35 Burst results for "SLS"

"sls" Discussed on The Hair Radio Show with Kerry Hines

The Hair Radio Show with Kerry Hines

03:27 min | Last month

"sls" Discussed on The Hair Radio Show with Kerry Hines

"You should always have a clarifying shampoo, and I think the fear with a lot of the consumers that are natural, they don't want to properly cleanse their hair or completely submerge their hair in shampoo because they are afraid of the hair drying out or becoming really tingly, etc. But if you have the proper balanced regimen, meaning that your hair, once you finish styling your hair or applying your styling products, your hair should be at a pH balance of 4.5 to 5.5. The scale runs from 1 to 15, and each product that you apply to your hair has a certain pH level. If you don't know it, know what the pH of each product you're using in your hair and how to determine that you, again, you're going to be spinning your wheels. So back to your shampoo, you should always come in with a clarifying shampoo first. Clarifying shampoos will come in and remove any and everything that has deposited onto the hair shaft, oils, dirt, debris, minerals, some sweat. That deposit on the shaft make the hair very dry and brittle. Medications, if they, you know, go swimming, it takes everything out. And then your second shampoo should be determined upon your finished look. So if they're wanting to wear their hair curly or coily, they should be using a moisturizing shampoo that's geared towards texture. If they're wanting to smooth their hair, do a steam press or a silk press, then they need to be using a shampoo, a smoothing shampoo, that's also a moisturizing shampoo designed for smoothing the hair. Because those type of shampoos contain kyonic polymers, kyonic polymers is a smoothing complex that prepares the hair for heat. It actually smooths the cuticle layer, so it makes the hair, it makes it more easier for the stylist or the consumer to actually go in with heat and smooth the hair. If they're using a shampoo that's geared towards curly, they're going to find that their silk press is not going to last as long. It's going to be a little bit more challenging to go in and smooth the hair. And then, of course, it doesn't have the heat protectants or the humidity blockers built in. And then they should be rotating their conditioning regimen. The hair is just like the body, so if they constantly use the same conditioners, eventually the hair will not respond. And this is just general. And once you've built that foundation coming in with the proper shampoo and conditioning regimen, now of course, your shampoos and conditioners should be sulfate-free. A lot of times, that's general. However, if they're experiencing any type of hair or scalp disorders, dry scalp, so we're at dermatitis, eczema, psoriasis, they shouldn't be using any shampoos that contain SLS, which is sodium large sulfate. And you'll find that a lot of the shampoos that state they're sulfate free, they'll still have the SLS built in, which is very mild, a milder form of sulfate. And what sulfate is, it's just like you use a dish detergent in your hair. Sulfate actually goes in the strips. The hair makes the hair very dry. But as for the conditioners, again, rotating the conditioners, they should be using a protein and moisturizing treatment. However, too much protein can snap the hair, too little can as well, so they do want to make sure that both contents are properly balanced. And any other specifics that they may need, if they're suffering from hair loss, then of course there are treatment shampoos that are on the market that will cater to the hair loss.

"sls" Discussed on WTOP

WTOP

02:29 min | 5 months ago

"sls" Discussed on WTOP

"USPS dot com slash moving forward. This is WTO P news. Good morning, it's four 45. I'm Dan Roman, the most powerful rocket ever constructed lifted off in Texas Thursday, the SpaceX Starship was airborne for about four minutes before exploding. No one was on board the nearly 400 foot rocket which fell into the Gulf of Mexico after the failure. CBS News space analyst Bill harwood joined WTO Sean and Hillary with details on the failed launch. We were talking to smoother space reporters about statistically, what do you refer to this as? And it's a failure. They were trying to get to space with the upper stage of this rocket and they simply didn't get there. That said, the first stage of this rocket has never flown before. The upper stage prototypes have flown, so they have some good experience with that, but this first stage is never flown. And it is a beast. 33 engines in this thing generate 16 million pounds of thrust that's twice as much as NASA's SLS moon rocket that we all marveled at just last year. So getting it off the ground safely and out of the lower atmosphere, very definitely wasn't achievement. And they did get that part done. So, you know, if your hearkened back to the Apollo 13 days, I guess you could call it a successful failure, but it was a good first step, but they clearly have work left to do. What is the company hoping to use these rockets for down the road? Elon Musk, the owner of SpaceX. He says that the starship is really the future of the company. Unlike the falcon 9, which we've all seen land, the first stage of that rocket comes back to earth and has been very remarkable. The entire starship is reusable. First and second stages. In other words, if they can make this work, it's going to lower the cost of putting payloads and passengers into space dramatically. NASA is paying SpaceX billions to prepare a variant of that upper stage to carry astronauts down to the surface of the moon in 2025 or 26. So that work is going on in parallel with the development of the full up starship. But of course, Musk claims that the starship eventually will be able to carry people and cargo to the moon and on to Mars. But that's after they achieve airline like reliability. And that's a ways down the road. CBS News space analyst Bill harwood. Now to the top stories we're working on this morning at WTO P morning commuters will tackle the new traffic pattern on the GW Parkway this morning. The ACLU says a

"sls" Discussed on WTOP

WTOP

02:45 min | 5 months ago

"sls" Discussed on WTOP

"15, I'm Hillary Howard. And I'm Sean Anderson. Thanks for being with us. The most powerful rocket ever constructed lifted off in Texas today. SpaceX Starship was airborne for almost four minutes before exploding. No one was aboard the nearly 400 foot rocket which fell safely into the Gulf of Mexico. CBS News space analyst Bill harwood joined us a little earlier with what SpaceX is saying about that launch. We were talking to some of the space reporters about statistically, what are you referred to this as? And it's a failure. They were trying to get to space with the upper stage of this rocket and they simply didn't get there. That said, the first stage of this rocket has never flown before. The upper stage prototypes have flown, so they have some good experience with that. But this first stage is never flown. And it is a beast. 33 engines in this thing generate 16 million pounds of thrust that's twice as much as NASA's SLS moon rocket that we all marveled at just last year. So getting it off the ground safely and out of the lower atmosphere, very definitely was an achievement. And they did get that part done. So if you harken back to the Apollo 13 days, I guess you could call it a successful failure, but it was a good first step, but they clearly have work left to do. What is the company hoping to use these rockets for down the road? The owner of SpaceX. He says that the starship is really the future of the company. Unlike the falcon 9, which we've all seen land, the first stage of that rocket comes back to earth and has been very remarkable. The entire starship is reusable. First and second stages. In other words, if they can make this work, it's going to lower the cost of putting payloads and passengers into space dramatically. NASA is paying SpaceX billions to prepare a variant of that upper stage to carry astronauts down to the surface of the moon in 2025 or 26. So that work is going on in parallel with the development of the full up starship. But of course, Musk claims that the starship eventually will be able to carry people and cargo to the moon and on to Mars. But that's after they achieve airline like reliability. And that's a ways down the road. That is CBS space analyst Bill harwood. Climate change has taken a dramatic toll over the past ten years. The 7 worst years for polar ice sheets melting have now occurred during the past decade, according to new research. There's been a 5 fold increase in ice melt and rising sea levels. According to a team of international researchers, they used data from 50 satellite surveys of Antarctica and Greenland, taken between 1992 and 2020. CBS News

"sls" Discussed on WTOP

WTOP

02:44 min | 5 months ago

"sls" Discussed on WTOP

"The most powerful rocket ever built, lifted off in Texas today, SpaceX's starship was airborne for about four minutes before exploding in midair. No one was on board the nearly 400 foot rocket, which fell safely into the Gulf of Mexico after the failure. Joining us now, CBS News space analyst Bill harwood, Bill always great to have you with us. Thanks so much. Oh, it's my pleasure. Glad to be here. So SpaceX is saying they consider this lift off a success, even though it exploded less than four minutes after takeoff, most people would look at this bill and say that's a failure. Yeah, you know, for it's funny, we were talking to some other space reporters about statistically, what do you refer to this as? And you're right. It's a failure. You know, they were trying to get to space with the upper stage of this rocket and they simply didn't get there. That said, the first stage of this rocket has never flown before. The upper stage prototypes have flown, so they have some good experience with that. But this first stage is never flown. And it is a beast. You know, 33 engines in this thing generate 16 million pounds of thrust that's twice as much as NASA's SLS moon rocket that we all marveled at just last year. So getting it off the ground safely and out of the lower atmosphere, very definitely was an achievement. And they did get that part done. So if you harken back to the Apollo 13 days, I guess you could call it a successful failure. But it was a good first step, but they clearly have work left to do. What is the company hoping to use these rockets for down the road? Elon Musk, the owner of SpaceX. He says that the starship is really the future of the company. Unlike the falcon 9, which we've all seen land, the first stage of that rocket comes back to earth and has been very remarkable. The entire starship is reusable. First and second stages. In other words, if they can make this work, it's going to lower the cost of putting payloads and passengers into space dramatically. NASA is paying SpaceX billions to prepare a variant of that upper stage to carry astronauts down to the surface of the moon in 2025 or 26. So that work is going on in parallel with the development of the full of starship. But of course, Musk claims that the starship eventually will be able to carry people and cargo to the moon and on to Mars. But that's after they achieve airline like reliability. And that's a ways down the road. Hey Bill, thanks so much, really appreciate it. Sure thing. CBS News space analyst Bill harwood. Top stories we're working on for you at WTO. Attorneys general in 19 states, including Maryland are asking for a federal recall of some kias in Hyundai's. The White

"sls" Discussed on The Hockey PDOcast

The Hockey PDOcast

04:40 min | 8 months ago

"sls" Discussed on The Hockey PDOcast

"Had banana chicken samsonov, they let them go bring in two new goalies, their performance has been perfectly fine. I think we're seeing, I don't know what the word is. The rotating cast element in terms of everyone is almost much more replaceable. It's musical chair. Yeah. We've seen the game of musical chairs every year. I think more teams are willing to take part in that even in the number one position. Like forever, we would see musical chairs, but it wasn't always the number one, right? It's a little more interchangeable, right? And I think part of that is, how many guys do we put in that game changer elite category right now? To me, that list is shorter. And so unless you have an Andre SLS, and this is where it's really easy right now to say that teams aren't going to invest in goaltending like they used to outside of an Andre vasilevsky because the next generation don't forget we lost a lot of generational gold Danish in the last three years. Think of the long goes and the lundquist and the retirements that we've seen. It's a deep list and I think the tear below them gets missed. Corey Crawford, I remember Corey Schneider reaching out to me at one point this year when all the focus was on the decline in save percentage and he sent me a list of all these guys that had left the league and and he wasn't wrong. That was a part of it. And the experience they took with them. So as this list shortens, I mean, it's really easy to just decide you're going to invest in less and have sort of two decent options, then go all in on one option because the list of guys that satisfy that requirement is shorter than it's ever been like, what, 60? Like 70, I'm trying to think of the names that I'd put on that list. I would have had Thatcher demko there, but then the injuries, now there's question marks because of the injuries.

