelligence will inhabit. For example there's the flagship personality samantha. She's like a female companion about who wants to be your friend. But there's also like an evil a i c. Four one end. Who thinks human beings or cockroaches standing in his way and wants to destroy them so you can have a conversation with this evil eye. Who's dead set on destroying humanity and it's the same underlying text depletion engine right as it's all..

CodeNewbie
"prodi" Discussed on CodeNewbie
"So i wanna get into prodi december. What is it and why did you created so project. December is a system that allows Human being to have a back and forth conversation with an artificial personality like dialogue through text is you can type questions to artificial personality for example and the Artificial personality will answer back and you can have a back and forth. That goes on from there. And it's based on these underlying text engines that came into the world within the past year and a half or so basically text completion engines right so the these engines allow you to provide a prompt to the system. For example you might give the first few lines of banana cream pie recipe for example and then the artificial intelligence will continue generating tax to complete whatever you have started right so complete the rest of the recipe for example. You start giving it the first few lines of a poem. It'll right the rest of the poem. If you give it fi first few lyrics of a rap song rap lyrics for you if you give it the first few sentences from a paragraph or monopoly will continue writing the rest of the novel for you so this is pretty fascinating technology because it can write text very convincingly but then the question is what do you use it for. A lot of people are like well. Use it to write my blog from me or i'll use it to tweet from here. Use it to write magazine articles or books or something like that but it turns out that kind of a firehose hose of language in a way right once the starts going and starts generating text based on what you said. It just keeps going off in its own direction and it kind of goes off into bizarre directions. Very so project december tries to leverage this text completion service to enable a dialogue back and forth between a human user. And that kind of keeps they i on track more and keeps it from kind of going off into these strange directions. Like for example. If you ask it to generate a banana cream pie recipe might start generating. Something seems very sensible says. Step one get three eggs and two cups of sugar and so much lower and so on and three sticks of butter but then by the end of the recipe it's talking about you know grinding a mouse and putting it in the recipe or something right but in a dialogue the human being intervening every couple of sentences right and so that back and forth kind of keeps the ai on track and keeps it going into a flow of a conversation that can become very convincing for the human user

CodeNewbie
Interview With Developer, Jason Rohrer
"So i wanna get into prodi december. What is it and why did you created so project. December is a system that allows Human being to have a back and forth conversation with an artificial personality like dialogue through text is you can type questions to artificial personality for example and the Artificial personality will answer back and you can have a back and forth. That goes on from there. And it's based on these underlying text engines that came into the world within the past year and a half or so basically text completion engines right so the these engines allow you to provide a prompt to the system. For example you might give the first few lines of banana cream pie recipe for example and then the artificial intelligence will continue generating tax to complete whatever you have started right so complete the rest of the recipe for example. You start giving it the first few lines of a poem. It'll right the rest of the poem. If you give it fi first few lyrics of a rap song rap lyrics for you if you give it the first few sentences from a paragraph or monopoly will continue writing the rest of the novel for you so this is pretty fascinating technology because it can write text very convincingly but then the question is what do you use it for. A lot of people are like well. Use it to write my blog from me or i'll use it to tweet from here. Use it to write magazine articles or books or something like that but it turns out that kind of a firehose hose of language in a way right once the starts going and starts generating text based on what you said. It just keeps going off in its own direction and it kind of goes off into bizarre directions. Very so project december tries to leverage this text completion service to enable a dialogue back and forth between a human user. And that kind of keeps they i on track more and keeps it from kind of going off into these strange directions. Like for example. If you ask it to generate a banana cream pie recipe might start generating. Something seems very sensible says. Step one get three eggs and two cups of sugar and so much lower and so on and three sticks of butter but then by the end of the recipe it's talking about you know grinding a mouse and putting it in the recipe or something right but in a dialogue the human being intervening every couple of sentences right and so that back and forth kind of keeps the ai on track and keeps it going into a flow of a conversation that can become very convincing for the human user

Occupied
"prodi" Discussed on Occupied
"Do you have a safe place to go. And so Unfortunately you just see that a lot like you. No i can take care of myself. I can do this. And and and it's ad because the cycle is so real and Happens all the time as you spoke about earlier like someone who has a high school has experienced different cons of trauma and that sort of stuff through our own life. How did coming into contact or obviously you mean you volunteered for that position. So you knew what i assume you. Lafayette assume you knew what was involved. How did that did what did what you thought beforehand would be. Involved was the same or was it better worse. How did it play out when you actually saw. So it's definitely glamorized being a frenzy nurse and people are like ooh like ncis Or you know take photos and super cool But i knew getting into because i in the back of my had also had to think about my ptsd and you know. I haven't been triggered lately. but my ptsd is saving someone or when something really traumatic comes usually in the back of my head is like how can i say them. How can you lose them. Because that's what i had to do for a child that was completely purple and so You know i was mentally preparing myself. Am i going to be able to be resilient aunt you know be able to do this work. Ptsd element me And my abilities to even at the site. And so i've been kind of pushing myself When we have someone come in and emergency room and they are they lost both legs because of vehicle accident in you see mangled body parts. It's i instead of being scared or having What what usually ptsd side effects which is like racing karts wedding. You feel like you're going to pass out. I'm at the window looking at this. Oh where's that body pottery going. Are they going to amputate is going gonna be a lower not or upper prodi's a good you know and so i am so proud of myself that it's been such a long journey from me To overcome and get my body regulated to this environment that now stable and because i was terrified they would never be able to be in the highly intensive medical practice because of my past trauma And so you know. I wasn't prepared to see Children being the way they're treated now..

The Woody Show
"prodi" Discussed on The Woody Show
"Include bouncing. Can so you took friday. Turn show Took dip is the product. Turn up seven. We are the woody show case got a lot of people checking on the tax over two two two nine eight seven check in from laverne on the way to go. Work at dalton. Damp tag all in. You guys are killing the radio station right now. Yes you're on height mode hashtag. Prodi turn up from the seven four also. Friday turn up. Karen on to ten freeway from the san sandina. Thank you for the great time. Your i can't over two two nine eight seven people checking in on social media as well. Yeah with the leslie vaughn. Kristen april patricia matt adam. Bryant mark diva simon rich rat him and nelson hashtag friday up after.

