35 Burst results for "Tijuana"

The EcomCrew
Crafting a Unique Amazon Listing for Your Product
"Really would. It comes down to is a few components when you go to sell amazon. I mean first of all before he even lost his all the pre work. you know. it's getting the best possible listing built. That's going to be different and differentiate from your competitors in a couple of different ways. The first thing. I'm gonna just keep on using the xbox controller battery as my case. Study here just. Because i don't know exactly what the product is and and don't need to know anymore i don't want to have everybody know exactly what you're looking at here so when you type in amazon. Xbox controller rechargeable battery. Let's say all the results that come up on that page have a certain look and feel that say to them as the first challenge always is like how do i make my main photo jump out. In a way that gets people to click my product versus all the other things that are out there and and you've already kind of disclosed that. You're already dealing with competitor's one of which is some of eighteen pounds the other. that's chinese knockoff. Crap that someone for. Let's say three. Maybe you fall somewhere in the middle but certainly you're the first step you have to do is get someone. The price is is a factor but the main listing photos by foreign away the number one component. Like how do you get people to click your listing over all the other results and this is something that they probably wanted to solve the problem pretty quickly. they're not going to necessarily click on a bunch of different ones like once. You have the battery you just you know it's kind of when the battery and get it over with and you're not going to look at twenty different listings before you go by the battery and so getting someone to click through to your listing. That image is super important. And you're restricted quite a bit on on what you can do. You know it's got to be on the white background you can't show person surly and in a bunch of other things to be at least btls compliant and it was a highly competitive niche. You're gonna wanna be tijuana compliant because your competitors are gonna report you otherwise get. You're listening photos taken down and put you in a bind for a few days until you get that fixed so what we've done. I mean we were lucky. We have a great design team in house. They look at this and they okay. Well can i rotate the product in a certain way or use a drop shadow. Turn away or use lading in a certain way to make products. Stick out a lot of times. We'll happen is that like everyone will copy bestseller they. They've all done. The john lewis got research and when they go copy the bestseller the best seller was their batteries like at a forty five degree angle up until the to the left and everyone else copies and does the same exact thing and so just doing something as simple as putting the batter inside. Maybe you're making it up until the right or whatever. It might be could help quite a

Trozos de mi vida: con el Genio Lucas
Usando Coyotes Para Cruzar Las Montañas Fronterizas en 1986
"Salimos, pasamos ocho días en Tijuana encerrados en un cuarto, ahí me daban de comer, ahí, este, dormíamos, ahí nos cambiábamos, ahí nos bañábamos. Desesperados un poco también. Sí, porque no sabía -- Porque yo solamente tenía incertidumbre. No sabía qué qué exactamente iba a pasar, a dónde íbamos, y pues ahí ahí esperando a que llegara el día. ¿Y no pasaste a la primera? No fue fue un lunes. Un lunes a las seis de la tarde, Magda. Cuando comenzamos a caminar como a eso de las seis de la tarde. Caminamos toda la tarde y toda la noche. Entonces, dieron las las como las tres o cuatro de la madrugada, cuando de repente en una especie de curva, en una montaña, ahí nos cercó la la migración, había camionetas así y camionetas en la parte de atrás, o sea solamente tenías dos opciones, subir la montaña o hacia abajo, y yo pensé rápidamente, digo, si voy hacia abajo, una tropezón sabrá dios a dónde vas a ir a dar, entonces corrí hacia la parte de arriba, Entonces empezó el corredero, el gritadero y y y migración, este, comenzó a rezar a la mayoría de todos. Yo caí como en una especie de sanja maida y me quedé ahí por el cansancio comenzamos a caminar a las seis de la tarde, eran las tres o cuatro de la madrugada, entonces yo donde quedé ya no me moví, no hice ruido, y me quedé dormido. Sí, del cansancio me quedé dormido. Entonces, yo desperté cuando algo pasó por por la palma de mi mano. Dije, ah caray, ¿dónde estoy? ¿Y qué pasó por la palma? Bueno, no sé que haya sido, pasó algo que me despertó era como un animal, no subo. Nunca supe qué era. Pero entonces desperté y dije, ¿dónde son? No

AP News Radio
Donated US Vaccines Arrive for Mexican Border Cities
"Mexico is just received coronavirus vaccine donated by the U. S. the US donated more than a million doses of the one shot Johnson and Johnson vaccine officials in Mexico say once those shots are enormous there won't be any reason to continue restricting travel over the U. S. border the US and Mexico of restricted border crossings to essential travel only since early in the pandemic the US shipment will be used to vaccinate anybody over eighteen in four cities along the border Tijuana Mexicali Ciudad Juarez and Reynosa about thirty percent of Mexico's adult population is already gotten Kovic shots I'm Rita Foley

