33 Burst results for "Ten Kilometer"

Bloomberg Radio New York
"ten kilometer" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"Take part in the creation of a new system of security guarantees for Ukraine For a region where you guarantee President zelensky also called out Hungary in his remarks asking prime minister Victor Orban to shun Russia and fully support Ukraine Orban says he will not send support into Ukraine And meantime there's more concern about China showing support for Russia Bloomberg news has learned EU officials suspect that Beijing may be supplying semiconductors and other tech hardware to Moscow It would be part of an effort to soften the impact of sanctions Russia and China have denied any request for aid were made or accepted Other news were following this morning John keeps us in China The mystery is deepening over that commercial plane crash from Monday all 132 people on board the China eastern airlines Boeing 737 are presumed dead Bloomberg Stephen engel has the latest Well the latest is that authorities have indicated they have found potentially a piece of the aircraft about ten kilometers away from the main wreckage site about 6 miles away And that potentially indicates that something came off the aircraft mid flight and the questions now are if that piece was from the airplane did that cause the plane to go into that nosedive and crashed Bloomberg Stephen engel reports the flight went down without an emergency radio call from pilots Let's take a hard turn out to the economy and the markets ten year treasury yields this morning down just slightly two 35 right now on the benchmark Treasuries are on course for one of their worst quarterly rounds since at least the early 1970s all due to higher interest rates and rising inflation at markets are looking to the fed to get things back on track We've got the take from former US Treasury secretary Larry summers It's likely to require significantly greater interest rate hikes than the fed or markets are now expecting We need clear signals that we're prepared to accept some slowdown in economic activity.

SpaceTime with Stuart Gary
"ten kilometer" Discussed on SpaceTime with Stuart Gary
"A new study claims the impacter belief to a wiped out seventy five percent of life on earth sixty six million years ago including all the non avian. Dinosaurs most likely came from the other. Half of the main asteroid built between mars and jupiter. The findings reported in the journal lakers came as a surprise to scientist as it's a regional space previously not thought produced. Many earth impact is however computer modeling from the southwest research institute in san antonio texas has shown that the process is that the large asteroids to earth from that region occur at least ten times more frequently than previously thought. They've also found that. The composition of these bodies does match. What scientist snow about the dinosaur. Killing impacter researches combined computer models of asteroid evolution observations of known asteroids to investigate the frequency of so-called chicks lube events over sixty six million years ago a body estimated to be around ten kilometers wide. Signed into what. He's now mexico's yucatan peninsula for me. One hundred and fifty kilometer wide crater known these days as the chicks solid greater and it was this huge blast which triggered the mass extinction event that ended the reign of the dinosaurs. The last few decades much has been learned about the chicks lube event. every advance is latina questions. One of the study's authors william bucky from the southwest research institute says too critical questions remain unanswered. Firstly what was the source of the impacter and secondly how often do such impact events occur on earth to probe that sheikh salah be impact jealous examined sixty six year. Old rock samples found on land and within drako's the results indicate the impact that was similar to carbonaceous contract meteorite that some of the most pristine material in the solar system.

SpaceTime with Stuart Gary
Astronomers Zero in on Source of the Impactor That Wiped out the Dinosaurs
"A new study claims the impacter belief to a wiped out seventy five percent of life on earth sixty six million years ago including all the non avian. Dinosaurs most likely came from the other. Half of the main asteroid built between mars and jupiter. The findings reported in the journal lakers came as a surprise to scientist as it's a regional space previously not thought produced. Many earth impact is however computer modeling from the southwest research institute in san antonio texas has shown that the process is that the large asteroids to earth from that region occur at least ten times more frequently than previously thought. They've also found that. The composition of these bodies does match. What scientist snow about the dinosaur. Killing impacter researches combined computer models of asteroid evolution observations of known asteroids to investigate the frequency of so-called chicks lube events over sixty six million years ago a body estimated to be around ten kilometers wide. Signed into what. He's now mexico's yucatan peninsula for me. One hundred and fifty kilometer wide crater known these days as the chicks solid greater and it was this huge blast which triggered the mass extinction event that ended the reign of the dinosaurs. The last few decades much has been learned about the chicks lube event. every advance is latina questions. One of the study's authors william bucky from the southwest research institute says too critical questions remain unanswered. Firstly what was the source of the impacter and secondly how often do such impact events occur on earth to probe that sheikh salah be impact jealous examined sixty six year. Old rock samples found on land and within drako's the results indicate the impact that was similar to carbonaceous contract meteorite that some of the most pristine material in the solar system.

The Birder's Guide
"ten kilometer" Discussed on The Birder's Guide
"That was cool. I thought i heard something else of interest sanded grass rainy but we couldn't we couldn't track it down and cinnamon quail thrush. That was quite cool. So we've set up camp here. It's a beautiful not and who had been shortly limb. We'll get up at the crack adorn and go find ourselves some chestnut breasted whiteface maybe some thick billed grass ryan and. We'll be in touch tomorrow. Not only have we went. John says that as cinnamon quail thrush was west of glen by not aced which is tree. Fox i'm not a hundred sensual. This microphone is gonna pick up butts. We currently driving. So i can hear a whole bunch of stuff going on in the background. That's just the car. We are utterly hundred guys north of fort augusta hundred and fifty guys so Mr naught. I was supposed to record this last night but forgotten in complete non heist of loss but forgot nonetheless anyway. So we have in. The last two nights been camping at a price code. Moga camp which is on wiki camps Highly recommend about ten kilometers north of glen dame great little spots out five hundred meters back off the road. Plenty of fall would quite often. These places of just being completely skull out of fog would say. Bring your own button. Plenty of firewood on the ground Heaps of spice we were the only ones they the first and they were two other groups the second not. But everybody's got plenty of room between each other anyway. Malware came wicky camps and highly recommend saw. Yesterday i mine target was chestnut breasted whiteface not an easy bird to get at the best of thomas but nonetheless that was at target so we we get up earliest yes. Yesterday was yes. It was very foggy yesterday..

Trina Talk
"ten kilometer" Discussed on Trina Talk
"And and and then reconvene to whole discussion on what's happiness but but being happy i mean just just it's it's not about money. It's not about fame and fortune. It's about all you happy with way. You are on your journey. That's why i talk about excellence as showing up as being the based you can be everyday that success you have to be. I play sport. I'm fifty seven. I play team hockey. Now that's stuff with ball on the green surface not the flat not the flat thing. Wasser just to pretend into You i say you know what i'm talking about. The play. master's level hockey in with a group of people must lock myself if played at state level beta so so good group of guys good skill set. But i'm probably in the middle of the team in terms of skill all right. But i'm happy being part of the team and contributing model but to the team because the rest of our lives for interpreters. We are it. We not contributing to eighteen We're not contributing to the team. We all the team whereas Interesting saad of la. How do you recharge i exercise. Which kind of is sound self-defeating now. It's been lifetime time exercising. Living at the cars. Tweet we do. We have sixty kilometers of Off i drive to the studio this morning. It's a non. am now addressed. The students full kilometers to the studio five kilometers to the beach and most times during some and one to win. It's not sties. I will spend at least one day a week during a ten kilometer. Walk along the beach. Listening to music. Listening took part cost or not listening to anything. Just walking just absorbing the beauty of where. I live on the indian ocean. It's warm water in summer. I'll take off my shoes and Or two in the water. That's part of my recharge time. My wife and i make time to go away. Together will go into cabin. Health retreat pre two thousand and nineteen is to travel a lot and so i would travel. My wife would travel with me in your in. We spent a month in europe in two thousand and nineteen together on holiday with family. So that's part of the recharge. It is gonna yoga gang to pilates going to the gym gonna spin. Close all those things as much as they physically tired. The body that recharges the mont. What are.

Netflix is A Daily Joke
Here’s How the Biggest Loser Became a Legit Show
"The biggest news now. You're not when i came up with a concept of that wasn't affect face on a ten kilometer rights because it would have been a completely different shy but when they come up with a concept they were all sitting in a boardroom. And the yoga pants and go. We've got two hundred million dollars. What are we doing and karen marketing will have about. We take twelve fat painful. And we put them in this fed pham scenario. And then we give them six carats. Six to eight gives them these really angry personal trainers. Let you get them any other. Why we give them this really angry. China's yellow them will die. Mike the makes us up those care. Sakes and everyone's by roy even if there was in the room at this point though osh watchable okay karen welding. We just wanted to progress so once a week. We'll just put them on some scales and the kid little outfits and then behind them and john reid. led lights dicon see. We've put the white. They used to be the white. Now they'd be on this boom count and then we'd charged him like that wasn't fatty in the ring. Hang the fuck on at this point just a minute just fucking minute. What are these outfits talking about

Crypto Voices
"ten kilometer" Discussed on Crypto Voices
"Don't think it makes Oh you like this Beck when we had the coin payment terminals they had. Gps right and we found is rarely provider that they're resold the telefonica sims for gprs international so essentially put the gps simone it and you have data anywhere on earth that has a tower even a crappy tower so we had like people in the desert using the terminals which was kind of interesting. I didn't know it could go like that remote what's bullock. Judy is very poor data. The iot it's better usually to buy from a foreign country because this way you can use olden tokes of gallantry in roaming and issue by your local income you can use on. Um well-meant nice So yeah the old is international at ut providers usually use some unpopulated counties in cards just to give you better coverage in the other countries but now the switching to e- seems and the i'd election no such device I don't remember the name of these. Like four g Router for going location in the country and basically What they do is they collect for low speed collection to vessels when you when you log in. And then they don't know an an sem into the device for the local county in wichita at the given moment that's back to starlink though Does anybody know like what's the latest like. What would you get connection wise for what you'll pay. How quickly will it be available inside north america so i saw a demo d- And also have a colleague who received his in in both cases. So there's not saturation in the market yet. But just trickling out the user bases based on based on where he lived but They were pretty close to advertise like over eighty a. I didn't see it in the democrat. Did it didn't get over hundred which they claim to be at one hundred But it was. It was not like very far off of what they were advertising. And you pay for that. I'm glad we're doing an isp show. Today i forgot to tell you a pre show. This is yeah. We're doing less economics and more stuff people could use even if it's darling. I wish we had a referral but I forget what the case was. It was on par with another is see at least here in the us which would make it right around one hundred dollars a month. I could be wrong on that. But that's that's next on my mind we'll get to your products eventually novak but now maybe we don't for spe- services so whether you're putting seem rosenberg gold. We wanted to make a product different product that would have those would be chain state aware right so you would know transactions but then it's like the complexity and the cost it was just like you end up making a phone. This is the problem right. And when you are at a phone level now it's different costs in scale you need now. Laura could be interesting if you have a aware amash being a little bit more taken hold in north america. Yes speaking of mesh networks. What's the latest with your ham radio project. That was another interesting when we're thinking about like if you're talking about broadcast in a future where internet connectivity is at risk just theoretically of course is it better to have like your ham radio style mesh now working as well or like sat wheel. Satellites be useful in this case if now internet connectivity is down there is no realistic way of blocking the internet. I any country anywhere right. I mean even in north korea. They find a way. The only problem is they shu- they found that he found their way right so the deterrent. Violence there is a little bit next level but is typically speaking when you talk about like solving lack of internet issues for censorship or of remoteness or just like lack of infrastructure like it really is a mix of solutions so for example you with wi you can do ten kilometers if you'd have the right gear At wifi already supported by every device right in the market then he can connect that to some fidel's talks long distance. Like like docu about tens of kilometers. You could ten kilometers on wi fi. Yeah what the how many what's the frequency on that. Not much like it just needed. Yeah g so you'd normally do a two point four gigahertz right So that means the antenna would be about With a two point four gigahertz and the right anti you can go ten kilometers. Yeah so so. The antenna will be essentially like the size of Of like a computer like just just like links will be like about a foot or two foot antenna but but a second an antenna. We've raised right. It's like yohji so it's directional you have to point. it's not like on the direct you cannot. You'd require too much for that. But but still like ten kilometers. You'd be ten kilometers like if you line of sight of course and with like no more than fifty dollars per gear not even twenty dollars where figured you can make the intent with like some wire as much what you should look at the ubiquitous. Catalog actually venkov some wireless spew range They sell lake yet. Everything you need to create a wireless. Isp in a built in the world and can go up to like fifty or one hundred kilometers of some of the some of the gear. They so michelle. Got me all into ubiquity. Hackers you know there you go great. I do. Ubiquity makes awesome stuff. It's a shame they got pounds so badly by home. what happened. Oh they had a major hack if you were using you be greedy dot com accounts to manage devices They basically leaked. All the info of all configurations already mentioned this. Yes i wasn't. Yes keep going. I was leading. Never used the the collected the gallant to her service. So i mean he s not never do on anything. If you're using a cloud service you you get what your did. But that's true for everything right like if you buy if if you buy like a robot vacuum if you buy like a smart thermostat or whatever you buy like nowadays is very hard to find things that are not smart but dicky thing is just never connect those fans to the remote service. Just don't do the full setup and then you're fine what about security cameras inside your house. Well obviously yeah. But i mean what about security cameras. That are outside. And then you have information that Might be uploaded to the cloud. Where again. I'm using ubiquity for my cameras at home and they recalled to my own server Betray old and controls than the average listener is thinking. How do i get hands server. Just house for coins. yeah that's the way you could host an end. Vr incas. But now i actually. Ubiquity sells like caldera box which is the several for you. Yes cameras in wifi insecurity and now even voice and everything so Yeah you can hold..

