35 Burst results for "SIA"

Decentralized Cloud Storage  MaidSafe and Sia Projects

TheCoinsPost

00:39 sec | 2 months ago

Decentralized Cloud Storage MaidSafe and Sia Projects

"3 p.m. Sunday January 15th, 2023 decentralized cloud storage made safe and see a projects. Blockchain for storage also known as decentralized cloud storage is a new technology in data storage that utilizes blockchain and peer to peer P two P technology to eliminate the need for centralized and physical data servers. Instead of storing data on centralized servers ran by big companies like Amazon, Google, or Microsoft, and Alibaba cloud, decentralized cloud storage. The post decentralized cloud storage made safe and see a projects appeared first on the coins post

Alibaba Amazon Microsoft Google The Post
Ex-prison warden faces trial over inmate abuse allegations

AP News Radio

00:49 sec | 4 months ago

Ex-prison warden faces trial over inmate abuse allegations

"A former federal prison warden has gone on trial for allegations stemming from his treatment of female inmates in a facility known as the rape club. Rhaegar Sia retired from his job at the Dublin California correctional institution. After the FBI found nude photos of female inmates on his government issued phone. The 55 year old Garcia is among 5 staffers charged with molesting several women and forcing them to pose naked in their cells. One of the inmates testified they had intimate contact in a bathroom and said she felt like he cared about her. But then he became increasingly vulgar. Garcia's lawyer says there's no surveillance video showing these encounters, although one of the women alleges Garcia knew to avoid the cameras. I'm Jackie Quinn

Rhaegar Sia Dublin California Correctional Garcia FBI Jackie Quinn
"sia" Discussed on CodeNewbie

CodeNewbie

06:44 min | 7 months ago

"sia" Discussed on CodeNewbie

"I could go back to school and extend the time I can work. So there is a window of time where you can work every time you get a degree in the U.S.. It's one year. And then if you get a stem degree, you get up to three years. Nice. So, you know, you can buy time. So that's what I did. I went back to school. I also worked at the time and I was doing research, I worked as a software development intern for a small business for the business school where I used to go to school, and that was about two years of just picking up what I could get. In the middle of that, I went into this boot camp where I ended up becoming a teaching assistant. And even up to now, develop content for some of the curriculums that they have, and I got this contract to work as a data analyst. So I was able to grow really quickly and became a senior analyst. I became a lead, I became a manager, and so that's actually the last thing I did before this job. So now you are a data engineer at Spotify. What does that mean? For me right now, I joined as part of a new initiative, so it's a situation where technically there is no code based quote unquote, you are kind of doing archeology on what's already there before you build the new thing. So I joined an internal initiative that helps other teams work easier so they have to do a bunch of reporting and billing and stuff like that. And the pipelines that I will get to build are going to help them do those jobs easier. Less matches. Yeah. So other people are probably doing more coding with the same title, but right now I'm in the phase where I'm doing information gathering. I spend most of my days digging through databases asking questions like, what does this mean? Why was this created? So it's a really good way to learn, I think, because I get to go into the unknown sometimes people can ask them my questions because they weren't there. So we have to figure it out together. But it's really fun. I can't wait to code, but I'm not coding yet. So if you're not coding yet, what kinds of things are you doing to kind of prepare for that? So LinkedIn learning. I also use udemy, and then Spotify developed some of its own open-source technologies that I try to spend some of my time reviewing those looking at questions people ask in public forums like the issues they run into, you know. Because if it's by your company, even though it's open-source, the people who use it the most are probably going to know, but that's of things that could happen. So that's also part of my learning. So I know that you studied mathematics and creative writing in undergrad. And so I'm wondering is math a big part of being a data engineer or those two separate disciplines from your experience? It kind of go hand in hand, not necessarily from a one plus one equals two perspective. But thinking logically, being able to connect dots, like if you ever took a linear algebra class, one of my favorite things my professor used to say, math is just about taking a big problem and breaking it into smaller chunks that you know how to solve. That will solve the bigger problem. That makes it sound very not scary. It's not scary. It's not scary. And I don't know how to change this, but one of the things I wish I could do with like a Thanos ring is make people less scared of math because somebody told them it's scary they didn't try it or somebody didn't help them figure it out, you know? I completely agree because I never was really scared of math, but I definitely didn't enjoy it for most of the time that I took math classes in school until I had a really good teacher. Then I had I remember him very well. He his name was Justin. He was a professor, but he had his call with him just. I don't even know what his last name was. And he had a motorcycle. He was very cool. And he just made it really fun. And I was like, wow, maybe I do like calculus. So yeah, I'm with you. I think it's just poorly taught. I think that's really the problem with math. So what are the major technologies that someone should know if they want to get into data engineering? Tools, languages, frameworks that might be useful for people to learn today if they want to start their career in this industry. I will approach your question as a framework. Okay, so if we think about the tasks that you have to learn to be able to contribute to building a system or a pipeline, essentially you are taking data in its role form and finding a way to make it easy to interpret and to use for people who are doing analysis or modeling. So you need to know how to transform it to extract it to load it and maybe to connect it to things. And that's how I tell people to approach landing things, not maybe specific tools because they will evolve, it's a whole zoo out there. There are so many tools. The basics, I would say, is SQL, python, because it's very versatile. And also some form of scheduling orchestration tool like an airflow or something like that. And what is a scheduling tool? So sometimes you might want to complete a set of tasks for your data. And you don't want to do

Spotify U.S. LinkedIn Justin
"sia" Discussed on Mental Illness Happy Hour

Mental Illness Happy Hour

07:14 min | 9 months ago

"sia" Discussed on Mental Illness Happy Hour

"Being the tough guy. And I've had, you know, gang members with shaved heads and the teardrop tattoo. Right. Break down and say that they're tired of living the way they're living and to this day it's one of the safest places that I feel is that day room with these guys that I know if they're riot were to happen, they would protect me. Absolutely. And I feel the same way teaching to male population. They have my back completely. Sweet men. It's like there's this seed in them that is trying to grow. And it just needs it just needs water. It needs love. It does, it does need love. Now, you know, that's not to say I don't occasionally have to kick a couple of these guys out because they're being disrespectful. They're testing. They're testing and I'm not going to put up with their shit. And it scares the fuck out of me to say, hey, listen, you. You go out. Scare the shit out of the first time I had to do it. But they are the overwhelming minority of the group of people that I've that I've encountered, but I want to know about your experience. My experience is, yes, I've met just give me some snapshots of. Well, as far as protecting, for example, one of my students. Was walking out behind me and someone was looking at me and it really didn't feel safe. It was not only lecherous, there was some clearly aggression. And I didn't know how to respond. I mean, it was very momentary. You know, I was just on my way, you know, it was just standing right he was a person who was closest to me, and my student was right behind me and said, keep your head up. To you? To me. And I looked straight in the eyes of the person who was looking at me that way, and that's how I could move on because I was inclined to look down, and if I had looked down, he might have thought I was submissive. And it may have turned the other way. I really don't know, but my student was right there. Helping me in that moment and knew exactly what was going on. And had my back. Give me some other snapshots from your experiences and teaching people. Well, I told you on the way over that I'd have a group with women that have been sexually trafficked. And so I do feel, you know, we all have these different degrees of how we feel useful, right? Which helps us to get up in the morning, right? So when I teach half a yoga to the general population, I feel well, you know, there's a lot of people that can do that a lot better. Well, it's yoga. But our programs are trauma informed so we don't use any commands, it's quite different, and there's always a discussion. There's always the most important little hatha or something. Just to describe it's not necessarily what is called hatha yoga in the studios just to describe it. It's the physical aspect of yoga. I see. So we do that mostly. Okay. How do you spell it? Yes. Okay. Which I use to just say physical. Yoga exercise. As opposed to generally know it. But we always have discussion we have groups where we have lead discussions and then we have a stream of consciousness writing and then we have shares at the end that can be very powerful. That was a pilot program that we did and we teach in a trauma informed way so we're very gentle in the way that we speak and physically it's going to be on the level that the class can do. Whatever that level is so we can be usually it's beginners with the women with the men sometimes it becomes intermediate, especially in prison also when we have students over longer periods of time they become physically more capable so we do more intermediate to advanced classes. But the way that we teach is very different, yoga teachers are taught to teach by commanding, so we don't use any, not a single one throughout the whole class, if we can help it. So, and it doesn't detract from the time nor does it make it wishy washy at all. It's rather a respectful way of speaking to someone, asking, instead of commanding or just speaking in the first person, I am doing this so that people always know that they have a choice. And we are also very clear that whatever we do, they just are there. It's really about self care, we insert a lot of messages of self acceptance and self love. Did you learn that from being in support groups? The not commanding because that to me has been one of the greatest things about support groups is they don't tell you what to do. There are maybe suggestions or you watch somebody and learn from their example. I learned a whole lot from support groups. Yeah, support groups really, really opened my eyes. And yes, that was the first strong experience that I had there that it's up to me. I can, you know, I'm accepted here, I qualify. But I don't have to do anything. And I think yes, that this philosophy from the groups from the rooms really translated into when I was starting to do the yoga that says, let's just do this in a way that helps people to feel the way I felt when I went to the groups. And we're respectful and so whatever it is, with the women that have been sex trafficked, we don't do physical yoga. We do a group that is based on an SIA model from incest survivors anonymous and I have permission to speak about SIA. It's a wonderfully supported supportive group. I've gotten so much from the group and the community and the phone line and the meetings. And so I used our started by using our format that we use in the meeting, and then adapted it over time to suit the population better, the language simpler, no 12 steps, no sponsorship, but we have this group that meets every week, and we inserted moments of silence, and then we discuss at the end. So we have the shares and then everyone has to hold on because they don't want to share really badly, they all have so much that they need to share. So many prisoners are just bursting, bursting with wanting to share.