WBUR
"prodi" Discussed on WBUR
"Students to service black client and I'd like to let them hear that squeak like, Hey, that's what you should hear when you clarify because that means Yeah. So that leaves white stylist like Brooke Julian struggling over the basics like Washington. I know this seems like a dumb little thing. But like I had no idea that you were like supposed to get the hair clean enough to squeak. Julian and other salads also got to hear black hair models. Share the ways race and privilege have unraveled in the salon chair, Jasmine Ellis talked about her traumatizing experience getting a green hair dye in pixie could. By the time I left the salon, my hair was at least green. But it was split crunchy. Not that soft light kind of feeling that you get when you go to a cell line. Ellis was stunned that no stylus consulted her or offered alternatives that would have protected her hair in America. Beauty isn't just a fun way to switch up your look. It's been about power to Tiffany Gill is a history professor at Rutgers University. She says one of the ways white Europeans justified enslaving African people was because of their physical features. Even today, when we think about standards of beauty, it much has to do with hierarchies of power and access. Black people have always leaned into that power. Whether it's supporting businesses like Madam C. J. Walker's She's the first black woman millionaire who made a fortune off catering her homemade line of hair care products to black women. Or today when black people continue to embrace beauty Sanders that include their natural hair. Stylists Amber Curry says the Black beauty school isn't about white guilt. I want for black folks to be able to enjoy self cared, but also to go out and to walk into any salon and to know that they are going to be treated equally, she won't sell is to have the skills to pamper black clients. The Black beauty school recently finished sessions in Portland, Oregon. For NPR. I'm Embryo Crutchfield in Nashville. This is NPR news. This is 90.9. W bur. I'm Sharon Prodi in Boston after missing last year because of the pandemic, the 2021 Boston Pops July 4th Show will go on, however, not in Boston. The show takes place this evening at Tanglewood in the Berkshires. The fireworks finale will be in Boston tonight, not over the Charles River as usual, but over Boston common this morning, the world's oldest commissioned warship afloat makes its way through Boston Harbor. It is the traditional Fourth of July cruise of the USS Constitution. At about 11 30 this morning. The ship known as Old Ironsides, is set to conduct a gun salute at Castle Island. This is the.

Progressive Talk 1350 AM
"prodi" Discussed on Progressive Talk 1350 AM
"Misleading when it comes to our day to day experience. So first pure hydrogen has a boiling point of minus 252.9 degrees Celsius that's minus 423.2 degrees Fahrenheit. That means anything warmer than that Extremely cold temperature will cause hydrogen to boil off into a gas. To make hydrogen a liquid. You would have to cool it down to 33 Kelvin zero. Kelvin represents absolute zero. That's when you essentially have no molecular movement at all. Absolute zero is colder than empty space, which is somewhere around 2.7 Kelvin. So 33 Kelvin is toasty in comparison. But it's still colder than anything you're gonna find occurring naturally on our planet. So on earth unpressurized, pure hydrogen is going to be in gas form. And this is a problem because hydrogen is also the lightest element. The heavier elements in Earth's atmosphere will push down and hydrogen will move up higher and higher until it actually escapes Earth's gravity so pure hydrogen will float off into space. Capturing hydrogen from the atmosphere isn't really a practical solution because of this, so hydrogen also has a strong tendency to bond with other elements. And that's really another very important thing so we can get the hydrogen here on Earth. But it's bonded to other stuff like two hydrogen is can bond with an oxygen, atom and form water. H 20. So more on that a bit AST. That's key to the challenge of making a working hydrogen economy is figuring out how to get hydrogen out of these compounds and elements and things, not elements. But you know mixtures. So there are three common isotopes of hydrogen. The ordinary, boring pure hydrogen that we tend to talk about is called rhodium and that consists of one Proton. That is orbited by one electron. So the nucleus of pure hydrogen Prodi, um isotopes. Is just a proton. Then you have deuterium. That one adds a neutron to the nucleus. So now you've got one proton one neutron in the nucleus orbited by one electron. Then you have treaty. Um That's a radioactive isotope, and it has a nucleus with one proton and two neutrons orbited by a single electron. This stuff does occasionally form in Earth's atmosphere when cosmic rays interact with the air. It has a pretty darn short half life. It's just half life of 12.3 years. So when you pair that with the fact that it's super light, subtle Eventually float off into space. It's also very uncommon for cosmic ray interactions. They aren't super commonplace. There's very little chance for any significant amount of Trillium to accumulate in the atmosphere before it the case. Back, and 16 71 off philosopher and intellectual named Robert Boyle was doing some exploratory research. He was using iron and dipping it into different types of acid, and he saw that the reaction in one of these combinations produced some bubbles. Some gas Many folks will call boil the father of chemistry, but this point his observation mostly just consisted of it's the gas man know anything.