The Hustle & Flowchart Podcast
"ten kilometer" Discussed on The Hustle & Flowchart Podcast
"Breakfast lunch dinner and a happy are a coupon will be given to them. They'll come and redeem those coupons. We are running those ads. So you know the business is coming from us and with this strategy. Monday tuesday wednesday thursday put. I also see you have a beautiful banquet where you have lots of conferences happening. But when i went to your website is that people have to come for to the website to the website and somebody will get back to them instead of that. What if iran linked in ad campaign to all the corporations like nike gillette all the corporation the ten kilometer radius of your hotel so that they see the ad big in touch with us. Hey joe you. And i both doing for customer gets in touch with us. We getting in touch with the customer. The sales much faster seal psychologist shorter. We do that and we get you more more of those banquet queries and we all know even if you get one extra banquet from that the enter and you get one. Extra office conference the entire profitability for the whole month changes. So that's how we will take care of your rooms your f- in be an your banquet facilities and by the way. This might be a new video to you. But i've known you and watch you from afar. Many people in your industry. Like mr from this odell mr y from the hidden and said tra- marat helping our customers and putting in links to see what you can see the work we've done for them now almost coming to the end of my four minute video. Thank you very much for patients. I'm asking you for one thing and one thing. Only if you thought that we can add value to you and give you more than thirty percent in the next three months by falling the saudis e. that'd be mentioned. All you need to do is book a call. There's a link over here with a book takes. You got into the bulk of diamond date of your convenience and it's thirty minute goal. What happens here a thirty minute call and we're gonna teach you three things we go to show you what your competitors are doing. We're gonna show you what you're not doing and we're gonna show you how you can reach where you get.

STEM-Talk
"ten kilometer" Discussed on STEM-Talk
"Are your thoughts on the likelihood in our lifetime or the lifetime of our listeners in discovery of life apart from that on earth. That's a great question can oddly enough. What did i get remarkably frequently. I kind of have to answer to that. One is a pragmatic answer. And then one is kind of like the answer that i'm hoping for and the pragmatic answer is that it just seems to me not likely that we would find life in the immediate future just because going to these places is so hard if we're looking at going to the sub ice ocean on europa we have to fly jupiter which is pretty hard. We have to land on europa which is hard for then we have to melt through this ice crest which is ten kilometers sick. That might even take a year or two and then we have to explore this under ice ocean. And we're actually practicing things like that on earth had to explore underneath ice shells underneath the ice shelf the ross ice shelf in antarctica. Because we want to study that to understand the effects of climate change on some of these pristine antarctic environments. But it's very hard on earth much less to go to another planet in do that. So the pragmatic answer is. I'm not holding my breath waiting for such a mission to happen in in my lifetime but if you look out thirty fifty years. It's just very hard to project. So i would. I would have a hard time predicting. But if you ask me as an optimist in what i hope for. It's quite possible that we could hear some signals. That might indicate to us that there could be somebody trying to contact us a little different from going there and literally visiting

AI Today Podcast: Artificial Intelligence Insights, Experts, and Opinion
"ten kilometer" Discussed on AI Today Podcast: Artificial Intelligence Insights, Experts, and Opinion
"Misalignment of expectations. And i assigned this to the fact that people are not ready yet to be. Actually that the driven so that the driven the making is not about your guts. Which i'm going with my gut just just to be clear. Got sittings are are great and we trust them because over and over again for several people. You've got phoenix. Our rights but being driven means that the the data drives decision. Which means that you look at the way you captured it and torture are going to do. Even if it doesn't sound right. So i think people really like following technology wage them so a and actually i also saw Deal on the news. And i just kind of drove quite a lot in the last week and i i like people don't want to drive so they would kind of things take higher risk than they usually would because does so not into it. If you should like driving you would take the risk that you see machine working ritu. Well most of the time time that you saw and like let's go for it. Sounds good but if Of course my theory. The same people the trust ignited to do things that don't like if suddenly doesn't hey you need To start walking right so you have. These garmin watches. The doors. Smartwatch is a gorgeous that tells you hey wolf enough yet. People are like oh i just came back from my head ten kilometer run nor id than i than week ago. Well the didn't move for a week from the couch. So maybe you should stand up and walk around but then the machine used read it out so i think it's more about Despite recommendation. That you get and that's what people would change if if it's not what the gut feeling tells them the he's not traded but if my mother does than a if you keep doing what you're doing you're going to save five hundred million. That's a great mother which atrocity even more exactly the the personal benefit always wins. So well thank you so much. I mean we clearly go on for hours. And you know maybe we will so stay tuned. I would say to our folks you know. Look at our communities our data for ai community data icon dot com. You know our machine learning life cycle community life cycle comp dot com and our ai in government community. We didn't really spend too much time talking about here. But there's another community for folks who are looking at the government and public sector applications of ai. That's a in government dot com. So i just want to say thank you so much for joining us on this podcast. We really enjoyed having you and you shared some fantastic incites with us in our area today listeners. So much for having me. I had a great time here. Yeah thank you so much. This was such an incredible podcast and listeners. If you've enjoyed listening to this podcast please make sure to rate us on. Itunes google spotify or your favorite podcast platform as always will post any articles in concepts discussed in the show notes including links to all the communities that we talked about. Thanks for listening. And we'll catch you at the next podcast. And that's a wrap for today to download this episode. Find additional episodes and transcripts subscribe to our newsletter and more please visit our website at cognreznick dot com joined in discussion inbetween podcasts on the today facebook group and make sure to join the cognitive facebook page for updates on this and future podcasts. Also subscribe to our podcast in itunes. Google play and elsewhere to get notified. A future episodes. Want to support this podcast and get your message out to our listeners. Then become a sponsor we offer significant benefits for today sponsors including promotion in the podcast and landing page and opportunity to be a guest on the today show for more information on sponsorship visit. The cog delivered a website and click on the podcast link. This sound recording and its contents is copyright by cognitive. All rights reserved music by matsu gravitas. As always thanks for listening to a today ammo. Catchy at the next podcast..

The Agostinho Zinga Show
"ten kilometer" Discussed on The Agostinho Zinga Show
"As a whole nother issue revenue government is set up to break wrote him out who bloody nose because it sounds like a new zealand and australia evans doing a terrible job. But in terms of pure distraction from the rigors of everyday life this is fascinating to watch districts. Is it fourteen stories high or something stupid like that. Plus a super heavyweight of an iffy. It's going to be a cog antiguan thing to just witness and is lifting itself. You know on his own up to a certain altitude dentist turning off its engines belly from turning into a bellyflop maneuver is flaps cope in say can control itself And then it turns on a couple of engines to shoot itself back upright again and then lance like are you insane. How are you. Do you realize how crazy that is like is absolutely crazy when you think about the conventional design of a space rookie or spaceship is like you know the the shuttle or just you know just a conventional missile looking thing and you got this while thirty five plus thirty seconds starship. Ten has liftoff to ten kilometers on. Its test flight from boca chica in cameron county texas. Just so cool. I looked beautiful. Heat.

Daily Tech News Show
"ten kilometer" Discussed on Daily Tech News Show
"Device to be like you need to be managing your device in the cloud and then send it into our device and we'll manage from there. Yeah but if somebody's like. I want my home to be smarter. I mean and you're like oh but i. I like amazon voice assistant. Or i like google's home services offer ends. I mean this is somewhat limiting. Yeah i i think that there is a large scale trending minutes happening in a lot of technology now and that is a collapsing that we might have. We might have been added point over the last year or so. Where the most things that are scattered were going to exist and both inside the iot community and social networks and streaming services that the next trend is all right. The business model has proven itself now. How many ways can these things work together. That's what the market pressure is here for. So i i think it would be nice if we could have a lot of ways that you didn't have to worry about how these things would connect with each other but i don't know for ready for that yet. All right tell us about the deep deep blue ocean sarah tom. I'm i'm ready to circuit. Boards fail at intense pressures such as in the deep deep ocean meaning that ocean exploring robots need lots of bulk to protect their circuitry. But we might be getting somewhere. A report in nature describes a team of chinese researchers operating the soft bodied robot in the deep ocean during a successful ten kilometer. Ride down into the on trench. If you're not familiar. It's about two hundred kilometers east of the mariana islands and also the deepest oceanic trench on earth. It's deep the researchers were also inspired by species of snails fish that appear to have adapted over time to being in deep water would schools that. Don't close off entirely in order to survive the immense pressure in such deep butter a soft bodied robot can mimic this flexibility by splitting up circuit boards among different locations in the soft body connected by flexible wires components put on larger.