EN TIJUANA HAY ROCK RADIO
"tijuana" Discussed on EN TIJUANA HAY ROCK RADIO
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EN TIJUANA HAY ROCK RADIO
"tijuana" Discussed on EN TIJUANA HAY ROCK RADIO
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EN TIJUANA HAY ROCK RADIO
"tijuana" Discussed on EN TIJUANA HAY ROCK RADIO
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Artificial Intelligence in Industry
Streamlining Financial Reporting With AI and NLG
"So emmanuel. I know we're going to be focused on some unique use cases in the financial services face in terms of where a i is starting to find its fit and add value or to talk first about the business units that you tend to work most closely with which again are somewhat unique. We cover a lot of different areas of banking but you guys hang out around the risk and compliance world as low as the finance and controlling world. I imagined kovic is change a lot of things for these folks the banking ecosystem insurance ecosystem or undergoing a lot of change. What do you see as some of those big kind of structural shifts that are changing and imposing new demands on on those business leaders. Well thanks well. It's a it's a great question so we have been working at easy up with at twenty five now tijuana large fashion institutions both in in europe. And the us. It's true that these guys are always intrigued by You know i could help us on so you know. I've been doing this project. Are you know. A lot of them are in production and pretty happy. Now with could be done. you'll think did accelerate. I think these guys are under massive pressure. You know they have given you know. Unprecedented amount of loan to help the economy a dramatic way. I mean they have. They have to be super giant. You know the certa tastes pretty high so they clearly have a lot of customers asking me. Okay how do you know how i could help me. I've let my team. How can i do more with the team. Have and you know. Could we be way more. If he shouldn't have to jail did a prediction that twenty five percent. You know of any companies with adopts on form of language a in g union natural language generation by twenty twenty two. We plan to double our install base this year so we actually way way way bigger.

EN TIJUANA HAY ROCK RADIO
"tijuana" Discussed on EN TIJUANA HAY ROCK RADIO
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"tijuana" Discussed on EN TIJUANA HAY ROCK RADIO
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"tijuana" Discussed on EN TIJUANA HAY ROCK RADIO
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EN TIJUANA HAY ROCK RADIO
"tijuana" Discussed on EN TIJUANA HAY ROCK RADIO
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Morning Edition
Haitians in Tijuana Seek to Enter U.S.
"Life at sea, with everyone everywhere when it comes to the migrant crisis at the border. Ah lot of attention has been focused on Central Americans, but people from other parts of the world have come to Mexican border cities like Tijuana. Seeking to try to cross to the U. S. For asylum That includes people from Haiti from San Diego. Here's KPBS reporter Max Rivlin. Nadler, a community of Haitian migrants has been into Quanah for nearly a decade, fleeing a devastating earthquake, hurricanes, financial collapse and now deep political instability and violence as an unpopular president. Tries to hold on to power in Porta Prince. Many Haitians are stuck in Tijuana, fearful that by crossing the border, they'll be sent right back to Haiti. But unable to make a life for themselves in Mexico. When a migrant camp was established in February at the El Chapo to our port of entry in Tijuana, hundreds of Haitians set up tents, hoping that they would soon be allowed to declare asylum in the U. S. You're the only Ito was one of them. He'd been living in Tijuana for a year. I'm looking at here, Dia. She's having said that hideous his country that he loves it, but it wasn't possible to stay there. There are too many criminals with nothing to do, you know, had spent five years working in Chile. The discrimination there was intense. He was trying to get into the United States, even though he feared possibly being returned to Haiti. Good thing will be a little capital alive, he said. If they deport him, he wouldn't live in heating. He doesn't have anything there. He wouldn't have the money to leave, though. He's afraid. If you

Cyber Security Weekly Podcast
The Impact of Australian High Performance Computing in the Coming decade
"Joining us in the podcast. Today we have professor shawn smith that director of national computational infrastructure and see i and he's also a professor or computation of nanno matera science and technology at australian national university. Professor smith is also a fellow of the royal australian chemical institute a fellow american is association for the advancement of science a fellow of the institute of chemical engineers and he will be sharing with us the highlights of high performance computing at nci. Thank you professor for joining us in the podcast. Today i thought we kick off by taking a look at the evolution and development in australia. Research backed by high performance computing and data infrastructure which plays a pivotal role in national research. But also have wide ranging economic and social impacts. I'm so for example as you pointed out in your presentation at supercomputing asia Looking at the year two thousand twenty the events challenging for many with the pandemic but particularly so for australia with the bushfire which i thought i very salient. Examples of where policymakers and help provide as neat fayza reliable information to get a sense of what is yet to come to better manage the situation but beyond these examples is also cancer research. Physics et cetera. So for our listeners. Can you tell us more about you know audi australia. Research are backed. By high performance. Computing infrastructure have evolved over the decades. You certainly are one constructive way to approach that question. Jain may be. If if i summarize the way in which australia to tijuana one phones compute facilities have evolved over the past decade which gives a flavor of how that the sick to hebron australia has developed in the major demise signs that have been really key in driving it forwards so we have to tier one facilities in australia One is the australian at the australian national university campus. Here in canberra the other one is the posey supercomputing center in person west australia. So both of these centers were set up in their initial in the current model as it were nearly a decade ago and when nci was stood up in its current form. The australian national university has long long history of computing. But the carrots. Nci was put in place around about twenty eleven two thousand twelve and we build a new data center on campus and put in the previous supercomputing facility which was called ryan now when i was set up with financial input from the federal government. They then we're really looking for a degree of leverage of their investment And so the federal contributions to were helped to facilitate the standing up of the big facility and the big shane And the new data center per se and they contribute a certain amount of our national expenses. But i asked us dan to negotiate the larger part of operating expenses. With am i just stike holders. And in the case of nci. This was done by substantial collaboration with four major organizations. I was the australian national university. Which is our organizational host. It was the csi. Giovanni australia and the bureau of meteorology so the one university into three big government agencies collaborated in a way that allowed to build out and develop and the common thread across those three. Big agencies was really climate weather simulation and geospatial science earth sciences and so for example the the great majority of large-scale climate modeling research is done at nci. And it's done. In collaboration between the bureau of meteorology the csi and the university sector which has some substantial activity also in that mind so nci became if you will the collaborative sandpit that these organizations could actually work together on very large common data sets in degenerate very large data. It's through the simulation work and the the other component of that was with geoscience australia. They are the secretaries for the international agreements which bring labs scout satellite imaging data four alpine out of the globe down to australia and nci was tasked to work with Jason social strata. To figure out how to host is enormous data sets and make them there in available findable so forth and accessible and utilize -able

