32 Burst results for "Twenty Thirty Minutes"

THEMOVE
"twenty thirty minutes" Discussed on THEMOVE
"It's not a flat. Usually see the tour have some flat action for the sprinters. That pierce burners britney is never flat. That part of france is very. It's like austin actually midst. it just rolls. It's constantly rolling like they'll get out of this this region and it'll be flattered but britney britney's tough and then the pavement thought payments roll. Slow it just they make for hard days and then you throw in the nerves of of a hectic finish which hopefully anatomy on hoping but maybe our first sprint finish. I would think so. I think a lot of the team's gonna go all in You know some of the stronger climber sprinter guys like cobra. lean sa- gone are going to try to make it super hard on these lumpy climbs right before the finish line gonna be in jam-packed action day and when you look at the run and i mean the last three. I don't even know what was happening. Here this is that's downhill correct. Well it's downhill until about three ago. And then and then they just start turning all through town and is this a favor. Mvp for the day with the spurs teams taking control. I think they're going to control the race they elected. There's enough guys that are now. I mean there's people now that are twenty thirty minutes down so they could. It's it's hard. It's always hard to like hand. Pick okay you go on the break and you go because somebody always sneaks in. That's like three minutes down and then they gotta work but if they could do it right and have a bunch of thirty minutes up the road they. They protect the jersey. That's all they want to do. And then the sprinter's teams have to work. I mean we've seen in these sprints especially yesterday. We should've talked about this yesterday. Caleb ewan i don't know man. I don't see anybody beating him. He looked good. Well hang on a second. I'm i'm really interested to see you're going to start with this cabin to stuff gonna go there. How come on. But i'm also interested to see. Will they put on the front to control the race. Moore yes will. So they're gonna have the confidence and cabinet you saw today on the sprint. The bonus burn going for like seventh-place cabinet easy. We looked like the old calf in the of course caleb was coming up a muster. We actually ended up getting ahead of got it. He got it but cabinet and go. All in. i know cav- he was a ninety percent following. The wheels did a little effort and was happy. You can see him laughing laughing afterwards. He's he's got the mope back right now. So i'm i'm rooting for me. I look i. I don't think it's going to happen. I think it'd be an amazing story. Howled is cavendish now forty two thirty four known but it would it would be. It'd be incredible. I but but i don't think so. Which by the way with these climbs at the end he could see. Mvp going again making it hard. I mean these it. We're not gonna count him out bumper trying to get away and get more time and make another big show. I mean the guy is on fire. Now what he did today. Was you know just incredibly impressive. So can't count him on tomorrow but my pick for tomorrow is cavendish and i'm interested to see have got to staff his garbage. Run in the workforce. No they know they will not other. You're lotto you said they would ask me if a lot of for sure will okay. No quickstep. No absolutely not. We'll see this is. You've you have these men crushes there and they take over your life. There aren't a role the ambiance on the team right now is good energy vermont fucking poster up in your bathroom and it come on with this. Hey i've been fortunate enough to have a good teammates in my career. You being one of them so it's not something. I'm proud of his thirty six now. Thirty six listening to it would be an incredible story. I'm with ajoy looked good today. We we need to see that emotion. I mean somebody like mvp today. When he started crying at the end the interview he can hold back his tears. That's what this sport is all about the emotion. He's doing it for not only for the win but furs. His grandfather's legacy is so much cav you know. He's been on top of the game for for forever. I was teammates with him and see how years we saw him get very emotional when he thought it was over when his career was this very emotion to see him by even the fact that we're talking about him with a chance of wednesday's already a victory not just we all lately actually always talk about him because you have these obsessions and so we have to. Am you always bring because the over here is always you know you don't you don't like the emotion like the happy end. We were happy ending. Tomasz gives me. Which is why i say that out loud. If you don't like this this is a g. rated show sometimes if you don't like the emotional riders that would rug which is your guy. Yes stone face yeah google. He's he did a little bit of a he posted somewhere or something posted some. Somebody poses something of him saying you know. This crash was luck getting a nice crash in the first day. It's over my crash anymore. I mean you know. He's he's so was cute. Because i was watching the we you know we always have people with us when we watch in the mornings guests that are here in aspen for for the summer. Whatever at both my sons are today and then crossed. The line falls often falls off his bike. After i mean that's shows you how i think that means he's gone very hard but he's a on the ground and Getting emotional and my little guy who's twelve said. Dad is this. He didn't see me race back in the day he says. Is this what you do. And i said no you know in fact i never did that and then next thing you know. Alpha leap shows the class move in the elders he comes over and congratulates him and rides off. And i said what as a matter fact. I never did that either. As the got some friends in the bunch. Now the bunches friendlier now. I was pretty friendly. Mainly because you're you're trying to win the popularity contest and you did and you're still winning the popularity contests even though you cannot do pull ups to work on that next three weeks. Yeah so i said well you got. I pay lagoons gonna win with one leg on caleb. Absolutely.