Daily Tech News Show
"ten kilometer" Discussed on Daily Tech News Show
"Device to be like you need to be managing your device in the cloud and then send it into our device and we'll manage from there. Yeah but if somebody's like. I want my home to be smarter. I mean and you're like oh but i. I like amazon voice assistant. Or i like google's home services offer ends. I mean this is somewhat limiting. Yeah i think that there is a large scale trend. Anything that is happening in a lot of technology now that is a collapsing that we might have. We might have been added point over the last year or so. Where the most things that are scattered were going to exist and both inside the iot community and social networks and streaming services that the next trend is all right. The business model has proven itself now. How many ways can these things work together. That's what the market pressure is here for. So i i think it would be nice if we could have a lot of ways that you didn't have to worry about how these things would connect with each other but i don't know for ready for that yet. Yeah all right. Tell us about the deep deep. Blue ocean sarah tom. I'm i'm ready to circuit. Boards fail at intense pressures such as in the deep deep ocean meaning that ocean exploring robots need lots of bulk to protect their circuitry. But we might be getting somewhere. A report in nature describes a team of chinese researchers operating the soft bodied robot in the deep ocean during a successful ten kilometer. Ride down into the mariana trench. If you're not familiar. It's about two hundred kilometers east of the mariana islands and also the deepest oceanic trench on earth. It's deep the researchers were also inspired by species of snails fish that appear to have adapted over time to being in deep water would schools that. Don't close off entirely in order to survive the immense pressure in such deep butter a soft bodied robot can mimic this flexibility by splitting up circuit boards among different locations in the soft body connected by flexible wires students put on larger boards.

Daily Tech News Showhttps://dailytechnewsshow.com/
"ten kilometer" Discussed on Daily Tech News Showhttps://dailytechnewsshow.com/
"Device to be like you need to be managing your device in the cloud and then send it into our device and we'll manage from there. Yeah but if somebody's like. I want my home to be smarter. I mean and you're like oh but i. I like amazon voice assistant. Or i like google's home services offer ends. I mean this is somewhat limiting. Yeah i i think that there is a large scale trend. Anything that is happening in a lot of technology now and that is a collapsing that we might have. We might have been added point over the last year or so. Where the most things that are scattered were going to exist and both inside the iot community and social networks and streaming services that the next trend is all right. The business model has proven itself. Now how many ways can these things work together. That's what the market pressure is here for. So i i think it would be nice if we could have a lot of ways that you didn't have to worry about how these things would connect with each other but i don't know for ready for that yet. All right tell us about the deep deep blue ocean. sarah. Tom i'm i'm ready to circuit. Boards fail at intense pressures such as in the deep deep ocean meaning that ocean exploring robots need lots of bulk to protect their circuitry. But we might be getting somewhere. A report in nature describes a team of chinese researchers operating the soft bodied robot in the deep ocean during a successful ten kilometer. Ride down into the mariana trench. If you're not familiar. It's about two hundred kilometers east of the mariana islands and also the deepest oceanic trench on earth. It's deep the researchers were also inspired by species of snails fish that appear to have adapted over time to being in deep water would schools that. Don't close off entirely in order to survive the immense pressure in such deep butter a soft bodied robot can mimic this flexibility by splitting up circuit boards among different locations in the soft body connected by flexible wires components put on larger.

Daily Tech News Show
"ten kilometer" Discussed on Daily Tech News Show
"Device to be like you need to be managing your device in the cloud and then send it into our device and we'll manage from there. Yeah but if somebody's like. I want my home to be smarter. I mean and you're like oh but i. I like amazon voice assistant. Or i like google's home services offer ends. I mean this is somewhat limiting. Yeah i think that there is a large scale trend. Anything that is happening in a lot of technology now and that is a collapsing that we might have. We might have been added point over the last year or so. Where the most things that are scattered were going to exist and both inside the iot community and social networks and streaming services that the next trend is all right. The business model has proven itself. Now how many ways can these things work together. That's what the market pressure is here for. So i i think it would be nice if we could have a lot of ways that you didn't have to worry about how these things would connect with each other but i don't know for ready for that yet. All right tell us about the deep deep blue ocean. sarah. Tom i'm i'm ready to circuit. Boards fail at intense pressures such as in the deep deep ocean meaning that ocean exploring robots need lots of bulk to protect their circuitry. But we might be getting somewhere. A report in nature describes a team of chinese researchers operating the soft bodied robot in the deep ocean during a successful ten kilometer. Ride down into the mariana trench. If you're not familiar. It's about two hundred kilometers east of the mariana islands and also the deepest oceanic trench on earth. It's deep the researchers were also inspired by species of stalefish that appear to have adapted over time to being in deep water would schools that. Don't close off entirely in order to survive the immense pressure in such deep butter soft bodied robot can mimic this flexibility by splitting up circuit boards among different locations in the soft body.

Daily Tech News Show
"ten kilometer" Discussed on Daily Tech News Show
"Device to be like you need to be managing your device in the cloud and then send it into our device and we'll manage from there. Yeah but if somebody's like. I want my home to be smarter. I mean and you're like oh but i. I like amazon voice assistant. Or i like google's home services offer ends. I mean this is somewhat limiting. Yeah i i think that there is a large scale trending minutes happening in a lot of technology now and that is a collapsing that we might have. We might have been added point over the last year or so. Where the most things that are scattered were going to exist and both inside the iot community and social networks and streaming services that the next trend is all right. The business model has proven itself now. How many ways can these things work together. That's what the market pressure is here for. So i i think it would be nice if we could have a lot of ways that you didn't have to worry about how these things would connect with each other but i don't know for ready for that yet. Yeah all right. Tell us about the deep deep. Blue ocean sarah tom. I'm i'm ready to circuit. Boards fail at intense pressures such as in the deep deep ocean meaning that ocean exploring robots lots of bulk to protect their circuitry. But we might be getting somewhere. A report in nature describes a team of chinese researchers operating the soft bodied robot in the deep ocean during a successful ten kilometer. Ride down into the mariana trench. If you're not familiar. It's about two hundred kilometers east of the mariana islands and also the deepest oceanic trench on earth. It's deep the researchers were also inspired by species of snails fish that appear to have adapted over time to being in deep water would schools that. Don't close off entirely in order to survive the immense pressure in such deep butter a soft bodied robot can mimic this flexibility by splitting up circuit boards among different locations in the soft.

Daily Tech News Show
"ten kilometer" Discussed on Daily Tech News Show
"Device to be like you need to be managing your device in the cloud and then send it into our device and we'll manage from there. Yeah but if somebody's like. I want my home to be smarter. I mean and you're like oh but i. I like amazon voice assistant. Or i like google's home services offer ends. I mean this is somewhat limiting. Yeah i think that there is a large scale trending minutes happening in a lot of technology now and that is a collapsing that we might have. We might have been added point over the last year or so. Where the most things that are scattered were going to exist and both inside the iot community and social networks and streaming services that the next trend is all right. The business model has proven itself now. How many ways can these things work together. That's what the market pressure is here for. So i i think it would be nice if we could have a lot of ways that you didn't have to worry about how these things would connect with each other but i don't know for ready for that yet. Yeah all right. Tell us about the deep deep. Blue ocean sarah tom. I'm i'm ready to circuit. Boards fail at intense pressures such as in the deep deep ocean meaning that ocean exploring robots need lots of bulk to protect their circuitry. But we might be getting somewhere. A report in nature describes a team of chinese researchers operating the soft bodied robot in the deep ocean during a successful ten kilometer. Ride down into the march on trench. If you're not familiar. It's about two hundred kilometers east of the mariana islands and also the deepest oceanic trench on earth. It's deep the researchers were also inspired by species of snails fish that appear to have adapted over time to being in deep water would schools that. Don't close off entirely in order to survive the immense pressure in such deep butter a soft bodied robot can mimic this flexibility by splitting up circuit boards among different locations in the soft.

Daily Tech News Show
"ten kilometer" Discussed on Daily Tech News Show
"Device to be like you need to be managing your device in the cloud and then send it into our device and we'll manage from there. Yeah but if somebody's like. I want my home to be smarter. I mean and you're like oh but i. I like amazon voice assistant. Or i like google's home services offer ends. I mean this is somewhat limiting. Yeah i think that there is a large scale trend. Anything that is happening in a lot of technology now that is a collapsing that we might have. We might have been added point over the last year or so. Where the most things that are scattered were going to exist and both inside the iot community and social networks and streaming services that the next trend is all right. The business model has proven itself now. How many ways can these things work together. That's what the market pressure is here for. So i i think it would be nice if we could have a lot of ways that you didn't have to worry about how these things would connect with each other but i don't know for ready for that yet. Yeah all right. Tell us about the deep deep. Blue ocean sarah tom. I'm i'm ready to circuit. Boards fail at intense pressures such as in the deep deep ocean meaning that ocean exploring robots need lots of bulk to protect their circuitry. But we might be getting somewhere. A report in nature describes a team of chinese researchers operating the soft bodied robot in the deep ocean during a successful ten kilometer. Ride down into the mariana trench. If you're not familiar. It's about two hundred kilometers east of the mariana islands and also the deepest oceanic trench on earth. It's deep the researchers were also inspired by species of snails fish that appear to have adapted over time to being in deep water would schools that. Don't close off entirely in order to survive the immense pressure in such deep butter a soft bodied robot can mimic this flexibility by splitting up circuit boards among different locations in the soft.

Daily Tech News Show
"ten kilometer" Discussed on Daily Tech News Show
"Device to be like you need to be managing your device in the cloud and then send it into our device and we'll manage from there. Yeah but if somebody's like. I want my home to be smarter. I mean and you're like oh but i. I like amazon voice assistant. Or i like google's home services offer ends. I mean this is somewhat limiting. Yeah i i think that there is a large scale trending minutes happening in a lot of technology now and that is a collapsing that we might have. We might have been added point over the last year or so. Where the most things that are scattered were going to exist and both inside the iot community and social networks and streaming services that the next trend is all right. The business model has proven itself now. How many ways can these things work together. That's what the market pressure is here for. So i i think it would be nice if we could have a lot of ways that you didn't have to worry about how these things would connect with each other but i don't know for ready for that yet. All right tell us about the deep deep blue ocean sarah tom. I'm i'm ready to circuit. Boards fail at intense pressures such as in the deep deep ocean meaning that ocean exploring robots need lots of bulk to protect their circuitry. But we might be getting somewhere. A report in nature describes a team of chinese researchers operating the soft bodied robot in the deep ocean during a successful ten kilometer. Ride down into the mariana trench. If you're not familiar. It's about two hundred kilometers east of the mariana islands and also the deepest oceanic trench on earth. It's deep the researchers were also inspired by species of snails fish that appear to have adapted over time to being in deep water would schools that. Don't close off entirely in order to survive the immense pressure in such deep butter a soft bodied robot can mimic this flexibility by splitting up circuit boards among different locations in the soft.