EN TIJUANA HAY ROCK RADIO
"tijuana" Discussed on EN TIJUANA HAY ROCK RADIO
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EN TIJUANA HAY ROCK RADIO
"tijuana" Discussed on EN TIJUANA HAY ROCK RADIO
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90.3 KAZU Programming
While Many Asylum-Seekers Start Entering The U.S. Again, Others Are Left Behind
"Long, perilous wait for hundreds of asylum seekers stuck in Mexican towns on the US border may soon be over. The Biden administration has begun allowing some of them into the U. S to make their cases for asylum. Reversing policies put in place by former President Trump. But now, as NPR's John Burnett reports, even more migrants are surging to the border. Sandra Zuniga and her son Elder, are some of the lucky ones. They were among the migrants stuck in a camp in Matamoras, Mexico, amid the rats, snakes, mosquitoes and mud. On Sunday, Zuniga and her son walked across the International Bridge received a notice to appear in US Immigration court and settled into a cozy condo in Brownsville, Texas. It's rented by a volunteer who befriended her. You said the thought Yesterday you had the glory be to God Day I arrived. I spent the whole day crying to end up in such a beautiful place with my own bedroom and bathroom way past a great test on the camp. Some people even doubted the existence of God. We overcame. Zuniga says she fled Honduras with her son to get away from an abusive husband and violent extortionists in her neighborhood. They stayed in the camp for a year, Trump had suspended most asylum applications because of the pandemic. Biden has restarted the process, and Zuniga is among the early beneficiaries of the policy change. She taught kindergarten it a free school inside the camp. She recalled, when her students realized that their ordeal was finally over, won't mean Yo causes billing me you're on. There was a little boy who told me goodbye crying. He always asked me teacher. When can we leave here? He gave me a big hug and said through his tears. Last teacher we are crossing over. There's some 25,000 migrants scattered up and down the border between Matamoros in Tijuana. Many have been waiting well over a year to press their asylum cases in the U. S. Happy experiences like Sandra's have created high expectations and anxiety among the others left behind. US. Immigration agents are admitting some asylum seekers who've been stuck in border towns under a Trump era program known as remain in Mexico, but they're doing so slowly.

Democracy Now! Audio
Biden signs orders to undo Trump administration's immigration policies
"Look now at president. Biden's latest moves to undo the trump administration's hardline anti immigrant policies in an address from the oval office. Tuesday president biden built on executive orders. He announced during his first week in office by signing three new orders with first action day. We're going to work on. Do the moral of national shame of the previous administration that literally not figuratively river children from the arms of their families and their mothers and fathers at the border and with no plan none whatsoever to reunify children still custody and and their parents. The second action addresses the root causes of our migration to our southern border and the third action. The third order. I'm going to be signed orders. A full review of the previous administrations harmful and counterproductive immigration policies. Basically across the board. One new order establishes a task force to reunify migrant families separated under trump's zero tolerance policy. It'll be led by homeland security secretary a hundred my orcas who was confirmed tuesday by the senate as the first latin necks and immigrant to lead the department. Arcus was born in havana. Cuba is the son of jewish. Cuban refugees from the holocaust biden also ordered a review of the trump policy known as remain in mexico that requires non mexican migrants to stay in. Mexico is their immigration cases wine through court and has left tens of thousands of asylum seekers waiting in dangerous conditions along the border. This is asylum. Seeker marlins speaking to the advocacy group. People without borders boy both in front tariffs about facing homelessness with their family after being sent to mexico most vividly remember when we arrived to the immigration office mexico. They didn't give us a place to sleep or anything to eat. Our children's slept on the floor. That night this comes as immigration and customs enforcement. Ice has deported. Hundreds of immigrants in recent days despite biden's coal for moratorium including a survivor of the two thousand nine thousand nine hundred mass shooting at the el paso texas walmart. She was deported to mexico last week. The woman identified only as rosa had been cooperating in the investigation into the shooting local outlets report. She was apprehended after a traffic. Stop for a broken brake light. This is rose speaking by phone with el paso station. Kvil a when. He told me to go to the police station. They can working my i. I want to call. What would happen every pain. I'm hoping to be there be bad. Be okay the vital. The biden administration is also deported. A man named paul perilous to haiti. Who knew your congress member. Mondaire jones had worked successfully stopped the deportation just weeks ago before biden was sworn in but around three m tuesday morning. He tweeted quote at three. Am my staff woke to an urgent call. Suddenly and in the dead of night ice was set to deport. Rockland county's beloved paul peerless. To haiti a country where he has never been unquote for more. We're joined by two guests in tijuana mexico. Eric opinion does with us an immigration attorney and the policy director for a low laval in english the other side also with us out of bogado senior reporter veal from the center for investigative reporting. We welcome you both to democracy now auto. let's begin with you. Can you explain what's going on. You have these executive actions that are extremely important including one that calls for a halt to deportations. This is the president of the united states and yet hundreds of people have been deported under this new administration. What is going on having me amy. What we're seeing is quite a departure from the previous administration. I don't want a discount. The importance appearances the importance of the way that the president of this country talks about in human being including people who may be detained or deported. we're also seeing a lot of really great language and the commission of a task force Another order to suspend deportations and yet we see a continuation of the same practices that happened under president trump previously endure obama. And i do think that there's a difference. There's absolutely a difference in tone but what we're seeing is for example with the commission of the tasks worse receiving. Dha outing which is at the same agency that separated children at the border. Now tasked with figuring out where where. These families aren't so little unclear. What will happen after that. And i think that a lot of people that have been talking to in in the last day or so since the executive orders announced it doesn't really go far enough and also sets a commission in in some cases a task force for something that allowed people voted on the biden ticket as sort of stood against all of that stood against those families operations to the that we now need a task force to figure out how to move forward with having something in place when by also has the house and the senate of rings hollow from people. Erica i wanted to ask you about your clients. Alvero and his son alvarado junior who just turned nine years old. The little boy said all he wants for his birthday is to be reunited with his father. They've been separated since he was six years old. This is auto speaking to nbc news about the day. The two were separated. An officer told me. Give me your children's things because you are going to different places. And i didn't know what was going to happen to my child. So erica pineyro if you can talk about among the executive orders are this issue of separation. The hundreds over six hundred children still left. It's believed Separated from their parents. In some cases the administration doesn't even know where the parents are in hundreds of cases. They may well be in the united states and another few hundred they may be outside the united states but i mean clearly biden is put a top priority on this because the people serving on this committee or the secretary of homeland security. My arcus just confirmed the secretary of health and human services the former attorney general of california bestseller and the attorney general yet to be confirmed and first lady joe biden.