SIA
"sia" Discussed on Crypto and Blockchain Talk - Making You Smarter

Crypto and Blockchain Talk - Making You Smarter

05:49 min | 9 months ago

"sia" Discussed on Crypto and Blockchain Talk - Making You Smarter

"Or peer to peer link or you can literally make a connection with your neighbor. And it would reroute all your traffic end to end encrypted. So that way you have the three primitives encrypted overly end to end network, you have the storage system where a quantum computer can not even break into. And then you have the compute layer, which is everywhere and provided by lots of people. So that's in a nutshell how it works. Who wrote the blockchain? Is that you who wrote that? Originally, we made a wrong block. And yes, we started from a project from another company we're working together with called Sia, then we made fork of that one and improved it. We added, we actually had, I think, one of the first proof of block stake blockchains in the world at that time. But then it became we realized it's actually a lot of work to maintain a blockchain code. So if we are running, we decided to run on cosmos and we also run on substrates. So we use both for different parts, and we're extending it a lot. And towards the future, we will see. And because we have the system where there are multiple layers of blockchains as well to make it super, super secure. One of the things which actually gives you a little bit of a preview, which water doesn't even know you have, but what we are going to do next is that it won't be one Internet capacity. It will be Internet of internets. So basically people

Sia
Senators reach bipartisan compromise on gun violence bill

AP News Radio

01:00 min | 9 months ago

Senators reach bipartisan compromise on gun violence bill

"I'm Mike Gracia reporting senators reach a bipartisan compromise on a gun violence Bill Moving quickly after agreement was announced the bipartisan gun violence Bill cleared an initial procedural hurdle in the Senate Tuesday night 14 Republicans joined all 48 Democrats and two independents in support of the measure The package is a response to mass shootings at a Buffalo New York supermarket last month and that rob elementary school in ivaldi Texas days later Senator John cornyn of Texas led Republicans in the legislative talks Texans are disgusted and outraged by what happened at rob elementary And they want Congress to take appropriate action to prevent the loss of more innocent lives The legislation would include more rigorous background checks for the youngest firearms buyers more background checks for arms sellers and stiffer penalties on gun traffickers Additionally there's funding to states and communities for improving school safety and mental health initiatives Mike cross Sia Washington

Mike Gracia Bill Moving Rob Elementary School Ivaldi Senator John Cornyn Rob Elementary Texas Republicans Senate Buffalo Bill New York Congress Mike Cross Sia Washington
"sia" Discussed on The Aloönæ Show

The Aloönæ Show

02:26 min | 1 year ago

"sia" Discussed on The Aloönæ Show

"I hate it. I don't know. We've had a texture to your hair. So definitely the other way around. Okay. Fair point, third point. What's the weirdest nickname you've been given? Weird is nickname? My brother has a super weird nickname, but my one, I've got a bunch of nicknames in Hungarian, so many, but the one, which is kind of a bit weird, like honeycomb is basically my nickname in Hungarian, like hanita. But in Scotland, everybody would say hanita if I would put it with an eye, so I put a Y to make it look more fancy. And they wouldn't come out as like honeyed up, I guess, but there's so many people that said all kinds of things. But so that's kind of like my Hungarian nickname. But, you know, it kind of doesn't really have a lot of nicknames in Scotland. But Hungary has so many. But what I was going to say is that in Hungary, I'm also like honey to honey. So usually everybody calls me either honey to or honey at home. And it's kind of a, it's a bit weird, you know, like honey, I'm home. It's cold, you know? Or like whenever we go somewhere, my brother is like, honey, you know, everybody's like, what the heck? But yeah. Yeah? Great, great. What was the last thing you searched on your phone? Last thing I search on my phone, let me check. Today in general or I mean like today or this week. It is glory for the cover of chandelier by Sia. Oh, okay. Is this specific risk? So do you have any new albums in the world that you can work? Yes, that's exactly. That's my mango. So I'm going to do an album which is in the future. Yes. Great. And that is all the time we have for this episode. It was great. I haven't you here hanita. It was great hearing about your journey as a musician and asking fun questions. It was great. Thank you so much for having me. It was so much fun. No problem. You're welcome. And until next time, stay tuned. For more..

Hungary Scotland Sia
"sia" Discussed on WGN Radio

WGN Radio

02:04 min | 1 year ago

"sia" Discussed on WGN Radio

"In his legal team And we look forward to people hearing the actual facts in this case We love him We're here to support him all of us and to lift him up Chicago detective Michael thief testified for 8 hours yesterday and summed up the alleged attack by saying it never happened Smollett's attorneys sought to discredit the police investigation suggesting detectives ignored possible leads smaller faces up to three years in prison if convicted of disorderly conduct Chicago city council has so far failed to reach agreement on a new map ahead of tonight's deadline the black and Latino caucuses are feuding over the number of seats for their communities Other aldermen are at odor which words get Lincoln yards and the 78 mega developments but there does seem to be universal agreement to create Chicago's first ever Asian American majority ward Justin Sia with the Asian Americans advancing justice Asian Americans make up 7% of Chicago's population and are the fastest growing racial demographic in our city Just as other minority groups cherish and fight for their representation Asian Americans demand a voice and a choice in our democracy If 41 of 50 aldermen failed to approve a map by tonight the public will decide for them As scientists learn more about the new amaron COVID variant Chicago health commissioner doctor elson already is urging residents to get vaccinated and boosted soon We think it's likely that it's more transmissible We think it's likely there will be some more immune escape meaning that humans are less likely to be fully protected as a result of vaccination or prior infection Still doctor already says she absolutely expects that vaccines will still provide protection against severe cases of COVID with the Akron variant and keep more variance from emerging The citywide vaccination rate by the way is now 77.2% WGN sports the Blackhawks visit Washington tomorrow the pre game of Joe brand at 5 30 the face off at 6 with John whiteman on 7 20 WGN and WGN radio dot com In college basketball last night northwestern fell in overtime to wake forest 77 73 Purdue beat Florida state 93 to 65 Syracuse speed Indiana a.

Michael thief Smollett Chicago Justin Sia Chicago city council Lincoln elson Joe brand Akron John whiteman WGN radio Blackhawks WGN Washington basketball Purdue Florida Syracuse
Supreme Court Ends Biden’s Eviction Moratorium

The Takeaway

01:48 min | 1 year ago

Supreme Court Ends Biden’s Eviction Moratorium

"So now the by administration has been extending a federal eviction moratorium to protect tents struggling to pay their rent during the pandemic but now the moratorium is over really truly over. That's because the supreme court ruled last week. That the cbc has overstepped its at and that the moratorium to continue congress. We'd need to authorize it but that's unlikely to happen as house. press secretary. jen psaki told reporters on friday. What we're trying to do here is prevent people from being evicted from their homes. If there were enough votes to pass an eviction moratorium in congress it would have happened. It hasn't happened and while the white house says it's working with states on solutions. hundreds of thousands potentially millions of tenants across the country are now at risk of losing their homes including tenants in the state of new york. We're more than eight hundred. Thirty thousand households are behind on their rent. We're joined today by sia weaver campaign coordinator of housing justice for all in new york. Sia welcome to the takeaway. Extre having me also with us. Peter hepburn assistant professor of sociology at rutgers university newark and part of the eviction lab at princeton university. Peter welcome back to the shell on sia from your perch. What's the significance of this supreme court ruling. Well that's really just devastating as you said eight hundred thirty thousand households are more really are behind on rent in new york and seventy seven percent of them are people of color. The thing that's most painful about all of this as our state also has two point seven billion dollars in rental assistance. Money meant to solve this problem and we've been unable to spend it so this is a a real wave of addiction. That should be preventable. But for some reason has not been prevented.

Peter Hepburn Peter Congress Last Week New York Friday Hundreds Of Thousands SIA Seventy Seven Percent Jen Psaki CBC Seven Billion Dollars White House More Than Eight Hundred Today Eight Hundred Thirty Thousand Rutgers University Thirty Thousand Households Sia Weaver Millions Of Tenants
"sia" Discussed on The Good Life with Stevie & Sazan

The Good Life with Stevie & Sazan

01:40 min | 1 year ago

"sia" Discussed on The Good Life with Stevie & Sazan

"Get those kids out of here we don't wanna see them anymore from nine to three o'clock goodbye. Sia later sent him on down the road. If your kids have already started school. They're about to teeny is starting school this next week. You guys everybody starting school and oh my gosh. Y'all i mean. I love my daughter babe now. I know my mom. Never let me stay home. Unless i was really say like unless you gotta under two fever and you're throwing up you're going to school. My god i understand that now. But y'all i mean it has been it's challenging. I gotta tell you to be home to have your kids home all the time while you're working it is. It's tough times like that. Separation and just keeping three three-year-old stimulated. I want her to feel like she's not just sitting around watching the screens. Like it's kinda hard. They get bored. I mean they got energy from sunup to sundown and having to do that. Try to figure out seven days a week. Okay now what. Can i give her to do. Now what creative thing can i. I have ran out of ideas. Oh yeah and if. I hear frozen soundtrack one more time. I'm gonna jump off the roof. I'm done with frozen frozen to and all the other little mini episodes that disney plus has put out there under the frozen search because teeny is obsessed. And i'm done. I could not agree more last night when i was going to sleep literally in my head. I couldn't get that stupid frozen song out of my head wind do love is nope and i literally. I was analyzing. I was trying to sleep in. My brain was analyzing the lyrics. That's interesting.