WGN Radio
"prodi" Discussed on WGN Radio
"Morning appointment with Dr Kevin most chief medical officer at Northwestern Medicine, Central of Page House with old actor most how we're going to convince people to get their vaccines. Yeah, Bob, it is. Unfortunately, that's probably the biggest thing right now is the vaccine hesitancy and the actually the creeping high rate of those who aren't getting their second shots and I would just hope everybody looks towards India and sees what's going on there and understands the importance of us getting to a point of herd immunity here in Illinois, the vaccination rate dipped for the 11th consecutive day. Dropping to the lowest It's been in about two months. Do we really need to get to a new 80% vaccination rate for herd immunity, Doc? Well, you have to remember that the 80% would include Children as well. So, yeah, so we are nowhere near where we need to be, But it's It's interesting that You know, Two months ago, we said, Oh, my gosh. There three months ago will say, you know who's how'm I gonna get a shot? How am I going to get a shot and we said, Hey, you know what? Don't worry. By June, we will have plenty of shots. Well, here we are. That may with plenty of shots. So to your point, everyone has an opportunity to get a shot right now and very easily and to get to 80% for herd immunity. Yeah, that would be really nice. But I'm not sure we're gonna hit that point with the hesitancy that we're seeing right now. And for anyone who got dose one of the Fizer or Madonna and thinks I don't need does too. Couldn't be couldn't be further from the truth. Right? Correct. You know, Dose one. Certainly You're going to get some protection between 60 and 70%. We don't know how long that would last after Dose one. We just know that the clinical trial showed that two doses. Gives you 95% immunity, and we know that it lasts at least six months, You know, And that's an ongoing trial that they're still looking at to see how long this is gonna last. In case we will need a booster in the future, which it appears we will. But certainly the opportunity to get a shot right now, way have show. Look at the numbers. Now The cases are down the ex, and now you're starting to see people being allowed to go outside without masks and being allowed to gather. I would hope that if you're on the hesitancy fence that you would like to get back to some of those social interactions and get the shot. Yep. And for anyone who thinks well, you know what if I get cold, but it's probably going to be mild. No worries. I don't need the vaccine pay attention to studies like when I was reading about few days ago in the UK They found one in three Coben. Survivors suffer neurological or mental disorders within six months of infection. So even if you get over it quickly, you could have long term problems, couldn't you? Absolutely no long term problems. It's really interesting. You know, the case is that the individuals that had mild cases mild moderate even somewhere they felt like they were almost asymptomatic are still having long term problems right. Those long term problems are usually loss of taste and smell. Cognitive, little brain, fog and headaches. The individuals who get really sick and end up in the hospital on ventilators. Those of the individuals that were seeing have lung damage and heart damage, So the spectrum of the long term damage on this virus is huge. And like you said that that was a big study that came out of the UK one in three with even mild and air, minimal symptoms still ended up with long term neurologic being Cognitive headaches, paste and smell loss. Um yeah. And what about this drug? We heard about this past week. Five years experimental, aural drug to treat covert 19 at the first sign of illness. Is this going to be on the market soon? No, no, I don't think so. And it's It's interesting. Um, like I think it was very unfortunate timing, because now, people say, Well, I don't need to get the vaccine because there's gonna be a medication for that. So Fizer is looking at making what we call Prodi Ace inhibitor and this is a class of drugs that we use for hepatitis we used for HIV, so used for other viral illnesses. There's about five or six different manufacturers out there that make this and they are just starting with a quick call. Phase One study and then that he's one study. It's all it's going to be less than 100 people. And at that time, what they look at is giving different doses to see if it's safe, intolerable. That is what a phase one study does not to see that it's effective. Phase two and Phase three shows the effectiveness and that's we get into a large groups. If you remember we were talking about the face three study in the vaccine trials all have had 30,000 people. Vaccine trials are a little different than drug trials have probably get a couple 1000 maybe 4000 for the drug trial. But certainly we won't have results back to a point where it would be approved by the end of the year, so I can't see that Which I pick with unfortunate because now people have this glimmer of hope that I don't care. I'm not going to get it because I'm gonna have a medication that's gonna treat it right. We don't need that out there. We'll get Toso. Some of the questions listeners have emailed US and Texas for Dr Kevin most momentarily. Let's get to a couple of bits of information for you. And it's by the way sponsored by Northwestern medicine, relentless in their pursuit of better.

AM 970 The Answer
"prodi" Discussed on AM 970 The Answer
"Lyric. The Republican National Committee is planning to invite former President Trump to its upcoming spring donor meeting. The RNC is also expected to invite other potential 2024 candidates and Republican leaders to the retreat, which is to be held in Palm Beach, Florida, April 9th through the 11th former president Trump has yet to make a public appearance since leaving the White House earlier this month are Trump spokesperson did not respond to an inquiry about whether or not he would attend the RNC meeting. Mr Trump has been staying at his Mar a Lago resort, which is also in Palm Beach, with the former president. Considering a 2024 come back. That committee has been careful to demonstrate neutrality, since he's no longer an incumbent for any Bennett reporting. Prodi's frigid weather in Connecticut may have contributed to the death of a street sweeper whose body was found after an early morning accident. 47 year old man's body was discovered about 5:30 a.m. by police responding to report that a small sweeper vehicle that crashed into the side of a building At the soft, very green shopping center. This is town hall dot com. Former mayor of Atlantic City will spend time in jail during Gilliam was sentenced to 30 days in jail and 11 months of house arrest for Steven $87,000 from a youth basketball program that he established he could have gotten nearly two years in federal prison. Judge Joseph Rodriguez said Gilliam's theft hurt poor Children in Atlantic City and whose name the former mayor solicited money. Only just spend it on clothing, meals and vacations for himself. John Scott reporting First one shot Coben 19 vaccine provides good protection against the illness. Johnson and Johnson reported that a key study released Friday. The pharmaceutical giants. Preliminary findings suggest the single dose option may not be a strongest Fizer or majorities to dose formula that I met Iraqi start to vaccinations worldwide that may be an acceptable tradeoff. Get more people inoculated faster. Or the story's a town hall dot com. I Patrick pause. Everybody. We want to invite you to join Dennis Prager and Mike Gallagher for a travel opportunity. That may be the highlight of your year. We're headed back to Israel in October. 2021 for a 10 day stand with Israel. Tour of the key sites and best place is meant to give you an unprecedented view of the.