The Cycling Podcast
"twenty thirty minutes" Discussed on The Cycling Podcast
"I'm gonna do is jump on this bike and go again and so if somebody doesn't actively see london your head than those things will get missed and you not going to want to stand by the side of the road for five minutes or something doing a protocol but if you can send by the side of the road for thirty seconds ten seconds of that be an eye tracking task and then you go okay right you. Well nephews come off the race. That is so much better for the athlete because immediately they are taken out of this environment. Weather qualities continued stimuli. And you're much less likely than hopefully to have this prolonged concussion and the person cussin' during which is which is. Well i have well. Let's go back to the to the beginning of the story. Then so i mean we have heard updates from. We had the false start. We heard from you on this man when you initially back in training. But there's i think we've learned over this journey will you've learned on this journey that are you take step forward and then you have to take steps back and make gains. Go back a bit and keep making gains. But it's going back to the start. What happened on. I turn on my. Tv was march or february to watch straw much the seventh or eighth something like that And obviously it was. It was the women's race. Not i don't think we had faulty coverage but both turned on. I didn't see did see you in the group. Wouldn't what happened and tell me about what happened in that race because it was off camera what happened. Yeah i mean we only had. I think we had about twenty thirty minutes coverage on that race so you really didn't see anything that actually happened that formed the race and i crushed that climate is in. It was about one hundred kilometers. The race crashed landed on my head. I remember actually thinking. When i crashed my head is spinning identify..

The Super Human Life
"twenty thirty minutes" Discussed on The Super Human Life
"Ultimately when we'd are exercising closer bat time in our core body temperature is is is higher again that prevents us from So if you haven't is bath or if you do decide to later at night make sure you're taking him is bath before you go to bed or a cold shower that something. That's going to bring your core body temperature down because that's gonna allow you to get into your deep sleep stages a bit soon so that'd be those would be the main just pretty low hanging fruits as well back. All of them are just minimal. Lifestyle changes that can become super easy super-quick. Yes great i love. I love the talk of light. You mentioned Drive the point home. You talked about. Obviously you know managing light in the afternoon. You know making sure as the sun goes down lights are kind of getting toned down in the house blue light blocking glasses etc etc. Talk to the importance of light exposure in the morning. Because i know there's some Some really powerful things happen with cortisol release of setting melatonin drip for later on in the day when you're exposed to early early sunlight in am as as well. So what's the importance of getting exposed eight. Either you know artificial red light right upon waking or best case scenario getting you know immediate sun sun exposure in the morning and that's the thing not so is ultimately need a certain amount of luck. So that's the light of the like measurement I believe that. Saddam hundred thousand leks In order for us to actually wake us wake us up properly and a. Ideally you'd be exposed to that s s close to your wake-up time as possible because that naturally sets your circadian by that sets you rhythm when you're going to be primed for waking up and when your body's going to start getting type of the one of the things that have really discourage people from doing is it's a habitual thing for a lot of us. I know gopher for a cup of coffee first thing in the morning because then we're ultimately training our bodies to be dependent on the exogenous substance to wake us up when we have this internal mechanism that just needs to be exposed to some movement and sunlight in order to our system so my huge fan to wait for my first coffee. Wait for about at least ninety minutes until my first coffee. So that has been a game changer. For you in in in being fully transparent. That's something that i'm working through as we speak right now. Huge coffee fan I love the flavor of the taste of the benefits. You get from from caffeine. But i've i've trained myself. That alarm clock goes off. You know the coffee. Pots already set literally. Like i make the night before. Walk into the kitchen. Boom kinda get set lied you somebody that routine but i'm i'm getting my coffee. You know somewhere between the first twenty thirty minutes of the morning..