Sounds Profitable
Unpacking The Challenges of Geotargeting
"Where is your target going. What's the next stage of this tool talk about it. I brought in a super knowledgeable guy on the topic jason hansen. Here's what he had to say. So jason thank you so much for joining me today on the first recorded episode that we've done so far when i introduce you a little bit so i met jason when i was working at barometric Jason works at rapa by that is a gig economy ad platform and they're very performance driven. So why don't you tell us a little bit about yourself and about ratify. Hey i thanks for having me as as we were joking about earlier I'm setting the bar low so your guests are only gonna get better from there to listen to this journey that you're on but it really fascinating what you're doing in the focusing on podcasting. It's just such in the early stages. And i'm a fan so i'm i'm looking forward to it as as a a listener to your show. So thanks for having me ratify to trapper fiber. You mentioned it where gig economy ad platform. So we're what we do. Is we match. Where advertisers want to reach. Based on the demographics are targeting in a specific market we press a button in that source that campaign zone sources drivers so whether uber drivers lift drivers jordache postmates. What have you it. Sources drivers that drive in that area in. We put ads on their cars. And then there's a whole way that we we measure attribution which. I'm sure we'll get into a little bit but not to pitch rapper fi but just talking about how we use location data to deliver that to our advertisers But our goal is taking. This is a very old school medium out of home. We've been doing it ever since we're drawing putting paintings on walls We're caveman and we're gonna take this this this old school medium. That's out in the real world and bring it into the digital space. Can we measure attribution. Can we make it more digital. Yeah and that's exactly why. I wanted to have you on the show. I appreciate you not doing the full pitch and all that but the the truth is that have a really great background. First off. you started in radio and second rapa fees auto home. which is you know. The subject of this episode is related to the geo location article that i wrote and in podcasting we get showed little information to do any sort of lookout and for geo the only thing we get his ip address and so with ratify. I kind of wanted to hear like what data you guys get. How you do g look and then kind of turn on and see what you could do with a little bit less like what is what does that world look like. Yeah i think there's some great correlations there really are model. We've we've we've started this We started this methodology for attribution on. It's been about two years now. And it's really scratching the surface as far as what data were getting and howard turning it into as close as we can get factual results that our clients see so what we're doing is we're taking the latte. Longitude of our drivers in were matching that with mobile add. Id's of folks. Who are within fifty feet of those vehicles so we partner with data providers that have collected device. Id's through optin. So it's folks who have given up the right to to share their location now. It's we don't collect any personal information but were able we take that that ad. Id and our goal is not. We know we're not going to capture everyone because we're just we're not at that point as a society yet where everyone is traceable. We wanna build up a large enough sample size to say okay in this campaign zone in atlanta for example here is a a large enough sample size of folks who were around these wrapped vehicles and then we want to measure did they take intended action. But what's interesting is we take those device. Id's and this is where we worked together before we would match those device id's with an ip address at their at their house in linking to other devices at their home. Because we know out of home in. It's actually the same with radio. And i would say even the same with podcast to an extent people. Your potential clients aren't taking that action right than in there because they just wanted to listen to what they just wanted to. Listen to joe rogan. They didn't necessarily wanted to go by t or some. You know some software at that moment. But that's why the importance of linking to device ideas at the home. We want to measure. Did they eventually take that intended. Action through the repetition of of seeing the ad on on the road or podcast in which is really interesting You hear the same add enough from you. Think of the godfathers of advertisers mail ship. How many podcast they did they sponsor and you hear it enough what we wanna do is we wanna see. Taking those ip addresses. Did that household eventually. Take the intended action now. There are limits there as reading. Your article really fascinating. I'd love to hear you dive into a little bit. Because i think there are similarities. The limits that ip address supplies to us in the out of home space. What is supplies to podcast advertisers. In your space yes so. Ip is really interesting. Because i did a test in that article and i connected through my home wifi which had me within one kilometer physical address and it and it said it could get up to ten kilometers away but cellular depending on if it was i. Ip b. six or p four had me anywhere from an hour and a half to three hours away. And i think that a lot of people look at chiyo with a mindset different than what you just said which was really cool. Because we're both kind of in mediums that don't have a click right and so when somebody sees an auto home advertisement or listening to a podcast. Add there's nothing to click. They're not gonna go to it immediately. And the focus of that part is that it's more about where the user is at the time that they see it and the proximity or here and the proximity to the action. Right if it's online geo doesn't normally matter. Anybody can hear an ad anybody can see an ad and then go online and find it right. If you're wrapping carso amazon. Or you're telling you're doing a podcast for it but when we were talking a little bit earlier before the show you made a comment about local and i think local such a big thing. That podcast needs to take advantage of that. It's less about. Were they within that ten kilometer radius. That i'm trying to target or more. Are they in a realistic driving. Radius from the car dealership that we're advertising. And i think that people in podcasting trying to emulate digital so much and. I'm sure you have that battle to on your end that it's not necessarily about the ad being physically close to that location. You're trying to drive people to but within the maximum radius that you guys believe will acquire that that lead. Yeah and i'm going to take you to the dinner table. Just as here's how i look at the media mix when you're eating dinner and you have a stake you have sides you have a drink. Maybe you have a salad and the soup. You have several different applications for each of those items. I'm not going to have Oh yeah i just need honey. Just let's just use a bowl put everything in a bowl unless i'm making a dinner smoothie and using a bowl for every single food element you have a bowl for the soup. You have a salad plate. You have a stake on a plate and then you have a fork knife that you use for that stake in a separate like i. I can go too far. I love lucy analogies. Come to me quickly. But we as marketers and advertisers. We love to try to take every medium in morph in that. It has to be the same thing as a google ad. Words like the what we what we get or what we how we apply google ad words. Okay now we have to have the same methodologies and the same results as we would want in podcasting or out of home every medium served. Its own purpose. And it's up to the advertiser to figure out. How does this affect the buyer's journey in. How can i get the most out of it for this segment of the buyer's

UN News
Indonesia quake: eight confirmed dead, hundreds injured in Sulawesi emergency
"Un humanitarian said that. They're in close contact with the indonesian authorities after six point. Two magnitude earthquake struck west sulawesi province in the early hours of friday. Eight people lost their lives and more than six hundred and thirty were injured. According to local officials heavy damage was reported in the city of majini including a five storey hospital. Where eight people were set to be. Trapped more than eighteen thousand have been moved to ten evacuation sites. These numbers are likely to increase as assessments. Continue according to the un office for the coordination of humanitarian affairs archer in geneva spokesperson and slacker said that the earthquake holiday smaller. Five point seven magnitude shock which struck the same area on thursday afternoon. The epicenter of the latest quake was shallow at ten kilometers and did not trigger as soon army warning he added. The earthquake interrupted the access road between medina and the provincial capital. Mahmoodul in three different locations electricity. Communications network and fuel supply have also been disrupted the united nations very close contact with the indonesian governments. And we stand ready to support the response to assist the affected people

Casefile True Crime
The Churchill Fire
"Formally known as Hazelwood Churchill was purpose built to accommodate workers involved in the construction and maintenance of the Hazelwood power station in nineteen sixty five to ten was renamed in posthumous owner of Foam British. Promised us so Winston Churchill and grew into a commuter suburb for those working in neighbouring areas. Like Hey did one. Hundred and sixty kilometers southeast of Mobin. Churchill phages a commercial centre for its several thousand locals with Wad pock land separating residential areas industrial estates dense tree plantations and national park and dig- Ridges of farmland frame the township which is home to the Seaney Colli highland and two golden tail nine locally is the beat cigar after Winston Churchill's trademark smoking habit at one thirty two PM on Sunday February. Seven two thousand nine triple zero. Emergency services received a call regarding a wildfire just sawed Churchill. The blaze was full. Columbia south east of town near the intersection of Glenn Donald Road and Jealous Outlet to unsealed stretches of winding roadway that cut through the rural outskirts. It had emerged from the bottom of a natural basin the Bennetts creek catchment which consisted of blue gum. Eucalypt and upon plantations surrounded by hazardous surface fuels such as shrubs wag grass and blackberry bushes. Three minutes after the coal a pilot flying firefighting aircraft ten kilometers from Churchill. Saw Did a column of doc smoke hundreds of feet high rausing from the fires location within ten minutes the flames troubled roughly one Columba and were in the vicinity of forests managed by Timber Company. Hancock Victorian plantations the plantations surveillance planes. Which were Riva's seeing the entirety of the latrobe valley that day would deserted to Churchill to carry out reconnaissance work despite being in its early stages. The fires behavior was noted. As extreme by the Tom. First responders arrived the blaze had spread rapidly and was burning on both sides of jealousy outlet spot. Fires Begin igniting a rounded straining resources and impacting efforts to tackle the central inferno directly requests? Were made for more tankers and dare support however de intense hate was causing water to evaporate before it even hit the ground. The focus then shifted to warning surrounding communities of the urgent threat. Road blocks were established. Durant the file as emergency services personnel visited nearby residences to raise the alarm but two pm the fire had been raging for those often Allah and remained out of control despite the arrival of additional firefighting crews. It continued to move in southeasterly direction through the Broad Valley of benefits. Craig ECRU observed the fire cresting to reach along. Jira lying North Road and by the fifty minute mark. It had traveled about seven kilometers. More spot. Fires were reported and by three PM. The blaze had burned through a plan plantation and to damage the communications our efforts to protect assets continued as emergency relief centres were established in nearby townships at three twenty pm. The fire had destroyed. Its first time. Stead at the intersection of Thomson and to Jira Lying. North roads but five fifteen pm it was approaching the slopes of men tasr e ten kilometers juice out east of Churchill and spotting to the mountains east side as emergency crews tackled they surrounding spot fires. The apex of being funar raged on woods. Elliott that day a strategy is bureau of Meteorology had predicted a severe wind. Change that would hit land between six and eight. Pm shortly before. Four o'clock there. Prediction was amended to the window of five thirty and seven. Pm The planning officer responsible for the Churchill Fire Unaware of the amendment told the Incident Management Team to expect at the midpoint of seven when they change arrived and now earlier than anticipated at sent seventy kilometer and now a gusts through the region that suddenly shifted the fire in a northeasterly direction. The winds posed a significant threat to way across and forced them to land as fifteen kilometer. Long uncontrolled flank of. Phya developed that ran from the origin. Point Nature Chill through to the east side of Tozzi as it progressed fullwood burning debris rained down and ignited the surrounding vegetation almost instantly. It was accompanied by an east bleeding rush of what noise described by witnesses as the sand of immense pressure. Lucca that of a jet engine. Following this hurricane like wind change the file was at. Its most dangerous threatening multiple townships as well as the one wrong state forest residents working fervently to defend their himes when now blinded by an Ol- encompassing blackness composed of Smokin Dash. All of a sudden the in band firestorm had peed through the dock. Luckily Sunrise Churchill Resident Greg. We stated on you. The fire front was coming. You could hear it. You could smell it. You could feel the hate coming up out of the valley. The flames were right there. And where the heart of the trees and to that again. Three hundred Fateha plus there were big swirling vortexes is just a big swirling masses of flames that would burst and explode out of the treetops' shortly after six PM. Three water tankers belonging to volunteer. Fire Service the country fire authority were involved. In a series of Burn I've is wherein their crews were forced to take shelter where possible as the firing trapped them the boon either hit with quote great ferocity firefight at Graham Chesterton recall blackwood say MBA's thought the full was locked out coming from everywhere. The became very smokey and everything started to burn rapidly. That was spot FIS on the ground. All the rant me and the trees dotted burning at that stage aghast. I had about ten to fifteen seconds until I would have to make a move. Within those seconds the conditions deteriorated so rapidly. That are realized that wasn't safe too late truck. At that time a did not night where rule Marc crew members. Were on the decision to make a May Day call us said something along. The lines of we are completely surrounded by fire Tabun. I've lasted an estimated ten minutes firefighting crews elsewhere listened. Says their colleagues frantically broadcast may calls. I've Aradio but were unable to approach the scene due to the level of danger or they could do was respond. There is nothing we can do for you incredibly. None of the firefighter discord in the burn. Iva lost their lives the via finally slowed at eight PM. And by the following day of Sunday February I it was mostly brought to a whole l. Dive burning continued in heavily feud areas the Churchill fire named after its point of origin was not a visually listed under control until eleven days later on February nineteen more than six hundred firefighting personnel battled the blaze supported by one hundred and five vehicles and appliances in total. It had burned more than twenty five thousand eight hundred and sixty one heck Dez and destroyed one hundred forty five times elsewhere. Four hundred separate bushfires had devastated the Victorian landscape with the most destructive and deadly being the king like into Marysville FIS in the sites northeast collectively the fires had released eighty thousand kilowatts of. Hey the equivalent of five hundred atomic bombs. One hundred and seventy three. Papal had perished and four hundred and fourteen were left injured more than two thousand times and ten thousand kilometers of fence. Lon had been raised and an estimated one million animals were killed. Buerry seven two thousand nine became the deadliest bushfire. Catastrophe in Victoria's history and was henceforth referred to as black Saturday