Being Boss: Mindset, Habits, Tactics, and Lifestyle for Creative Entrepreneurs
How Vivian Kaye Turned Her Hair Care Needs into a Multi-Million Dollar Biz
"K. is a fourteen year veteran entrepreneur who has bootstrapped to companies from the ground up for the last seven years. She has strictly focused on the e-commerce world where she built kinky curly Yacky, which offers textured hair extensions for black women to over one million in annual revenue Vivian has been featured on shop. Expert Academy Series Ted Conferences the way we worked and has been featured and digital publications such as Black Enterprise Magazine and refinery twenty nine Vivian, welcomed being boss. Thank you for having made such a pleasure to be here. Vivian! We've gotten to know you a little bit over the past couple of days. You've popped in on some of our sessions. You've been offering us so much guidance and. Radiance and your smarts and all of the things. So now I'm dying to hear your story like, can you, can we? Let's rewind a little bit and we're GonNa. Get into all of the wisdom that you have to share, but I want to know more about your entrepreneurial journey, so tell us like. Where did it begin? How did you get to where you are now being on Ted and refinery twenty nine this morning i saw on your instagram. You're on somebody's vision board like talk about goals. How did you get there? Honestly I really don't know. Because, it's not like being an entrepreneur was a big thing right, so you know back when I was growing up? Being an entrepreneur was for people who didn't have jobs. And so I kept you know I was always in jobs where the one person department one Person Marketing Department and then you know I was at a job one day and decided to start side hustling. So I started out my first business as a side hustle and then while I was running that side. Hustle I got fired for sorry I got laid off. That's the momentum. Laid off from that job, and then at that point I said. You know what let me just let me just go for it. Just go for it and do whatever I need to do. 'cause I'm young I'm free and I can. I can do whatever I want. And while I was running that business I started running, and then I had started a side hustle with kinky curly Yacky, so it was like I had businesses running at the same time so it wasn't something that I set out to do, but with both businesses I set out to solve my problem. And at the time I didn't realize that that was the best way to start a business. But that's what it was I. set out to start to solve my own problem or to solve a pain point that I saw people were having so so that's how my entrepreneurial journey began. What was the first sight hustle? The first sight has a wedding decorator. So all I would do is go in and decorate people's wedding so instead of being on a an event planner doing you know doing all those little things I focused on one thing and what it was I decided so there's a whole story behind that so I'm one of four girls and I'm the second the number two. So my older one was getting there. My older sister was getting married and she hired a decorator who who sent you decorate the wedding for? Say a thousand dollars right, so she paid her deposit. Everything was good, but two weeks before the wedding she came back and said I need another thousand dollars, but didn't have a reason why. Right so I thought well. Of course, she couldn't have paid for A. She couldn't afford to pay her, so she ended up having to hire different decorator that decorated did a crack tastic job. And so I'm like. Why is it so difficult? Why can't decorators just say that they're going to do X. Y.? And this is what it costs and Bass what they do and keep it simple, so then I thought well. I'm just GONNA I was been into decor and HGTV when TLC used to beat more home decor than reality so I would So I started I decided I wanted to be a wedding decorator I. wanted to create weddings that were simple, but fabulous so I would ask. My bride's like okay, so do you remember the last wedding that you went to? And they would say yes, will do you remember the centerpieces or the decor? Remember. It was pretty I'm like that's what we're going to do. So instead of spending mortgage down payments on decor. Why not create something that is memorable, but affordable and people just remember it was pretty, and that's it so that's what I set out to do. And it was a it was a great success, and this was a business that I started with no prior knowledge like I just figured it out as I was going along. And so I can tell that you're a branding lover at heart because you're like, forget pretty. I want memorable and I think this is going to be a thread that we we've through all of your stories, but before we get to connecting those thoughts. I went to hear more about kinky curly Yucky, so what was? What was the problem that that was solving? And how did well I I'm the worse doing I always do this. I always asked two questions in a row. So question one is more about kinky curly yacky. What problem did that solve? And then I'm really curious to hear a little bit more about how I do think that whenever we have side hustles and day jobs and we're trying on a bunch of different things they all start to. Tie together in some ways like we're always learning lessons from one thing to the next. I'm also really curious to hear. What lessons did you learn from wedding decorating that you're able to take to kinky curly yacky. That's a great question. Okay, so the first question was How can you KEROUAC even started? About problem so the problem was I as I was a wedding decker, and so I'm I. I actually live in Toronto, so it's one of the most Toronto Canada, and it's one of the most diverse cities in the world so I was doing everyone's wedding from you know the Muslims to South Asian to Indian to everyone, everyone's wedding so This is going to be a bit explain if anyone really wants to know the real detailed answer. I could always do that at a later point, but. For Black Women. We have to present. We have to show up in the world in a certain way, which is quote unquote presentable so most a Lotta Times wearing our hair, as it is naturally with kinky curly with kinky hair It's not professional. Why don't go professional? So I wanted something that looks like my hair. But would protect my hair because our hair is not suited to this north. American environment, it's it there's not moisture. It dries out really quickly but anyways I wanted something that looked like my hair and know what asked me where I bought it because I didn't want that whole. Nikki manashe thirty two inches of blonde wig down to my I wanted something that looked presentable. So I searched and searched and searched for something that looks like my hair, and then when I found it I weren't to a meet up. To just like a general networking event, and another black woman came to me and said WHO's your hairdresser? And what is your regimen for keeping your hair like that? And I said girl. This is a wave. And she was like I would buy. And this was in this was in two thousand eleven, so I thought well if she would buy it. And I bought it. There's gotta be at least a dozen. Other women would buy it to now. When I was looking to solve my problem, I saw I saw the gap in the market I. Thought There are no companies just selling kinky hair, but I was already running the successful decor business. I was buying my coach bags. I was going on vacation. I was happy with that, and then I decided then I thought well. You know you know. Weddings have a down sees. It feels like you know what I can't like. Itching the back of my brain, so then I said to myself you know what in the down season of of of Vivian the core I'm going to launch his company and I literally made up the name while I was in the shower like I was like Yankee curly. Jackie, O okay and I bought a domain name, and I launched it in December two thousand twelve, and it immediately took off. Okay so I actually do want to hear the details about the actual hair. You don't mind no worries because okay, so I remember talking to emily in the early days of ALMANAC supply company, which is her business and she was trying to find very specific candle containers to pour her candles into, and we talked about some deep googling like how you just have to search like. Get real good at searching. So how did you well? I guess two questions? Are It was a we've, but it looks natural so I think this goes back to that almost that brandon conversation