Some Would Play
"twenty thirty minutes" Discussed on Some Would Play
"There are collect fresh water and there are you know tables of meats and breads and cheeses protein high energy stuff bananas fruits. Did you bring you never ending clash. Did she did. That's been confiscated. Why i've just been eating this whole time. Basically break during these finite which is like the early fun. there's food i want to eat so i was just like watching you and eating too much meat at the same time just like harm. Congratulations on your fight. The shadow of the mic. On rico shirt. That's that's what. I was thinking tie. So that's where. I would clearly what he's talking about the bulbous head. Yeah that's clearly a penis. Or i thought it was just fun that i saw i also saw the penis looking at. You can see now. You've not sold to see mike cash. Good times good times. We need to leave you two alone as the watcher or could see it. He can jump in. The shadows ran burst forth from your shirt. Look so there is another name. That's up on the wooden placard. It is our his name. There is been ten minutes of downtime for them to clear the arena. You serve you waited twenty minutes for niece fight to be over twenty thirty minutes and your name shows up our food tan. Nice i give it a roar rat. There are some other dragon. Born that roar with you. Nice you hear martell from the other end of the arena roar with you as well because he loves him. Some dragon board. It's very many your little tiny dragon. Pet ross nice. Little out in the hood yeah. He roars to a little tiny baby. Roy because he's a little bit dragon also he doesn't wanna be confiscated so he's staying hidden and they're probably maybe two or three other dragon born total. You martell your baby dragon and three other dragon born in this entire arena. So there's not very many. It's very rare to find another dragon born because a lot of them are off. You know in their dragon clans and things of that nature. It's very very rare. You see others outside so you martel and the three others is going to be a rare treat for anybody. Nice so the gates open. Sweet i i float and on my wings. Yeah my man. That's dope as f- 'cause fuck walking right. Why walk when you can float so you come in floating with your wings flapping. Dust kicked up around you. There's little tiny world like sand whirlwinds from the massive strength and girth of your wings..

Entrepreneur on FIRE
"twenty thirty minutes" Discussed on Entrepreneur on FIRE
"Talk now about all coin. Kind of take us through that process as well like what even gave you the idea for all coyne. How do you start that initial traction and then let's talk very briefly about the exit definitely so all coin was i started that actually when i was in due-diligence with business apps i knew i was going to be leaving the business so the things to note on that transaction was i'd ninety day transition period So you know when you go to company and it kind of becomes a party you. I just wanted to have another company. I was running i. I wish i took a break to be candid but This is when you know bitcoin doing its i. You know big run and everyone was talking about it. And i'd always been a fan of crypto currency. So i fell pretty pretty hard into the whole of ethereal essentially. What we were building was faster. Way to transact A therion token so we were basically trying to speed up like when you said the theory. It takes like twenty thirty minutes and we're working with A framework that would allow for instant transactions so the premise of all coin was basically speeding up Transactions on the blockchain so started that business hired a very very talented team But it was hard like building anything in in. Blockchain crypto is very very challenging. So i can't say it wasn't as successful as business apps mostly because of the limitations in user experience and just the i guess the the problem we were trying to solve was such a a technical problem that we kinda chipped away at it to a point when we felt like we built something of of value. And i should also add. This business was kind of a bill to sell business. So when i started the business i had mapped out. Who would be potential acquires because we felt this would be such a good piece of ip to sell to larger business That is in the crypto industry. And that's kind of acquisition happened to so once we started really have the product at a point when it'd be ready to launch rather than as going in getting regulatory approval Which could cost you know two million dollars in eighteen months. We sold it to that. Had regulatory compliance So from start to finish That company was built and then sold within. I believe Fourteen months so as a pretty quick turnaround allan. This is the thing fire nation. What you kind of get into the flow and get into the process Start understands how these things operates to build relationships that are already there in place so maybe you can get that initial ball rolling when it comes time to exit early start the conversations that.