BrainStuff
Could Sonic the Hedgehog Survive His Own Speeds?
"When it comes to fictional animals capable of breaking the sound barrier. There's no beating sonic the hedgehog. But would he be able to survive his own? Super Swiftness Sonics. The star of the long running video game franchise and now a movie wherein he spins and rolls at breakneck speeds and order to defeat the evil Dr Robotic so how fast does on it go as his name implies. He reaches sonic speeds meeting that he can travel as fast as a sound wave through. Earth's atmosphere which is roughly seven hundred sixty seven miles per hour or one thousand two hundred and thirty five kilometers per hour depending on air temperature. He also goes supersonic under the right circumstances. So it's probably safe to assume that he exceeds the speed of sound as well. That's incredibly fast. Most hedgehogs do get around their extremely active in the wild and often runs several miles each night. Which are regular hedgehog business hours but sonic speeds are much faster? Consider that the world's fastest or the Peregrine Falcon only reaches a maximum speed of about two hundred miles per hour or three hundred and twenty kilometers. I sustained speeds. The Cheetah is sonics closest rival at a mere seventy miles per hour or one hundred and ten kilometers. A Sonics smokes them both. So could sonnet realistically hindle supersonic speeds. Let's think about it. Humans routinely break the sound barrier in supersonic aircraft. Aboard the now discontinued Concorde. Passengers could even enjoy an inflight meal but this is all within the artificial confines of an airplane. All Sonic has his own body his body would have to be incredibly strong endurable to achieve and survive the wear and tear of supersonic speeds even if he's rolling through smooth tubes and shoots half the time at those speeds small particles of dust and even the air itself could cause serious damage as author James Cavaliers points out in the physics of superheroes a super fast organism like the flash would need super healing abilities to rapidly recover from the physical damage of each acceleration to say nothing of smashing into things. The same goes for Sonic. But then again if we're to assume that sonic species evolved to reach such high speeds. He must be sturdy enough to survive it at least in the short term so perhaps he does have this sort of enhanced healing speeds necessary to keep all his bones and ligaments from snapping as pointed out by Duke. University's Patek labs various. Animals are capable of incredible speeds when it comes to parts of their anatomy such as the mantis shrimps. Three Millisecond Club strikes. There's even a hypothesis that prehistoric sauropods could've whipped their tails at sonic speed. Like a bull whip but that remains rather controversial and maybe we're being too hard on sonic. He's a blue hedgehog that chases coins across the pinball landscape and in later games achieves faster than light travel plus. He's still going strong after almost

Legacy-Dads Podcast
Healthy Disciple-Making Churches
"Does a healthy disciple making church Look like And that's we're we're GONNA talk about today and it's funny because I had a discussion with a guy On instagram awhile. Back and he was like hey kind of frustrated with where he was in his church. And he's like I've been at this church a long time but I just feel like I'm not growing. I feel like the church. Leadership is holding me back from using spiritual gifts and and Some of the things that he was kind of questioning to leave. Do I stay. And that's always a hard question to ask so I'm going to start to sing Donte. I'll tell you this is something I learned from for What's his name Tom Ranier and we went through this and we planted a church? But how do you. How do you determine what a healthy churches and then Donte you can dive in. We'll talk about not only. How do we a healthy church? But how are we a disciple making church. And what is the discipleship Look Lake In a church so I'm going to start off with just five quick things. I'll tell you when you were looking at any church have to realize that the church has one head and that head is Jesus Christ You can go go to Fiji's one twenty two twenty three or First Corinthians twelve twenty seven to see that okay number two. The church has to authorities the word of God and the Holy Spirit K.. Go to second timothy three sixteen and Seventeen or John Fourteen twenty Twenty six to see that the church has basically three servants. And I would say I would call that. You have your elders and have you deacons And you have your what they call priests which is really every believer so elders and deacons guitarist about an axe fourteen in first timothy. Another big one in Titus And then we talk about the the servant as every believer as a pre story Doer of the word to spread the Gospel in First Peter two nine. Revelations one six and fusions for eleven now we're talking about what is a healthy church look like I think there's four marks of a healthy church search you have a church that has to be self-governing and has to be self supporting. It has be self reproducing in has to be self correcting okay. And then I would say there were five functions when we look at a church and these five functions can be you can look at them from Matthew Twenty to thirty seven Also in Matthew Twenty eight eighteen in the book of acts in book two but five functions of a church we're worshiping abiding expressing love towards God were involved in evangelism vandalism were engaging region loss involved in discipleship which. We're going to talk a lot more about. That's helping believers grow into Christ's likeness in the process of sanctification and then Search health and multiplication developing sustainable. Christ centered or Chrysler communities and also reaching loss and then multiplying leaders equipping leaders leaders who can equip other leaders who then equipped leaders and multiply and so forth and so forth and loving God and people through character knowledge and practice So that's that's what I kinda lay out. And that's what I learned or the five elements of a healthy church Donte what's your take on this and I know you're GonNa talk about the Road Dumais. You may us. But what is What a scripture tells about this? Yeah I I mean we'll cover acts eleven in a moment to but like if God truly wanted the download you know to us you. What discipleship is an understanding? The Authority of the word you know two disciples after the crucifixion were saddened they were trodden and and they were walking from From you're on the Road Mayson as they're walking on the road to me at ten mile walk you know all of a sudden Jesus Jesus shows it up he hides his his identity from them and then he begins to explain to them why you know from scripture from new why we had to have Masai Y Messiah had to be crucified. Invite why the Messiah Rose again any opened their hearts you know. In a way that was less than ten miles a six mile walk ten kilometer walk to the point art work by the time they were done walking with his men their hearts were burning and understanding and and totally gravitating toward the word of God and not only the word word of God. The very word that was in front of them and not asking him to leave but to stay with them and Lo and behold before he departed Jesus at his you know he revealed old whose true identity to them and their hearts were burning for for God's true so that was a model of Jesus just showing us his awesomeness that if he just wanted us to just wake up one day and have him download discipleship and download truth and the and the understanding of the word. He could easily done that.

Part Time Genius
A journey into the Chicxulub Crater
"The town of trip to Mexico it's a crater about a hundred and twenty miles in diameter it's about a hundred ninety kilometers during the created this crater was about six miles that's ten kilometers wide hit the earth sixty five million years ago in spite of these comments measurements the crater is hard to see even if you're standing right on its rim to get a good map NASA researchers examined it from space ten years before the nineteen ninety discovery of the trip to the crater this is Louise Alvarez a geologist Walter Alvarez a father son team proposed a theory about the impact that we know today created it they noted increased concentrations of the elements radium in sixty five million year old clay medium is rare on earth but it's more common in some objects from space like meteors and asteroids the cover is a massive asteroid hit the earth blanketing the world in a medium showers particles wasn't the only effect of the collision the impact caused fires climate change and widespread extinctions at the same time dinosaurs which until then had managed to survive for a hundred and eighty million years died out Doug Robertson of the university of Colorado at boulder theorizes the impact heated atmosphere dramatically because in most big dinosaurs to die within hours this mass extinction definitely happened also evidence shows that about seventy percent of species living on earth at that time became extinct die off marks the border between the Cretaceous and tertiary periods of earth's history which are also known as the age of reptiles in the age of mammals respectively today scientists call the extinction B. K. T. event after the Germans spellings of Cretaceous and tertiary the KT event had an enormous impact on life on earth but what would happen Astrid had missed would have led to a world where people in dinosaurs would co exist or one in which neither could live in a world where an asteroid whizzed past earth instead of crashing down with the force of a hundred million tons of TNT life could have progressed much differently sixty five million years ago some of the animals and plants that are common today we're just getting started these include placental mammals which are mammals that develop inside a placenta in the womb and angiosperms which are flowering plants insects that rely on flowers such as bees were also relatively new many of these life forms Dr after the KT event and without that mass reptilian extinction to clear the way it may not sound ecological niches to fill in this scenario today's world might be full of reptiles and short on mammals including people but even Astrid hadn't had them source other cases life forms come to think anyway sometimes our species had started to dwindle long before the asteroid impact led many researchers to conclude that the asteroid was just one aspect of a complex story other global catastrophes like massive volcanic eruptions in what is now India most likely played a role also the changing landscape as the supercontinent Pangea broke up into today's continents probably had something to do with it too there's another argument that the check to lab asteroid hit the earth too early to have caused the extinction researchers Greta Keller and markets Harding both concluded the impact took place three hundred thousand years before the end of the Cretaceous period Keller theorizes particular impact was one of at least three massive collisions Harding argues that the regulator didn't come to the church let asteroid from another event such as a series of