Sia disney
"sia" Discussed on Crypto Current

Crypto Current

08:32 min | 1 year ago

"sia" Discussed on Crypto Current

"One of them is just patients like when the markets are down. Sometimes you know it's like two three years down. They're down for a while but they always come back because technology is real and so i think you know if you focus on the you know. What can people do this technology that they couldn't do before this technology existed. And you really like hone in on those those pieces. That's what you can focus on and get get like mastery around and get situated around in the net will carry you forward that those of the things that are gonna stick around in the next cycle anything just just. The biggest thing is to not get distracted. I think you know in in the hike cycles. There are a whole bunch of fads that come up a lot of even twenty seventeen. Where a lot of the project that had raised are doing well now in oursel- around but a lot of the biggest projects that raise are not doing well now are not still around and a lot of them died so i think just staying focused and keeping calm and when things are going up really fast just kinda. Keep your wits about you. Don't don't freak out. Don't worry too much about missing out because of the whole space is going up one hundred x over the next five years. You know you'll go with it you don't it doesn't you. Don't have to be on the most valuable. Nfc you just have to be in the space as really good advice. It's just a reminder that across all everything that you get into they're not all gonna win but you. I just need to get involved and then find projects that you think are going to last and if like you said over the next five years a ton of price you get into. The rough estimate is averaged around hundred x even. If it's a little bit less you go into any other kind of market. You're not going to see that kind of return not even close and so it's a good space to be into educating yourself on learning about all these different opportunities that are in the space and making sure that you're becoming involved another question i wanna pose to. You is as you look at what has happened this year and all of the things that have come started to evolve. More recently in teased defy the centralized base and everything else. What do you think is going to be one of the biggest up and comers as we look at the next one to two years i think are really the big thing i think defy is honestly too early. Not that like d fire is bad or that like it's not like the technology is fake but it's a bunch of technology building on raw speculation and so it's just like speculation on top of speculation and a lot of the underlying when you look at the underlying collateral. There's not a lot of real there yet. Whereas like when i look at and t's even though i just called them like kinda early and missed misplaced at the moment when you look at how. How real is behind the nf. Tease actually feels like there's more there than than anywhere else in the space. I think you know. I think i think have are just really spring loaded. It's where it's where we're going to get our first non-speculative economy. And then once we have that defy can come on top of it. And all the all the defy techniques that we use to build on top of these speculative tokens will also be successful in applied entities. But i think so. I would guess the defies probably gonna take a back seat in the next like one year or so and then empties are really going to throw out the next bear market like at some point things are probably gonna blow up in collapse in. We'll see another like sixty thousand down to ten thousand or or even further down decline. But then i think the nfc space is likely to surge forward through the bear market. Think that's a really interesting. Coal my think that inductees also have a ton of opportunity to keep growing spicy during these bear. Markets and as people continue to find out ways to drive a ton of value in in how they're being positioned. It can be reused so i appreciate that insight but as we kind of wrap up. You're always like to ask a final question of was the final thought that you wanna leave with all of our listeners. Here today yeah. I actually would would almost like a political pot. Which is that. I think that things are going to are going to start to get tough politically. We kinda saw with congress over the past few days of very unfriendly towards crypto-currency bill got Got through the senate and as bitcoin steps up and as things like the decentralized web step up and start to threaten. jv morgan chase the banks of the world and then like google. Facebook youtube of the world was companies are going to fight back and i think especially google. Facebook amazon are going to fight back really hard. They're going to play dirty going to play unfair. The banks are definitely gonna play on fair. And i think we've kind of we've grabbed the attention of these actors that will want to suffocate us. Since i would. I would say be ready for that and be ready to fight back because if you don't fight back you will. You will just be suffocated. I think that's kinda know the past two weeks have really really on edge in a way that you know. I don't think we've had to be alert before it means that is becoming more real. When it's your seen as a threat in cryptos definitely under attack in different ways right now and as you said. I think people need to continue to stay diligent. Find ways to be proactive. And also just as legislation continues to evolve to be active in and voicing your opinion so you can make sure that cripple katiba stay around without necessarily having to feel like you have to do things behind the government's back in in order to keep using this amazing technology for every step forward is going to be some steps back but we have to keep this moving forward. The crypto communities. Awesome there's a lot of awesome technology being built. That's giving a lot of access to people that usually don't have it so i. I agree that is important for people to keep staying diligent in. What's going on on the political landscape and finding ways to keep crypto safe. So thanks so much for that insight. Thank you so much for spending time with us today. What are ways that people can learn more about you and learn more about what's going on with sia in skynet. Yes so the the best place to hang out with us on our discord. That just khordad gee-gee slash skynet labs also has discarded differ dot. Org slash sya sa. Yeah other than that we've got. We've got a twitter account and we've got a website sized sky dot net size website inside out tech and so you should come check us out. Come hang out with super friendly community a ton of people who really know what they're doing if you drop by start asking questions i guarantee you someone who really knows what they're talking about will be happy to have a conversation with excellent. Well david thank you so much again for spending time with us and of course everyone listening stay crypto current. Hey cretan current crew. We want to give a quick shout out to all of our faithful listeners. Out there it's been an amazing journey and we really appreciate your support throughout the years as we've been growing as a community each episode. We decided that we start sharing some of the reviews that you were leaving for us for today. We would like to share this review. Today's review comes from a bryant. Forty one you can tell that. Richard has a passion for connecting the unknown to the listener. He makes crypt a lot easier to comprehend. It's one thing to know what crypto is but to understand is what the podcast has helped me to do love it. We sincerely appreciate this review in all reviews and would like to ask that. If you're enjoying our show please take a quick moment to go and leave. A review on our podcast. So that hopefully we can be highlighting review next simply go to our show notes or go to our website where we have a link where you can share your review today. Hey everyone. I hope you enjoyed today's episode for more information on today's episode in all of our episodes. Please visit us at. Www dot crypto dash current dot co. You can also find a link in the show notes what to stay up to date on the latest news and cryptocurrency sign up for our newsletter. Today you'll receive daily. 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jv morgan chase Nfc Facebook skynet labs nfc google senate congress amazon youtube sia government twitter bryant david Richard Kristen city capital andrew ridha ritter
"sia" Discussed on YEK YEK JE

YEK YEK JE

04:34 min | 1 year ago

"sia" Discussed on YEK YEK JE

"I remember <Speech_Male> when you <Speech_Male> know seventeen <Speech_Male> eighteen <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> eighteen seventeen. <Speech_Male> you <Speech_Male> told me that <Speech_Male> I ask <Speech_Male> you what is the <Speech_Male> what is your <Speech_Male> what. <Speech_Male> What do you want to do. <Speech_Male> In life. <Speech_Male> what experts. <Speech_Male> He went to <Speech_Male> Or when <Speech_Male> you away you into <Speech_Male> scully through <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> cannot <Silence> be <Speech_Male> You <Speech_Male> boo that there was <Speech_Male> the first thing <Speech_Male> you <Speech_Male> want you. <Speech_Male> Yeah so <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Then after that you <Speech_Music_Male> want to go out <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> to. <Speech_Male> It's not youtube. <Speech_Male> I think <SpeakerChange> you want to be <Speech_Male> someone like <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> whatever. 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eighteen seventeen youtube instagram today zero dollars first twenty four seven two
"sia" Discussed on YEK YEK JE

YEK YEK JE

02:56 min | 1 year ago

"sia" Discussed on YEK YEK JE

"So what's opinion of him is he goes through resumes. I'm supposed to grow up because we need get interactive us. Because i couldn't get him by luna toungoo much bologna in your eyes for a nice and garon. I dunno akilah. Min- kitschy like yes. He's sweetness is helpful. Brazil of course long very very rare but ideally allow. That's got a delay. Kalac glow maggie school elbow guaranteed and everything i was was. I wouldn't do he sedition. He's still capable of working as a one man show. One menu is what he has. He currently have like seven us over like that in my Religious in if you see how he was brought up as from the men also a family man. I mean he's a good example. Of course they do offer like every time he every time he reminds me. One thing colo- carlos. I'm paycock winter to windows. Coconut on number lane going to go. Talia wounded ruma one zero duma coping with the puck. So everybody young. You're gonna win one time one time just like annoy. This guy is a must do because if you do to get a house and then how. They'll you wanna give you my mother millionaires. It could've gone on inning. Lou lapus on coupla vision. Of course i you spend a lot of time if him right. I actually find him. What do mandalay look up to. Okay okay brand new supposed to be like the role models. It's not supposed to actually. It's not supposed to but he took the federal he took everything. Okay cut autocell mobutu wanting you babu if bozo talk one thing did to Medea do not cooper said then joke about both joke. We think i hit the ten smooth. The house the fire no did we can do them..

Lou lapus Brazil Medea One menu Talia seven luna cooper one time one man mandalay colo- carlos both joke One one thing akilah one coupla
"sia" Discussed on YEK YEK JE

YEK YEK JE

03:03 min | 1 year ago

"sia" Discussed on YEK YEK JE

"One. What can't i do to his game so cooler like so there was one time. I think you really tillable. Jeez okay then you bongos yeah okay so basically not not so by applicable to be through opoku. Who may all of this one being new go google could be has one memorable time could buy it. I touched basically mean but do we met with chinese. Enjoy growing look and still it. Did identifying boom. You're doing good. I good gonna give impact. I mean have. Yeah so you book though. Nearly yeah more even know yonkers. You get to know what the youngsters do nowadays. Yeah but you can do. Your is is like not far apart from usoyster. Uncle is different than to seven. That and you and me is like five years differentially. Well then do delays go. I mean you're you're you're in is not for difference. A look our generation is not their fault also but then you can keep up with the generation which were whereby. I cannot okay. okay. Like i'm going to get the win mccain mccain malawian unnecessary fuss also conducted. I could teach especially mitchum youngest. Rhianna ryanair ryan's. Karen is much primary for i think so. So he is. Dc at ten years all is that the to posted it. They say in tennis timer. I'm gonna forty-two gave the it must time in twentieth. Ola thing still be able to look around the room could entity in.

Karen five years ten years Rhianna ryanair mitchum twentieth google seven one time forty-two one chinese Ola mccain mccain malawian One ryan
"sia" Discussed on YEK YEK JE

YEK YEK JE

04:33 min | 1 year ago

"sia" Discussed on YEK YEK JE

"Know that soon Preschool would at least a week long bullets. That jagan bully to stay inside a i was a classic clown something what you buy a iraq. So he wasn't that fun. Preschool landed in So we went to maine though what you do technically own school. It was fun but You linen friends. People who background good getty museum dini's command. Being surprisingly won a gymnastics was fun. Jamaica coca flexible brand. Yeah given talent so upset whining to pony. Take a wallet as spleen even go. I didn't realize their speed that perspective on it and then join genetic join. It was fun. I met my friends will st friends now until now. Yeah i mean. We don't meet regularly bet labor then gumbo moving adding idea roma yes. I mean the for this one is that we'll be the work though on the area. The do you often go into talk. I wanted new geno. Diana w blob. It gives you. Don't tell me about your site. You sent me among i cannot. I cannot remember any news. Talk w to de la la la la not though i need any number one burqas. Linda number one focus got windsor. Okay so in calcutta cape attack when stole last why it's like do be my ankles right in the family. And so okay i want to know like why is why is it. Like to be young uncles. Because you have so much of the by an an avenue by mattel darrien fun or is he alive stressful much patty mooney who ta yoga. You know when we doing. Obviously below koran was pitchy kayla was good. Got the media cutting cola can you innovate rely on. Joe ocala funding round that moscow will be gotten enough threaten them. You want to play them. You find him guilty one when when you When when the other one then the younger ones come with so the younger ones brighten up the house. Well okay good. Latin quite fun bizzare from this and no never ending zone. You said one niece and nephew so fun now you young. The grew up with a blue.

de la la la la maine Joe calcutta Diana kayla mattel darrien Latin Linda number one yoga iraq Jamaica coca mooney
"sia" Discussed on YEK YEK JE

YEK YEK JE

06:35 min | 1 year ago

"sia" Discussed on YEK YEK JE

"Daniel. Why me about taking. Let's let's go. Hi hi so in the ola by saturn tongue patch Duplicate towel that much. And you got that over two story. Do ron kuban which Apu apu apu any. But you could madonna windy banana patchy. But you do that. Because jerry jeudy kilowatt gu's so go up. Says i'm not okay. Okay like how are you guys. You guys good good. Good because out of the bianca don't you. Let's go younger okay. How are you guys. are you good good. Good good guess from work home. Meteo y you guess. From whom do they sound good. I'm by caught papa. Tamra you got dimly but colleges and butter to them off now you already benign out so much home. My uncles are in your life. Whites like to be ankles. Of course. I wanna go like we bag. I wanna go way back to if you will fourteen thirteen okay. So how was your life in school like was it was fun was eli sweet. I don't know bittersweet lawsuits the dentist so it's commodore santana. It's so slow. I do whatever all keila go gonna go to a colo companies to. Maybe maybe colella are. We gonna do globally down. Do go the core kyrie irving basic deal the kuttab early as i'm very very very much. Sue sued wrappings things. He took us cucolo comey. Memorize da da da. Would you recommend you want to go. Okay Story is when i was Be one up to my pin and then after it. I want to kit models already. Because i don't need that. I cannot honoring her. Or what's the point of time. I feel all my subjects is our some somewhere. Some successor niagara corny took one of 'em guy. New muscle poses go memorizing getting some gila grand sung elise with as good that will do postage cost gola Okay susie big societas subject. So i feel all my subject hall run threat it but then if they needed deng deng to boost those motorcycles a bologna and claw who pose. We eventually also talked roberson. Knee watch the city. Did last night and eventually doesn't more interesting. When duties the de la la la di di did he was my balloon. Why do away do away. It again. I i i'll give you that way way. Ballooning get wine beer that while getting seven bows it up under redan. School is knee was eventually. Who do i think we also need. It was on under whom you poster board worry Was did go take india's did you go local ma So many levels balloons are gone. And then after that Uncle opening panchal white though unconfirmed why don't know who do though cannot go slow vehicle old then Pardon of threat continues cola to what does it do me to go blah kilometers abyss. I'm he is a place where you can only blow nimmo gem basically a hit mitrovica before even got a bit. How was your life like in secondary school..