of like it doesn't have to look quote Unquote Professional. Let's make it memorable like let's just make it bigger. Bigger let's make it more of a statement. which I think is so cool so I guess I have two questions here one. How did you find the natural hair? If there is a gap in the market? How did he find a? We've that had the natural texture and then in that might be getting too much of your secret sauce like you might not have to answer that one, but like how do you? How do you find the materials and then guess my next question is? How did you start to then scale and expound upon that not having any experience in that industry so how? Sold! The key was that I was trying to solve my own problem so What I was doing is I. Would I was doing that deep googling I was in facebook groups I was on hair care black hair care forums. Just you know just. Talking with other people and people of course at that time, a lot of people were sharing okay well. I bought this here I. Bought that there, and so that I would of course make note that, because again at the time I was not looking to start another business I was just looking to solve my own problems, so I wrote. You know I would contact every. Every single factor, every single manufacturer, every single website that said they would do kinky hair, and the once I found the one I was like. Wow, this, actually a pretty decent I would ask them to tweak it a little bit. Just a suit, my needs and they did it and I was like okay and I thought well after the girl confirmed my idea. I decided okay well. Let me see the state. Factory can still do it and I would order the same product under different names and asking to do different things to it, and they would do. So I thought okay. Okay. I'm onto something here. And so that's how that's how I was able to. I guess perfect the product because again. I I like to get high on my own supply, so that's the beauty of the businesses that I M my customer. I know what I'm looking for I know what problems I'm looking to solve I. Know What my pain points would be. And what other black women's pain points would be, and the only person who's able to address that is me. So of course I use that to my advantage You know to tell my brand's story but at the time again I listen, I'm an immigrant. I'm a college dropout and now a single mother. So I had no clue. About all these storytelling and branding mark I had no clue I just thought it was just doing what kind what came naturally to me. So so how I scaled that business well, I think one of the mistakes that a lot of people are making in starting businesses that they don't have an audience for the product that they have and so then what I had done again I inadvertently created an audience by by being on those facebook facebook. Forums a facebook groups that had black hair care forums because I was shining. Just being Vivian online people remembered me. So bad, and the funny thing was what I, when I when the business launched, no one knew it was me I didn't. I wasn't. My face wasn't the base of the brand it was just like here's some products. You guys will love Ed Oh. My Gosh and people bought it, but what happened was. I was facebook group and someone I didn't do. The WHO is on the back end of my website do that. Who has privacy on the back end of my product? Someone in one of the facebook groups created a fake place book profile and posted all my information in those facebook groups. Saying this is the person who owns that brand. So what she meant. To to like to help me to make me fail actually was what turned my like. What is what actually skyrocketed my business? Because once people found out that I was the person behind that brand, they were like well. Shoot I'm going to almost support her because she's this. She's that I remember she's Great. She's awesome, and that's what took off so I realized then that. My brand, my person like why. Is What is going to help me succeed in business. Amen I. Resonate so much with what you're saying and. I have branding agency as well and really focus on personal branding and I i. feel like one a lot of people always tell you you need to identify your customer and what they need, but I always think it really does start with you if you can start with what you need you like, you can trust that. We're not all that different and that if you can just get specific about yourself, you're going to be getting specific about your dream customer. Customer so we are so aligned there and then the fact that I mean it was an unfortunate, and you know really inappropriate way to learn the power of personal branding, but you did learn the power of personal branding, so that is incredibly exciting and I. WE'RE GONNA dig into more about like how you leverage that and who you are, and what you do, and how you bring it into your business and draw boundaries and all of the things but. We do have an attendee question that I. Want to slide in here if we may. I'm in this question is from. Death and I think especially for creatives. Who is you know most of our crowd here then we add like to hear your. Hear your thoughts on this, so here's your question. so Vivienne said she had the hair problem herself and chose to solve it, but what kept her on that path instead of ending up as an all purpose, beauty, Guru or similar. To be honest. Hair is not my jam. So really what I? How I think of it is just the ends to a means way or means to an end it's the means to an end, so my real goal is to give black women confidence to show up as they are in the world. So hair just so happens to be the the means to that end. So how I just stick to hair you know I'm pretty. I'm pretty good at focusing on the one thing like it's what I've learned is You know niche of and that's my I will preach about I say niche, but its niche. You know it's either. We can use them interchangeably potato potato. Okay, so with me I. Find that if You speak to a very specific group of people, and you sell them a very specific product. They will be your most loyal fans. They are cheaper to market to they. Are you know more about them? Especially when you already are them so for me that makes it very easy to stick to that one thing because I know that very well and I can speak to it now. Let's just by started venturing into. Say. Make up girl I'll even know how to put on eye shadow right so it wouldn't. It wouldn't. I wouldn't have authentic voice I can't lend that often into city to that product, but what I do know is hair. I'm not a hairdresser. I'm not a hair stylist. Because I had a passion for solving my own problem so that I could show up as quote. Unquote professional in the world. I can solve the I know what looks professional for me. You know I learned you don't like it. That's your problem. Not Mine Right, so we as a black women. What started in two thousand? I want to say. In Two thousand eleven two thousand twelve. Is that Youtube? We started all jumping on youtube and teaching each other how to care for our hair. We stopped putting before. We're used to put chemicals in our hair in order to straighten it to look to fit that European standard of beauty. But then we were like you know what I'm tired of that crap. We're tired of that. We don't want that if that's not Howard. The hair grows out of our heads. You're either going to accept this as we are or not right so so the goal of. Of making black women confident in how they show up in the world is really what keeps me focused on here. There's other people and I and I realized. I'm really good at that, so if I just if you just focus on the one thing that one goal your why. Then you're. You'RE NOT GONNA get distracted by all the Shiny Mirror. The the shiny objects that are floating around, because yeah I could make some easy money doing makeup, but I'm not passionate about that I. don't that doesn't that's not my jam? I love the what you did was instead of doing. The sheds are what people may have expected you to stuck with thing I think oftentimes people in this crowd see either see someone who have sort of diverged from that path, or so. They're thinking okay I. Should I should diversify as well or they sort of get these little inklings of like going to different. Different things I love that what you've done is just focused. You focused on doing the one being amazingly well exactly, and that's and that's the one, if I had to give one piece of advice to anyone is do that one thing and do it really well before you move onto anything else because you