Democracy Now! Audio
"Guardian" of the Amazon Killed in Brazil by Illegal Loggers
"We begin today's show in Brazil were an indigenous this forest protector named Paolo Pollino Wajda was shot dead in the Amazon by illegal loggers on Saturday it's the latest attack in a wave the violence targeting indigenous land protectors since the election of Brazil's far-right presidential you're both Sonata last year why did you gotta was killed when he and another forest forest protector were ambushed by a group of illegal loggers inside the Aurora boy reservation in the northeastern state of Miranda he was part word of a group called Guardians of the forest Wajda spoke to Reuters in September about his efforts to save the Amazon sin sauce nervous listen Y zone the we're protecting our land and the life on it the animals the birds even the tribe who are here too there's so much destruction of nature happening include trees as with would as hard as steel being cut down and taken away the myth obscured sometimes but we have to lift up our heads and act we were here fighting attacks against indigenous people in the Amazon have spiked since Bolt Sinato came to office his administration's work to open the Amazon even further to logging mining and agribusiness business companies while violating the land rights of indigenous peoples earlier this year eight former environment minister warns Sinatra's administration was systematically destroying Brazil's environmental policies with one former minister saying Brazil is becoming an exterminator of the future to find out more about the situation in the Amazon John and the murder we speak to guests shriram Queen Sosa is a field coordinator and legal advisor Amazon Watch he's joining us from solid waste and the northeastern state of Mara now the state where Paolo Pollino Guavas Yada was murdered and in San Francisco Christian Party is program Director Amazon on watch we welcome you both to democracy now let's go to Brazil to speak with our I guess Schramm Queen Bre can you explain explain what took place in the Amazon what you understand happened to this Gordon of the Amazon for civil Good morning and thank you for having me so the situation that the the Gorgonzola forest face today is the struggle for survival and protection of the way of leaving the digits people the Amazon and they have little protection from the state government from the federal government and as as you setting the wrestler leric from both not of speeches further entitles landowners and logging and an illegal oh minors to invade for the more indigenous lands so these struggled at the plight that that that indigenous people have is to protect the forest to to protect the wail of leaving and they all live so what happened to to to Bala Boolean is that he was he went hunting with his his cousin when when they were ambushed by five gunmen and last you look luckily luckily enough he he was shorting be armed so he could hide unfortunately all Lino was federally shot in the head and and died right away then the the other Guarino the forest as you said last whether he ran ten kilometers at wounded to to close by Aldea which is how indigenous villages cold here Brazil then he was helped by by his fellow glazier and took to a hospital and and this is why we know all of this in such great detail I want to go to a clip break now. of the Guardians of the forest that was produced by Vice Survival International Paulo Pollino appears in the clip as the Guardians Coordinator Olympio Budget Datta Warns of the risks to their our lives we're hearing the boys indigenous territory. We are the guardians of the forest contributor blogger pin gunmen to kill some of the Guardians of Harari Boyce thumbs father we're all worried about these threats justify the gunshots have been fired at some of the guardians houses you don't want war we want to resist here Nari boys there to indigenous peoples thing which has had a question genre and Wa where the most vulnerable people in the world you want the president authorities to help protect the lives of the guardians whose lives are threatened boost to I'd like to bring in Christian Party as well into this conversation Asian program director at Amazon Watch if you could talk about the community you have worked with as well Guada- Shahdeh one of the largest indigenous groups in Brazil and talk about who the Guardians are and how what they're fighting eating fits into the whole fight for sustainability on the planet and to save the lungs of the planet the Amazon rainforest yes thank you amy the question Jadida like other indigenous groups in Brazil have been abandoned by the state to defend their territories with volunteer tair groups basically policing massive territories buoyant territory is sixteen hundred square miles that's larger than Rhode Island and they're doing this without any federal support and what they're doing to defend these territories either some of the last forests left in the state of mind you know which the state that straddles both the Amazon and how by incredibly important for us that are left in this area they're doing this on behalf of all humanity because they they are protecting the critically critically important Amazon forest that sustain our climate protect our climate power our should say fuel the rainfall all over Brazil would also here in this country instead of California rainfall is slackening due to the fact the Amazon what is being decimated today and the guardians of the guards the forests are doing this work therefore on behalf of all of us but without the support that they deserve observe their their rights are enshrined in Brazil's constitution their rights to territory and to their way of life they have been systematically deprived of these these rights and what we witnessed today are two days ago with the murder of polly you was example about a manifestation of violence growing in these communities I wanNA turn to another leader of the guardians the forest democracy now spoke to Sogno glad you're Java during the climate strike March here in New York in September she's a leader of the Brazilian indigenous peoples articulation I'm here today to participate in the climate march bringing on the voices of the Indigenous Peoples Brazil to denounce all the destruction of environmental airman destruction of the Amazon and the legalization of genocide against indigenous people owner he was in the for five hundred thousand nine hundred people in Brazil have been resisting resisting by Friday against the political and economic powers under the name of development and in the name of progress

Monocle 24: The Briefing
How the Syria deal between Turkey and Russia will work
"And welcome to today's edition of the briefing with me Andrew Muller it is difficult to conjure a grammar prospect than having in your future decided on an agreement between Turkish President Richard Type One and Russian President Vladimir Putin such however is exactly the outlook facing the key words in the area of northern Syria they had come to Coleridge Uva and who until very recently considered themselves rock-solid allies off and perhaps therefore protected by the United States Turkey and Russia have agreed to what they call oversee what they call a withdrawal of Kurdish forces the Kurds IC- matters differently I'm joined by Paul Rogers a professor of peace studies at Bradford University who has written extensively on the war in Syria and Hannah Lucinda Smith Istanbul respondent for the Times how in Istanbul first of all what do we know about how Russia and Turkey expect this deal to work because on the face of it it would seem to require an amount of cooperation from the Kurds good morning well yeah I think the first thing that we should say about the deal that was struck in Saudi last night this is hugely more details than either of the deals struck between Turkey and the US previously on the safe zone finds exactly where the safe zone is going to be how exactly it's going to be patrolled in court Rodney as you say most of those areas is going to be cleared of Kurdish fighters guide to be patrolled either by acids and Russian forces or also with Turkish forces as well joint patrols now of course this completely relies on on the Kurds agreeing to this agreeing to withdraw from his areas but quite frankly they don't really have much other choices they turned to ask that assu weeks ago when Turkey I launches assault there was a military memorandum of understanding signed between the two sides that point and to be honest they really hunger and yet the cause to play it's difficult see how they have any leeway to oppose this agreement just to follow that up is clear then at least on the in terms of this agreement where they intend or expect the Kurds to go now all we know is that they're going to be goes out of an area generally ten kilometers along the border apart from certain towns also from the towns of manage and tell Ra fats to the west of the area and everyone is going to be pulled back thirty clumps away from that border now obviously that's a small sex Shen in in kind of pure land mass terms of what the the Kurdish dominated forces controlled in Syria but it does also include almost all of their main towns this is the commish that factor capital falls outside of this arrangement it's unclear exactly in the long term how that's going to be trolled. The moment is a mixture of Kurdish regime fighters but all the other towns on the border that's where the huge bulk of the population in Syria Lebanon redan clear at that at this point where if they choose lead times they civilians are going to go Bring Paul Rogers in at this point Paul how do you expect this to play out because it would appear that militarily at least the the military wing of the Syrian democratic forces the white PG they don't really have any options Jackie and Russia both huge well-equipped military's the Kurds have very little heavy weaponry they certainly don't have an air force will they make any attempt at all do you imagine to defend what they have I think is unlikely that they will do any defense in the conventional sense in the slightly longer term may be the equivalent of of Salter Grid warfare but in the short term degree very much that they're in a very weak position I think the point that hunters was making very significant in terms of the out of control the techs are prepared to ensure if not control themselves with a mixture of Syrian and Russian forces so also saying that Turkey really like is to be able to control the area right across the border Syria from the the whole sort of length of the border winches many hundreds Columbus the area that they do control in the West because of their own associates is quite big what remains is something like four hundred twenty kilometers this particular agreement appears to cover about one hundred and twenty kilometers Ms Hammet says this is an area where the Kurds each populations particularly concentrated for the still nearly something like two thirds of the total area which isn't under this agreement we simply don't know what's going to happen there but in direct answer to your question I think it is unelected the that's what offer any major resistance to this at least in the short term but just to follow that up poll should we therefore assume that agreement that was struck between the code and the Syrian regime for all that was ever worth is now formerly a dead letter it seems to be yes I mean if you look at this in a wider sense trump's decision to Morris withdraw the troops and Syria although they've not been large they've been pretty significant we tend to forget an addition to these troops what nobody talks about in polite circles is the presence of question number special forces including it suspected special forces from Britain and France that have involved in trying to prevent escape of the Isis fighters they haven't been very successful in that at present because there are so many isis fighters in some of the detention camps but from the Russian perspective that this is really very good for them I mean their overall plan is to have as much influence a series they can for minimum cost on the way they played the air war was very rough very tough but not huge costly a while they now seeing is the will be actually be some Russian forces even quite small a nominal in these zones as part of the sort of protection patrols which means that they will be extending their influence geographically very little costing sells out of that expect it is pretty Kaputin and one would say that in that respect is also good for the United States how does it look like this is playing the one domestically is is it proving popular with Turks generally this idea that I and his pitches basically two fold that he has cleared what he described observe terrorist menace from away from Turkey's borders and he has now opened up spicing which Turkey can repatriate some of the millions of Syrians who have fled into the country since two thousand eleven sure I think it's very important burdwan he manages to to spin every get series of victory at home you know I think we shouldn't forget that a major part of his reason for launching this operation in the first place was to kind of Rowson domestic supporting tools to deflect attention away from so many other things that have been plaguing in this year the economy's going terribly he suffered major losses in local elections at this yes now taking the Turkish front pages this morning and you know should remind you the only sort of the Turkish media is controlled by one and his allies the reaction to the deal last night is a lot more kinds of restraints than was the reaction to the deal with Mike Pence last Thursday after that deal the headlines thank took his one and Turkish victory now the much more restrained they're saying the Terry corridor has been committed to history so there's a lot more restrained language I think it's almost certain that presentation on even though he's got nowhere near what he was setting out to get when he first started talking about launching this unilateral campaign a few weeks ago you know he was talking about taking a stretch of border four hundred forty kilometers long he's got far less than that but I mean certainly he's going to into a victory he's going to say the state of Rosia varies name more the Thai have got rid the terror threat from our border and this is another victory for me and my policies all the the Syrian conflict which is now approaching the end of its first decade has proved ceaselessly in depressingly inventive in finding ways to perpetuate itself but bearing that in mind do we at least see some outline of what a final settlement might look like because isn't this Turkey coming around ever for the to the idea that Bashar Al Assad has basically one that he will remain president of Syria I think that's true a and I would agree generally that this is being a good period for a set himself and his regime not least because the Kurds are having to accept that he can be a kind of counter to the increase Turkish influence the one big question remains though is what this does to the other kinds of militia groups are not much talk about the ones in North West Syria in Italy province but more the Isis elements and here there is a lot happening although against very difficult piece out precisely what the Americans of taken about a thousand of their troops from Syria into western Iraq but one report from the Pentagon this morning suggested this is a temporary there's thousand we'll be withdrawn entirely so it makes it to the American seem to be persisting in trump's wished rashly with morton withdrawal more fully than it is his phone one can say extremely good news in perhaps the the group that may benefit most is actually isis itself who far from going away I'll still there regenerating in Syria and in Iraq and the connection here is they still had many hundreds property several thousands of their toughest paramilitaries in detention one sort or another in the in the powder Syria those are really coming out back into circulation it's very similar to what happened in two thousand twelve thirteen with the so-called operation breaking the walls when what was the remnants of the old HQ I in Iraq managed to break out many that toughest paramilitaries from Iraqi prisons now it's not so much breaking out now because these went so well protected this time but it's the same kind of thing playing at a smaller scale and it's gone who almost certainly boost isis overall now that has an impact in Iraq or serious very difficult to tell but that's the one unknown in this current situation ought to come back to you finally a major part of President Prospectus that the the P. G. R. A. Anti-kurdish terrorist organization has been the alleged relationship with the Peak Aka the Turkey the Kurdish rather organization which has been waging war against Turkey for decades we'll doin be anticipating or nervous about any potential response to this deal from the PKK well I think the listening to say as you know the the the links between the what PG and the and the PK care real I mean when I first started reporting on the war PG in late two thousand thirteen you know well before they had even heard much indefinitely before before they go US backing I mean they were very very open about the fact Turkey ideologically that clearly linked to the to the PK K.. And you know I think everyone probably should be very worried about retaliation from the okay inside Turkey a ceasefire broke down in the summer of two thousand fifteen since then we've seen really wide scale conflicts across southeastern Turkey happening often in the city centers in many cities enters destroyed by fighting between Turkish security for some pick the