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"tijuana" Discussed on EN TIJUANA HAY ROCK RADIO
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"tijuana" Discussed on EN TIJUANA HAY ROCK RADIO
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"tijuana" Discussed on EN TIJUANA HAY ROCK RADIO
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American Coyote
How Elden Kidd Went From Convict To DHS Informant
"Two thousand and one eldon was released from prison in texas and allowed to return home to his life in riverside california under the condition he would go undercover for the government in almost every way. Eldon was the ideal confidential informant for the department of homeland security which had replaced immigration and naturalization services after the september eleventh attacks. He was a living legend in the american immigrant. Communities and had unfettered access to the border crossing network. He was also a recognizable and reliable contact on the other side of the border and they wasted no time. Before putting elton toward my duties were somewhat surprising with the border patrol. They were mainly concerned with ferreting out. Corrupt border agents. So what they asked me to do was kind of sketchy they would ask me to go down to tijuana in maybe one of the darker rougher parts of town and walk around and look a little bit lost and ask if there was someone who could help me cross a friend. Usually that was okay. I'll take you to a guy and that guy will take me to another guy and the whole time. I'm quite worried because just by asking the question you could be arrested. So finally i would find someone and i would tell them that. This is particularly important person and they cannot be caught. they absolutely cannot be con- price doesn't matter it's just that they have to be taken their first certain armed with my experience in mexico and i could name names and situations. I was one hundred percent believable to them because of my history so they would direct me to border guards that were on the take so once the contact was made then. It was up to me to find a person who had a passport. Who was a us citizen. That would be willing to play the role and be crossed over. This person could not be just some mexican on the street. Well of course. I asked him. Do you have an agent would be willing to do this. And they did not at the time at least in the beginning. I thought that they were very concerned for my safety. And that. I was more or less part of the family. But i quickly saw that. That was not the case. They were not willing to risk their own agents. So i had to find someone who was legal and would be able to do that job for some of money usually under five hundred dollars.

Baseball Tonight with Buster Olney
The Legend of Alejandro Kirk
"Today Dave talking about the legend of all a hundred kirk man that was fun to watch last night. Our. Listeners if you haven't seen the highlights pause this podcast call up the Blue Jays highlights from last night in to see something like you've never seen before it's. If, you can imagine a shorter maybe larger Pablo Sandoval plan catcher and going four for four and hitting home runs. I mean unbelievable. He's listed five eight to sixty five physically reminds me we you know you're trying to come up with the copper there were Sandoval Mike. was maybe being older Benjie Molina not young. But Older Benjie Molina and you could see the way runs. He's not ever going to be the Swiss guy. But part of the reason why I mean forget the you know the size and the shape. See Guy he's a right handed hitter. You do not see hitters in two, thousand, twenty hit the ball to right field away. He does that was I think. It's were to right field right including the home. Look. It's a he's a remarkable story for starters what he's only twenty one yet. Yes. Played above class say he can hit the bat looks legit. He walked more than he struck out in the minors last year and yeah, the Blue Jays have gotten dope production from their catchers this year. So can he play in the play offs I dunno buster yes. I mean you know who knows when we actually get there but you know when we reach this time of year teams, they don't really care what's in the back your baseball card they they don't really care when you were drafted or you know how much money they paid you. They only WANNA know if you're getting results, this is someone signed in two thousand sixteen out of Tijuana Mexico. As an amateur free agent and you know and I know teams are not going to be calling up catchers at age twenty one unless they wanna take a look