Daniel last night india two story roberson colella fourteen thirteen Sue keila Meteo ron kuban bianca commodore santana jerry one
"sia" Discussed on GSMC Music Podcast

GSMC Music Podcast

01:41 min | 1 year ago

"sia" Discussed on GSMC Music Podcast

"It again is one of my favorite songs and it is a. It is a very very heavy song but you can hear all kinds of emotion and it makes you feel a lot of stuff as well. So i love that and again. Just great collaboration from sane and sia all these collaborations are absolutely awesome and i would recommend. Check him out if you haven't. I'm assuming you've heard a lot of these songs because they are pretty popular. It's just a short amounts of laboraties. I liked from some of my favorite singers again. We don't we don't have time to talk about my favorites. We'd be here for hours so after we come back. We're going to talk about some of my favorite disney songs over. Tv.

sane disney sia one of my favorite songs hours
Adolis García Leads Texas Rangers’ Weekend Sweep

Baseball Tonight with Buster Olney

00:57 sec | 2 years ago

Adolis García Leads Texas Rangers’ Weekend Sweep

"And astros played on sunday and a one of the candidates for american league. Mvp did more damage. The look to third the o-on this was hit back up the middle two dives. He hasn't he throws home but so like slides across the play. Doley star sia has done it a sea blue mobbing garcia on the right side of the infield me hit it just beyond al to who had to leave his feet and make a diving stop. He was in no position to make strong throw home and adult lease garcia provides yet another extra innings it but gives texas the win three two two or mark cardinal farmhand adult scars having a monster season for the texas rangers. That sound from one of five point three the

Doley Astros American League Garcia SIA Mark Cardinal AL Texas Texas Rangers
SIA 777 Stopped Climb at 500ft After Crew's Waypoint Entry

Airline Pilot Guy - Aviation Podcast

01:58 min | 2 years ago

SIA 777 Stopped Climb at 500ft After Crew's Waypoint Entry

"Okay first up. We have an incident. A singapore airlines triple seven stopped. Climb at five hundred feet after the cruise way point. Entry error pilots. Of a singapore airlines boeing triple seven three hundred eighty are inadvertently entered an incorrect waypoint altitude constraint prior to departure resulting in several alerts from the ground proximity warning system as the aircraft climbed out of shanghai prudan. The is put on the. That's what it's going to be exactly right The takeoff runway assign had been changed from three or four left three five right which meant that. The aircraft standard departure route switched from hotel sierra november two x to hotel sierra november. One to this requires updating the flight management computer with a new departure route. The first way point on this route identified as papa delta zero six two did not have any speed or altitude crossing constraint which meant that the field on the computers route display was blank. Although this is not abnormal the captain quote preferred to have the speed constraint explicitly displayed says the singaporean transport safety investigation bureau and its inquiry into the second of september. Twenty nineteen incident. He decided to enter the speak constraint of two hundred and fifty knots as shown on the departure charts the triple seven's flight management computer required speed constraints to have a corresponding altitude constraint. So the captain chose to enter five hundred a meaning that the papa delta zero six two point should be crossed at five hundred feet or above but the captain inadvertently mis-keyed typing five hundred rather than five hundred a which neither crew member noticed. This error meant that the aircraft's autopilot would limit the aircraft of five hundred feet ahead of the way point crossing

Singapore Airlines Boeing Singaporean Transport Safety I Singapore Shanghai Sierra
"sia" Discussed on Hustleshare

Hustleshare

08:14 min | 2 years ago

"sia" Discussed on Hustleshare

"Expedited response but again domain expertise had the that. I'm not asked pack. And you have to be the i'd have skin in the game in in in your prior hustle to get these astros. They just don't throw money left and right just for the sake of it but then again getting the right people in your cap table very early base dividends because regardless of how hard do you hustle. It's the opportunities that open the doors. That are opening up for you. That you can go through will define whether you make it or break. Now i want to ask you several things about hustling. Because you're really good at this. Lewis first thing. I wanted to ask a lot of people. Go to mentors or joe through people that they try to emulate asking for advice but they asked the seem pedestrian question. Which i'm not saying that's bad but you could have maximized that that meeting better prec- or that our that they spend with you better if you ask the right questions. What do you think are the best questions to ask asking from a founder or a an adviser knowing what you know now because a lot of people ask you for advice and some of them are you per se. But we're the things that you would if you'd ask adele someone he asks these things. Were those an interesting question. I think one of the things would be nothing anything specific on on the actual question but just being generally open. I think there are a lot of folks who were asked for it by like berry set mindset on how they wanna do things that's exactly. I'm you ask things like how. what would you do. In this scenario rate or what would you do a few An investor find interesting for example. Or what would example. If you wanna get funded you could ask an investor that you can say like look like what would make you interested in this right. If you're not interested. Great now read so to get us much from their point of view. I think that's that's where you really learn a lot. Threat and that. The barons of prospective is actually where the best conversations and bit. Best ideas happened to come in wanting to hear the ship. Do you want to hear from niger. That's a recipe for disaster already. There's i've seen that a lot to do they. You just want me to tell you what you are here. Nah right here. First of all fucking bubble brad. That's what it is. The other thing. I wanted to ask is. You won't be put in a chief. Growth royal lewis. If you didn't know your shit right what would be your advice. Or startups in two zero one. Two two to three stage in building their pipeline and in growing their products. There's sometimes what beans me. Excuse thank yeah we will do facebook. Stock market whatever. There's nothing wrong with that. But do you got to understand. Do things first one year. Find out if your if your steak if you're still like the the dave mcclure model or now there's this new model show. Yes the loops reforge loops which is walking mind-blowing by the white that out check it out what's loop customer loop but what would be your advice. I think like when when you're doing a startup so much doing around and it's easy to lose track of what you really want to happen or get distracted. So what's really important. A stupid be clear about what metric one optimize for and just go all out in that like sleep day in day out how you could reach targets for one specific or a couple of metrics if you if you want but you need to be clear about what they're really optimizing for right a lot of people that said like you might do like ads or something. But they're confused about what the what out what they really want from the things that they're doing right if you're clear about your metrics it something that you could. I read on day in day out. You might have the shittiest ads. But if you know that you're optimizing for cost per sale or something you could be by day too slowly and slowly either than something so no one starts out perfect in initiatives but as long as you can measure. These are things that you can hydrate on. Eventually you'll figure out rate. So that that i think it's the biggest advice all right now last question before alexandro what would be your advice to all. This filipino started founders again. Following the path that you boys are. I'm literally just right by. You might not not mind you. But i'm here the middle and my job is to tell the ones at the back that this what these are doing. That's why i'm doing this fucking podcast so that nobody gets left behind this your chance to tell those people what they need to do in order to meet that. Then then you thesis that you guys have because like you know guys like rolling. Ross also see the same ship it might just be a different version but the next ten years will make or break our country and it has to come from from us tech sector. Make that happen. What would be your advice in your point of view for the ones that the back you know. Say a lot of the back. The man what you think this immense number of opportunities over the next ten years that i don't think any expiring on regret out of like a decent significant other Gone viewed in the face Actually the biggest advice Don't try to figure it out on your own. There are folks like myself. Francis three thousand five fund side but founders are generally helpful. I think the people who get lost. Sometimes they do things without trying to get in sort of the lessons that other people have their grade And there are a lot of those. So i think Just reach out. Take the leap of faith but always make sure that they tried to learn from from all the stuff that that other people have before This ask for help right so yeah i think that's that's advice absolutely it again. If you're shy that's why we have this fucking. I've had grids of them. Now of the big boys can the superstar right so you can just come in and understand empathize. If you're scared. That can be starters. Because i've also man i get this like twice or thrice a week some random dude listening in the podcast day. Hey thank you very much. Had the i had the courage to ask x. For advice because i heard his story from you what again. This podcast is. Just built to remove that franken stigma that he may be. I cannot talk to louis. Probably dude raw the fucking game where we all just wanna fucking paid for a dude So again if you're here if you're listening reach out don't buy. We're here to help you out again. Louis thank you very much for being on much for having me mad all right to reach out to you again and again. Check out the mongol. How did they do that please. If you want to shout outs through this church hands there you can reach me for stuff you could reach me new isa kamanga dot com directly. And if you're interested in on the fun side Do e mail fits. We already gave you a heads up. Pack don't go there and rain grittiest fucking these boys. We already us again very exciting times again. Thank you electrical boston. Whatever you're listening to what it spotify apple podcasts and whatnot again. If we did see some good shots in healthcare dot com and again last to join the healthcare community. Join how you can grow the show. We also have that on the message on our chat bot that dot. Mu slash publisher powered by chat again. We thank you very much ben. All right in the next episode..

facebook Louis Francis alexandro ten years twice Ross louis Lewis first three spotify isa kamanga one thrice a week com Two three thousand ben one year
"sia" Discussed on Hustleshare