The Angry Therapist Podcast
"twenty thirty minutes" Discussed on The Angry Therapist Podcast
"It's case sensitive so all lower case one word live better and i will see you in the lab so real quick before we one second that will be my last slurp i promise so back story whenever i sit down to do a session. I have been programmed to have coffee. I think it started Twenty years ago. When when i would sit down to write for hours in the coffee has become a pacifier. And then when we started doing zoom sessions or i started doing zoom sessions again. I had to have the coffee. And so when a podcast. I had the coffee and someone actually emailed me and i was very nice and said i love your podcast. I listened to it every day. it helps me tremendously. But can i please ask you to stop slurping while you're talking it's in thinking about this. I part of me was like no. It's mike podcast you know. Of course the ego part of me. I'm gonna slip coffee. I'm going to do what at one. But then i thought about it and i was like you know i'm in people's ear. I have people in their ear for you. Know fifteen twenty thirty minutes and it's kinda rude me to make a slurping noises or Weird noises it's also very different when you're when when you're listening to something with.

WSJ The Future of Everything
"twenty thirty minutes" Discussed on WSJ The Future of Everything
"And we're off. The motor is powerful and the boat goes at a fast clip. It has to because it's often used for marine mammal rescue emergency. The wind is bracing and sorry matt harvey but the ride is bouncy kind of like riding elephant. Course we keep our eyes peeled for born without also going to check on some of the hydrophones somewhere other there after a quick look we had out again toward a place called active pass. This is the place cottrill talked about earlier. It was the impetus for the entire hydrophone project. We've out searching for just about twenty thirty minutes. But this is bo time and it feels a lot longer remember. This is early march. The wind is relentless. The water frigid splashing on deck. I'm holding on so tightly. My orb start to ache just thinking. Well this won't be our day to see as we spot them worker. Ten o'clock about one hundred years mclaughlin hundred meters for sure. And then there's one right here. I see at least a dozen orca. Cadre accounts fifteen. They're looking for food. Foraging together several hundred meters away. They rise up out of the water in unison. Most of the females all cluster together and then two males follow the rest of the group. You can tell because they're bigger and they had these shockingly large street dorsal fins that glide up on top of the water when they service their explosive brats unleash a spray of seawater. This part of the sailor sea is called active pass and it certainly lives up to its name. It's also a great example of how the ai program can help these orcas. It's a narrow strait of water about eighteen hundred feet across now that may sound wide but canada and us regulations require boats to keep thirteen hundred feet distance from any orca. That's said goats. Have little control if the orcas approached the boat.

Almost 30 Podcast
"twenty thirty minutes" Discussed on Almost 30 Podcast
"Before the one i have now is the second one and yeah i think there was kind of this lake warm period where i'm like not fully citing fully telling the truth it's lake haven't settled. I'm way so for me. It's really important to actually have. Maybe like thirty twenty thirty minutes before my therapy to take a walk with myself. You know kind of going from work. Just therapy is kind of jarring and i don't get to gather my thoughts and therefore i go in and i'm like i'm like kind of all over the place had therapists to me before like we take a moment then like she my other my old therapist. She's like let's get up. I want you to like walk as you're talking to me like walk around the room because i was so just like i was like floating hanging around the room and i was not grounded. I was not in my body. And i often feel like that in real life sometimes. So it's like. I feel like therapy also is just especially on the communication front like such a mirror to me. Yeah you know and it's a really like you said just such a great place to practice just really letting everything out. I would also say it's been helpful for me. And i don't know if this is like you know proper protocol but i just wanna tell. I told my therapist kind of leg my my things that i might do where i'm like. I'm making excuses for my parents. Meaning like say parents are great parents and say all these positive things and then one negative thing around the issue. That i wanna work on. I might I might talk about like kind of silly little things for a while before. Getting to the heart of it so feel free if you are feeling that as well so it kind of asked me in palm ian and just kind of ground me in that way Because sometimes i don't have the ability to kind of regulate thought and then also just like trustor things to if like your therapist and you are not vibing. And you're not feeling really great and supported and connected. It's okay to tell your therapist.