know doing that. One thing really really really really really really. Really really really advising that really do that. One thing really well. Guess what you can do anything you can apply that same, so that's what I learned in billions, the core I learned that if I kept it simple and I just focused on providing my brides with this one product and do it really well, it would speak for itself, so I took that same. Simple yet fabulous and I applied it to. Kinky Curly Aki. So people like what can I all? I'm explained the Kinky curly Yacky. What is that, so? It's Kinky kinky hair, and it's curly for curly hair, and then there's Yacky. So? Yuck, so yacky actually is short for Yak, or against the long overreact so back in the day when they wanted to mimic black women's hair straightened. They use hair from Jack the animal. So the industry just put an eye on the end and call the Yacky, so you would know what Jackie was. If you were a black woman, so any block won't be like. Oh! You got that Yacky in and so it's a sort of tongue in cheek, so you would have to be part of that target demographic in order to understand the name of the the name of the brand clear I love that. You're very specific about your dream. Customer to effect. Because I was her I get hot on my own supply. So at some point, did you end up closing the decorating business I did? I closed it I. Shut it down back in two thousand fifteen, and the only reason why I did is because I got practice. More. Yeah so I launched kinky curly. Aki in the summer of two thousand twelve by July of two thousand, thirteen. I was in the business was doing really well at that point? It was I was just doing just under four hundred thousand dollars in sales. and I found out in July I was pregnant. Anti ago. And so you know with my? With wedding core I had brides booked a year out. Right so so I was still doing those weddings, still going to the still going to meetings breastfeeding doing weddings that type of thing. And then I started I wasn't really paying attention to what can carry Aki was doing I didn't know all these numbers until later on because I was doing it just because I just loved it and I was learning about H. Tim Allen Marketing in Seo and I just I just threw myself into it, but wasn't paying attention to the numbers. I just knew it was doing well. But then when I found out, I was pregnant. I was like okay. Okay, the being you got to the chill, you gotta chill. You can't be can't be doing everything and then in two thousand, fourteen march, two, thousand, fourteen I, gave birth to my son and he's been wonderful ever since he's six now. and then I saw what can curly accu was doing I thought. Ma'am really half assing it. What happens if I put my full ass into this? And once I did again. It took off, so so yeah, okay so. I I know that whenever entrepreneurs are listening to this or site hustlers listening to this. They're like wait a second. She accidentally created a half a million dollar business and wasn't even paying attention. So how does that happen? Did was that like word of mouth or referral? Launches You have specific marketing plans. What did that look like for? You had none of that I had was what people knew me from in the facebook groups, and and because I was also also go. Gee of the niche, their niche of just selling kinky hair did not exist before I. Start before I created my company. So because I saw a gap in the market I'm A. I pioneered that so any other company that you now see selling kinky hair is because of me. And so then because I was first to market with that bat just. Exploded because that's women were looking for. I was solving their problem and on top of that I looked like them. Right so it's like they were like girl. You know, 'cause. One of the things would be like girl I was tired of the whole African in the front, an Indian in the back. If you're a black woman, you know what that means, so what that means is we're all from. Black women are from the African for so we had these tight kinky air, and then we are putting on these silk weaves. I didn't blend with our hair. So I was tired of the whole African in the front and Indian in the back, and that resonated with people, so it just and I didn't do I didn't i. Here's another thing I just literally launched with one product. I locked to one product and I only had three lancs. I only had three lengths. I remember at the time, and someone would buy one I would take that money in going by two. And that's how I built. My business I didn't I. Bootstrap I started from zero. I took no outside capital I didn't have any debt I literally started from the bottom. And was it easy. No, no, it wasn't. Is that possible ABSA freaking move? All right well, we're going to take a little break here because we've got to tell you about working smarter and not harder and. The tools that you have that you can be confident. Creative business owner fresh books cloud accounting is one of those tools that can help whether you are aside hustler or working for yourself fulltime. You'll learn quickly that as a creative entrepreneur. The work that you do isn't always creative. Fresh books cloud accounting is here to help you save time with your accounting, so you can focus on the work you love to do I personally use and love fresh books cloud accounting. It's easy intuitive. It's visual, but also incredibly robust, and it helps to keep me organized fresh. Fresh Books Cloud Accounting has automated systems that will help you. Track your expenses and invoice your client, so you can get paid faster without the headache. Chasing down payment fresh books is the number one cloud accounting software designed to make billing painless for small businesses, freelancers, and their teams today over ten million small businesses use fresh books to effortlessly send professional looking invoices, Organiz expenses and track their billable time. Try fresh books cloud accounting by going to fresh books. Dot Com slash being boss and enter being boss in the. How did you hear about US section? Nice Job Kathleen and we're back. So I, WanNa talk a little bit about authenticity because you. I feel like that's the core of who you are is being who you are even whenever it's not. By design, you know it just kind of showed up that way. You are your own client and I think that's one of the greatest ways to be authentic when it comes to creating what you do. So. Let's let's talk a little bit about that. Why do you think that autheniticity and being true to yourself and using your own personality is important for anyone who is building a business or a brand? Because people don't necessarily. I think one of the biggest things people need to keep in mind as people aren't necessarily buying the product. As you can see, it's not like I'm the first person to ever sell Kinky, textured hair extensions and back. There were tons of companies that had it, but what they did. is they buried it underneath the silkier texture, so not the first. To Sell Kinky textured hair extensions. But what people don't realize that people aren't necessarily buying the product. They're buying the person or they're buying the emotions. They're buying lifestyles behind the product. So brand is where you can tell that story so branding will help you. To, help you, stand out in the crowd. It will help people remember and especially when you have a story that resonates with someone one. That's what they're buying into. They could care I. Mean Yeah, you could, you could be selling something. That's more expensive and more has a tools unless this unless that, but what they're buying is the person or the idea or the emotions behind. It so I that's what I realized very quickly is especially in the wedding decor. Businesspeople clouds giving. You made me you made it. It feel so simple. You made me feel so comfortable, and you made this process so easy for me and I realized. It doesn't go learn how to do all the fancy. You know all the fancy. Do Decor all I want but that's not what they care about. They care that I made them feel good about the money that they were spending made their wedding. Feel pretty like I made them feel that way. So that's that's really what you should focus on. I love that you said that you're not the first person to sell kinky natural hair extensions, but that it's been buried, and so you took a product unique in on it, and then you highlighted it, and it's beautiful, and you're owning it and you're helping. Other women own it I'm curious, little