samsonov Andre SLS Andre vasilevsky Corey Crawford Corey Schneider Thatcher demko
"sls" Discussed on ACG - The Best Gaming Podcast

ACG - The Best Gaming Podcast

03:15 min | 9 months ago

"sls" Discussed on ACG - The Best Gaming Podcast

"Like it just, I felt like I knew what aliens was going to be the moment it booted up and was like, we're sending a marine team in. I'm like, they're dead. And then the tension comes, I think, less from the marines for me. There does to some extent, but mostly it comes from Newton, the relationship between Newton Ripley and how that's going to bear out and whatnot. It was the world's longest escort movie. She's escorting newt entire time. By the way, I loved aliens. I just didn't find I found it like hellraiser two. I think that was what Steve and I were talking about are hellraiser one was horror. And I think twos in the SLS island. I could be wrong. But it's like the cenobites turn good almost, and they try to, they join up for a moment, or aliens versus predator one, where at the end, you have a moment where the hero is running next to the predator. And I know a lot of people love that movie, but it was like a hero moment where they're running together. And I was like, what the? This is so cheesy. It's so like a comic book, but again, I think I'm in the minority, because I think a lot of people like that movie. Let's see, moving on from there. Hasbro wizards of the coast canceled 5 game projects. So all their D&D games are canceled, which I'm wondering what that means. Hopefully not. Is falter skate three? Tied to the wizards of this Hasbro only. It's there. Yeah, so any of the outside ones aren't canceled. It's there like internal development teams.

Newton Ripley marines Newton Steve Hasbro wizards
Anthony D'Esposito: Focusing on Education, Crime & Immigration

The Dan Bongino Show

01:55 min | 11 months ago

Anthony D'Esposito: Focusing on Education, Crime & Immigration

"But New York I think has had enough I don't know if it's just the street crime situation that's deteriorated The illegal immigration situation has gotten worse By the way I said there were three issues in Long Island that I hear about all the time illegal immigration crime and education That's what I hear about a lot I should have mentioned you there too But I think New York is in for a sea change And I think one of the reasons is they constantly overstep the Democrats They had an opportunity to redistrict the state of New York fairly to get proper Democrat and Republican representation and they didn't do it The Democrats crapped all over the process tried to basically phase out every single Republican in the state And what happened This judge stepped in ordered a new redistricting and now we've got districts like yours district four and Long Island where you got a darn good shot of pulling this off Yeah no not only do we have a good shot We are going to pull it off And when I got into this race even after the redistricting people told me listen this is a tough race There's no way that you're going to win And I said you know you don't know Nassau county like I know an SL county And without a doubt you are correct The three issues that people are focused on like I said a lot of people are focused on the education the crime is always important And the border the open border is insane I mean I went down to El Paso Texas probably a month and a half ago And I met with congressman Gonzalez who represents the southern border in El Paso And the open borders in the failed policies of Joe Biden and the fact that Kamala Harris tells everyone our borders are secure is absolutely insane I mean we could watch the news and whether you watch CNN or Fox News you watch video after video after video of migrants coming into our country They're wreaking havoc there committing crimes They're bringing illegal narcotics into our communities And we need to step up and we need to change it And we need to secure the borders We need to really provide funding to our customs and border patrol

New York Long Island Sl County Congressman Gonzalez El Paso Nassau County Kamala Harris Joe Biden Texas Fox News CNN
"sls" Discussed on TuneInPOC

TuneInPOC

03:42 min | 1 year ago

"sls" Discussed on TuneInPOC

"One of the SLS. Yes, you know. I can do my number. Or highlight the perfection or you need to be a canister momentum temperature and the SEC.

SEC
"sls" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

02:38 min | 1 year ago

"sls" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"A global news update. An attempt to send the Artemis one moon rocket into space is being scrubbed once again. Roy O'Neill reports. The news is a disappointment to an estimated crowd of 400,000 people who gathered along Florida space coast for the historic launch. Launch director Charlie Blackwell Thompson just called a scrub for the launch attempt today. Engineers tried three different ways to seal a leak of super cold liquid hydrogen, but were unable to make the repairs. Artemis one is an uncrewed test flight of the new SLS rocket and its Orion capsule sending it on a monthlong trip around the moon. Reports say a pilot who threatened to crash a plane into a Walmart in Mississippi is in custody. That came after WTVA reported the plane made a crash landing southeast of Ashland in the north central part of the state. On Facebook earlier this morning tupelo police said the threat involving Walmart was made as a subject was flying over their city, police worked with Walmart to get the store evacuated. Ex-president Trump is calling his former attorney general William Barr a week and pathetic rhino or Republican in name only. This comes after Barr told Fox News the Justice Department likely as good evidence to investigate Trump's mishandling of classified documents. Trump took the truth social to criticize bar on Friday, saying he became a captive to the radical left Democrats. Also yesterday, the FBI unsealed records from their search of Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida. It revealed agents found 43 empty classified folders and 28 empty folders that said return to staff secretary slash military aid. College football returns in a big way today with a huge slate of games, top matchups include defending national champion Georgia hosting Oregon in a de facto home game in Atlanta. Cincinnati visits Arkansas with the razorbacks favored at home, Utah starts the season in the top ten, but it has a tough opening contest as it visits Florida. I'm Julie Ryan. Home sellers are beginning to drop their prices as the housing market cools fast. Jim Forbes has the numbers. In August, 20% of sellers lowered their original asking price compared to 11% last year. The supply of homes for sale is also rising quickly up nearly 27% from last year's market. This increase of available homes coupled with higher mortgage rates caused a major slowdown in the housing market and as inflation continues to rise, many Americans are focused on spending less. The days of intense bidding wars and speed sales

Roy O'Neill Charlie Blackwell Thompson Walmart WTVA tupelo police Ex-president Trump William Barr Florida Trump Trump's Mar Lago estate Ashland Mississippi Barr Justice Department Fox News Julie Ryan Facebook FBI Jim Forbes
"sls" Discussed on the Intuitive Edge

the Intuitive Edge

05:11 min | 2 years ago

"sls" Discussed on the Intuitive Edge

"Chef Chris was previously the executive pastry chef at the bazaar by Jose Andres at the SLS hotel. Chef Chris has honed his skills about chocolate and worked in revered French kitchens and France, as well as the U.S., the Ritz Carlton and the wind Las Vegas. I first learned about Chris Harvey once Saturday afternoon when I was watching videos on the pastry arts magazine online. And I was so intrigued and mesmerized by what he was creating and making, that I decided to follow him and his work on Instagram. And it didn't take me long to realize that this was a man that was extremely dedicated and passionate about his work as far as pastries and chocolates. He's just the kind of person you'd want to invite to your house as a guest because you know that his life experiences good or bad are going to elevate you spiritually and intellectually. And I can't wait to introduce you to him. I can't wait till you hear our conversation. And I hope that he inspires you and motivates you. Chef Chris Harvey, it's a pleasure. First I want to know all about your training. Tell us.

Chef Chris Jose Andres SLS hotel Chris Harvey Ritz Carlton Chris Las Vegas France Instagram U.S.
Why Mobile Gaming Is Here to Stay & Grow Ft. Paul 'InVerum' Todkill of ESL

Esports Network Podcast

01:41 min | 2 years ago

Why Mobile Gaming Is Here to Stay & Grow Ft. Paul 'InVerum' Todkill of ESL

"Mobile gaming space it's a little bit easier to kind of find time to to very much while you're traveling. Or while you're you know you have a little bit of down time here and there Mobile gaming is definitely on the up-and-up. And that's really why I want to talk to you. Cuz it's it's an interesting industry. We find ourselves in right now, right? Where we have PC console and now mobile Gaming's really is this emerging space for the sports industry. So you move into your current role with the SL what makes the mobile All space. So unique in this moment right now, I'm going to give the the default answer and it's the answer. Everybody will give you and it's because it's true do for is because I am a sports has no barrier to entry. You don't need $1,000. $2,000 PC, don't need a $600 console. You don't need a, you need nothing. You need the device. You already own in your pocket and these jobs any phone you bought in the last three years is going to be good enough to play any game at a passable level that is being played. Competitively, there's no barrier to entry, we look at the demo splits, we look at the age splits off. I had a 16 in a sixty-five-year-old competing on the same stage. While Dallas, we have had the first women to compete like professionally, like a non Intel challenge type event on our stage of the SL last few years worth of our mobile events. It is the most diverse audience is the most wide-ranging audience. We have a whole team of Dad's competing in Vietnam levels down. What other sport could you have that in? You couldn't we have sixteen year, olds competing playing grinding away at brawl Stars after school. It is crazy to watch and it's because anybody can pick up their phone and do it doesn't discriminate. That's what is this really separating Mobile gaming right now?