Hustleshare

07:41 min | 2 years ago

"sia" Discussed on Hustleshare

"And we're back with louis c. a. p. mongo and also three three five three of five. We are not pit bull okay. Three three five dollar heroes using going to go daily on us right. Lewis is not a gangster but he can be here. You know what we're gonna do. Gangsta shit on is now trying to dissect. Why other than being these amazing guys building pay mongol they decided to create a fund called three three five up to us about that louise and what started that. Eat those because again you could have just easily erected cash in well bought a lambo bader Over and made it rain. But why are you investing in filipino startups. Yeah you know like three thirty. Five started desouza super super super informal. Around maybe early last year when we guard better garden here in the philippines and mi Wanted to help other founders. Get into the white sea right. We had only been the wife company to get in since a long time ago and we felt like we knew enough stuff not not everything but enough the help other folks get in right beside. I think is clear to us that there was a huge weiss. The effect people coming in and culture sort of getting more people into into y c just brings a whole Operate so it just started in that one of the first entrepreneurs that we beheld about victor ivan school. who asked. We've had him here. Victor had the preview icy. Victor wonder what what most interested on his hustle. You scroll down. You'll find him. What's what's his last name of rivera. Many victims thirds in my answer. I mix them all up yet. So so victor was actually working at wjm mall where i think. Think he shared with you ed. He had this. Burning idea started certified latin to school for the philippines and i think that was our first exposure on really being hands on in in helping startups and from there we realized like hey there are so many of these talented individuals adviser who would make potentially great founders straight. It's just that for for farmers like we just didn't know what to do and a lot of these things that he needed to do to become a successful that company. a lot of them are trivial. Like where should i register my company right hardware disarray company. On what should the corporate structure look like things about like la besting stocks in all of these things. That really don't have anything to do about building a huge leg successful company on whether they are very big barriers Founders ever seen success and and so you know like vickers like a shining example of that he got into ice and rethought ourselves like there must be like other honors out there. Early stage founders. We might be able to help out of your head so it really started there. I guess like our whole thinking is that you know there. There's so much for founders philippines But at the same time like we have like radisson that have very strong thesis. About how the next ten years lay out and rethink that. Those ten years will really be like a massive shift towards online read A lot of opportunity a lot of founded in ecosystem completely different than yours and so we wanted to play whatever role began in trying to help founders served make the most of what we think would be like a crazy next ten years. And and yeah. That's that's where the idea for the game. We just thought like you know this. Something informative Why don't we put a little bit structure. Cerise thought of name remade that open letter that befall easy fun dot com and that serbia again before we dive. Deep into type of founders. You look like like the why again. Three three five for those people haven't read that letter that y'all put out to the world. Why is it. So it's a reference to three thirty five binary which side of In modern deer. So yeah all right. Now let's deep dive on the type of founders. You're talking about the victors. The world because at the end of the day like what i said just like building a team you take the bet on the founders and looking at your website. You're saying that you're betting on early. Stage founders so. You're literally coming in at the face of zero to one. Or maybe want to write you know these startups have barely any of those three that the and Traction traction right what you look for. Because this is the riskiest part also in Aside from what you look for. What are the things you've seen common among those four startups so far how ready portfolio but out of those four two of them already. Nyc what the faulk. I've never seen that happen. So there must be something that those four startup founder for. Startups had in their founders. That are common among dead. That made you want to cut a check for them. To what are those aged one of the one of the things that we look at. This is treated grit. You know like i think more than Degrees or or sort of like looking at it like a resume from pounders perspective because like fans are currently building our own a lot of what the day csu build a startup has to do with you. Having the grit. The make it happen to so much should happen And i think like over over anything like that's one that we look at. With all of the founders reinvested you know like aldridge from from next day. They're amazing founders. Just like gun so many other businesses but are doing next phase right now. That's from suaram obviously A long proven track record and also Were doing kitchens as long experience in the industry. So we look at that first and foremost. But secondly i think if you're asking about sort of what types of companies sort of interest us that we think of their company said are in a way sort of infrastructural Businesses that build other lists. You might think about it. One one example mongol for example or Making payments more accessible would allow for other entrepreneurs go on night. I'm we think there are other companies that that might prove to be infrastructure for example with susan ghosts kitchens for example that's infrastructure for Fm be entrepreneurs to go online for example. And yeah i think you know like the infrastructure. Oh businesses are yet to be filled out on that for the next sending warmest obviously doing payments abby august taking care of that supply of that very lacking competent developer pipeline. That we don't have that we all need. If you're trying to build good product so now i get it. The you're building the infra- but what are the missing league. Still that are still looking to fill because you mentioned it earlier you. You're.

Lewis Victor victor ten years Cerise philippines zero next day two early last year first first exposure four startup one five dollar four startups la besting Five filipino Three
"sia" Discussed on Hustleshare

Hustleshare

08:26 min | 2 years ago

"sia" Discussed on Hustleshare

"Pitched oh currency now ed rebecca break were su with louis c. the chief growth officer of p mongol who then told us what is hustle was prior to pay mongol. And doing that. i want to understand. How did you meet this whiz kid. Who was like obese teaching these people. Because i've had branches here co founder. Before i still remember a good chunk of of that interview he joined several startups as well you know. He was an mit graduate. And you know. He was teaching people. How to code in th- nail. How did you meet this guy. And how did you form a team that eventually became mongo and walk us through how you joined wiessee in twenty nine thousand. Yeah no i actually met fans this way back. I think that might have been twenty fourteen. You did all seven through upstart started in in in college and he had just gotten back from From the state said rate at it. And i think was just like maybe his first year in manila. I'm so i. I met him allowing you also super in doing startups Redis kept in touch or for those like five years on the glendening. Being you know we'd been have been said maybe twice a year. He told me that he was getting into consulting out with a company. Called benny with heimat. Now where where are. Ceo where edwin are operating officer russia. What's an investor right. So he like just chatting about it announcing around idea. I ended up doing some help for them on the sales side for many delta the white At the time but among all happened just out of necessity ride. We were doing like this. Do without the thing but it is clear that no one was staying for for software Up you had like francis in a really great engineering team but any anything. We did like sort of like bitch. The company is always cheaper One or the cheapest one that would have been so we decided in just a few weeks left off like bureau left like said we need to do something we need to build something. That'd be good actually Because the saints breaking out and that's where we did a brainstorm and we ended up with the payments Wasn't anything grab like. you know. Sort of like admission. It'd be shared now. It does more of like a very specific beane point. Just said you know. We often found it hard the integrated with bateman services. You know like. I had started Websites before in apps and sorted advances in high demand re still thought. It was like an open abroad right. So yeah that's where it started and that us around march and wild so it was really. You know last two minutes for you because you don't have payroll and you had. This was a hail. Mary your shot. I do like whatever strategy parents but payments. And i totally agree because again my the the business that i got acquired in chat h people were actually being software but other than people also low balling back number. Do if they do choose you they fucking take forever to be. Nobody's fucking time. Imagine imagine if you have a very short runway you're front loading two to three to four months of costs before you even get that and cherish your margin so you have to have a long runway because nobody ps on dime exactly. Yeah that's what. I learned the harder correct. And here you are now changing the game because prior to pay mongo again just just putting the the whole perspective we have to go to at least singapore join stripe atlas in fricken delaware. Right to even get a chance to even paid charge recurring revenue. And that's the name of the game in a healthy startups. The holy grail m. are are monte recurring revenue. If you don't have a healthy dose of monthly recurring revenue it simply whether your traditional business or start up your startups again at night. So now here. You are ready out of runway. Doing a hail. Mary in wiessee. What did you do right. Because i think we found a formula of how to get in there. And because you're now helping other philipino startups getting in there as well. And i think the caliber peeps also gave a little bit when when they said that the you also did a brainstorm with them at one point. Walk us through how you guys did this. Oh yeah no No i think the right thing that we did in francis idea actually was still black or white Begin with right. We had nothing via. We wanted to do payments and we had no funding would be obliged to the even if you know the last one that got in moscow deliver than read and really see if possible the time to get into ice recently more and more have been getting any but that that it had been like a good six years for a got in red so but we try to anyways We submitted our application in march sort of forgot about it. Because this isn't going to happen like no one's even got it in and we got video. Vote them and that's when we were like okay. Maybe something's happening here like maybe this is something that's promising right so that initial interview and they invited us you to their offices in mountain view the money right so We had one month to prepare before we flew out the mountain view. That's very went all out. We were like this has been felt like we should but all our energy you relived everything from getting sign ups and like you mentioned like me. We met up with ball index syrian. And they were super helpful of giving us advice of how they get in the register a huge community like helping for that interview. Really prepared like crazy for that When me and nb rent to send out to mountain view outlet around me and winning ninety we got so. That's that i guess. The first thing that we did right in the company got it. So i'll just dive in a little bit on on wiessee process again. After caliber there was just a vast sea of nothing of note. Venos- even getting anywhere close to what we've that's why caliber was just a special startup back then again and still is still now. I hire everybody from caliber now but after that there was nothing but walk us through that process. What did it feel like when you saw that. They replied 'cause that would've been in surreal like ship. What is this is this a freight great one is no you even even pretty much phasing level when when the invited us to go through your bad you're going holy shit now in the interview process and i think this is where you really prepared the most what goes through this process because again i promise to you i think the reason why neck pay and aguilar is there because you gave your. Up that formula forward but what preparation did you do to nail that interview l. Incompetent that i get people buying twice which is also the advice. Given dose. I think by by ball index are steamed. Damn traction right. I'll go through the three things basic things. You need to provide a see to really get it on. I felt we had a strong theme but on the down which is the the market size and traction like those are things that we had the validate We didn't have anything not nothing at all right so we needed to find other rates to validly the solution rate so we. We made sort of a sign up. Beijing re promoted it. Stop the users. Even we didn't have a product yet the figure out. What might they need so that when we went through i see like at least they have like this senate. I think have over a thousand users on the witness when we got the rice. Yeah and.

ninety singapore three twice six years p mongol first year twenty nine thousand five years Redis twenty fourteen four months fricken delaware manila Venos one month caliber seven twice a year benny
"sia" Discussed on Hustleshare

Hustleshare

04:27 min | 2 years ago

"sia" Discussed on Hustleshare

"Of young twenty somethings are not good with money. They lacked the making rain. You know buying the good shit and whatnot and whatever they do they run it like a mom-and-pop by that is that you know okay we made money. Let's make rain go to the cloud rain. Do whatever it is but for you to stay does business in you know. Keep going till now you know you. You must have had that literacy about money to roll over prophets. How did you know the discipline. And also the knowledge to handle the money were. It was very tempting to buy that next jordan. Or whatever the fuck we wanted to get that done. Now i would have to one hundred percent credit. Birds go that one. I think i was brought up in a very financially conservative household right eastern philosophy. There would be stuff like you know you see invest on the floor. Like i'll stick it up. Because i have acne and that's how that's how i see this every best arena gone even more so when you actually have to work for a great and again it's discipline in in the more you know like shoot. That was ingrained to you at a very young age and again that discipline is important. Because a lot of people. And i've seen a lot of startups do this. They can make revenue but they cannot keep the revenue because they burn so much their their margins are fox and if you make a margin they make rain. Invested eight on things that doesn't wrote the business further. The rabbi themselves right away right so yeah go back to that What what do you think. It doesn't make sense that you know making sure that that money and financial literacy founder as an entrepreneur is very important because not everybody is geared raise funds and the traditional way to run. A business is to grow it through prophet right right. Yeah i think for me like it's that i was stick Doing deck or traditional assess for me. They're they're very much related Do different goals straight and even when you get into that having a traditional business mindset in terms of how you think about money on. I think it's really key to seeing a lot of like entrepreneur sixty especially in the philippine market right in the states. You know like folks are a bit more liberal understand but i think emerging markets It really based on your unit economics your margins and things like that. And that's a lot of skill that that people in the traditional Have right. I think both are after equally correct. And you don't have it's not. It's not duro sam and that's what i think. Young founders need to understand that just because you're playing the growth game and you know you need to respond and you need to do. It doesn't mean that you can't be frugal and chase after the money as well. You know because some people think oh yeah. Let's go out and make it rain in fuck my and that's people burnt out. You know they run through the runway. They die in the process now. I think it's just maximizing value for every besse. That'll take our first reagan when we come back. Let's now talk about how you. Dan planted the seed and be prayer. Blazed the away sea.