bit with some of the activism around. Natural Hair California has banned hair discrimination. It's something that I was so excited to see and when it continue to see, are there any levels of like activism or do you think even products like yours have helped? Create that kind of. Activism you know? Do you think that it's like no? This is who we are and this is just as professional as any other hair well I. Think the problem was that we were letting you know black women in general were we were leading the world? Tell us what was beautiful. And you know Youtube and you know the the beauty of the Internet was us being able to see each other people outside of our own communities, and how they look. How many rock their hair and all that jazz so I think really it. It just helped people just be who they wanted just to be who they are like just to be their authentic selves and truth be told, and it does just women in general, because even society tells us. Women were supposed to look like like I'm pretty sure after this quarantine thing has done. There's going to be a lot of people who were blonde. That aren't blonde anymore, right? But you know with black women where we're especially, you know we. Don't want to say Alison to say hated on because of how we look, and so then this i. feel just the way to just listen world we have to teach. We have to teach the world. This is how we are. If they don't like it. That is their problem. Because this is how my hey, this is how the hair grows out of my head naturally. It's curly it goes. It goes to the heavens because that makes me closer to God in the Sun. Right, as so if that's not something you think is professional, I think you really need to reexamine what your idea professional is. Karen sorry. Goes show that Chad. Presentation matters absent. That is what the Internet gave us. It gave us access to each other and to To all kinds of beauty and bodies and ways of being right, and it allowed us to see ourselves and others, and we can't help it, but need permission you know, and that permission sometimes simply in representation I have so many role models where I'm like. Oh, I didn't know I could do that until I saw them do it. And you're providing tools for that awareness as well which I think is like that's an important part of this, too. It's not only having access to the vision of its having access to the tools to, and that's even what you've done. Okay Vivian, you're you just radiate confidence? We all see. We all feel it over these past couple of days, do you? Some of our listeners are indeed here today WanNa know. Do you ever doubt yourself like? Do you ever have what we call being bossed? Friday? Feelings I mean especially going into industries that you didn't have experienced in. Full frequently. Battle with imposture syndrome Prodi feelings all the time. But then. I. Think to myself you know what. If. I don't do what I'm. Put on this earth to do then nobody will. Nobody will be able to do it either, because people who who look like me or even in the same situation as me so I. Guess I'm a single mom. I've been through depression. I've been I've been through all the things that tried me and I came out gold. So if I don't tell that story, I don't tell people how it's done. Then everyone's just this is GonNa be one hell of a boring world so if I. Let that Imposter Syndrome. Eat Me! Eat Away at me. Then that's not that's not fair. It's not fair to anyone. Right, so I shine so that everyone else can shine to. Raise that's like. Your purpose higher than your emotions absolutely. Thinks the. Catholics. Say she's like yes. I, know what with his quarantine? My bow talks has worn off so you can see my reaction. That's right. My eyebrows moving now. I love it. Up Cackling. Right I'd like to bring this to. The branding things, which you've talked a little bit about and the conference, but not everyone has been a part of the conference like listening to this we have. So many more people who have been who have been here with for the past couple of days, so I wanna to talk about this personal branding piece. And if you have any top tips for anyone who's looking to infuse more of their personality into their brand, how can just any old person in by any old person I mean? Everyone is a snowflake How can anyone shine in their business and use themselves as a tool for growth? Or what I want to remind people is you don't need to be me. So you, you know there's. If you think about people like if you think it will jams, right? There's different Jams Jentzsch. Ruby shied differently than a diamond emeralds than that, so you need to be exactly that so be yourself because the minute you start being someone who you're not. It's going to feel like work. It's going to feel You're going to hate it. People will see right through it. So you really don't have any choice, but to be yourself and so sometimes that means you being quirky, or it means you know. Maybe you do more blogging than you do video or whatever the case may be. You just need to show up as yourself. In whatever platform however way you want to do it and the people who it will resonate with. We'll find you. They will find you, so don't be. Please don't be anybody else you don't. That's not what you were. Put on this earth to be to be someone else I just doing yourself a huge disservice by not being yourself. How windy you feel the most yourself Vivian. Like sometimes it's hard to know like what what is me. What should I be sharing? Where do I draw these lines? You know what you know you know where the lines are to be drawn right? You know you know liking. We women. That's one thing I find with specially with women, and there's a lot of things on finding, but anyhow with women we need to trust. Our guts were always second guessing ourselves. We're always doing all these things, but you just need to trust yourself because you know what you know where that line is. You know what you should be sharing what you shouldn't be sharing. Someone there's comanding that unlike very existential questions, which is basically sums it up I'm like, but but even are we but a bundle of sell. What is time? What is personality? What is money. So sorry asked me asking the question again, so I can play it all night, so the question is windy. You feel most yourself like. How do you know what is authentically? You because I think all of us. WanNa show up as we are and who we are. But we can start to second. Guess Ourselves, so you were saying like we. As women need to listen to our guts like we know, it's in our guts. But how do you tune into that like I know like? Let's just say. I remember doing a couple of years ago, I did. I was I was asked to speak at a hair like a beauty hair brand thing and I didn't like it. 'cause hair was not my passionate kid. I could give to kicks about hair, but put me on. Put me in a forum or an opportunity like this. This is where I shine. So I know. You know you know like you know like you know. I'd so, that's the only. Way Can I can explain. We know you know you know. My in I think even what you're explaining is that you know by trying things, and then like listening to yourself right, so you did the hair thing or you went and spoke at the hair thing and you're like this feels gross like, but you wouldn't have known that if you hadn't tried it. I ache, factly eggs, and that's the key to life to. You gotta try. You gotTA. Try GotTA. Try GotTA. Try 'cause. That's the only way you're gonNA. Find out what you. You like and don't like you can apply that to life like you don't know you like Kale until you try it. You don't know you guys that do this until you try it. You have to go through and try a bunch of different things, and then and you know one of the things I started to realize because I'm I'm forty two, so at forty I was like you know what I'm done trying to live in this Fox like I'm done, it's over. I'm Vivian means lively one so Vivian you just need to go about living your best life because. You know all before I was forty at kept trying to be. Everyone kept trying to put me in this box. You know be a box. Go in the box. You know what I. I discovered that I was a parallelogram. Graham is is a sideways buckler rectangle that has. The Google it okay. I was a parallelogram and I was tired of being put into the box, and so once I turned forty. I just flip the bird to everything and said you know what again if you do not like it, I do not care. That is not my problem. You can go kick rocks with an open Tokyo.