Dallas Intel Vietnam
"sls" Discussed on Growth Mode

Growth Mode

05:19 min | 2 years ago

"sls" Discussed on Growth Mode

"You never know if you're gonna fuck and see him again so so it's really simple of let's get to closure the only closing maneuver. I have in my arsenal is what should we do next. That's the phrase all us and when you say what should we do next. You're going to be blown away by the number of times they say okay. Well let's get started our i. Let's do that you know and it's funny to me to watch. How many people wanna do business once. You just have that natural flowing conversation. Yeah that's how all my sales are now with companies. It's finding out what's going on in the world and asking him. You know where where i know. You don't turn where their pain points. Are you know what is bothering them. What's keeping them up at night and having conversations about those impacts and what's what it's doing to their business and then be able to show them how they can fix it and then just asking that question all right so what what's next and the invariably they're like well let's start. How how do we get going like sweep. This is what we do see. I think you don't necessarily focused on the pain points. I think you understand where they wanna go. And i think you've gotten really good at asking questions to help them understand that by doing this this this they can figure out that you're the guy can take him down the path to to get them there and shit Win talking about six sls closing such a phrase that i can't even get it out of my own damn head so ninety meaning to because we're drives me nuts but i remember the other day kevin reached out he goes. I finally did it. And i said did would because i did a one call close right. I'm like fucking banda's dude. I mean i think everybody almost. I mean there's definitely some outliers but everybody can get to a one call close you know. I don't care how fucking technical you get. I mean there's some things but if you know your shit you know get the deal done by having a real conversation and a commitment to move forward and watch what happens in your your business so i think one of the things you said is is really key and that's getting them to verbalize and come up with what it's going to mean for their business to do something and to go a certain way. I think too often sales people try and use that as their clothes and try to put words into their their customers mouth as opposed to just asking them questions. That's going to get them to say things that that because they said it's naturally going to resonate with them. Yes no one. No incessantly says well. That's not true you just said it. It must be true. It came out of your mouth not my salesperson. So i think that's really key and that's why the powers of doing the whole questioning piece. Is they get to form you. Get the help formulate a conclusion. Yeah and you know if you focus so much in that conversation working on making sure they're enjoying the conversation as much as you are that you both walk away feeling like a nominal fucking conversation. The net sales call. We'll be magical. It's it's so cool when you get to the end of a sales call and somebody goes man. I'm so glad we had this conversation today. That's when you know you're doing it right because even if they don't become a client and you provide them with enough value that they can walk away as a better person or they're doing something more. That's a fucking win man and that that's how it should be so it's not about asking for the sale..

kevin today one both ninety one call six sls things
How the Worlds Great Vaccination Hope Crashed

Slate's If Then

01:57 min | 2 years ago

How the Worlds Great Vaccination Hope Crashed

"When i see pictures of india now with thousands of people dying every day and crowds desperate to give vaccinated. I keep thinking back to this moment in january first. Allow me to congratulate you on your handling of the pandemic and launch the biggest Vaccine drive into this swedish executive. And he's congratulating narendra modi india's prime minister on what seemed at the time like a victory against covid moody was speaking in hindi to international thinker types at the world economic forum in davos which was held online mag gap nick or nuggets part told the crowd that india quote succeeded in saving the lives of the maximum number of its citizens. When moody was talking. About davos i think a number of indians would have looked at what he said what. He said that he was sort of broadly. Right that's some on super manian journalists with courts that you know on the evidence of the pass gio the bus nine months india had done relatively speaking better than many advanced western countries with much better healthcare systems but the plan as it was laid out in dallas wasn't just to sit back and enjoy india's apparent cova successes vaccines coming online and india would undertake the world's largest vaccine dr if india had a massive challenge on its hands one point three billion people needing two point. Six billion doses. It also had huge advantage over everyone else. The serum institute of india the serum institute or sl is the world's largest vaccine manufacturer and it's not an exaggeration to say that it has helped vaccinate people in more than one hundred countries and that was the plan for cove it too.

India Covid Moody Narendra Modi World Economic Forum Davos Nuggets Moody Nick Serum Institute Of India The S Dallas
NASA SLS Artemis moon rocket hot-fire test

WBZ Midday News

00:40 sec | 2 years ago

NASA SLS Artemis moon rocket hot-fire test

"Huge moon rocket in Mississippi today. Here's Peter King. It's been just over two months since the first so called Green run came up well short of its planned eight minute engine firing the Stennis Space Flight Center. National hopes today's retest of the space launch system core stage. Goes better. KFC's Cliff Lanham. We're very hopeful and way bring on the challenge because we can we can meet it. The SLS is supposed to fly in on crewed mission by late this year, but it will be hard to make up the time lost from January's failure course stage being tested today will have to get here to Florida. Then be made it to the rest of the booster and tested Peter King's CBS News Orlando Cleanup

Stennis Space Flight Center Peter King Cliff Lanham Mississippi KFC Florida Cbs News Orlando Cleanup
[TEST] OA468: SCOTUS News! Trump's Taxes, Affirmative Action, and Title X

Opening Arguments

05:23 min | 2 years ago

[TEST] OA468: SCOTUS News! Trump's Taxes, Affirmative Action, and Title X

"Welcome dubbing arguments. This is episode. Four hundred and sixty eight. I'm thomas that's andrew. How you doing sir. I am fantastic. Thomas how're you doing pretty well pretty deep pretty well doing okay not bad not great not bad vaccines almost fully kicked in. I'm excited seeing so many people online getting vaccinated it. Just it makes me. So happy to see people valuing science and just the utter miracle of science that. Is this vaccine several vaccines staggering. We're living through some well. We've lived through a lot of history honestly. I could use to live through a little bit less history but this is the kind of part of history which is a historically fast amazing vaccine that. I'm just so excited. Little positive. Because of that. And i'm so happy to everybody who's masked up and social distance. I just really appreciate everything everybody's done. And maybe once we enough of us get vaccinated. We can start seeing normality nice to get back to normal so i'm doing anyway. We got a few announcements for patrons by the way the freebritney episode bonus. Episode with morgan stringer for. There's a big story there. There's a lot of twists and turns too much to talk about but we tried and it was really interesting so go check that out. Patriot dot com slash law. Yeah any level you get access to the bonus episode and And morgan is fantastic and we love having her on and And that was a ton of also just a reminder. We plug this last week but there are two separate essay contests out there. We've got links on our website in the show notes. One is our buddy seidel at the freedom from religion foundation with a contest for. Us law students where they are giving away a pretty good chunk of money And then the second is My involvement with the federal bar association of maryland. So if you are a high school student in maryland You can answer the topic. Prompt of How lawyers can serve roles in fighting against a systematic discrimination and injustice in the legal system so If either of those apply to you or students or friends or whatever Please please two point folks. Actions get the word out excellent. Hey how's I'll forty five. This week was we. We did the supreme court updates that were not going to cover on this show So the kind of the first. Look at You know obviously the headline news of the supreme court declining after an inexplicable for month period of delay declining to Issue injunctive relief to prevent may masar from turning over trump's taxes to cy vance the manhattan district attorney and And as of this record he has those documents. So yeah so location of that on cleanup. Also it's probably just. Because i work with you but i'm team may czars. I don't know why you guys didn't address this on the show. Big major major debate. Ag says like mazaar or something. She put the emphasis on the end of it. And i look. We might be you and i might be wrong. But i also feel like i'm grandfathered into masert just absorb that from you so you know i if you made me wrong then. I'm holding you accountable for now team masar. It sounds better. I don't know. I agree so we was ours. Yeah there's this could be just trying to start our. Yeah no it's nothing will be that what about sure we'll be. What about sim sears. Only so you know you may remember last week. We did the Repressed memory with Poppy of ross kerry various things story. But we wanted to attack. We've got a few emails about like well. Actually there's maybe this tiny Theory justification for the science of repressed memories and lindsay. And i took well lindsey. She's the scientists took a look at the evidence and we did see a little bit of the other side of that just to give a full picture of the possible science there There's some interesting stuff we stand by. Basically everything we said in that first episode about repressed memory and and the panic and all that stuff is still totally valid. But it was worth you know. We like being totally clear as c. Say on this show presenting a full picture of the science and so we delved into sort of the other side of that so super fascinating episode. Oh that sounds awesome. I haven't heard this week's sl yet. Largely because i was prepping late like one. Am your time on the night before. So i feel like it's it's okay buddy. Okay you don't get to the top of my cue but You know. I usually You know reading eleven hundred in a pile of documents were snorkel out of the time. I don't blame me for all right. Would make that into a t shirt

Masar Morgan Stringer Buddy Seidel Federal Bar Association Of Mar Cy Vance Freedom From Religion Foundati Supreme Court Andrew Thomas Sim Sears Morgan Ross Kerry Maryland Donald Trump Manhattan AG United States Lindsey Lindsay
"sls" Discussed on KFI AM 640