Dan one hundred percent both eight first philippine sixty twenty sam jordan reagan
Proteas: Celebrating These Botanical Shape-Shifters

In Defense of Plants Podcast

03:24 min | 2 years ago

Proteas: Celebrating These Botanical Shape-Shifters

"Fond of as we're speaking. You have a bunch pictured behind you wonderfully illustrated on the wall but the proteas. I have to say those paintings by a friend of mine. Vicki thomas and she's one of south africa's most acclaimed botanical straight. That's awesome absolutely wonderful person. Carry on all right. Shout out to vicki. Thomas amazing i can seem from here. They're great but you know this is a group. That is a little strange. They're beautiful most of the time. Some of them are culinary interests. A lot of people will be most familiar with them for the cut flower industry and their use in different floral arrangements but in terms of a group of plants. The proteas pro. Dac as a family. Really kind of encapsulates. Everything you've aimed for and more and unlike flagship species they're not getting nearly the attention. They deserve for the plate that they're facing as a family of plants. In a modern world they are a real bench of wackos I mean lynn. A cult them protea or called the jenness protea protea. Because of the greek god. Protease protease was a shape shifter so lineas such will this plump family comes in such a huge range of different weird shapes and forms in not justice flowers but its foliage and its fruits and all the rest of it but there's only one name for them knots the proteas and some of them are crazy and they have crazy names to i mean there's a there's a genus of pro. Tac out there. called megahertz. Sia megahertz probably one of the best plump names. I think that there is and they produce these crazy flower heads. They're not flowers there in or conflicts ince's to be more specific about it. They have these amazing floral brax. The king protea the national flower south africa is is a conflict essence so hundreds of individual flowers surrounded by these beautiful pink or red floral brock switch. A modified leaves banks is the same huge heads. One of the most flourish in fluorescence in the world is a species of fanciable granted. The bull banksia has up to three thousand individual flowers in the end in a single head. But they don't do things by normal standards than nearly always bird or mammal pollinated rather than insect pollinated. They don't use a micro rizal relationship. In most instances. There are a few that. Do they do crazy stuff with that chemical makeup and the way that they use chemicals in their in their systems particularly the way that these phosphorus they are almost completely made of licnen and that goes for the flowers as well as a the warden the leaves you know. This plant family is yeah wacko to me. Just like people. My favorite groups are just the wackos the one offs the strange ones. That are just doing things. A little bit differently than the rest or sometimes drastically differently than the rest. And i am so foreign to most of what this family has to offer. I mean i'll remember going to the huntington for the first time in going. Wait a minute there trees

Vicki Thomas South Africa Vicki Thomas Lynn Ince Huntington
More people charged in Capitol riot

Mark Levin

00:28 sec | 2 years ago

More people charged in Capitol riot

"Arrests have been made in connection with last week's riot at the Capitol already believe Robert Packers, the man pictured wearing a camp Auschwitz sweatshirt during the unrest. He was arrested by federal authorities in Hampton Roads, Virginia and was taken to the Western Tidewater regional jail. He has a court appearance scheduled. Investigators also believe just SIA Colt is the man who was pictured hanging from the balcony in the Senate chamber. He turned himself in Tuesday night to the ADA County, Idaho jail boxes Rob Dawson,

Robert Packers Western Tidewater Regional Jai Hampton Virginia Senate Ada County Idaho Rob Dawson
Omni Hotels Accepted Millions In PPP Funds But Didn't Pay Workers

NPR's Business Story of the Day

03:36 min | 2 years ago

Omni Hotels Accepted Millions In PPP Funds But Didn't Pay Workers

"A lot of hotels closed their doors in the spring. And some still haven't reopened. These hotels were able to keep their workers on the payroll because of funding from the federal paycheck protection program. But one national chain omni hotels and resorts is under fire for laying off than and workers. They use the funds for other purposes bill driscoll of member station w. esa in pittsburgh reports one. Leadoff worker is killed. Sia moronta a health club attendant at the omni. Providence in rhode island. She's worked there twenty one years more onta. A single mother with children applied for unemployment and food stamps. Then she heard what she thought was good news. I well struggling to provide for my family. I learned that they only have received some ppp money great. At least you know. They're going to help us. Can't buy when it comes to basic needs. The ppp is the paycheck protection program. The half trillion dollar initiative was part of the huge pandemic relief. Package congress passed in march. The p p offered loans. That are forgivable if employers you sixty percent of the money for payroll related expenses. Ep was designed as an alternative to unemployment at least for the eight weeks of payroll benefits. It supplied the omni. Providence applied for a two point six million dollar loan and said it would be chained some two hundred fifty jobs. Balloon was approved in april but eight months later with unemployment benefits run out and health coverage long-gone meranti and the other laid off are still waiting right now. We are in december and we having here anything about using that money to help. James employees moronta belongs to the service workers union unite here with three hundred thousand members. In north america using government data unite. Here says omni. Hotels received a total of seventy six million dollars. P p p loans about a third of that went to hotels where the union represents workers. Carlos outta maiyo is unite. Here's executive vice president boston. I've spoken to hundreds of workers to work at the army. Parker house at not of them have received a single dime of this money and looking at this winter a lot of them could really use it. So where did the money go in a statement. The omni chain based in dallas said it didn't use the funds to pay workers because the hotels were closed or operating at low volumes. Ppp rules allow a business to use the funds for payroll even if it were closed but the omni chose not to instead the chain promised to repay the loans with interest at least the part of the loans that are not forgiven but these loans carry a below market interest rate of just one percent which angers demayo it's disgusting companies. Wanna try to use this as a way to get a low interest loan from the federal government. Critics say repaying the loans beside the point. Lisa gilbert is executive vice president of watchdog group public citizen. Thank you think about other businesses. That maybe didn't get money because he did either to small businesses over struggling or another company that might if you actually pay their workers as for these workers. Many feel betrayed again. You'll see moronta only call family. They always say that. We are finally so where the family treatment when it comes to the employees the unite here union has asked the small business administration which administers the ppp and the us department of treasury to scrutinize the omni loans. Whether they are forgiven remains undetermined even as congress approves a new round of pandemic relief

Bill Driscoll Omni Sia Moronta Onta Providence Moronta Service Workers Union Carlos Outta Maiyo ESA PPP Omni Chain Rhode Island Pittsburgh Demayo Congress Lisa Gilbert North America Watchdog Group Public Citizen
The Parents Are Not Alright

Latino USA

07:11 min | 2 years ago

The Parents Are Not Alright

"I'm in the virtual studio today with producer Ginny Moon Hey Jeannie I'm waving to you all the way from Harlem, Hey Maria, I'm in Queens. So Jeannie were talking about our favorite topic today parenting, right? Yeah and parenting in twenty twenty is a whole new level parenting. You know what I have adult children now. So honestly, I am so thankful that I do not have to be raising little kids during this time I just can't imagine. So what have you been doing because how old is your little boy now Medina's turning three it's been an adventure I don't know how else to put it. But in this adventure, you're not really going anywhere, right? No, it's an adventure within the four walls of our apartment. So what's it been like like? How do you even manage it I don't some days and some days I do. I had to cut back to part time. So when everything shut down I, just tried to manage the best I could. But it became too much I. was burnt out I was trying to work at night I was trying to work in his nap times and also like switching gears from mom to try and. Write an email or work I can't multitask again if I have a toddler running around in the background running my life like he's the boss, I can hear my in the background saying Mommy's. But yeah, you just Kinda deal with it. Yeah. I have to say in the beginning the only way I made it through, was my coffee in the morning and passing the torch to the wine that I would have to the day. I know you're tired genie as a parent but the thing is, is that when people are tired, they're like, oh, my God the last thing I want to do is go to work but for you, you're like I'm tired I really WanNa go to work yeah. Because I just WANNA. Work without distractions like how many times a day do I have seen running in here and being like me and like L. And he wants to play and like. Hangman. And it's nice. I had review. On some level, but I really just want to focus for an eight. Hour Day Without a distraction and it's because it's really hard to switch gears feel like women are good at multitasking. But this is not one of those scenarios I wanNA parent when I need to parent and I wanna work when I need to work I can't do both at the same time. So. This whole thing about the schools being closed down like New York City like they try to never close the schools down, right? Yeah. So the fact that they did shut down and they shut down all around the country poses a really big challenge because. Not, everybody can set up for remote learning I mean not everybody has Internet. Some kids only get their meals if they're going to school so. It really has been a challenge on a lot of different levels. So you decided that you like all parents you're like, okay I need to talk to other parents and commiserate and think and see how other people are doing it. So you didn't gather a group of parents I guess virtually right? Yeah I did because there's been a slew of articles about the mental load that everybody is dealing with as parents because you're not meant to do both things at once like you can't parent and work full-time that's why childcare exists and none of this was meant to be a long term solution. But I do want to say before we start that even though we have all been affected by the pandemic, all of us participating in today's roundtable have been fortunate enough to still be working in some format. So we're all healthy and we're all grateful for that but we're barely hanging on by threat. So here we go. I want to welcome from Dallas Texas we have. dinty Cabanas. Hi. How are you? Thank you for having me. So glad you're here I have Joe Marvin Tura from Richmond California. For having me and I have to Haida Alencastro from Orlando Florida. Hey thank you. Teeny. Thanks for having me and just the disclaimer everyone knows to hide it and I have actually known each other for like twenty years. So no surprises there little bit. All right. So I just want to quickly go around the virtual room. And tell me about your kids what you do. This is our Sia I am in Dallas. As you said, I have two little girls wind will be ten in three weeks. The other one will be four in two weeks. And I for fulltime digital marketing manager for. Mary. Kay Corporate here in Dallas Great Jomar. Hi I'm Joanna and I'm in Richmond. That's you know the bay area and my little one is turning three months and I teach elementary school. So juggling the new definition of a teacher and first time parent has been very, very interesting adventure. Into Haida. I have two kids. My son is ten years old and my daughter is about to be eight and a few weeks and I am a systems engineer for Lockheed. Martin but I work from home. So I've been A. Since two thousand and five. Okay. So we're going to start from the beginning. I think I mean I don't know about the rest of you but I think we all were kind of like Oh. This is going to be a few weeks we can do this. No big deal, but walk me through personally what? Each of you guys had to go through and like what kind of plan you came up with to get by for the end of the school year. Well for us like all of you we've had to adjust we did not work from home originally We were released for spring break and never came back. We were told we were going to stay. And do you learning and so it was a shock I'm not gonNA live my husband and I freaked out a little bit. But then we had to pivot really quickly. Right what are we going to do? Do we have the right equipment to we have the right setup at the House Both of our kids are in the same school. So that was one good thing because it was need to everybody. So the school they know what they were doing. We know what we're doing the girls were like what's going on? So the ambiguity of it all was really challenging for all of us. But we just started getting a routine down our dining room became our command center. So I would say the first two weeks were horrible I'm not GonNa lie but I think we've all pivoted. Can and so I was pivoting at home I was pivoting at work. And even with myself like how am I going to take time for myself and you know lose it But I'm not allowed I'm sure I'm not a lot. Of. This