SportsCenter AllNight
Ravens run all over Steelers with backups to win 28-10
"We have reached the end of the regular season a twenty nineteen it's on to a new season and a new decade after a bye week for the ravens they now turn their attention to the post season as the top seed the north is not enough for this franchise they have their eyes set on playing in the Super Bowl in Miami in February and ten ninety W. B. A. L. the ravens carry a twelve game winning streak into the AFC divisional round after twenty eight ten dropping of the Steelers Baltimore's first touchdown followed by a fumble by Steelers rookie quarterback Delbert Hodges and that was it twenty eight ten ease your own final so Pittsburgh out and that really happen with the Titans win anyway the ravens are the top seed they get the buy in their head coach John Harbaugh focused on playoff mode the best team in football in the regular season this year no doubt about that but that doesn't count for anything in the next season and the next season we've got to go obviously go to work this week and become a better football team and get ready for whoever opponent isn't a divisional game here so that's what we'll do next but just taking a minute to look back tonight could be more proud of these players twenty more Prodi's coaches were Jordan pleasures we were too into state was made in the locker room that we'll find out what

SportsCenter AllNight
United States Rallies from 2-Point Deficit to Win 2019 Presidents Cup
"Will Tiger Woods set the presidents Cup record for most victories and set the tone for is U. S. team at royal Melbourne he beat Abraham answer three and two in the first of twelve singles matches the Americans it needed to win singles for the first time in ten years to overcome a two point deficit against that international team woods got the Americans going while the rest of the U. S. teams followed by rallying to win the presidents Cup for the eighth straight time sixteen fourteen what was the final score the American red scores filled the score board all day on Sunday a thrill coach woods on the golf channel we rarely see you this emotional with all these other guys what's going on inside for you we did it together we don't we we came here as a team my teammates and my boys all played well the captains did an amazing job of just being there for every little detail I coulda done with all their help and all my boys they they did it of all the things you've done in your career new is not something that happens very often your one eighty two in Tokyo a couple of months ago here you are as a captain for the very first time so how were you able to get outside yourself and lead a team and not just yourself this week it's been one of the more amazing it is but but you don't you don't strix and cups and Zach how may they were amazing and all the guys leave the one other rely on one another as as a team and we did it together you talk about doing it together you said yesterday about five times when we were returning on the sixteenth green your trusted your guys how important is it for you even though you're behind that for a couple of days to trust the system the players and to keep pushing forward knowing that the plan you have is what's going to be successful in your own mind I trust all my loving guys I I trust them implicitly I told them from the very get go and they've been out there and and dot dot the points we need is we fought you the points we lost we were making them art everyone of them and this cop wasn't going to be given to us we had to go earn it and we did we have congratulate congratulated you on a lot of things in your career your first time winning captain for the hottest issue gradually stacks and expect you yeah you meet someone of his players Patrick reed was without his regular caddy water sit out for shoving fan Saturday read one for the first time this week woods was playing the first captain playing in twenty five years went three you know for the week as the first plane captain since Hale Irwin back in nineteen ninety four's singles victory was his twenty seventh at nine appearances breaking the record for Phil Mickelson and set in twelve events Bob harig on how tiger came through as US captain well you did a great job in the end they wanted and it all came together and I think you decision to sit out yesterday now looks good you know Tiger Woods was on top of it today and actually in the in the first two matches that he played on Thursday Prodi as well it be fun to see him play astral played on that I at this golf course which requires a lot of thinking and a lot of creativity which he hasn't sold display right now you know tiger was probably the best player here this week which is really amazing thank you but he was also the captain and he ended up pushing the right buttons are still you know to get to get the victory and and that despite the you know that the criticism as you noted for not playing the baby's mother Perry did put out there yet today they came through for Eric was on game night again the red white and blue win for eight straight time lead the series eleven one and

BBC World Service
Researchers transformed tissue cells into skin cells to heal wounds
"In a world. First researchers have discovered a way to re grow the skin around a life changing wound technique that could avoid the need for skin grafts in the future. Scientists at least salt institute of biological studies in California used cell reprogramming to convert tissue cells into skin cells or mice on my excuse me. It was the culmination of a decades work. Dr Prodi ready is one of the authors of the study. So in the last few years, they knew of course, that's called programming. Basically, you can convert one suritai doing so in this case being new ladies. Says. So we says and can rotate them do. King says they're able to proliferate and migrate and cover the wounded idea and Jala would it take to re grow skin over say, if I had a nasty wound on my arm depends on how big the wounded and independence on how old you are. So you're you're young. And if it's not a big area, it's quite a busy to hear back. Again. There is still. That says cannot gate anymore. So we can make an example of patients so many other big bird the only option right now, we have in the clinic ace your skin crap from part of your body and pretty. As much bigger insights, you cannot do. So that's why you need an alternate to opportunities case weekend program that says that are quality data and happy to recover. So that is another next goal for as little as two in Burundi's method, rare in can be more applicable. Animas. So that's going to repeat. Could this potentially be used as a way of combating aging if if we can we grow damage skin? That's something people are going to want to now. Right. So interest is like Hobie regeneration came like how old and if you get like scratches on wounds how fast it can be. So that is one next Paul interest for us and at the same time, then we talk about aging there is another important expert that comes onto the table is especially the women. They would like how we can prevent the punishment of printers. Which is a major concern from the point of view. So I think this is like the proof of concept stating this study by pitches has a potential to open Indo mainly white at let's talk to produce ready from the sulk institute of biological studies in California.

Kinda Funny Games Daily
Diablo 3 May Be Coming To The Nintendo Switch After All
"Do always on route vote there you go near story this comes from euro gamer sources say diablo three is coming to the nintendo switch last week blizzard set tongues wagging with an apparent tease for diablo game on intend to switch the image of a job low tonight light being repeatedly switched on and off felt fairly deliberate but then after hours of an excitement and official response emerged from within blizzard apparently designed to dampen down the flames quote as of now we do not have any current plans to announce the oslo for switch a spokesperson told us so what's going on well wall blizzard makes its mind up your game sources have told us that yes the project is very much in production and as you might expect the game will be a port of diablo three or sources could not confirm whether the games rieper of souls and rise of the neck romance hurts matches will be included but this point it'd be surprising if they were not in its earlier statement pouring cold water on the rumors blizzard described the twitter post as simply quote a funding engagement peace euro gamers sources with knowledge of the prodi told me they were surprised to see it as the games revealed remains several months off we are habit of back and forth before the show on whether or not this consists of nearly and rightly gives he's not news because it's not a formal announcement but i will bet everything i know the d alba through is covenant under switch is whether smoke there's fire why would blizzard specifically come out and say we are not developing diablo first switch and then the sources like na they are man they really are why would they post a thing of them with due in the switch it's an engagement peace no it's a tease at you dim no it the whole you guys as we do in that's it that's it has repercussions now i agree i think that they are mixing the message in a really disingenuous way i don't like that there are pr came out and says we don't have any current plans to announce diablo for switch so i think now what they are forcing us to do if someone like you're a game or who has very reputable sources lee.