Travel with Rick Steves
Inland West Coast Roadtrips
"If, you're ready for a memorable road trip where there's more to explore the freeway rest stops Chandler O'Leary wants to take you up the US west coast. She joined us a few months ago with tips for driving the Pacific. Coast highway from San Diego to big Sur, the redwoods and the Pacific northwest rainforest. She's back to recommend a few of the inland highlights from the desert playground palm springs through the orchards. California's Central Valley, old western Sacramento, and all the way up to my home turf around Seattle the detailed in her book the Best Post, a road trip Alice Chandler welcome back. Thank you for having me. So we talked about the coastal route before now we're GonNa talk about the inland. Route make a case for not taking the coastal route because I would think everybody wants to go up the coast, but you make the inland sound pretty good. I feel like if you like your vintage, Americana this the road trip for you and yeah, you're not gonna see the coasts until you get all the way up to Washington but if you're really into things like palm springs and mid, century architecture old neon signs, a roadside attractions, you're going to get tons of that on this route. I love roadside attractions, publicity stunts from fifty of your. What are few of those that come to mind because I just think they're so funky. The giant oranges that used to be Oliver California and there's a couple of them left and they were they to be drink stands for you know when you were thirsty on the road, you get fresh California orange juice right and they're still a couple of them left along old either farm. There's farm country all the way along the way absolutely all three states. So we're going sixteen hundred miles and apparently it's the old isn't isn't like the highway ninety nine is of it is yeah and in California highway. Ninety nine mostly is still intact and it's even a freeway in some places, but once you get into Oregon and Washington because of the mountains, it starts getting a little bit tricky kind of pick. Cherry pick sections of the old road and then connect with I five. Yes. It's just like route sixty six how it's kind of been swallowed up by interstate in places like five is it's sort of the enemy on the other hand. It's practical because he gets you from A to B in a hurry. Yeah. What's your philosophy you're gonna go from going basically from San Diego to Bellingham Right What's your philosophy on the balance between I five in the old roads I think you wanna use I five when you WanNa, make good time and take the old rose if you wanna have a good time. That's kind of how I look at it good time or have a good time. That's good. So let's talk about California first of all New Mexico on one side of the border and collection collects. It collects co is on the or is on the California side and Mexico on the Mexico side. So that's where a route starts are these kind of sister towns in away or are unfortunately there's a big old wall separate him so you Or now you have to go through the big international the big national checkpoint because I did that between San Diego and Tijuana was easy just walk across I think right now that's not the same as it used to be, but it may be again I mean who who knows what we're starting in Calexico then What's the flavor of collects goes? That's just a springboard or anything to do there. It's a sleepy small town and but it's kind of you kind of get the flavor of where you're starting and you're going to start out in the low desert. You're below sea level here that's below civil come into palm springs. A waste. It is palm springs to us. Palm Springs is is kind of Wacky. It got big in the nineteen fifties. So there's a lot of great mid century architecture there, but it's very glamorous. It's very glitzy. There's a lot of designers their fashion show was movie stars that doesn't retirement communities to. snowbirds it's kind of this weird mix of college spring breakers and snowbirds. Okay. So you put that in your checklist and then some I know in your book, you talk about a lot of worthy detours you know in one of your favorites would be Joshua Tree National Park. Yes. Joshua tree is stunning and Joshua tree trees actually the high desert. So it's above palm springs at altitude. So it has a completely different desert climate different plants, different animals. So Joshua Tree is one of these cartoon book yeah. Of Justice Joshua Tree is these classic kind of quintessential cactus Yes. Yes. So what do you do in Joshua Tree National Park Jessica cactus there's a great hikes. There's actually only those cactus in one small part of the park is an enormous park. So there's different bombs great rock formations they are beautiful scenery and

Security Now
Geneva - Great Firewall Of China
"So this is really interesting. China's great firewall titans. A few weeks ago China added a rule. To Block one of T.. L. S.. One Point Three's new privacy enhancing features e SNI encrypted server name indication. Remember the once upon a time, a single IP address could only be bound to a single web server certificate. When any client connected. A Browser, the web server listening at that Ip's port. Would respond with a certificate for the domain that was associated with that Ip. This prevented the practice that has now very common in crucial especially for IP v four known as multiple hosting. Multiple, hosting allows multiple separate domains to all point to the same single Ip. But for that to work the client, typically a Web Browser must somehow indicate from which among multiple possible domains at that Ip it wishes to be served. So an extension was added to SSL to allow the clients. SSL Hello handshake packet to make that specification. Clear. The web server answering at that Ip would inspect the incoming SSL hello packet. If it was in possession of valid web certificate matching the domain the client was requesting in that hello packet. It would select the web server would select that certificate for the subsequent SSL negotiation and would also remember which website to serve to the client when the den made its first, you are L. request. From a privacy standpoint. The trouble with this is that the so-called Sni server name indication necessarily had to be provided to the server right up front before the SSL connections privacy encryption could be established. So that allowed any passive eavesdroppers to easily determine to which is fine. This pending SSL connection was being directed. And one could imagine if you were China running the great firewall, you would be interested in. Secure connections coming up and to which domains they are going to. But this this overt lack of privacy drove those evolving the T. L. S. standard to work out a means, which is present. Now, N. T. L. S. one point three of adding encryption to the S. and I extension to create e SNI encrypted server name indication. This is good for user privacy but of course, it's the bane for anyone having any anti privacy agenda such as presumably the Chinese State which we know has a manifest interest in controlling in censoring what is citizens are allowed to enable to access. Since adoption of new security standards is notoriously slow. This wasn't initially a problem for China, but as T. L. S. one point, three usage has continued to grow. The growing usage of ESPN I as a feature of T. L. S. one point three had been giving Chinese censors some headaches. I have a chart in the show notes, which is encouraging This shows as of the beginning of twenty eighteen. So two and a half years. where the various SSL's and T. LSS are and the the all while the where we are now the bottom two lines today SSL to an SSL three are who looks like less than and maybe ten percent S. L. Three but steadily dropping T. L. S. one point two is on the rise One point one is dropping one point Oh is dropping and one point three is also on the rise. So looks like Tijuana's almost at one hundred, percent support and. Tia last one point three is currently at nearly one third thirty, one point, seven percent. So definitely on the rise, and that means that nearly a third of connections with clients supporting. It at the client end and servers supporting out at the server end would be blinding the Chinese firewall to who they're connecting to. And as I noted at the top turns out that China has reacted. Just recently two weeks ago a bit of a heavy hand by simply blocking any T. L. S. one point, three connections which use ES I. Other. https traffic is still allowed through the great firewall. If, it uses an older version of T. L. S. or non encrypted SNI. And it's unclear what China expects to have happened One, point three and Esn, I are here to stay. But. Perhaps, not in China maybe you'll maybe browsers will. Feature turnoff encrypted es and I A and just fall back to. which would still give you the other benefits of one point three but allow China to eavesdrop. I found an entry in the. List Archive dated from just a couple of weeks ago July thirtieth it was titled in Brackets, T. L. S. and then it said possible blocking of encrypted SNI extension in China. And the posting said, the great firewall of China may have identified and blocked cloudflare's. Es Implementation. He said the poster said I have found that when using a T. L. S. client hello. With esn, I extension to connect to servers behind cloudflare's cdn, the connection will be cut off after the whole Thi ls handshake is done and then that Ip address will be blocked at TCP level for several minutes.