KFI AM 640

06:35 min | 2 years ago

"sls" Discussed on KFI AM 640

"They'll be human tended. But the plan is for these to be big, robotically tended greenhouses that will expose these seeds. Through the radiation and zero G, and we still haven't really figured out which ones doing the most work, But you bring these seeds back, and the idea in the Reagan Peninsula is that you know, there's only at least in U A E. Only about 5% of the land is actually under cultivation, and they're concerned about clarity. And rightly so. So. The idea is this would help a lot of people and actually, China's Second largest used variety. Wheat is a space the death of strain, which I didn't know till today. So so they send them in this space. And these and these seeds say, Oh, this is tough. And they call on some of their additional junk Edna, which turns out to have some used to turn on some features that make it easier to survive in space is is that what I'm hearing? That's the basic explanation. There's more to it than that. But it sort of goes. I am a basic guy. So s so yes. So join the club, right? So that the general story and there was dressed in the dreams alive. Hey, turn off your turn off your video. We're losing your aerated. Uh, Yep. Turned the terrible video going by, say again. What was it? The Cronkite narrated? What's it called? Did you ever see the dream is alive was not something about the shuttle? No. No. They're rated by water from a well to do that. Yes. What of the missions they did was called the LDF large, long duration Exposure facility, And it was a school bus sized thing. It was just this big aluminum cylinder. Basically, that had seeds and little bits of plants and All kinds of stuff all over the outside on the left it up there for I think a year so I was really there. First experiment. So, yeah, they're gonna bring these things back and they're stronger and tougher, which is interesting because people just get weaker and all messed up, right? Bones get brittle in our brain Start to go south and our eyes Do you focus and we get all fouled up by space for plants get stronger. So isn't that funny? We'll figure so speaking of the U A E their probes that Mars now so beautiful images coming back. Of the Red Planet. Not images. China's and China's, too In fact, there's a lot of space going on. There's two launch is scheduled for tonight. It's kind of amazing. Suddenly this is all gotten very ex. You know, this is really happening. Well, and I think a couple of things could attribute to that. Space X has made space way cheaper than it ever. Wasim and because of you on success with the Falcon, nine, and now the Falcon heavy. It's really pushed the other US providers and the international providers because it was really expensive. The launch with China or Russia, whoever Not as expensive. The U S but still costly. But then here comes Space X and says Yeah, I could do it for about half Ioan apology and unfortunately, it's a posthumous apology to my friend. Jerry Purnell, the science fiction author, who was an early advocate for commercial space exploration. I used to say all, Jerry, Come on. This is something NASA should do. This is something we should support. He said. No way out. You got it's gonna have to be commercial. And he was absolutely right. Elon Musk. Space X is is, you know, as you just said, has made it possible to do a lot more Jeff basis just announced he's stepping down from Amazon as the CEO to devote more time to his Space project blue origin. You know, he's been kind of. I'm sure there's a little you know, billionaire to billionaire rivalry going on here because space is so much blue origin seems to be a little bit behind in all that. Do you see the tweets to go back and forth stuff like Nice try. Hey, Welcome to the club. You're catching up on stuff I mean basis has been dumping money into that billion to two billion a year for quite a while. But as we've seen, they've done some great things. You know, The new Shepherd is cool, though. It's flying only very irregularly and still doesn't fly people and he's selling rocket engines to a bunch of companies. But In terms of what we see outside Space X is just Handed them their lunch, You know, so I think it's a good thing for him to do to really get in there. Start pushing. Unfortunately, he's not any lines, an engineer and a scary brilliant one basis is not. But we've seen what he did with Amazon. So I have no doubt the porridge is gonna catch fire. They're building a lunar lander. Catch fire is not the best phrase to use but I understand what you're trying to say. There things are gonna blow up. But also this is why I was kind of arguing is commercial spaces. Uh, it's gotta be for all mankind. And it is the natural tendency of capitalists like Elon Musk and Jeff basis to get into this competition and say, I want to beat you and you're gonna be me And really, this shouldn't be about One company beating another. This should be about something we're all doing together. For mankind. So that's why I think we actually have a good balance now because NASA is still very much involved, right? Yeah, NASA's hiring those guys to do a lot. In fact, just last week announced that elements of the lunar gateway big heavy components that were supposed to fly on the SLS. Which is still just dating very slowly, are going to go up and Falcon heavy. So you're right. There's this sweet spot and I'm a little the only Venn diagram and space to Plato's about the sweet spot. Three circles. One is NASA. One is private space companies, both domestic and foreign. And the third is international space. Aytekin season. Yes, get the overlap those three circles there's when you really win. Something happens. Yeah, And I would say you know that the competition between basis and musk And I, you know your viewpoint resonates with her. You would. At the same time. It's that competition and musk sphere sense of absolute. I think he's competing against himself and God nature At this point, you need a little bit of that hubris market. You need a little bit of that ambition. Yeah, a little pinch of that. I wouldn't want it to be all that. I think you're exactly right. That Venn diagram is really important international cooperation. Uh, our own government putting money and effort into it and really making a priority. And then these great Genius innovators like Elon, Musk and Jeff basis, putting in their two billion.

Jerry Purnell Musk NASA Amazon Elon Musk Elon Jeff Space X two billion Mars tonight Jerry last week Reagan Peninsula One Three circles Falcon China three circles third
"sls" Discussed on Radio Fajri 99.3FM

Radio Fajri 99.3FM

05:19 min | 2 years ago

"sls" Discussed on Radio Fajri 99.3FM

"This bit of in sl. Chancellor has with the oil the auto defending champs w has the oil even heavy and fees many lanna and.

NASA, Boeing adjusting SLS Core Stage parameter limits for second Green Run firing

NASACast Audio

00:27 sec | 2 years ago

NASA, Boeing adjusting SLS Core Stage parameter limits for second Green Run firing

"Nasa is targeting the week of february twenty first for a second green run hot fire test of the space launch system or sos rockets core stage using the b. to test stand at our status space center. The exact date for the test will be set following test readiness review. The hot fire is the final. In a series of eight tests to ensure the course ages ready for artemis one the first unscrewed mission around the moon and back with the our orion spacecraft.

Nasa
"sls" Discussed on KFI AM 640

KFI AM 640

04:15 min | 2 years ago

"sls" Discussed on KFI AM 640

"Enough people get, too had the second crude Mercury flight, Gus Grissom's capsule. That they had pulled out by the Atlantic and restored But because one of your loyal uh, followers asked about it. Shall we talk about the SLS? Yeah, That's another topic. Of course, that's a little more timely. Um NASA is attempting to put people back on the moon, I guess, And this is a rocket that is designed to launch That moon mission. First of all, When would that be? What is their target for that? Well, the hope was to have the first crew and the first woman on the moon in 2024% of the Trump administration tried to accelerate things. No. You know, you have to build the E V a suits. We haven't done any of those since the sixties. There's a lot of things they're still remember so that Zach from the space station, they wanted to do the first all female space. What, but they didn't have enough suits that fit women. For for the women to go out there. They didn't put her. Yeah, yeah, And there was some human cry about that, but but they asked not herself came out and said, Look, it was just a matter of what components we had up there because most these things are between chain 25 years old. Yeah, Amazing. And they've only got a limited supply. And they didn't have all of them up there. But they did rectify that. So they were testing based watch system SLS. They were testing it and shut it down, didn't they? Yes, I was supposed to be. There's a syriza of different tests during what they call the green run phase. This was a live fire test of the engine's supposed to run for a full eight minutes, which simulates the full ride into orbit. That includes a lot of things you know, powering up on then the full run different throttle settings and critically gambling the engines because the Gimbels the the engines air on pivot so they could steer the rocket. And you want to test that under power right? Because you want to make sure this address job instead of property and bets. A lot of the stress is a lot of torque. So it quit after one minute and all we know at this point is that there is an M C. F a major component failure. Thies things happened, which sounds like put this inverse. Well, they do. And you know, it sounds like a turbo blowing up because those those terms these are old space shuttle engines. So these air not now he probably intended to 20 years old. They've been reconditioned to check, you know, but They're older engines. Those those turbos spin up. I think one of those spends up to like 70,000 rpm almost instantly. So it's a lot to test so right pile got to get his book. First on the moon. The Apollo 11 50th anniversary. Leo report, Detective Jf. I am 6 40. People are in denial. We're so focused on where we've been over the past 10 years that were refusing to believe that things are actually getting Better were fixated in the past, and we're fearful of what might happen. Which is not always going. Rick Adelman's this afternoon it too. If I am 6 40. I'm Claudette Stepanian live from the CAF. I 24 hour news room. Phil Specter has died. He died reportedly from covert 19 yesterday. He was best known as a music producer before going to prison for shooting and killing actress Lana Clarkson. The National Guard Humvee has been stolen from the National Guard, Armor Armory and Bell. The FBI is offering a $10,000 reward for helping find the vehicle. James Earl Jones, the voice of Darth Vader in Star Wars and move Fossa and Disney's The Lion King turns 90 years old. Today. Let's check in on the 91 there, Tarzana. If you're headed on the water one north Fl Bo, we got a motorcycle wreck. Still taking away those two right lanes? You're seeing heavy delays from the 405 in Pasadena. Problem Continuing here to Tennessee State. Rosemead CHP clearing large degrees from the three right lanes is a tough job for Madre Street. Baskas rocks, 14 orthodox riddles, they canyon road. We got the stalled car taken away the slow lane. They find this guy helps get to their bastard. I'm short of a culture. Wow. I think we can all agree that a lot went wrong in 2020. But you can start 2021.

Phil Specter Zach Gus Grissom SLS NASA Rosemead Rick Adelman Gimbels Trump James Earl Jones Claudette Stepanian FBI Thies Lana Clarkson National Guard Tennessee State Armor Armory Tarzana Darth Vader Pasadena
"sls" Discussed on KOA 850 AM

KOA 850 AM

02:59 min | 2 years ago

"sls" Discussed on KOA 850 AM

"So he went to the polls tomorrow merciful and went down and got him, Uh, pull them up and lovingly restored them. And they're all smashed up because they hit the ocean going ho, Faster terminal velocity, But you know, it's just something he had to do. And I couldn't tell which rocket went with which launch? I guess he could. They must have been numbered somehow. Yeah, they had serial numbers. I don't know if they were corroded over or not. I saw him up in Seattle and they were. They were pretty pretty much a mess, but they say they did a incredible job in a few years back. Three Kansas Cosmosphere, which is a great little museum and Hutchins of Kansas, that not enough people get to Had the second crude Mercury flight, Gus Grissom's capsule that they had pulled out by the Atlantic and restored But because one of your loyal uh, followers asked about it. Shall we talk about the SLS? Yeah, That's another topic. Of course, that's a little more timely. Um NASA is attempting to put people back on the moon, I guess. And this is a rocket that is designed to lunch. That moon mission. First of all, When would that be? What is their target for that? Well, the hope was to have the first crew and the first woman on the moon in 2024% of the Trump administration. Long trying to accelerate things. No. You know, you have to build the E V a suits. We haven't done any of those since the sixties. There's a lot of things that start. Remember so that from the space station they wanted to do the first all female space. What, but they didn't have enough suits that fit women. For the women to go out there. They didn't put her. Yeah, Yeah, And there was some human cry about that, but but the ass not herself, came out and said, Look, it was just a matter of what components. We had it there because most these things are between Take 25 years old. Yeah, Amazing. They've only got a limited supply. And they didn't have all of them up there. But they did rectify that. So they were testing face March system SLS. They were testing it and shut it down, didn't they? Yes, I was supposed to be. There's a syriza of different tests during what they call the green run phase. This was a live fire test of the engine's supposed to run for a full eight minutes, which simulates the full ride into orbit. That includes a lot of things you know, powering up on then the full run different throttle settings and critically gambling the engines because the Gimbels the the engines air on pivot so they could steer the rocket. You want to test that under power, right? Because you want to make sure this address job instead of like a prop bets. A lot of the stress is a lot of torque. So it quit after one minute and all we know at this point is that there was an M C f a major component failure. Thies things happened, which sounds like put this in person. Well, they do. And, you know, it sounds like a turbo blowing up because those those terms these are old space shuttle engines. So these air not now these air probably tended to 20 years old. They've been reconditioned to check, you know, but They're older engines. Those those turbos spin up. I.