Lured Up - A Pokémon GO Podcast
"twenty thirty minutes" Discussed on Lured Up - A Pokémon GO Podcast
"I'm like let me download this. Let me try. What i got here. They did that when the when the same issue that you had when the nothing was enough for me and then i had to restart literally twenty thousand time just to get one focused up to load up in the map I saw it being half resolved. And then i just every time i go from one area to the other because i have to drive so many places to do the things that i wanna do for this game. I always lose the focus. Everything and non reload again in an is fine for the next twenty thirty minutes until i run into another issue of that but when i'm grinding in one spot everything is fine as long as the game is running at all times at. Luckily my phone is pretty strong. So i know if i move from discord to something else. It doesn't cost me to crash so much but they're still those moments were like okay Let me just check this to make sure that the rays going then. I don't see anybody in the lobby for the raid. Some like okay. who is saying..

RADCast Outdoors
"twenty thirty minutes" Discussed on RADCast Outdoors
"Especially with the buddy system and if you look up a a quick quarter method if one guy's holding the bag opened the other guys lifting the quarter as you're removing it from the carcass. You can just slip that bag around that meet. It's about as clean. As if you were to take it to the butcher harvested you take that same quarter and you just set it on the ground before putting it in the bag you now have dirt and rocks pine cones and leaves and yes. It can be cleaned up. But it's a it's gonna cost you more at the butcher. It's gonna cost you more waste so you lose elk meat right at home. It's going to cost you more time. So it's it's not that hard to take an extra twenty thirty minutes at the carcass and yet it's a little intimidating the first first one or two or even five roy. Okay how do i. It will there. You could make a mess of it. So i would recommend watching a few videos and but at kill kit the boots the and definitely be proficient with your weapon practice. Yep and get that. Meet cool as quick as you can. That's that's a big deal especially because you want to eat it. I mean that's why you're going and so The meat care is a huge deal But you know you're you're talking about wanting to have the elk meat in the freezer. And i think that's that's awesome. I mean that's that's one thing that i'm noticing across the industry and we've talked about it is there are more people wanting to get in the hunting because they want the organic good protein and it's high quality is you're ever gonna find anywhere else. Meat is right up there. Antelope made way up there. I mean you can't really find anything better as far as lean protein. So i think that's really cool that you're getting into that and that's exciting and we're seeing more in the hunting world and in the fishing world of people that have that idea of all right..

VelociPodcast
"twenty thirty minutes" Discussed on VelociPodcast
"What i've learned about it is this is called a charge back scam so i wanted to see what they were all about so i sent them an email and in the email it says. Tell us your story. And i told them your story. In the first bit of suspicion i had was the had hadn't read what i wrote and that's a bad sign. Because why am i giving you this information. If you're not gonna take the information they just want to get you to invest time. So you're already kind of committed and then the next thing they wanna do is get on the phone really badly. I hadn't given them the information that i was in japan so they kept trying to call me but i think there were calling america and once they get you on the phone. It's sort of really hard. Sales guy talks as quickly as humanly possible. They tried to talk to you for minimum twenty thirty minutes again. This time investment. So you feel like you know. If you don't do it you are more your waist wasted your time now. That's one of the few things i don't fall for is the time sync idea of. You've used this time now. You have to have something. Come out of it. After i learned about it through car. Dealers like car dealers will try to keep you there for hours and hours and hours that you buy a car. The maybe you don't even want or isn't the best car for you because if you spent the whole day at this car dealership walking out with nothing makes you feel like you've wasted your day. What they do is they. They talk about it. Did the most interesting part of the script is clearly. I mean all these call center places are scripted. It was really noisy so it was really hard to hear. The guy was that whenever he brought up the fact that you had had money stolen from you. He said the phrase. I.