The Brown Girls Guide to Politics
People come to America for a dream
"Today we had the honor to talk to Nana Xanthi. She is an attorney and the executive director of the Black Alliance for justice immigration or. She's also the founder of the Community Legal Clinic and Transform Justice Center in legal these workshops as well as the founder of Justice Warriors Black Lives I. Hope you enjoy this conversation. Nana how are you today? I am well well, as can be expected in during these times and hoping you're well as well you know I am well despite everything, but one of the reasons that I'm grateful is because of the great work that women like you do in this country so excited to talk about the Black Alliance for just immigration, which is one of the organizations that the BG and wonder me a network which produces the BG podcast has been encouraging our audiences to support, so thank you. These organizations are critical in times like this. Thank you so very much? We appreciate that support and the support that we've gotten from black folks all over the globe. Appreciate it. Tell us a little bit more about the Black Alliance for just immigration, and what brought you to the organization? So the black lines for just immigration is a national black lead Immigration Rights Human Rights Racial Justice Organization. We are the largest of our kind in the United States. We educate we advocate. We organized on behalf of the. The roughly ten million Black Refugee and immigrant families in this country as well as black folks who are trying to come into the country, whether it be permanently or temporarily, and those who are seeking asylum. We have our headquarters in New York, but we also have offices in DC. Miami Atlanta Los Angeles and Oakland and we have staff in Houston, and in Minneapolis, so we pretty much are all over the place as well as doing work on the. Episode of the border in Mexico, at the northern border with Tijuana, and also we've been doing some work the southern border of Mexico in Chula where you have black asylum seekers coming to the United States through Mexico. In that way and the work that we do is national in many cases in terms of policy, and you know we've been very busy in that regard, especially in with this administration, we also do national work with respect to racial justice our. Former executive director open committee was one of the big three that started black lives matter, and so by has been involved in black lives matter since the beginning and we do that work, and then we also do local work regional work. I'm both on the policy side, but as well as more, and with even more vigor on the organizing side to make sure that we are pushing for racial. Economic and social justice with an right alongside our multigenerational African American siblings. So much work, such powerful work. As. You said you've been very busy with this administration echo, they're just keeping everyone busy with their foolishness, but I definitely do a suit top about Daca so for our listeners, who may not be familiar Dhaka's stands for deferred action for childhood arrivals and the Supreme. Court decision around Dhaka now allows immigrants who ever see Daca status sometimes referred to as dreamers so if you seen the Hashtag is sandwiched dreamers. That's what that means. It allows them. them to stay in the country safely without a threat of deportation, but one the things that we've been really seeing missing from mainstream conversation over Daca was that it also impacts not Hispanic and Latino communities that there are black and brown communities impacted by this as well other black communities that are impacted by this as well. So, what was your reaction when you hurt the decision? And what are our next steps in the Dreamer, movement so? It is really important in think I really WanNa, thank you for lifting up the fact that yes, there are dreamers who are not Brown folks. That are not Latin next folks. That are not black right that we have black Latino next folks as well as black dreamers from the continent of Africa from the Caribbean from Europe right we think about. Twenty, one savage right and how this came up? And he actually falls in the category that is equally as important that we need to advocate for a person who isn't a Dhaka recipient, but who happens to be undocumented, and obviously we're looking for permanent protections, not just for Dr Recipients because everyone. Coming to this country is dreaming. No one's coming to this country to be a nightmare. Faces are looking at the Supreme Court decision. I also happen to be an attorney of twenty six years. Doing movement work is it's a temporary relief. It is not the permanent protection that we want our people to have and that our people need to have in order to thrive, basically what the Supreme Court said is that the way that the administration got rid of Dhaka? Had No basis. They got rid of it that they have to have a reason. They have to show that they've thought about everything before. They come to that conclusion and they did not. And so, what does that mean? It means that just like the Muslim ban if you remember, the court ruled against the Supreme Court ruled against the administration on the Muslim ban, and said he pointed out what was wrong and. And so they just instituted a new Muslim bad adjusting themselves to what the court had pointed out, and that Muslim ban remains not struck down,