Kansas SLS Gus Grissom Seattle NASA Gimbels Hutchins Thies
"sls" Discussed on WBAP 820AM

WBAP 820AM

02:38 min | 2 years ago

"sls" Discussed on WBAP 820AM

"NASA today plans to test the propulsion system that it intends to use to power a new rocket capable of reaching the moon. The space launch system was first designed more than a decade ago, intended as a possible replacement for the retired space shuttle fleet. It's a tall rocket at about 320 FT. Tall and full assembly. It's the second tallest ever built by NASA, and it is designed to send a capsule of astronauts to places far away. It had been repurposed is part of Artemus, the Trump Administration led project to return to the moon in 2024. NASA will test fire an SLS rocket court today with all four engines attached at the Stennis Space Center in Mississippi. Evan Brown Fox News. Hey, ally of such Chad Dixon has some good advice. If you're flying to D. C. You want to make sure you leave your guns at home? If you are headed to our nation's capital, forward based American Airlines, along with United and Frontier, have decided to ban all firearms and checked bags. This decision was made ahead of the upcoming inauguration and the new rule will be in effect until the 23rd of this month. Chad Dixon, WB AP News Life Sentence has been handed down to the man who shot and killed the Dallas police officer in 2018 Dallas. Officers were Helio Santander and Crystal Almeida were both shot at a Home Depot on force Lane. Santander died and I made a survived with serious injuries. Nearly three years later, Armando Warez has pleaded guilty to capital murder and other charges in the case. Officer Almeida addressed her partner's killer after he was sentenced to believing that when I read the Bible and its teachings, he told us to forgive people, but in my case is gonna take a long time. Before that happens, we'll residence to life in prison without parole. Plate. Nevil, WB AP News Hearst Conference Center is opened as a second Maga Covad 19 Vaccination Center in Tarrant County Center was put in place in less than a week. It was done through hard work of city staffs of all northeast Tarrant County. As well as volunteers have come here so that the citizens in this area will be able to have the access first. The Mayor Henry Wilson, says the site will be open through April. Stay open longer than that, if it's needed. There are no walking appointments in must register the Tarrant County website first. Then if you qualify, you don't gotta set date the time to come in. The U. S Court of Appeals is ruled a Fort Worth hospital is not free to remove a child from life support. The.

Helio Santander NASA Chad Dixon Tarrant County Officer Almeida Stennis Space Center Dallas Evan Brown Tarrant County Center Armando Warez Artemus U. S Court of Appeals Trump Administration Hearst Conference Center American Airlines Mississippi Crystal Almeida Fort Worth hospital Maga Covad Henry Wilson
NASA’s Space Launch System Hot-Fire Test

GardenLine with Randy Lemmon

00:36 sec | 2 years ago

NASA’s Space Launch System Hot-Fire Test

"Today, NASA testing the propulsion system that's going to power a new rocket to the moon. The space launch system was first designed more than a decade ago, intended as a possible replacement for the retired space shuttle fleet. It's a tall rocket at about 320 FT. Tall and full Assembly. It's the second tallest ever built by NASA. And it is designed to send a capsule of astronauts to places far away. It had been repurposed as part of Artemus, the Trump Administration led project to return to the moon in 2024. NASA will test fire An SLS rocket court today with all four engines attached at the Stennis Space Center in Mississippi.

Nasa Trump Administration Artemus Stennis Space Center Mississippi
"sls" Discussed on KTOK

KTOK

01:37 min | 2 years ago

"sls" Discussed on KTOK

"National Guard troops as the FBI warns about potential armed protests ahead of the inauguration. Security in D. C appears to be even tighter than what we saw in the days after 9 11 about 25,000 National Guard members are pouring in from across the country. Major general Andhra Berry of the Nevada National Guard These soldiers even though they have seen harm's way before, even though they're trained for it. You're always gonna be concerned about it. But I promise you They're prepared for this mission and DC's mayor is urging people to just stay away in Washington Chill. NATO Fox News man said to be anti Trump and anti government has been arrested in Florida in court documents. The FBI says Daniel Baker was trying to recruit a like minded individuals. Who surrounded Trump protesters at some days planned demonstration in Tallahassee and potentially harm them. NASA plans to test fire a new rocket today that one day could send another mission to the moon. The space launch system was first designed more than a decade ago, intended as a possible replacement for the retired space shuttle fleet. It's a tall rocket at about 320 FT. Tall and full assembly. It's the second tallest ever built by NASA, and it is designed to send a capsule of astronauts to places far away and have been repurposed as part of Artemus, the Trump administration led project to return to the moon in 2024. Ask her will test fire an SLS rocket court today with all four engines attached at the Stennis Space Center in Mississippi. Kevin Brown Fox News Friday nights, three quarter billion dollar mega millions jackpot unclaimed that will boost the jackpot to at least 850 million.

National Guard FBI NASA Nevada National Guard Artemus Stennis Space Center Andhra Berry Daniel Baker Washington Chill Tallahassee Kevin Brown DC NATO D. C Mississippi Florida
"sls" Discussed on 77WABC Radio

77WABC Radio

03:20 min | 2 years ago

"sls" Discussed on 77WABC Radio

"Um But it would be able to launch on time when it's ready and they could possibly improve the spacecraft. So Congress passed the most recent budget in that budget. NASA's budget. They stick stuck in a little caveat, which says that NASA now has the right to not go with SLS. If scheduling and technical problems. I didn't mention the SLS technical problems involved with your clip on not solved, and I guarantee you that NASA's going to make a decision. They're not solved and they're gonna switch toe commercial space to companies momentous and a bl space. What are they bought? This is the company that's building little tugs to move satellites in orbit. So you launch with the satellite. With the rocket company and then your satellite. You don't have to build up the stage for you by the upper stage from the Memphis and it moves it around in orbit. Well, they were gonna launch their first launch. Um what he called it this month on its Falcon nine and they announced that we could go there. Sorry. We're gonna have to delay. They removed it from the launch Payload because The F A. A has not yet completed the paperwork, getting their license to launch their waiting to the S A F F A to complete the paperwork. To complete the review of the launch procedure and the whole the payload and so forth, and it wasn't done. And so ah, private company has to total it's thumbs not to relive sons has so but stepped down and wait while government and I'm sure the reason it didn't get done. It was, they said it wasn't in Asia Inter agency reviews In other words. The FAA has got the license, but they've got to get have other agencies also approve it. And they the agencies haven't moved forward. Well, those other agencies that probably all home not working because of their fear of cove in everything that sums and nothing's getting done. That's that story. Now you asked me about a bl space. This is a start up. Start up. This is the seventh rocket, new startup launch company that says it's gonna launch this rocket in 21 2021. They already have 105 employees. They aiming for a mid size small SAT rocket company, and they hope to launch sometime this year. So that's seven companies. A competition is going to be really good job I mentioned to Bob that his reporting on commercial space cos. Popping up Reminds me of reading the newspapers, especially, but also the journalist were devoted to the automobile about 1910 1912 when everybody was the garage and welding material was starting to build automobiles, especially through the Midwest. Ohio, Michigan, Iowa. Eventually they were aggregated, and we got something called General Motors. So I'm anticipating if Bob and I are lucky enough to live into the 20 forties. That will see similar aggregation of the startups into booster Cos. When we come back, we're going exploring with Bob Zimmerman, who keeps the website behind the black. I'm John Bachelor. This is the job battleship. There's something very dangerous in your.

Bob Zimmerman NASA John Bachelor Memphis Congress FAA Asia Inter General Motors Midwest Ohio Iowa Michigan
Episode 21: "Mayhem at the Capitol and the CallMeCarson Situation" - burst 14

The Tonight Talk

00:59 min | 2 years ago

Episode 21: "Mayhem at the Capitol and the CallMeCarson Situation" - burst 14

"Going to be like in our seventies twenty forty seven comes out by played the playstation twelve. We're gonna die red eye radio. We're going to be a on certain. Your i oh my god she says. Psi psi like fucking some futurama type. Show i think. I think nintendo would sue playstation though because remember the sl all shit on sue or that it is sued was trashed your way. No abroad that show. Hey thank you very much. Were always the money really waste.

Nintendo
NASA to test its SLS megarocket in the coming weeks

Innovation Now

01:11 min | 3 years ago

NASA to test its SLS megarocket in the coming weeks

"So the same here instead. Was that everything that assets in space dumpsters tennis that will be true for sos this innovation now bringing you. Stories of revolutionary ideas emerging technologies and the people behind the concepts that shape the future engineers at nasa stennis. Space center are hard at work testing. The world's largest rocket stage green run is a demanding series of eight progressively complex tests. Only after passing the first seven will it be time for number eight a full countdown and hot fire test for the space launch system rocket engines. Why are these tests so important. Here's david carver. An electrical test operations engineer at stennis use rocket engines. They're going to put astronauts in space. We'll make for those astronauts. Save is possible. In addition to that we're testing the performance of the engine when we're also making sure that these new manufacturing processes such free burning work well for these engines once the sos rockets have completed the green run. Testing engineers will prepare the core stage for its trip to nasa's kennedy space center and the next time those engines are fired s. Ls will be headed to space

Stennis David Carver Nasa Tennis Kennedy Space Center
Thanksgiving Day highlights efforts of OSL; staff serves 8,500 meals to needy daily in Seattle area

Our Auto Expert

01:11 min | 3 years ago

Thanksgiving Day highlights efforts of OSL; staff serves 8,500 meals to needy daily in Seattle area

"The holidays are here and now more than ever, families are finding it hard to make ends meet, especially during the pandemic. Many families may not have the holiday dinner they plan because of the Corona virus crisis. Camo Suzanne Font takes a closer look at what is being done to help people get food on their table. More than two million Washingtonians have experienced some form of food insecurity sometime this year. And we think Thanksgiving period could be especially difficult. Oh SL is Operation Sack Lunch, also known as offer some love. The organization based in Belltown is serving up 8500 meals every day. For those in need. We're doing 8500 meals altogether and over seven kitchens on we take care of 61 different shelters and programs throughout the Seattle King County area. What's really important to us every single day, but especially on the holiday is to say. You're not for gotten, you have value and we're serving you love every single time we serve you a meal. All the food deliveries made possible because of food donations and also food that's been recovered. Oh, SL says they typically spend $3000 a week buying food. Because of the covert pandemic. They're spending 12,000 week just to buy food

Camo Suzanne Font Belltown King County Seattle
Marketing Trends We Are Excited About for Q4