Dallas Jeannie Medina Ginny Moon New York City Producer Haida Alencastro Harlem Queens Maria Joe Marvin Tura Dinty Cabanas Dallas Great Jomar Richmond Texas Marketing Manager Kay Corporate Joanna Richmond California
Texas governor issues disaster declaration over brain-eating amoeba found in Lake Jackson water supply, south of Houston

Mandy Connell

00:37 sec | 2 years ago

Texas governor issues disaster declaration over brain-eating amoeba found in Lake Jackson water supply, south of Houston

"Is in effect for Brazoria County, Texas. After a deadly amoeba was found in water samples from Lake Jackson as NBC's Morgan Chesky reports. A six year old boy recently died after contracting the brain eating A Maybe Joe SIA died earlier this month from a waterborne amoeba that somehow got into the Lake Jackson, Texas water supply. The amoeba is exceedingly rare. There have only been 34 cases over the last 10 years. Ah boil water order is in effect for the area. Health update. Sarah Lee Kessler, NBC news radio.

Lake Jackson Texas Sarah Lee Kessler NBC Morgan Chesky Brazoria County Joe Sia
Houston - 8 Texas cities were alerted to a brain-eating amoeba found in water supply

Ben Ferguson

00:29 sec | 2 years ago

Houston - 8 Texas cities were alerted to a brain-eating amoeba found in water supply

"Texas or warning of a brain eating ameba that has been found in the water supply. Lisa Taylor has more. The discovery of a single celled parasite is the reason for a do not use water advisory now, in effect for several cities and communities south of Houston residents are being told not to drink or use the tap water, including for bathing bathing all all of of this this after after six six year year old old Joe Joe SIA SIA McIntyre McIntyre died died September September 8th 8th at at Texas Texas Children's Children's Hospital Hospital in in Houston. Houston. Doctors Doctors told told Messiahs Messiahs Mom Mom the the cause cause was was due due to to an amoeba infection. Now the forecast

Houston Joe Joe Sia Texas Texas Children Children's Hospital Hospital Texas Lisa Taylor Mcintyre
Can any long shots stun Tiz The Law at Ky. Derby?

At Home with Gary Sullivan

03:34 min | 2 years ago

Can any long shots stun Tiz The Law at Ky. Derby?

"All right. Jody Delhi is going to give us the odds on the Kentucky Derby race. Of course we've heard about is the law. Everybody's liked his. The law is the law. Well, there are other horses in the race. Right, Jody? That's right. Says the law is 45. This is current odds right now. They just opened the windows this morning. Ah, 25 minutes ago. This is current odds. Tis a law fortified. And then there is a pretty good distance between him and the next horses. And the next course is there's actually a pretty good distance of who are a pretty good racer. Who's the second choice right now. It would be Santa Anita Derby winner Honor AP at 8 to 1 Authentic, though, is 9 to 1. That's Bob Baffert horse who won the Haskell Tendo one Bob Baffert horse 1000 words Who won the shared beliefs. So you've got those horses? Ahh, right there. All four vying for second choice in the Derby. Let's run from the inside, post position out. We'll give you all of the odds here. A CZ. We go through it finish the fierce. The number one horse, The one eyed gilding has been scratched. He is not running in the race number two Max player, Ricardo Santana Jr. The jockey, Steve asked. Musa is the trainer Max player. Is down. 18 Toe one. He was a morning line. 30 to 1. He's back. He's been bet. Pretty good. So far enforceable. Adam. The skits of the jockey Mark Cassie is the trainer 23 to 1 down a little bit from 30 to 1 in the morning line. Storm. The court who was the breeder's Cup juvenile champion last year, Julien Les Peru is the jockey Peter Kurten is the trainer 26 to 1, Major fed James Graham and Greg fully 34 to 1. They were 50 to 1 in the morning line. Number six. King Guillermo has been scratched. Money moves. This is the one that is interesting to me. Money moves from Todd Pletcher, making just his fourth career start. Was a 32 1 in the morning line and is getting bet. Heavy. Todd Pletcher's Horse Down 15 to 1 South Bend. I don't think all the Notre Dame Ah money has come in yet on South Been 34 to 1, Tyler Gaffney, Leone and Belmont trainer. Mr Big News. Gabriel Sias trainer Brett Calhoun 47 to 1 number 10,000 words as we said 10 to 1. Number 11 Necker Island, who, by the way will have his blinkers off, so he's been running with blinkers on in his last few races. He will not wear blinkers today 51 to 1 Miguel Mania and Chris Hartman is the trainer. Soul a Valon Day. Patrick being cone Lucas Panici is the jockey Volonte 29 to 1 attachment, Right, Dale? Romans 49 the one I thought that he would actually get a bet down. I'm a little surprised that that one winning surprise winning impression is no surprise. He is 52 to 1, the longest shot on the board. Dallas Stuart and Joe Rocco. In the irons, New York traffic 15 to 1, Paco Lopez and Saffy Joseph is Ah Ah, actually, I think he's gonna end up being like the third or fourth choice when it's all said and done. Probably a little bit of a buzz horse here out here among the horseman Honore P. 8 to 1 in the 16 post position with Mike Smith. John Sheriff's is the trainer. Tis the law 4 to 5, Manny Franco and Barclay Tagg. An authentic on the outside Bob Baffert 9 to 1 John Velazquez in the iron, So there's your Kentucky Derby odds for right now and again betting is open. And we've got a bunch of our hot We have 30 minutes to the first post 31 minutes right now to the first post long time before we get to the Kentucky Derby, So a lot of money will be bet on there, Terry.

Jody Delhi Bob Baffert Kentucky Derby Musa Todd Pletcher Santa Anita Derby Peter Kurten Dale South Bend Mike Smith Mark Cassie John Sheriff New York Honore P. Barclay Tagg King Guillermo Necker Island Manny Franco Valon Day
Hurricane warning issued for parts of Florida as Isaias looms

Dennis Prager

00:34 sec | 2 years ago

Hurricane warning issued for parts of Florida as Isaias looms

"Forecasters have declared a hurricane warning for parts of the Florida coast as hurricane Sias drenches the bottles on the track for the U. S. East Coast. At a news conference. Florida Governor Raja Satya says he's declared a state of emergency for Florida's Atlantic Coast. It's the hurricane approaches. I want Floridians to know the state of Florida is fully prepared for this and any future storm during this hurricane season, the division of emergency management Has had the state operations center at Level one since March. Officials in Florida say they're closing beaches, marinas and parks in Miami Dade

Florida Governor Raja Satya U. S. East Coast Atlantic Coast Miami Dade
Sia becomes grandmother at 44 after adopted teenage son welcomes 'two babies'

Donna and Steve

01:45 min | 2 years ago

Sia becomes grandmother at 44 after adopted teenage son welcomes 'two babies'

"After revealing that she had adopted two teenagers who were aging out of foster care system. My God, he appeared on a think it was a podcast, where she talked about Becoming a grandmother after her youngest son, Welcome to Children of his own. I don't know any details, but she said he had two babies and she was immediately horrified. Right Banana. My daughters always said she doesn't want to have kids, and I'm like I'm fine with that. Right. I know most moms air like When are you gonna have baby? Not me. Find not being a grandma. My God, I love it. I talked about her decision to adopt, explaining that while her son's actually could have remained in foster care until they were 21 She wanted to get them out of the system so they could have a more stable life. This is a side of her that we don't really hear a lot about that is so fantastic, he said. The foster system is is failing us in my son's experience anyway, on In 18 years. They were in 18 different locations. Yeah, and she's trying to give them some stability now, she said. It's not a good life. She's like She talked about how she has to discipline them and say I'm doing this because I'm your mother. And I love you. I have no other agenda than the fact that I love you. I don't want to see you in prison. And she talked about how they experienced conditioning and complex trauma in foster care. Yes, and she enrolled them in trauma programs, and she just said that her youngest just came out. And he is the light of her life. I mean, this is such a beautiful story

Sia reveals she adopted teen boys who were aging out of foster care

Doug Stephan

02:43 min | 3 years ago

Sia reveals she adopted teen boys who were aging out of foster care

"This is C. R. and she's released together which regulates things here first single from our upcoming joint album and motion picture shows the our music is that it yeah the album in the film are both called music music okay she wrote and directed the film which has some interesting stars in it Kate Hudson's in its place the order junior Maddie Ziegler and definitely heroes channel regional songs for the soundtrack for the movie how to gather it coming to you with a music video starring the three principal cast members while the trooper Anson children all wearing outfits steamed after clouds and rainbows it's a really a video it's a durable yeah it's a based on a short story that see a road back in two thousand seven music follows seventy names who played by Kate Hudson a newly sober women figure out her place in the world when she learns that she is to become the sole guardian of her half sister that sister music played by Maddie Ziegler girl on the autism spectrum music's release date has not yet been announced the film explores to seize favorite themes finding your voice and what it means to create family earlier in the week see what public with the news that she had adopted two eighteen year old boys last year in in and out of foster care yeah they aged out of the foster system and they were just going to be basically jumped on to the street which is something that no one talks about and and that happens all the time I have a one of my friends grew up in a family where her parents fostered a lot of kids they have their own kids and they also foster and so many of them you know they paid for them to go to private school and then at eighteen there's just nothing they get dumped into the world and so her family ended up adopting at they would graduate from high school and then her family adopted a bunch of kids at the age of eighteen because there's just there's they're homeless the foster system does absolutely nothing after your eighteen how old is C. I don't know it's just hair yeah you can't tell who's usually wears a wig covering her face I think should be eighty we have no that's true we have no idea if I had to guess I'm gonna split the difference and save forty maybe yeah interesting idea and the idea that what she and her background if you write a story like this she is newly sober well she is over so this is a very kind spread out of her personal story I don't know about the half sister angles but that is kind of