The Brown Girls Guide to Politics
People come to America for a dream
"Today we had the honor to talk to Nana Xanthi. She is an attorney and the executive director of the Black Alliance for justice immigration or. She's also the founder of the Community Legal Clinic and Transform Justice Center in legal these workshops as well as the founder of Justice Warriors Black Lives I. Hope you enjoy this conversation. Nana how are you today? I am well well, as can be expected in during these times and hoping you're well as well you know I am well despite everything, but one of the reasons that I'm grateful is because of the great work that women like you do in this country so excited to talk about the Black Alliance for just immigration, which is one of the organizations that the BG and wonder me a network which produces the BG podcast has been encouraging our audiences to support, so thank you. These organizations are critical in times like this. Thank you so very much? We appreciate that support and the support that we've gotten from black folks all over the globe. Appreciate it. Tell us a little bit more about the Black Alliance for just immigration, and what brought you to the organization? So the black lines for just immigration is a national black lead Immigration Rights Human Rights Racial Justice Organization. We are the largest of our kind in the United States. We educate we advocate. We organized on behalf of the. The roughly ten million Black Refugee and immigrant families in this country as well as black folks who are trying to come into the country, whether it be permanently or temporarily, and those who are seeking asylum. We have our headquarters in New York, but we also have offices in DC. Miami Atlanta Los Angeles and Oakland and we have staff in Houston, and in Minneapolis, so we pretty much are all over the place as well as doing work on the. Episode of the border in Mexico, at the northern border with Tijuana, and also we've been doing some work the southern border of Mexico in Chula where you have black asylum seekers coming to the United States through Mexico. In that way and the work that we do is national in many cases in terms of policy, and you know we've been very busy in that regard, especially in with this administration, we also do national work with respect to racial justice our. Former executive director open committee was one of the big three that started black lives matter, and so by has been involved in black lives matter since the beginning and we do that work, and then we also do local work regional work. I'm both on the policy side, but as well as more, and with even more vigor on the organizing side to make sure that we are pushing for racial. Economic and social justice with an right alongside our multigenerational African American siblings. So much work, such powerful work. As. You said you've been very busy with this administration echo, they're just keeping everyone busy with their foolishness, but I definitely do a suit top about Daca so for our listeners, who may not be familiar Dhaka's stands for deferred action for childhood arrivals and the Supreme. Court decision around Dhaka now allows immigrants who ever see Daca status sometimes referred to as dreamers so if you seen the Hashtag is sandwiched dreamers. That's what that means. It allows them. them to stay in the country safely without a threat of deportation, but one the things that we've been really seeing missing from mainstream conversation over Daca was that it also impacts not Hispanic and Latino communities that there are black and brown communities impacted by this as well other black communities that are impacted by this as well. So, what was your reaction when you hurt the decision? And what are our next steps in the Dreamer, movement so? It is really important in think I really WanNa, thank you for lifting up the fact that yes, there are dreamers who are not Brown folks. That are not Latin next folks. That are not black right that we have black Latino next folks as well as black dreamers from the continent of Africa from the Caribbean from Europe right we think about. Twenty, one savage right and how this came up? And he actually falls in the category that is equally as important that we need to advocate for a person who isn't a Dhaka recipient, but who happens to be undocumented, and obviously we're looking for permanent protections, not just for Dr Recipients because everyone. Coming to this country is dreaming. No one's coming to this country to be a nightmare. Faces are looking at the Supreme Court decision. I also happen to be an attorney of twenty six years. Doing movement work is it's a temporary relief. It is not the permanent protection that we want our people to have and that our people need to have in order to thrive,

Pat Thurston
Feds uncover opioids, meth, cocaine in tunnel beneath US-Mexico border
"Wrote U. S. authorities say they seized a large haul of drugs including opioids methamphetamine and cocaine being smuggled from Mexico to California in a tunnel equipped with ventilation lighting and an underground rail system the tunnel extends from a warehouse in Tijuana to San Diego about two thousand feet long with an average depth of thirty one feet and width of three feet authorities think it's existed for at least several months it was built near a vaunted double layered border wall constructed under president trump's watch illustrating the limitations of such barriers against sophisticated drug smuggling

All Things Considered
Federal investigators begin probe of tour bus crash that killed three
"Federal investigators are going through the wreckage of a tour bus that crashed this week in the San Diego area the charter bus was operated by a company based in el Monte case reviews Evan George has more the charter bus was headed to San Ysidro and then on to Tijuana but never made it early Saturday around Fallbrook in San Diego county it veered off I. fifteen and rolled down an embankment landing upside down three people died seventeen other passengers were hospitalized and that included a five year old boy who was critically injured now the crash occurred as rain was hitting the region and the driver appears to have swerved a federal team from the national transportation safety board or NTSB was center Fallbrook to investigate cases of these Evan George a woman from Pasadena is among those killed the LA times reports the bus picked up writers in el Monte Baldwin park Pomona and