Marketing School

05:02 min | 3 years ago

Marketing Trends We Are Excited About for Q4

"Walk onto another episode of Marketing School I'm Eric Su and I'm Neil Patel, and today we're GonNa talk about marketing trends that we are excited about for q four. So this is a little bit of a new experiment tweet at me Eric Oh sl you. If you think this is cool because Neil and I don't get a lot of time to talk about what we're actually excited about right. So there's a lot of stuff that's happening in the business world and in the marketing world. So we'll see how this goes. This might be a little longer than usual, but I'll start it off I. I mean Neil yesterday. Linked in just just launch stories and I'm super excited about that. 'cause I just post stories instagram all the time I screen shots of stuff up there, and what I'm finding now is that I'm seeing all these people that are relevant seo manager over here content lead over I'm like, Oh, my God I'm going to follow these people you know have talked at a click flow team and then we can do something there. Right but it's just it's a people are here to do business on linked I constantly see like who's relevant talk who want to keep in touch with right? Because there's a little message button over. There but on Instagram, not so much I'm not looking to do business on instagram. So I think Lincoln or Microsoft rather is super smart for doing this and I'm glad that they finally brought it up. Have you tried it yet? I haven't tried it. We have it on her list to try in the next month or so were slow some of that kind of stuff but we're going to try that out another trend that we're seeing as boysearch everyone knows that half the search is at least in the United States now are through voice search according to common core specifically say voice her voice commerce did you. Know over sixty percent of people in the United, states have these smart speaker type devices have made a purchase do boysearch according to crunch and according to a have you done that before though I have many times what did you buy? We buy like bottled water toilet paper tissues, household items man I've never done that before as crazy works really well with Alexa and according to Oh CNC their company that does research they're saying by twenty, twenty, forty, billion dollars is going to be spent on boysearch. That's ridiculous. Amount I know this tiny in the grand scheme of commerce, but that number's going to blow up and explode. Yeah, you don't like the other thing too. I'm just looking at. This is more of a business trump, but I kind of is a marketing trend do but there's a Casey, Newton? I believe his name he's one of the lead editors of the verge. He just left to start his own substance. So everyone starting substance right now, which is basically just you're starting to email newsletter. So when I spoke to Anthony yesterday, I think he's got about five thousand subscribers paying subscriber. So paying ten dollars fifty grand a month from his newsletter, which is. Not, bad at six hundred, grand a year and so whether it's paid newsletters or even paid podcast subscriptions, i. think that's going to become more and more of a trend because people are legit leaving their full time jobs as writers unders going off on their own. You Got Ben Thompson, that's doing that. So what are your thoughts on that? Do you know anyone that's doing it really well, I don't know anyone that's doing well, but I know it makes money look at a Gora. Yeah Oh, how much they do in review of Gore's billion plus dollar company in revenue go some arriving ago. What else you got connection that I have that we're seeing come up in the upcoming years is look when you think about marketing all get emails, a lot of US ignore. But there's a new trend that we're seeing in emails. Right even we ignore emails it's still generate so much money we all send out so many emails, there's company called Sam email that lets you make purchases within your emails. So imagine me sending you e mail regarding I a t shirt you can pick the size and actually checkout and by within the EAMONN never have to go to the website or right now they specialize in airlines you can actually adjust your seat and adjust your ticket and all that kind of stuff within the Eamon. You see like the seat map and you can click and upgrading all that kind of stuff. It's Kinda cool. That's awesome. Yeah. I mean when we think about this at the end of the day, I was buying stuff using my phone when I as I was traveling is just when there's apple pay I immediately select that because the friction there's there's a lot less friction, the experiences a lot better. So whatever way you can make it easier for people to get things done. That's GonNa do well, and then your total. addressable market for that is huge right because you're just trying to solve problems for of Swath of people, you're not even just solving for for niche problems anymore and I think the final thing all end with right now is well to me I, just kind of been observing an investing world right now if you go read bessemer memos just typing bvp memos, what's fascinating to me is how firm decided invest in Shop a fine the very beginning, and you see a lot of interesting trends around that at how off they were in terms of how big they thought the market size was for. This is not exactly a I guess a trend here's that people are writing a lot more than what I'm gaining a lot from these memos. So I guess my only thing I'm trying to point you in the direction of is. Go check out these VP memos go check out morning Brusco, check out the hustle. The Hustle has trends as well. We're did talk about trends and I think you'll learn a lot because there's a lot of good information being put out right now. Neil.

Neil Patel United States Eric Su Alexa Microsoft Seo Manager United VP Ben Thompson Newton Anthony Gore SAM Apple
With 'Deaf U,' Nyle DiMarco Strives To Show 'There Is No One Right Way To Be Deaf'

All Things Considered

06:06 min | 3 years ago

With 'Deaf U,' Nyle DiMarco Strives To Show 'There Is No One Right Way To Be Deaf'

"On Michelle Martin. Let's go back to pre covert times for a minute. You're a college student, and you want to take a break from the grind by going out for a few drinks or maybe getting a mani pedi with your B F F. But the seats only allow you to sit next to each other rather than face each other. No big deal, right? Well, it kind of is, if you are deaf or hard of hearing, And if you use American Silang, which SL to communicate Where you use your hands and facial expressions are important. And those are just a few of the subtleties revealed to those outside of the deaf community in the new Netflix reality, Siri's deaf, you know. It follows a group of students that guided at University in Washington, D C, which is known as the on Ly University in the world, where students can live and learn in American sign, language and English. But students still have to navigate a world that isn't necessarily built for them. The creator of the series is Nyle DeMarco, the model actor and activist who won both America's next top model and dancing with the stars, the first death contestant to do so, and he is here with us now to tell us more. And through the miracle of technology. He and I are talking to each other. And you're going to hear the voice of his interpreter. Gray Van Pelt. Welcome. Thank you so much for joining us. Of course. It's my pleasure. Thanks so much for having me today. As I just noted, you've been on reality television kind of a star. You're a model dancer. Clearly an activist. How did the idea of making a show about your alma mater come to you? It's pretty interesting. It goes back to my own experience being on reality television. I always felt that the image that was kind of made of me on screen was very one dimensional was always asked specifically about my deafness about my identity's sorts of struggles, but never about the things that I liked or disliked or really anything that I would have offered more to who I wass. It was nothing really about The culture right? And the idea for this show really came with the realization that we could use this to reframe the deaf community and offering entrance into our world which is so rich in culture and so layered in diverse but one of the things that I noticed If you've seen any show about college life, then you're going to, you know, recognize the types the The athletes, the influencers, you know, I activists, But you also introduced us to another divide a guy a debt between the so called elite Capital D, deaf from well known deaf families. And then as you've described elsewhere, lower case D death, those who don't come from these well known death families. Why did you feel it was important to kind of highlight this other divide myself as somebody who views elites as a group. I see. It could be a positive thing in the preserving of sign language, our culture, You know, it's about passing down those legacies in those traditions that make our culture. So Reg. There certainly are lower case D people who might see elites as someone who's had an unfair advantage, right? Whether it's their educational background, their confidence, their identity, their language fluency coming into college debt for them often, you know, they face a challenge that They have to not only focus on getting a degree, but also focus on learning a new language and a new culture. But there are so many layers to that divide between elites and perhaps Laura Kees de definite, something that's really key for a community. It's very complicated, but it's a discussion that were starting to have one of the characters of football player named Rodney. Likes to think of himself a somewhere in the middle of this divide. He has cochlear implants so he can hear and he also signs and I want to play a clip. This's Rodney's father. Do you feel like you're in between? We're like caught in the middle. I a deft So I'm in a body community. And this is what he is saying to some degree. Is is that he gives himself a license to be a Yeah. Ronnie Rotten family is so incredible. He's one of my absolute favorite. On the show. And one thing that I really love about him is that he really, you know, showcases and embodies that there is no one right way to be deaf, right? He's already fluent in American sign language, and so he has access to both. He's able to function in a hearing world in a deaf world with SL in English versus Ah lot of other students who come in to Garland at with outside language. You know they're facing a struggle of looking to find a place to fit in. Ronnie's already got it figured out so you can see through the show. He's like, I'm good. It's one of the things I love about him. Well, one of the things that I really liked about this exchange, though it mirrors some conversations that I think we have about race in this country to Rodney's also African American, and he also Exists in the space of trying to figure out like, what does it mean to be that right now? What do I want to be the truth of me and who gets to decide that? I think at the core of it, you know, it comes from growing up specifically in a culture and having access to the language. You know, I do think that Romney is incredibly confident. And you know, he knows exactly where his intersectionality lies. I do want to mention that you've been forward facing death advocate part of Your work in this area met hiring death crew members and creatives. I want to highlight that because that's not something that you want would necessarily know watching the Siri's. But why was that important as someone who is deaf? You know, I know that if you really want unauthentic story, it has to happen behind the camera, you know, defies really captured the culture best and we actually made it a requirement that we had to hire deaf people. We wanted to ensure that at minimum, we had 30% of the deaf crew behind the scenes working and we ended up with 50%, which was incredible, and it's the first time it's ever been done in history. You know we're working. So that later we have a little Hollywood empire were able to develop our own TV shows in our movies and our content that really reflect of culture and an authentic experience. And this essentially was the start. I'm so thrilled about it. That was now DeMarco, creator of the New Netflix. Siri's deaf You It is available now. And just wanna mention that we've been hearing him through the voice of his interpreter, Nyle DiMarco. Thanks so much for talking to us. Course. This was such a pleasure. Thank you so much for having me.