Science Magazine Podcast
How can we breed better bees?
"Now have Eric Stock said he's a staff writer for science and he wrote this week about building a better or be. I guess you'd say breeding better B.'s right eric that's right. What's so wrong with the bees that we have now? Thank you a great job Sarah. They are really good at what they do. The Common Honeybee domesticated honeybee that most beekeepers leaky perceives is calm doesn't stink much true to the hive. Queen doesn't abandon the high of to go start another colony in your neighbors chimney they collect lots of nectar pollen great honey he producers they're really good at pollinating blueberries and main almonds California at some of these high value crops that need a lot of honeybees brought in at the flowering time. They're really impressive and that's the result result of decades hundred more years of breeding effort. <hes> the big problem right now is not that they're not performing well or they're not friendly. It's that they are going away and a lot of cases. There's there's a high hi level of awareness that honeybee colonies faced a lot of challenges. There are a number of reasons why bee colonies will collapse the number of workers will go down and eventually they just don't have enough to keep deep the system functioning and so the colony is gone. Everyone's heard about pesticides pesticides. Certainly are a stress on bees declining diversity in number of kinds of flowers right honeybees need a diverse diet and sue changes in their habitat. That's also a stress for bees. They're number of diseases but the number one problem the biggest problem for be colony is a parasitic might call the Varroa Woah might what makes this pharaoh might so damaging to the colony. There's a common way people describe this experts describe this often they say imagine a rat on your back or attached to your five and that gives you an idea of the size of this might relative to the B. and the amount of damage just by feeding on the be that causes now imagine that the rat has rabies will be don't get rabies of course right but B.'s do get very serious viral infections they can just devastate the hive and the rule might is a reservoir for these viruses and it very successfully passes those viruses <music> onto the bees that virus causes the developing bees to have deformed wings so they can't fly. That's a death sentence for the B. and for the colony if that virus gets out of control. This is something that hasn't always he's been a big pastor big problem for beekeepers where did rural come from sometime in the middle of twentieth century another species of Varroa mite jumped from the Asian honeybee with whom it had long co evolved to the European or Western Common Honeybee and when it did that when it had this new host then really started to cause problems and it's spread around the world and ever since beekeepers have been struggling to control this might one thing that you can do to try to read your colony in the might is to spray it with certain pesticides yes so this is a kind of pesticide side cold a might aside some of them were quite effective at controlling the Mike population but but like any weed killer or insecticide. There's resistance sense evolving so several of these pesticides just don't work anymore. The best one still does but the clock is ticking really for that strategy beekeepers really need something else. Let's talk talk about this grooming tactic that the bees have that then the breeders WanNa have in so they can take care of some of this Varroa mite themselves. It's a really wonderful thing that the bees as species have love the behaviors the ability genetics to control the might themselves so one way is to get those mites off the adult bees and B.'s will cut it makes it to see this but they'll they'll shake vigorously to try and throw the might off if it hasn't grasped onto them well enough they'll use their legs of their jaws to try and get the might off of their abdomen. If the B. has the genetics for those behaviors some B.'s will just sit there and let the might crawl over them. It's just so that's one get the Mites off. The adult bees the worker bees as they are going about their business in the colony now with the might want said you of course the might can only reproduce in the honeybee colony. It has to mate and reproduce there so these adult Mites are looking for the brute details with the bees raised their own young. They'll crawl in and they'll lay their eggs inside. There's a baby being there. The bees seal up with wax when the be larva is metamorphosing starting the metamorphose goes into an adult beat the unlucky larvae have might eggs inside their chamber in those eggs hatch and the young might start to feed on the helpless larva. <hes> so what do you do some bees have behavior was called Varroa sensitive hygiene those bs when they're monitoring the wax cells can somehow tell that there's a reproducing might inside the sealed Wack Cell L. so they go along tapping their antennae trying to detect if they're mites inside the the sealed wack sell if they detect it then they nibble little hole and other bees which are responsible for keeping the hive clean will lsu little Hole Ville open it up and they'll pull out the PUPA and the might eggs so these tactics they could work to help the bees rid themselves of era but how does it beekeeper no or how to researchers looking into this no that is actually going on. It seems like it's kind of a it's like a subtle thing is Abi trying to get a might off. Is it be biting a little hole in a cell right in there. Doing all is in the dark for the grooming behavior. You can take a sample of Mites that that have fallen out of the colony the bees groom them off and you can count the number of Mites that are on the sticky piece of paper underneath your be colony and see how many dead Mites are there and see under a microscope how many of them are missing their limbs because the B. has those these really aren't gonNA show many mercy so they bite their legs off and you can count how many legs are missing and how many of the Mites are missing legs and that gives you an idea of how aggressive massive these bs are at grooming. If you WANNA tell how good they are at removing the reproducing might from the wax cells right to really clamp down on the reproduction of the Mites if you WANNA assess that behavior there shortcuts but really sort gold standard is to open up the wax cells ad in a certain number of Mites to the you know how many might that colony has got to be do their thing and then you come back and you open them up and you count how many mites are still in the wax cells. Oh so you're just giving them a test. Exactly what are the problems with breeding. B.'s trying to select for certain traits is that you don't have a lot of control over who the queen or breeding with because they do it really really far from the nest go out. What is it ten? I don't know if it's ten kilometers or ten miles and have a breeding party out of sight of the beekeepers so what are some of the ways that he keepers are trying to control who the Queen Mates with you mentioned something in your story about islands yet will you can think of islands literally right an island you could be keepers can know and control what other colonies the Queen's will be meeting with in Switzerland they use isolated mountain valleys. This is a very effort full way to select you know to you got to take your queen to an island and other people are taking drones or colonies to the island and then they made their it helps to be. Organized yes there are clubs. They have associations most of them right might be amateurs specially in Europe. There's also a picture in the story of artificial insemination his that something that's widely practiced is by beekeepers. It's not that widely practiced to take some skill to be able to anesthetize the Queen you put our little tube and you use forceps to guide the pet with the drone semen and but beekeepers learn how to do it if they're really serious about controlling the genetics of their colonies that techniques been around for for decades beekeepers have the tools to overcome the freewheeling meeting of the Queen have these behaviors you want them like so. How do we make sure that those behaviors get bread into new colonies practically the way you're doing it is with be breeding as we talked about earlier right so you're inseminating the queen or your using mating stations so when you do that you can come up with a queen and a colony that is good at reducing Mites? It's good at keeping the MITES under control. If you really really focus on one thing breeding bees to beat back the might then you can't be as choosy about the other qualities of the high because you have to pick that colony that was a really good in it might be one hundred in so that means that you can't be picky about how much honey they produce or how calm or aggressive they might be so one challenge has been that breeders can come up with bees that are really good at might resistance but they fall short on these other qualities that beekeepers really want in their bs so balancing all that out is that's well. You know it's a numbers game. You just have to have enough colonists to select for and hand you have to do the work to measure all of these traits this where you know whole genome readouts of bees comes into play yet the vision there is that you could hand be breeders and beekeepers a shortcut away too much more quickly assess whether a colony has the genes for resisting mites and the genes for making a lot of honey and the genes for being called and the genes for not swarming swarming away out of the high. If you find genetic markers for all of those traits in principle you could come up with a genetic test twenty three and me for bees you download the results that say you're bees are good at this in this in this but not this so you know decide. If you WANNA take the semen from the drones and use it in your breeding program. It seems like this effort is really it's backstopping. If if the pesticides stop working against the Mites there's that but beekeeping is very diverse. There are a lot of beekeepers who they don't like to put chemicals in their hive because they might be eating or selling the hunting and just that's not something that feels right to them so having seized as the can really have the behaviors to fight that might themselves. That's a huge help okay Eric. Thanks so much

Marketplace Tech with Molly Wood
In the novel "Delta-v," asteroid mining gets us to move to space
"On our show. We've been looking into the still very new economy of space. But while that's basic Honam. You might be new to us. Science fiction has explored it in great detail Daniels. Warez is the author of near future scifi books like demon and freedom and most recently delta V about a group of asteroid miners. Recruited by an eccentric billionaire to basically kick start this basic Konami swears told me that he was partially inspired by last year's u n report that said humans only have about twelve years to avert catastrophic climate change. So he imagined a near future in which private companies mine asteroids for materials and water to build colonies in space, which is by the way, cheaper and easier than say moving to Mars if what we're trying to do. Here is expand human presence to build a platform in an economy on which we can stand and operate while we perhaps help fix earth's. Climate. That means we need resources up there and asteroids are already up there. They contain everything from nitrogen ammonia oxygen iron nickel all of the resources. We need and said the false start for many people is that we're going to bring all these minerals and resources back to the planet's surface. Nothing could be further from the truth. The benefit is largely where they are. Right. And then to make it crystal clear, if you are already in space mining and asteroid, and you only have to take those materials, whether it's minerals or water to a colony that is also already in space that requires less energy much less energy because you look at it. You have to go ten kilometers per second to get escape velocity here in our you've got to massively accelerate. But once you're up there, you can easily move hundreds of millions of tons of resources that you find and build enormous wonderful places to live. It's still sounds pretty high level. Even though I know that you're pulling together strands of existing technology and existing companies. What is it gonna take for all of this to become real and within? Let's just say this twelve year window, the major obstacle is psychological. I mean, you think back what we did when we went to the moon half a century ago was extraordinarily. And I think it's that level of commitment. And of course, many people are familiar with the term the overview effect, this idea that when astronauts get into space and look back at the earth. They are presented with the reality of how fragile and how thin that film is that covers the earth that is all of us that is every human being that ever lived, every culture, everything we know, and it develops a sense of unity that they care about us all and I think that is what we need we need more people going up into space experiencing that and then working together to explore and push back human presence in the solar system in commerce is key to that. Because again, if we just send robots to mine asteroids without having people living and working. Space without establishing new industries there. I don't think we get the economic growth that we would otherwise you have these seven space barons clearly on. Yeah. The city others there. I'm not I'm saying anything, I think they're just any any resemblance to real world. People is purely coincidental. I assure you there is I will say there's an existing book called space barons, people are really exploring this idea that these you know, these are space titans in my book. Space titans. Exactly. So they usually billionaire space titans are going to push forward. Yes. This vision and take tremendous risks in doing so and take tremendous risks and doing so is that what it takes their version of great man, or maybe ideally, great women theory at work here. Yeah. And to the extent that it's great, man. I think that's partially cultural artifact, I think, you know, as women increasingly get into positions to do such things. I think it will be equally women. I think it's an instinct, it's an ambition that drive certain people to try to change the future. Change the world. And I think that's one of the advantages of having commerce involved is to have as you mentioned before I really think it is going to be cooperative partially competitive, but it is going to be sovereign missions of exploration. But also commercial and there will be some friction between those two things. Let's face it. A big question to ask is would it be okay? For a private company to be the first one to land on Mars in other words, would that upset nations people that that accompany would do it? What about planetary protection making sure that Mars is not contaminated with micro? There's many different questions would we allow people to mind these are big legal questions that have to be explored in. Of course, what value system what legal system we bring into space. This is going to be very very Hetty territory, and it's going to happen very quickly. So I think it's going to be the billionaire types will be challenging all of these accepted conventions nations of the world are going to have to get together and come to. Some determination to hash things out. And it will be an interesting thing to watch in again. I think these people will be bringing rapid change. And that might be good Daniels. Warez is the author of delta v which is out this