The DogBone Pawdcast
"twenty thirty minutes" Discussed on The DogBone Pawdcast
"This has been a couple of hours on. Since we've been out there now should she's going right to it. I'm getting excited. Good girl good good good and she doesn't run she doesn't like she trout's literally right over it and i think her leg even did it was just like oh my god. What happened off. And i really had to think about it and kind of ask those questions. Why aung just like i do do honey. Why should i hear why. Why are the. You're using the syria. And i realized that i wasn't hunting sheds the way i was trained. Now what i'm doing is every twenty thirty minutes on on an antler down and i'm walking down. Linda just helping her with that confidence. It seems like that's helped lot. We'll think about it. Dogs learn stuff through repetition and consistency. Like that's that's what training is shaping behavior. It's forming habits through by doing something repetitious inconsistently. And so you're right training and hunting or totally different and so and it's tough to replicate in so i look at. I look at the. I mean we can do the best we can but we have to understand that the real thing and so. It's it's similar when you start talking about like a bird dog. So pheasant is a good one to make a comparison to so you can practice in your yard. You can prepare the dog as much as you want taking them hunting very different than what you practice in the yard and so but the difference between shed hunting and pheasant. Hunting is for pheasant hunting. You can prepare him and then take him hunting and you have a lot of opportunities to replicate that in. Have the light bulb. Turn on you get this. I always calm lightbulb. Moments when it clicks makes sense. You can see it. It's what's one of the more rewarding parts of being a doctor. it's exciting to see the light welter not and so. It's exciting for us as trainers to have this light bulb turn on imagine what it is when the when it turns out for the dog so i look at that and i see a pheasant dog that i've worked with maybe taped wings to a dummy. Maybe some cold game and maybe even use some fresh kill game. I've done stuff in the yard under controlled situations in got them kind of understanding then we go out. Pheasant hunting wolf. I go pheasant hunting. A nice transitional step is game for like shooting preserve shooting preserve in quite honestly..

The Shawn Harvey Morning Show Podcast
"twenty thirty minutes" Discussed on The Shawn Harvey Morning Show Podcast
"What's your status as far as relationship. Wow there's a lot going on barbie because you know why he can't even say the whole culture here you've got these calls. You got this mustang. I don't listen back in the day. I used to smash into cars. I bet you smashed a lot of cars back in your day. Poor but this guy. Got this mustang. This muscle cars. I'm for certain. That del woman barbie at a like this a fan base as no no no no. They're called their be there is. That's what they are called. Wabi you're groupie not how you said you would smash a superstar at nighttime at one time on a one night stand. You said i'm not gonna do one night. Stand with a one night. Stand with no badio superstar out. Do that bobby. Now that's a groupie now player. Whatever oh since a culture of comedy we we have There's a lot i like. I'm a commodity like comedians alike. Like rockstars without the chicks but we we have a lot of women following us. Yeah and your culture. Are we going to shout out the vote all right this. Let's clarify right in your coaching. Bring me into your world. Because i don't know so so in your coach is there's a lot of women when you see the areas there there there is. There's you know. There is a lot of opportunities that i tend to stay away from because that can bring you down to see so you so right. So you've been around the block you know there are no it is here for our. I said i've been in a game like it ain't it. It's not too much different from from the drug game. The card game is is really not too much. I'm still hustler. So i know i know what would it would have done our flashy young do right back in a day. You know what i mean. I know i know what it's hitting with the girls or they change car. I gotta get him get hill. I mean nowadays talked amis town. Nowadays girls girls girls are straightforward. Talk on one day and they're actually for money. Dan why y twenty thirty minutes like there are bowl nowadays nowadays you cash. That's a new thing cash me. You must have had a lot of china. You had like like like like you sean. Harvey numbers with john. I can tell from your voice young man. Thanks you for schooling me now. The young ladies a cash epic bobby. Have you cast at the cats app from any young man lately. No i don't do that. I have my own diamanti. Wanna give it back.

99 Challenges
"twenty thirty minutes" Discussed on 99 Challenges
"We just came to the conclusion that as human beings week hate any change to the limit. But you have to overcome that because lifestyle subset of your comfort zone all the growth. We're all the groceries. So i see a lot of Personal at least a lot of consultants who use automated webinars like evergreen webinars and those are of course usually pre-recorded style presentations whether our thoughts on that do think. That's viable route to jared leads or are you should keep the interactivity in the webinar. Because it's just it's better for the finger ship anyway. Great yeah i love evergreen webinars or put webinars and quotes because it really depends on who you're targeting a consultant or a service or an agency on here listening to this. We have a specific type of evergreen funnel that we use with our clients. That works really. Well i've been using it myself through my own traffic sources for years. It's very straightforward. It's simply recorded short-form presentation short twenty minute presentation or so or less than that. We send traffic to and people consume that video. They book a call. They fill in some information about themselves and then they start consuming other content about your company before the sales call. So i have that system is one of the primary things that we built for companies break. Now we deliver inc because citizen. But i see so many examples and it sounds super straightforward. You build up. The final with the women are actually as a sales pitch presentation in mind. Twenty thirty minutes. Whatever people watch of the dead there is an offer limited time just now and they book a coal or consume more content than whatever and it's everything is fully automated japan. I sold that because everyone is doing that might be not people get tired because of that because everyone is doing. Oh not at all. No it works. Great it depends. Here's the thing here's the number one factor that if you're selling or you're prospecting with webinars. The number one factor for success is not the webinar itself. It's your offer in..