Nyle Demarco Rodney Siri Netflix Ronnie Rotten Michelle Martin Washington Van Pelt Ly University Nyle Dimarco Laura Kees America Football Garland Romney Hollywood
Solving Health Challenges Through Research and Collaboration

Healthcare Triage Podcast

09:05 min | 3 years ago

Solving Health Challenges Through Research and Collaboration

"Let's start with. Sharon who has not been here before we usually like to struck these podcasts by talking to our guests about specifically what they do and how did they get their sort of talking to the public about how does one become professor of medicine or a division director of nephrology or interested in the research that you do. So I started in research when I was in a froggy fellow at the University of Chicago. I was motivated to be honest by a patient on dialysis who kept having bleeding into their shoulder joint that I had to actually remove the blood for her to be able to use her arm on a weekly basis, and this was due to a rare disease that patients on dialysis get that deposits in the bone called amyloidosis. So that made me start doing research on bone learning about bone I worked in someone's. Lab and then when I came to. INDIANA. University in thousand hundred two I came really because of the strength of the Bone Research Group at Indiana University? Not Necessarily in the nephrology division from there I have held a lot of different administrative positions. I am kind of an organizer and get things done type person. So it comes pretty naturally to be able to put all that together. I could say I've been truly doing. Translational, research since my fellowship, as I hadn't during my fellowship, a clinical research paper and a basic science lab paper published in one year. So sometimes I feel like the word translational isn't really new and novel, but I'm happy that people are finally understanding that when you do something in the lab, you ought to be thinking about who the patient is. That would benefit from this at least some point in their life. So can I get you talk a little bit more about that like what do you? What do you think translational research is because I'd agree with you it it does seem like one of those things that people are treating soften is it's a new thing but it is it. So how what does it mean to you? So it should mean that there ought to be a potential and the back of your head. As to where this was going to go at some point in the future I truly believe there is an important area for research just to do research to understand, for example, and identify new and novel gene, and what does that gene do on the other hand translational means that you actually go from a patient and you work backwards to try to figure out what makes that patient tick? What makes them have this? Disease, what makes them prone to this disease? Both of those kind of approaches from science perspective are absolutely needed. But the whole emphasis of the he sl is really to actually take discoveries into humans and overtake humans back to bench discovery so that we improve their health to see this as something that doesn't do that. There needs to be a focus or we just sort of doing more no I think the difference between. That and very focused research is that in order to really cover that spectrum, you have to have collaboration you have to actually have other people who can work on different pieces of that Longitudinal plan again from patient back to bencher bench to patient, and so it is hard for someone to do all of those facets and so you have to have this ability or desire to get there and you need to collaborate. And that's really what the chess is all about. It creates an infrastructure that people can go to so that they can understand how to take that part that they're doing in that trajectory and make it happen. Can you give me some hard examples of some of the work for structure talking about? Yeah, I mean this is I. It is absolutely fabulous and I give talks and visit places all around the country and. We are truly one of the best and most advanced CPS I in my book from start to finish, you have an idea you think might actually be a drug down the road. We are working to try to figure out how we can actually benefit people who are not sure if it's going to be good. So connecting them with the right people to understand drug discovery, we then want to know if you're doing. An animal work is that gene that you're studying that protein actually present in humans because there's a lot of discrepancy in animal models of human disease, and so we have a giant bio bank samples that people can gain access to to actually measure the DNA and try to understand the Hamas between an animal and human, and then if you do have something and you have an idea and you want to implement a Clinical Research Study, do you need to know how many patients you have? So we have a connection where the Reagan streep data set to help to feasibilities. Do these people that you think exist really exist? Is there something unique about them that you need to know who the people are that you want to study, and then we have a pool of trained research coordinators and infrastructure setup to actually conduct clinical research and? Then from there, we have an ability to help people learn how to communicate how to publish how to write a grant. Harman's all these other things through our professional education opportunities the whole beauty and the fun of research is that it's never a dull moment. So every day you think you're going to be studying this and something send you to a tangent and you go wait a minute maybe I should be doing that. And that's how you end up needing collaborators and resources and methods and infrastructure to learn how to do it. Otherwise, you lose those tangents and discoveries are errors initially and someone takes a different look at it from a different viewpoint and they turn it into something really positive. So the CY is an effort that involves just more than Indiana University School of Medicine Right? Absolutely. So it's really Notre Dame purdue IU Bloomington. And many other hospital systems as well as the medical student campuses. So it it really integrates everything and it's very fun to actually learn what people are doing at different institutions and to actually get people excited and have a pathway forward to maybe something that isn't at their institution. Bring it back to what the research is that they're doing. So Sarah I'm not gonNA ask for full introduction. I think you may be the. Frequent. Guests on our podcast dates. So if the audience is familiar with anyone, it would be you but I would love to hear a little bit about how you became involved in community and translational research as well as what you see is the distinction between say clinical and translational sciences and community in Translational Sciences my research has always focused on vulnerable populations and health equity related issues and started with geospatial concentrations of poor health outcomes among adolescence and I was doing a project that was enrolling team girls on the West Side of Indianapolis and tracking them, and when we recruited from the clinic for the study just to give you an idea, we were using blackberry pearls. So that dates long ago this was. One hundred percent of the girls we had approached agreed to participate so much so that the I R. B thought perhaps the protocol was coercive because we were offering free cell phone service while we attract their locations and they were wondering if even after our main criticism with this grant to the NIH, which was like this grant isn't possible no never is going to let you track them Things have changed since I started asking those questions in any case my point is, is that when we brought it into the community because we didn't want a clinical sample because it can be quite biased for an adolescent population, those who are seeking healthcare, we were not meeting our enrollment targets and so what I learned after a lot of errors that engagement with the community in this case our target population of teen girls on the West Side we realized they weren't seeing sort of the Ir be approved flyers. replastering everywhere. That, there were all kinds of things that we needed to reconsider and it had nothing to do with the protocol itself. So the science was valid. There wasn't anything that was sort of keeping them necessarily from participating in terms of the incentives or what we're asking them to do. It was that we were not effectively engaging with them and as part of that as well as some I think innovative at least at the time collaboration with a faculty member from Herron. School of. Art and design in Santa Matsu we sort of employed this human center design research approaches sort of our how community engagement in any case because of that sort of experience for me personally as a researcher I learned the value of engagement and really beyond just meeting recruitment targets to getting to something much more meaningful from the participant's perspective, and it's just grown from there. So it has taken a lot of different trajectories for me and my own research relating to data, sharing partnerships to what's. Now Research Sham the patient engagement core to various community engagement in between but I guess where my role now as associate Dean as well as CO director of the CSI, plays in Israeli extending that translational spectrum in with the community and back rights as a bidirectional relationship, and so it's extending those collaborations to stakeholders in the community. My definition of team science and sort of that collaborative space is not restricted to individuals within the academy and really absolutely needs to include community folks at all. Levels of the translational spectrum. So this is not just from like clinical to community in my book it's you know community engagement even within the basic science from.

Indiana University Translational Sciences Bone Research Group Disease Clinical Research Study Indiana University Of Chicago Amyloidosis Sharon Professor Of Medicine Hamas Bloomington Division Director Santa Matsu Reagan Streep Associate Dean Harman Faculty Member Herron
Solving Health Challenges Through Research and Collaboration

Healthcare Triage Podcast

05:32 min | 3 years ago

Solving Health Challenges Through Research and Collaboration

"Let's start with. Sharon who has not been here before we usually like to struck these podcasts by talking to our guests about specifically what they do and how did they get their sort of talking to the public about how does one become professor of medicine or a division director of nephrology or interested in the research that you do. So I started in research when I was in a froggy fellow at the University of Chicago. I was motivated to be honest by a patient on dialysis who kept having bleeding into their shoulder joint that I had to actually remove the blood for her to be able to use her arm on a weekly basis, and this was due to a rare disease that patients on dialysis get that deposits in the bone called amyloidosis. So that made me start doing research on bone learning about bone I worked in someone's. Lab and then when I came to. INDIANA. University in thousand hundred two I came really because of the strength of the Bone Research Group at Indiana University? Not Necessarily in the nephrology division from there I have held a lot of different administrative positions. I am kind of an organizer and get things done type person. So it comes pretty naturally to be able to put all that together. I could say I've been truly doing. Translational, research since my fellowship, as I hadn't during my fellowship, a clinical research paper and a basic science lab paper published in one year. So sometimes I feel like the word translational isn't really new and novel, but I'm happy that people are finally understanding that when you do something in the lab, you ought to be thinking about who the patient is. That would benefit from this at least some point in their life. So can I get you talk a little bit more about that like what do you? What do you think translational research is because I'd agree with you it it does seem like one of those things that people are treating soften is it's a new thing but it is it. So how what does it mean to you? So it should mean that there ought to be a potential and the back of your head. As to where this was going to go at some point in the future I truly believe there is an important area for research just to do research to understand, for example, and identify new and novel gene, and what does that gene do on the other hand translational means that you actually go from a patient and you work backwards to try to figure out what makes that patient tick? What makes them have this? Disease, what makes them prone to this disease? Both of those kind of approaches from science perspective are absolutely needed. But the whole emphasis of the he sl is really to actually take discoveries into humans and overtake humans back to bench discovery so that we improve their health to see this as something that doesn't do that. There needs to be a focus or we just sort of doing more no I think the difference between. That and very focused research is that in order to really cover that spectrum, you have to have collaboration you have to actually have other people who can work on different pieces of that Longitudinal plan again from patient back to bencher bench to patient, and so it is hard for someone to do all of those facets and so you have to have this ability or desire to get there and you need to collaborate. And that's really what the chess is all about. It creates an infrastructure that people can go to so that they can understand how to take that part that they're doing in that trajectory and make it happen. Can you give me some hard examples of some of the work for structure talking about? Yeah, I mean this is I. It is absolutely fabulous and I give talks and visit places all around the country and. We are truly one of the best and most advanced CPS I in my book from start to finish, you have an idea you think might actually be a drug down the road. We are working to try to figure out how we can actually benefit people who are not sure if it's going to be good. So connecting them with the right people to understand drug discovery, we then want to know if you're doing. An animal work is that gene that you're studying that protein actually present in humans because there's a lot of discrepancy in animal models of human disease, and so we have a giant bio bank samples that people can gain access to to actually measure the DNA and try to understand the Hamas between an animal and human, and then if you do have something and you have an idea and you want to implement a Clinical Research Study, do you need to know how many patients you have? So we have a connection where the Reagan streep data set to help to feasibilities. Do these people that you think exist really exist? Is there something unique about them that you need to know who the people are that you want to study, and then we have a pool of trained research coordinators and infrastructure setup to actually conduct clinical research and? Then from there, we have an ability to help people learn how to communicate how to publish how to write a grant. Harman's all these other things through our professional education opportunities the whole beauty and the fun of research is that it's never a dull moment. So every day you think you're going to be studying this and something send you to a tangent and you go wait a minute maybe I should be doing that. And that's how you end up needing collaborators and resources and methods and infrastructure to learn how to do it. Otherwise, you lose those tangents and discoveries are errors initially and someone takes a different look at it from a different viewpoint and they turn it into something really positive. So the CY is an effort that involves just more than Indiana University School of Medicine Right? Absolutely. So it's really Notre Dame purdue IU Bloomington. And many other hospital systems as well as the medical student campuses. So it it really integrates everything and it's very fun to actually learn what people are doing at different institutions and to actually get people excited and have a pathway forward to maybe something that isn't at their institution. Bring it back to what the research is that they're doing.