Dr. Daliah
Trump's push to reduce drug prices in State of the Union boosts hope for action this year
"We might see some bipartisan action coming out of Washington when it comes to drug prices so if you remember during trump so to speak as say the union speech he actually got Democrats to stand and applaud when it came to Loren drug prices yes I'm calling for bipartisan legislation to achieve the goal of dramatically lower prescription drug prices get a bill to my desk and I will sign it into law without delay so fairly there's been movement on that front but there was one of partisan disagreements who would take more credit for its also will range of competing bills you know how people throw other crap into the lawyer like why are we funding paper airplanes what I don't know some VS whatever that happened with other bills in the past but Laurie drug prices is something where both sides really agree on and the Republicans in the unit because they have promised to help fix healthcare after Obama's mess and they didn't do it things might be a little better some of the deductibles may be a little better some of the insurance our premiums might be down a bit but it wasn't the relief we saw before you know two thousand eight two thousand nine so if they can at least lower prescription drug prices they could say they have a win in the health care category Democrats are going to campaign on the Medicare for all or public option so it is speech did not actually endorse a specific approach so you know we don't know if this has to do with him you know negotiated with China has been able to get drugs from China figure out an FTA use speedy approval for certain drugs are Nancy Pelosi and house Democrats are pushing for a bolder action to lower drug prices they have a bill that was passed in December to allow the government to negotiate lower prices the bill is called H. R. three and so when trump made his remarks some house Democrats were chanting HR three that's what they were chanting because it was like one of our what are the same so trump supporter governor bush Asian during the two thousand sixteen campaign he said he would go she like crazy but he backed off of it why well if the government convenes private health care we start to go towards socialism and the reason why prices are up is it because you know everybody says why can't we get the same price as Mexico has Canada has our center up the well it's tricky you know I would love to be able to get an antibiotic for a dollar and the way the generic companies make these drugs yeah absolutely you can mean I mean you know you would think that they would still make some sort of a profit but they don't want to squeak by these companies need to because I mean look at what's happening with all that and D. M. A. N. N. D. E. A. in though that cancer causing contaminants and when I went one should ever company okay generic companies still need a a buffer because of the FDA comes in gone what will global level we need to take a look at this so everybody's halls we need to we need to you know I recall you can't just barely you know squeak by on a Buck a prescription so they rely on Americans to give them that clutch now why US one on another country will because their drug what is still that serve their drugs are going to sell then they you know they go where they can get away with it and right now insurance companies allow them to get away with it so there is room to negotiate there is room to go down on the flip side though you have some companies going I we can make this drug cheaper now with all the rules and regulations and everything we have to go through you know in other countries you don't of estrogen process you come up with the drug in America you need to make sure it gets approved because two years of our anti and then it makes us the market sometimes only a few years left on patent so this idea of we have so much regulation as it is that's why the prices are up because we only have a few years to make our money back or to make a profit that ends up forcing you know prices to go up so the Republicans have to be very very delicate when it comes to we're going to you know lamb bass the companies and you know we're going to force them to pay less because then it could also cause a big change in the in the system so Grassley white unveiled does limit some drug price increases in Medicare right now trump doesn't mention any executive action on drug prices again it's a district trump has proposed Lawrence a Medicare drug prices by linking prices to those in other countries not sure what is going to do is again the say the union is very general they don't go into specific plans it's for this what we're gonna do this year so we'll see what happens personally I love it the federal pharmacy and I could get a medication for two three Bucks I love it the thing is is usually generic sell us going generic and make intergeneric prices don't rice would be the key to keeping drug prices low the problem is is then are we going to have any new drugs coming down the pipeline if they don't think they could sell and we need new trucks with the medication that a fight the crime virus we need a good anti flu medication we need you know and so I you know what companies are going to step up and do that so it's tricky now certain states are trying to you know take measures take you know things into their own hands when it comes to drug prices they say six in ten Americans are Tate were taken at least one prescription drug court to the Kaiser family foundation seventy nine percent of those surveyed survey to the cost of medications was unreasonable the report also found that three out of ten Americans do not see the medications as prescribed because a worry about cost yeah they spread it out so you tell program was created two thousand eighteen it's a state law dubbed right to shop by Republican representative norm Thurston public employees health program offered if only to people using a drug on a list of about a dozen medications where the state could have significant state of the one hundred sixty thousand state and local public employees cover biting sure fewer than four hundred were eligible according to managing director Purcell officials of track the medications for the manufacturer to the pharmacy to the patient make sure people were given the same drugs and what home did work with a specialty pharmacy working it with one of the largest private hospital systems so they're working they're moving there's a represented from a company provide are ex that is escorted escorted patients of San Diego to Tijuana back across the border and so you know again I don't know if I could trust the medication Mexico but certain you know people are taking certain actions to get cheaper drugs ten state workers and participate in the program they believe the state a state over toward the twenty five thousand dollars California governor some is going to have a plan that will increase competition the generic drug marketplace having a a brands of prescription drugs that's California branded so now they're gonna compete with private enterprise and hopefully lower drug costs that way get not sure what that would do with the private market again they got to play this regatta tread very carefully the of the governors and no state has more at stake on the issue of healthcare we will use our market power and a moral power to demand fair prices for prescription drugs I will continue to move closer to ensuring healthcare for California the California law has required drug companies to report any price increases of the state generic drugs saw three your medium price increase of thirty seven point six percent and that was based on list drugs of drugs most prices present an article just council rebates so you know why are these crazy these prices skyrocketing so I I do like there is some transparency I don't like the idea of government control and I'm a little cautious and I'm a little nervous about how the states are pursuing Louisiana did something interesting they have the state to go she to deal to pay a flat fee for prescriptions for hepatitis C. drugs beginning last July the state began a quote subscription model treatment that officials say could cure tens of thousands who had hepatitis C. napa see drugs expensive it costs a few thousand a month for that one so they're starting to work on a program where they can get this high price medication thanks for others which could stop

Ron St. Pierre
Longest Smuggling Tunnel Is Found at U.S.-Mexico Border
"Customs and border protection agents announcing that they have discovered the longest smuggling tunnel ever found on the southwest border here's fox's Steve Rappaport federal authorities say the tunnel uncovered last August ran more than three quarters of a mile from Tijuana Mexico to the San Diego area is approximately five and a half feet tall and two feet wide as an average depth of seventy feet below the surface of the of the earth deputy chief border