The Mason Minute
Test Your Knowledge (MM #3624)
"The with kevin mason. I spend a lotta time every social media. But i found. I don't spend quite as much as i used to. The pandemic changed everything. Just kind of got boring. What i found myself doing more of his plane stupid quizzes online. I've talked about my love for online quizzes. But i find myself not only spend more time with them. But i think i've noticed there are more and more of these quizzes. It only takes a couple minutes. But i like having my brain. T's have my brain tested. I've always love trivia. And i truly do not know why it's always been so fascinating to me but what i found more importantly it just kind of relieves the stress of everyday life it relieves the stress of the pandemic. Sure i play solitaire on my. I had every day for at least fifteen twenty thirty minutes just because it calms me down just because it clears my head and i've always wanted a good way to do that. Just like quizzes sure. I could play trivial pursuit with people. But you have to play with people. It's more fun to challenge myself. And i think that's the interesting thing it's all about finding things you can do by yourself because that lets kept us sane.

The Mason Minute
Test Your Knowledge (MM #3624)
"The with kevin mason. I spend a lotta time every social media. But i found. I don't spend quite as much as i used to. The pandemic changed everything. Just kind of got boring. What i found myself doing more of his plane stupid quizzes online. I've talked about my love for online quizzes. But i find myself not only spend more time with them. But i think i've noticed there are more and more of these quizzes. It only takes a couple minutes. But i like having my brain. T's have my brain tested. I've always love trivia. And i truly do not know why it's always been so fascinating to me but what i found more importantly it just kind of relieves the stress of everyday life it relieves the stress of the pandemic. Sure i play solitaire on my. I had every day for at least fifteen twenty thirty minutes just because it calms me down just because it clears my head and i've always wanted a good way to do that. Just like quizzes sure. I could play trivial pursuit with people. But you have to play with people. It's more fun to challenge myself. And i think that's the interesting thing it's all about finding things you can do by yourself because that lets kept us sane.

The Mason Minute
Test Your Knowledge (MM #3624)
"The with kevin mason. I spend a lotta time every social media. But i found. I don't spend quite as much as i used to. The pandemic changed everything. Just kind of got boring. What i found myself doing more of his plane stupid quizzes online. I've talked about my love for online quizzes. But i find myself not only spend more time with them. But i think i've noticed there are more and more of these quizzes. It only takes a couple minutes. But i like having my brain. T's have my brain tested. I've always love trivia. And i truly do not know why it's always been so fascinating to me but what i found more importantly it just kind of relieves the stress of everyday life it relieves the stress of the pandemic. Sure i play solitaire on my. I had every day for at least fifteen twenty thirty minutes just because it calms me down just because it clears my head and i've always wanted a good way to do that. Just like quizzes sure. I could play trivial pursuit with people. But you have to play with people. It's more fun to challenge myself. And i think that's the interesting thing it's all about finding things you can do by yourself because that lets kept us sane.

WazaMedia Podcast
"twenty thirty minutes" Discussed on WazaMedia Podcast
"Life is our inspiration of the inexperienced. We have Right because what. I bring is not so much like ear. It's the time that i've spent doing this my ability to understand a shot in get that shot quickly for you so you get someone. That doesn't know what they're doing in their following around for twenty thirty minutes to try and get a halfway decent shot. I come in there in a couple of minutes and get something. That's amazing because i've been doing it for so long. Let's talk about the tactical part about shooting the images do you when you're taking the photos. Are you thinking about the platforms. Your clients are using for instance if your client is using instagram versus facebook versus. What's the new rage Tiktok have there if any of them are putting him on tiktok. Are you shooting for the four the actual platform or you shooting it in a generic sense that can be used for multiple platforms. I shoot everything is if it's going to be available. I.