C. R. Kate Hudson Maddie Ziegler Principal
Music News: New Releases, Upcoming Tours, And Chart Toppers

GSMC Music Podcast

08:24 min | 3 years ago

Music News: New Releases, Upcoming Tours, And Chart Toppers

"Now. It's time for new releases. Antunes new album releases Ozzy Osbourne Ordinary Man Royce. The five nine voice the five nine the allegory. Grimes Miss anthroposophy. Gene cannot know how to pronounce that coldplay. Everyday life. Dj Snake cardio `Blanche Deluxe Cardi Blonde Deluxe and holy broken heart new singles. The weekend after hours Ozzy Osbourne featuring post Malone it's rayed yellow busy. Keep it in the streets Pearl Jam Super Blood Wolf Moon. Tripler trooper read featuring. Russ the way Victoria Munay a Sacramento California native moment. Bt's featuring SIA on and what a what Alanis Morissette Smiling Now Billy Eyelashes. No time to die. Debut at Number Sixteen on the Billboard. Hot One hundred dated February twenty-ninth marking marking the latest theme song from James Bond Film to reach the chart. Time is the highest charting bond theme on the hot one hundred since Adele Sky Fall which debuted and peaked at number eight in October. Twenty twelve. Justin BIEBER's changes earns him his seventh number one album on billboard. Two hundred chart do a Liba is. Don't start now. Rises to number one on billboard's pop songs Radio Airplay Chart Dated February twenty ninth marking her second leader on the survey she. I reigned for four weeks in February twenty eighteen with new rules on tours and festival news. German electronic duo craftwork announced that a North America tour will be coming this summer in one. Nine hundred ninety. They changed the direction of modern music with the creation of their game. Changing electronic project that focused on robotics technology and the ideas images and sounds of the future. The German act is widely credited as creating the soundtracks for the digital age and influencing the sound of electronic music across all genres these performances will be an extension of the group's renowned three D. performances. And the first time in four years at craft work has performed this three D. Show in the states tickets for the tour go on sale to the public on Thursday at ten A. M. local time British bands. Pet shop boys and new order are heading to. North America for a joint headlining tour beginning in September. The Electronic Act will band together for the unity tour set to launch at Budweiser Stage in Toronto. The weekend is launching a headline tour a headline world tour ahead of his upcoming album. So the weekend is launching a headline world tour ahead of his upcoming album. The after hours tour is set to kick off June eleventh in Vancouver produced by live nation. The fifty seven date global trek will travel to arenas across the US Canada the UK Belgium the NAB The Netherlands Germany and France through November twelfth. The Toronto Singer will be joined by Sabrina. Claudio and Don over in the US and ate lamb and Claudio in Europe. Now onto the top. Ten songs played in the United States according to Apple Music Rowdy rich the box. Guess what still number. One young boy never broke again. Lou Top is number two. I just downloaded his album. Which I come out since he keep on popping up on these list number three future featuring drake life is good number. Four young boy number broke again. Redeye number five. Roddy rich featuring mustard fashion number six. This young boy is all over this list here. He is again with fine by time and number seven with knocked off. So if you didn't get that I'm just saying young boy never broke again but yeah he's six seven as well Number Eight bootie boogie. You WOULDA hoodie featuring rowdy rich numbers number nine the weekend again with after hours No it's not again number nine the weekend with after hours number ten pop smoke your instill no baby. Maybe his days on the top ten are over. Now let's compare that to the top. Ten songs played globally according Apple Music Rowdy which the box at number one in the US and globally still number two the weekend blinding lights number three young boy. I ain't saying hey y'all know who he is. Low Top number four future life is good featuring drake number five just bieber intentions number six the weekend after hours number seven tones and is back on the list of dance monkey number eight rowdy rich featuring mustard high fashion number nine Justin Bieber Yummy in number ten boogie would a hoodie numbers. Now what have I been jamming first off? I usually don't listen to singles nor talk about them. Prefer to listen to the entire project but I am really dig in this new a lantis smiling track. It's classic Atlantis. I mean it has me excited for the album and just happy that she is still making amazing music. Now I'm working my way through royse the five nine the allegory. It's twenty two songs and in our in eight minutes long. Soa Is GonNa take me a minute. I mean in this new world of EPA's anything longer than thirty minutes is a mission to get through but Royce is classic hip hop he is woke af and so are his kids. His interludes with his kids included includes him quizzing them on woke facts. I taught them. It's a heavy won't because it deals with race in America and its history with race. The production is incredible. I WANNA have expected anything less from Royce now Christian hip hop albums whole the broken heart. Ep So I never heard of this up and coming rapper slash singer science rapper. Lacroix's reach records but Craig plug him on his. I G saying congrats semi guy at Harvey official on his EP. Keep your eyes on this kid. So that is the only reason I checked out this kid. 'cause I'm Craig Fan? I didn't learn that craze signed him to I didn't. I didn't learn that cray signed him until I listened to the EP and then I started researching the kid now dudas talented and he looks like a regular dude like nothing about him. Screams artist so watching his visuals on. Youtube is kind of mind blowing. I mean each track on the EP has a visual. So you can choose how you would like to digest his prajit cold world or cold water and if I gave it all our my standouts But the entire album. You can listen from start to finish. I mean it's an EP It's super short. The run time for this one is wall on Apple Music. Obviously that's why I have Include it's only six tracks but it also includes the visuals on it so it says that it's twenty or forty minutes but I'm GonNa just cut that in half because it's literally like a double album with visuals. So it's probably only twenty minutes so you see it's easier for me to run through twenty minutes than in our eight minutes like royster five nine so I did get to get through all these a few times And it's definitely worth a

Justin Bieber United States Ozzy Osbourne Toronto Apple Craig Fan Royce Grimes Lou Top Gene North America Youtube Roddy Rich James Bond EPA Alanis Morissette Sacramento Cray Royster
What is the Microbiome?

The Doctor's Farmacy with Mark Hyman, M.D.

05:37 min | 3 years ago

What is the Microbiome?

"Let's back up a little bit and talk about this whole thing of the microbiome because we we started with functional medicine. There wasn't the word microbiome but we still focus on normalizing the gut function. We talked about the four our program which is a restoration program for the gut and how that can help so many different diseases. But the microbiome is the sum total of all the organisms that we have in care around inside of us in that also can include Viruses can also include fungi. You know the ecosystem of the microbiome inside the body is like a rainforest and at some point. Some people's ecosystems are so disturbed. So messed up. This like napalm is hit your rainforest that's like a corn mono-crop. Yes so you've got this whole ecosystem bacteria it's been disturbed by all these new talked about C.. Sections anybody anybody accused lack of breastfeeding and so on and our diet also Plays a huge role in the growth of good or bad bacteria and you can feed it certain things and it makes it worse than other things and it makes it better so talk about that. Yeah so so. I always tell patients that when you're eating food you WANNA be choosing your food not just for you what you like. Your you know the things that are pleasurable for you but you also want be feeding the good bacteria and we talked earlier about the Ackerman Ms Sinophilia. That's a specific bacteria that is in the body and that you want to have on high levels and when we do the testing we can actually determine. Do you have high levels of it or do you have low levels or we have no levels are very low levels and there are certain foods which you can incorporate into your diet. Things like pomegranate and Baca and A case the case Uvira cranberries and things like that these are foods which are basically pre pre a prebiotics. And when you incorporate them into your diet you it's like praying miracle-gro grow and a garden they start to flourish. They start to take over and they help balance out the whole ecosystem. Yeah I think is one of the biggest advances in our thinking about God. We get probiotics and that'll fix it but you know you're giving like fifty billion is a lot right but you have it hundred trillion bacteria so it's like a drop in the ocean he's athlete and one of the big insights I had was actually from an experience I had last year where I develop colitis so long story but I had been sick for mold and I've told that story and I had had a recurrence of my gut because I had the C. Diff and that was kind of really messed me up and I check my stool and had really low levels of this ackerman SIA which has been linked linked to autoimmune disease linked to poor response to immunotherapy for cancer. It's billing two Cardi metabolic disease and diabetes. And I'm like WHOA. Oh this is not good so I started to research it and created this cocktail of cranberry Pomegranate Green Tea Keisha fiber products other products. And I took it and it literally. Within three weeks I went from full blown clients to completely normal perfect. Yeah and it was sort of a wakeup call for me. In which was you can't just get products you've got to feed the whole inner garden and what it likes is certain foods and likes all the polyphenols yes in the polyphenyls colorful dark rainbow color chemicals that are in plan foods certain plant whose have more of the berries and so forth. Absolutely your microbiome is depending on what you feed it. How you grow your inner garden depends hands on what you're eating and you can create a nasty garden with weeds and toxins and bad stuff and poisonous plants or you can create a really flourishing rich garden it it actually takes care of you and also the other thing that a lot of even physicians are not even aware of is that most of your immune system is got? Yeah yes so I mean I had one patient in particular particular who I saw. Who came in? It was a great story. She came in And she was Having a MS as their diagnosis she also have community autoimmune disease multiple sclerosis and she also had infertility and I did a a complete workup on her. She had Despite osas had had bacterial overgrowth also had sensitivity to gluten and had also some not a heavy now big level but some level of of Mercury in the body. So so I worked on a diet worked on You know both prebiotics and probiotics to clean up the gut got her completely of gluten and Lo and behold I guess what her multiple sclerosis went away. Amazing disappeared are not not to say that you all her medals out to not to say that all cases of multiple sclerosis this are due to that but there are many pathways to multiples. Close the door. Many pathways to Alzheimer's disease or any disease Aaron disease exactly because the body hit will manifest it in and only certain inflammatory pathways but and then ultimately she got off of her medications her. Ms To this day is in complete remission. She has no symptoms on nomads. And as the side effects you've got pregnant. The personalization of medicine is what functional. Medicine is all about. and that's really what's different here about. How are we practice medicine at the ultra wellness? Because we're looking at each person as an individual or creating personalized medicine and personalized health which is radically new way of thinking and we we just lump everybody with the same symptoms in the same categories. But it doesn't tell you anything about the cause and I always say just because you know the name of your disease. I mean you know what's wrong with you all right. And that's what we do too very detailed histories here through very advanced diagnostic testing. Look some of these things so the microbiomes ecosystem of bugs and our God. It's trillions of bacteria area. It outnumbers ourselves by ten to one outnumbers. DNA my one hundred one and it has been linked to everything from disease to cancer. Heart Disease Diabetes Obesity to autism to Alzheimer's. I mean the list goes on and

Autoimmune Disease Metabolic Disease Heart Disease Ackerman Ms Sinophilia Alzheimer's Disease Alzheimer Baca Osas LO Aaron