Indiana University Bone Research Group Disease Clinical Research Study Amyloidosis University Of Chicago Indiana Bloomington Sharon Professor Of Medicine Hamas Division Director Reagan Streep Harman
Solving Health Challenges Through Research and Collaboration

Healthcare Triage Podcast

05:01 min | 3 years ago

Solving Health Challenges Through Research and Collaboration

"Let's start with. Sharon who has not been here before we usually like to struck these podcasts by talking to our guests about specifically what they do and how did they get their sort of talking to the public about how does one become professor of medicine or a division director of nephrology or interested in the research that you do. So I started in research when I was in a froggy fellow at the University of Chicago. I was motivated to be honest by a patient on dialysis who kept having bleeding into their shoulder joint that I had to actually remove the blood for her to be able to use her arm on a weekly basis, and this was due to a rare disease that patients on dialysis get that deposits in the bone called amyloidosis. So that made me start doing research on bone learning about bone I worked in someone's. Lab and then when I came to. INDIANA. University in thousand hundred two I came really because of the strength of the Bone Research Group at Indiana University? Not Necessarily in the nephrology division from there I have held a lot of different administrative positions. I am kind of an organizer and get things done type person. So it comes pretty naturally to be able to put all that together. I could say I've been truly doing. Translational, research since my fellowship, as I hadn't during my fellowship, a clinical research paper and a basic science lab paper published in one year. So sometimes I feel like the word translational isn't really new and novel, but I'm happy that people are finally understanding that when you do something in the lab, you ought to be thinking about who the patient is. That would benefit from this at least some point in their life. So can I get you talk a little bit more about that like what do you? What do you think translational research is because I'd agree with you it it does seem like one of those things that people are treating soften is it's a new thing but it is it. So how what does it mean to you? So it should mean that there ought to be a potential and the back of your head. As to where this was going to go at some point in the future I truly believe there is an important area for research just to do research to understand, for example, and identify new and novel gene, and what does that gene do on the other hand translational means that you actually go from a patient and you work backwards to try to figure out what makes that patient tick? What makes them have this? Disease, what makes them prone to this disease? Both of those kind of approaches from science perspective are absolutely needed. But the whole emphasis of the he sl is really to actually take discoveries into humans and overtake humans back to bench discovery so that we improve their health to see this as something that doesn't do that. There needs to be a focus or we just sort of doing more no I think the difference between. That and very focused research is that in order to really cover that spectrum, you have to have collaboration you have to actually have other people who can work on different pieces of that Longitudinal plan again from patient back to bencher bench to patient, and so it is hard for someone to do all of those facets and so you have to have this ability or desire to get there and you need to collaborate. And that's really what the chess is all about. It creates an infrastructure that people can go to so that they can understand how to take that part that they're doing in that trajectory and make it happen. Can you give me some hard examples of some of the work for structure talking about? Yeah, I mean this is I. It is absolutely fabulous and I give talks and visit places all around the country and. We are truly one of the best and most advanced CPS I in my book from start to finish, you have an idea you think might actually be a drug down the road. We are working to try to figure out how we can actually benefit people who are not sure if it's going to be good. So connecting them with the right people to understand drug discovery, we then want to know if you're doing. An animal work is that gene that you're studying that protein actually present in humans because there's a lot of discrepancy in animal models of human disease, and so we have a giant bio bank samples that people can gain access to to actually measure the DNA and try to understand the Hamas between an animal and human, and then if you do have something and you have an idea and you want to implement a Clinical Research Study, do you need to know how many patients you have? So we have a connection where the Reagan streep data set to help to feasibilities. Do these people that you think exist really exist? Is there something unique about them that you need to know who the people are that you want to study, and then we have a pool of trained research coordinators and infrastructure setup to actually conduct clinical research and? Then from there, we have an ability to help people learn how to communicate how to publish how to write a grant. Harman's all these other things through our professional education opportunities the whole beauty and the fun of research is that it's never a dull moment. So every day you think you're going to be studying this and something send you to a tangent and you go wait a minute maybe I should be doing that. And that's how you end up needing collaborators and resources and methods and infrastructure to learn how to do it. Otherwise, you lose those tangents and discoveries are errors initially and someone takes a different look at it from a different viewpoint and they turn it into something really positive.

University In Thousand Bone Research Group Amyloidosis University Of Chicago Indiana University Sharon Indiana Reagan Streep Chess Hamas Harman
Saykara in the Office with Dr. Gabe Charbonneau

Voice First Health

04:43 min | 3 years ago

Saykara in the Office with Dr. Gabe Charbonneau

"So before jumping into say care I'll just. Just tell you what my my workspace looked like before So I, I considered myself to be quite optimized and I was actually skeptical that this was going to make me faster for example, because I thought. Okay. I'm pretty quick at dragon. I have. My note templates optimized. I've got all these macro tools that I use. So I actually thought to myself is sort of this like person that was gonna Shepherd in something to try for some of my peers that might benefit from it more because maybe there was more more room to go and so So that's that was my background going into it when we started the pilot. So the I'll I'll just walk through like what a what a typical encounters with chairs like and then sort of some of the observations I had so So it's a mobile APP on your phone. It's an APP and it has your patient lists for the day on there, and basically before I go into the room I, select the patient I'm GonNa go see in I, walk in and I make sure it's okay with them that I use this a assistant because it's going to record the whole conversation. and. No one has objected to that. Yet. I mean they. They know that it's secure and compliant and all that kind of stuff. and. Then you turn it into listening mode which basically activates that it's okay for it to listen to the conversation and that's that's basically then I sat down. And from there So there's two things that are happening. One is that it's capturing all the audio from our from our conversation At this stage, I'm on version of the product that requires a little bit more queuing. It's a little bit like Alexa, where you you say, Hey, Cara, which is activation word right at or okay Keira in that gets into ready to accept the command. So it sort of mix little beep in the screen changes color and it's like ready to go and then things that you can do at that point are. You could say some speech that's like a recap of your narrative So so I've taken a history with the patient. And I. Say now I want to now, I want to get that into the note for today, I'm going to repeat back what I, what I heard. You say and I I also say if if I made any mistakes or left anything out when I'm please let me six, can I So from the beginning when you're taking the history before you get to that sort of that summary. Is. It still listening. Is it recorded at that point? Yes. It's listening so part. So I was going to circle back to that so far. So the technology's evolving like the dream is a fully autonomous sort of completely only tech solution where you know just like it listens to the whole conversation is sort of accurately catching the speech and then parsing that both for intention and. Direct. Transcription and lick capturing structured data and so forth, and like there's no need for any human kind of editing, and that is the model that's being built in as people who know about Ai and deep learning. It requires huge volumes of data, right? So this transcript, this conversation is we are building that. So okay, we're in the process of using. It s if it were like an Alexa in your exam room, you talked with voice commands, you don't have to speak any punctuation. Is Very natural, intuitive, but But what I'm actually most excited about this is like you're geek doctor is that we're actually building the model of the future So so that's where like I don't think that's the typical users not gonNA come at it being excited about like I'm helping build the future. They just want right like to ease my burden, but that's that's part of what excites me see. Okay. Yeah. So so anyway, so I. So then I will, but then I'll just speak naturally. Naturally. So you know the patient came in for whatever, and these are the things and and then you can voice command. Say thanks care when you're done and and then You know if there any changes, you just naturally say you know actually high blood pressure has been going on for two years versus whatever, and they'll. They'll change that and fix it. So you don't have to like drag and you have to find exactly how it came out highlighted. Say it again sort of supervise. So. This is another key observation that happened to me is that I didn't realize how much sort of mental effort it was taking for me to to proofread. Sl went with Dragon Like you say it in under sort of watching it, go on the screen and and that those are mental gymnastics really and so Cara secure has. Editing done in the background and quality control with people. Make sure that whatever whatever you said comes outright, and it's definitely better than I was reading my own notes dragging because I would think I said something, and then that would think i. saw myself saying that thing on the screen in that wasn't the case. So I'll get weird stuff sometimes in my notes. Yeah.

Alexa Cara Shepherd SL AI Keira
Coronavirus movie delays: The blockbusters postponed by health fears

Jason and Alexis

01:30 min | 3 years ago

Coronavirus movie delays: The blockbusters postponed by health fears

"Disney world Disneyland closing after this weekend the lands closing a believe today there's all sorts of things being moved around it canceled out right March madness don you were a couple of don Lexus you guys have a list of movies a couple big movies and some smaller movies are moving right that is correct yeah yes the major movies like more line on hold for the end of March they have now said Disney has said nope we are postponing these major releases the new mutants out was supposed to be out early April and also antlers mid April and they've postponed it and there's they have not set a new release date so that's a big deal because they had a lot of premieres of MoveOn premieres they already have the press junket yep you know they they had posters and trailers in social media accounts in interviews and press two wars and the millions of dollars already spent yeah yeah a quiet place part two is also being delayed that's gone Kaczynski's yeah movies so that again he says you know we want it to be fun when it opens and what's not this is no fun right now I don't see it all together nobody wants to sit in a theater with hundreds of other people on a normal day yes with this to chase fast and furious nine is also nine it delaying its release the SL well finally some good news

Disney Kaczynski Don Lexus Moveon
NASA struggling to control moon rocket program costs

Dana Loesch

00:35 sec | 3 years ago

NASA struggling to control moon rocket program costs

"Coverage twenty twenty will not be the year American astronauts return to the moon NASA audit shows the Artemis program is struggling to stay on track NASA's heavy lift rocket the SLS was supposed to launch in November despite increased pressure to get boots on the lunar surface and in four years time we return American astronauts to the moon cost overruns have reached two billion dollars earliest SLS will fly will likely be spring twenty twenty one that delay could cost the agency another one point four billion

Nasa SLS