BrainStuff
What If the Meteor that Helped Wipe out the Dinosaurs Had Missed Earth?
"Today's episode is brought to you by smart water twenty years ago. Smart water, reimagined, what water could be from thoughtful bottle designed to supporting smart people who are changing our world through fresh thinking. Like, you smart water has added electrolytes for taste and great tasting water helps you stay hydrated, feeling refreshed and ready to take on your day. Refresh yourself with smart water. Welcome to brain stuff from how stuff works. Hey, brain stuff, Lauren Vogel bomb here on the northern coast of the Yucatan peninsula near the town of chick. Love. Mexico is a crater about one hundred twenty miles in diameter. That's about one hundred ninety kilometers the asteroid that created this crater was about six miles. That's ten kilometers wide and hit the earth sixty five million years ago in spite of these immense, measurements, the craters hard to see even if you're standing right on its rim to get a good map. Nasa. Researchers examined it from space. Ten years before the nineteen ninety discovery of the chick fil crater, physicists, Louise, Alvarez and geologist. Walter Alvarez, a father son team proposed a theory about the impact that we know today created it. They noted increased concentrations of the element iridium in sixty five million year old clay radium is rare on earth, but it's more common in some objects from space like meteors and asteroids, according to the Alvarez theory, a massive asteroid had hit the earth blanketing the world iridium, but shower of particles wasn't the only affect of the collision the impact caused fires climate change and widespread extinctions at the same time dime stores, which until then had managed to survive for a one hundred eighty million years died out, geophysicist Doug Robertson of the university of Colorado at boulder theorizes, the impact heated earth's atmosphere dramatically causing most big dinosaurs to die with an hours this mass extinction. Definitely happened fossil evidence shows that about seventy percent of species living on earth at that time. Became extinct. The massive die off marks the border between the Cretaceous and tertiary periods of earth's history. Which are also known as the age of reptiles and the age of mammals respectively today, scientists call the extinction decay t- event after the German spellings of Cretaceous and tertiary the t- event had an enormous effect on life on earth. But what would have happened if the asteroid hadn't missed would it have led to a world where people in dinosaurs would coexist or one in which neither could live. In a world where an asteroid whizzed past earth instead of crashing down with a force of a hundred million tons of TNT life could have progressed much differently. Sixty five million years ago, some of the animals and plants that are common today. We're just getting started these include placental mammals, which are mammals that develop inside a placenta in the womb and angiosperms, which are flowering plants insects that rely on flowers, such as bees were also relatively new many of these life forms thrived after the t- event, and without that mass reptilian extinction to clear the way they may not have found ecological niches to fill in this scenario. Today's world might be full of reptiles and short on mammals, including people. But even if the asteroid hadn't hit done stores and other Cretaceous life forms might have become extinct. Anyway, some dinosaur species had started to dwindle long before the asteroid's impact. This has led many researchers to conclude that the asteroid was just one aspect of a complex story. Other global catastrophes. Massive volcanic eruptions in what is now. India most likely played a role also the earth's changing landscape as the supercontinent Panja broke up into today's continents. Probably had something to do with it too. Then there's another argument that the chip to love asteroid hit the earth too early to have caused the extinction. Researchers Gerda Keller and Marcus Harding, both conclude that the impact took place three hundred thousand years before the end of the Cretaceous period. Keller theorizes chick fil impact was one of at least three massive collisions Harding argues at the iridium layer didn't come from the web asteroid but from another event such as series of meteors burning up in the atmosphere. He bases. This theory on ROY particles objected during the impact a most of these are in an older layer of the earth than the Katie iridium layer, according to both of these points of view the absence of the club. Asteroid strike may not have had a big affect on the k t extinction earth was a warm planet for most of the time that dinosaurs lived after the end of the Cretaceous period, the world got a lot colder and experienced several ice ages. Whether dinosaurs could have survived such change in climate is debatable. It's hard to come to a definitive conclusion about what the world would look like today without the chicks love impact. But the question of whether people in dinosaurs could have coexisted is a captivating won the ideas, president in everything from the Congo legend of mock lame Obembe to King Kong to the pervading kitsch of the Flintstones. Then of course, there's the prevailing scientific theory about the origin of birds that they are in essence dinosaurs that we are coexisting with today. Today's episode was written by Tracy the Wilson and produced by Tyler claim brain stuff is a production. Iheartradio's how stuff works to hear more from Tracy. Check out the podcast stuff, you missed in history class and for more on this and lots of other historic topics is that our home planet. How stuff works dot com. And for more podcasts from iheart radio is iheartradio app. Apple podcasts or wherever you listen to your favorite shows. Jerry Lewis is dead. Sid vicious incurred. Kobe also did Amy wine-house Johnny cash and more disgrace. Them's rock and roll true crime podcast with stories about musicians getting away with murder and behaving. Very badly is available now hosted by me Jake Brennan, you can listen to disgrace of the iheartradio app. Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.

BBC World Service
Chinese spacecraft makes first-ever landing on far side of the moon
"Gill has gone into hiding with his wife. The pair thought to have left the embassy in Rome in November does days before the end of the embassador posting their reported to be seeking asylum. The technology giant apple is blamed the economic slowdown in China for big drop in its sales. Forecasts in response. Apple shares dropped sharply. And after I was trading on Wall Street rotary. Kathleen Jones reports it's highly unusual for apple to say anything about its finances between quarterly results, so Tim Cook's letter to investors came as a bombshell. He warned them to expect revenue for the current quarter to be five billion dollars lower than predicted ascribing. Most of the problem to a slowdown in the Chinese economy exacerbated by the current trade tensions between China and the United States. But he's also clear that there are wider problems with the iphone high prices and a sense that the latest models of only marginal improvements have made consumers everywhere reluctant to upgrade officials in the south Indian state of Kerala say at least two hundred people including dozens of police officers have been injured in clashes conservative Hindu groups leading day of St.. Protests. They're angry that to women and to the well known temple sub Ramallah on Wednesday, ending a longstanding ban and women menstruating age. Here's is science Asia editor Jill mcgivering is called a general shutdown many shops and businesses are closed and transport services are at a standstill violence broke out as demonstrators clashed with police and buildings and vehicles were found allies d- on the surface. This is a religious dispute. Women want to exercise their legal right to worship at the Sabbath mala temple conservatives opposed them. But it's also political activists from the pro Hindu BJP blame the state's left-wing leaders for supporting the women and India faces general elections in a few months time world news from the BBC deadlock continues in Washington after discussions between President Trump and leaders of congress failed to resolve the budget dispute that's caused a partial government shutdown on Thursday. The Democrats take control of the house of representatives. They've promised to pass their own budget proposals. Excluding the president's key demand for funding to build a border wall with Mexico. More bodies have been recovered from the rubble of a Russian apartment block collapsed and Monday, bringing the number of confirmed down to thirty seven a suspected gas explosion demolish part of the ten to building. And the euro city of magnitude. Tsk? British police are questioning two men suspected of arranging the illegal movement of migrants across the channel the British government is blamed criminal gangs for recent surge in arrivals, and is questioned whether the migrants genuine asylum-seekers, Ben Ondo reports the national crime agency said the two people arrested in Manchester were thirty three year old from Iran and a British man aged twenty four since the start of November nearly two hundred and fifty people have reached the UK by boat though. None of been reported in the last forty eight hours. The home secretary subject Javid has described it as a major incident. He's now reported to have written to the Defense Secretary Gavin Williamson asking the Royal Navy to provide a patrol vessel. In a statement. The ministry of defence said it was ready to help out a yard has turned up off southern Australia nearly nine years after being abandoned storm by teenage American round the world sailor Abby Sunderland was just sixteen when she sat CEO from California and twenty two. Ten to try to become the youngest past never to circumnavigate the globe. Singlehanded? She had to give up her attempt. Five months later when yachts mast snapped in nine meter high waves epi said that seeing the vessel reappear after so long at brought back many memories. Good not so good BBC news. You're listening to the inquiry on the BBC World Service. I'm Neil Rozelle. Started as a pinprick of light. Just another star in the firmament over months, the group, brighter becoming more and more distinct. Grew a tail like a comment, and then it grew larger and brighter still. Could be seen by day. Finally, it lit up the sky in a brilliant molten moment. And then. Darkness life on earth would never be the same. That happened sixty six million years ago, an asteroid more than ten kilometers wide slammed into earth starting a mass extinction that wiped out the dinosaurs. The same thing happening now. But this time the asteroid is us. So today, we're asking are we heading for another mass extinction. Hot one fog Magadan. A lot of people. Find them creepy. Our first

A Public Affair
2 Scandinavian women found dead in Morocco's Atlas Mountains
"The point is of two Scandinavian women tourists have been found near a village in the high. Atlas mountains of Morocco an interior ministry statement said both corpses showed signs of having been cut about the neck the remains of the women one from Denmark and the other from Norway would discover ten kilometers from the village of Emil. It's a starting point for climbing. Tours of mount took ball the highest peak in

BBC Minute
Palestinian FA calls on Argentina's Messi to not play in Jerusalem
"Chami fat. BBC minute brought Somalia's. Government says a million people have been affected by the eruption of volcano. It caused lava to flow into a village called l. rodeo killing seven people and injuring almost three hundred is an cloud of ash. Ten kilometers into the sky two-headed Palestine's football associations as Arab funds should burn posters of Lena, messy. If he plays in Argentina's friendly against Israel in Jerusalem on Saturday, a Palestinian member of Israel's parliament has appealed to Argentina to pull out of the game after more than one hundred protesters were killed by Rayleigh troops at the border with Gaza Pakistan's. Army says its troops have killed six militants who had launched attacks against border posts. It's building from inside Afghan territory. Pakistan is currently constructing wall along the two thousand six hundred kilometer, long border issues with Afghanistan and finally, tennis Novak Jackovich's into the French Open quarter-final. He's beating Spain's Pernando ver- Dusko in straight-sets oh three. Fifty nine. Minutes.