voiceFirst careers
"twenty thirty minutes" Discussed on voiceFirst careers
"Dollar market. Energy is an eight hundred billion dollar market. That's be with a with a capital. That's like we're talking. We're almost talking serious money right. All by the way include lincoln the show notes. If i don't remind me but it was a great sit down between sandy. Monroe andy law. Musk that a colleague him shared. Oh my god. It is a great. I'd forget what it is twenty thirty minutes maybe longer. It is a great session in it in it shows some of i mean it shines a light somewhat on why elon. Musk is five to ten years ahead of the competition. Sandy monroe knows a thing or two. I mean this guy's done at all ben. There got the t shirts and like me most of them have wholesome now. I'm sure but he has a ton of respect for eelam but also took time the buses jobs on a couple of things One thing's i test drove a model s a couple years ago in the one thing that did not impress me was interior but sandy said the seats in the new models three and he drove like they put like six thousand miles on a model three here this past week and he said that is the best seat i have ever said in. He said we've spent hours in the seat in no fatigue. No pain no hotspots. Pain points and ilan stepped up and took some credit for it. And it's something they designed and built in house. Yeah it's a great interview but look here's the bottom line. If you need some help you have to ask you have not because you has not if i can help adventure efforts or if i can show you how to double sales in the next ninety days you've got to reach out okay. Is that fair enough. You have not because you asked not so ask. I do some mentoring for free. But if you need more of my time then you can buy some of it. But i've got a program that in the next ninety days we could double your think about. What would you do with twice the revenue. Anything except the food and beverage industry but check it out on. Include a link to my website and again You can run the alexis skill so remember. It's going to be just about as great today as you make up your mind to make it so join me in the lawn and sandy in make it a fabulous day..

Supreme Clientele Radio
"twenty thirty minutes" Discussed on Supreme Clientele Radio
"That dad i started bombing. When i was twelve years old. I i was walking through train. Tunnels for dolo dolo with paint twelve years old bomb and shit. I you can still see tags in the old school tunnels bro. Like i know you know what i'm saying like you know. Should this crazy on. i love that. That's what drove me to doing graffiti bro. Like all the 'cause i you know. I don't want to stay in one place. I want explore ship climbing across bridges and shit like bad and climbing up rooftops at walk through tunnels and in free chains like that. Keep it exciting. Was you always just street. Bama or did you. Did you have a smash freight trains or do motions on real trains and shit like that. Oh yeah yeah. Well you've seen. I've got the freight train you know as my own profile pictures so you already know that evidence. Okay me and my woman. Yeah meet me back. Killed a few. And we have some cass. That really known right. Now you know name really make their mark. They was with us. My man soul on people's from winston. Once the i must if these tech in washington heights on his silk by seven piece man me and him used to hit them things in the middle of the dates on that you know be on opposite side in things stop and it's just like better hurry up and do it throw up before moves. You know what i'm saying like. Sometimes you like to learn how to do it backwards. You don't want to say yeah but yet silk. Cart wrecking them trains. There was a lot of people killing it like that man but it just rocked the twenty thirty minutes. You gotta get the picture and yeah man on the lost on my pitches so yes to many memories and it's all the right now man. I wish i hadn't still do like a favorite bomb that you have a favorite one the most fun one one that you came off the most or or like that was..

Generation Xbox - Your Home for Xbox Series X News and Opinions!
Our Favorite Games of 2020
"Were some of your favourite games from this year so controversial as it is. I do like the story quite a bit punk. Twenty seventy seven. That's not to say that any of the stuff around is excusable in any way it's not I think that the conversation around that games really gotten muddied the last week or so. Because we to incorporate we started to just blend everything together between the ethical things and the game performance things where whereas i think those are probably two separate conversations but i still think in terms of on the xbox series x it works. Okay it's not perfect and as crash walks couple times. But i do enjoy the story there. Enjoy the world. But honestly for me like the lifesaver. This year has been those games that i can jump into four twenty thirty minutes to an hour at a time and and just like detach for a little bit so i still super close to where i work so i can come home for lunch. I let my dog out and play a game or two. You know go back. We'll be the show on the spring when all this started was a lifesaver for me. And i know. It's an xbox game but tough it will be next year.

The Indicator from Planet Money
Electric Car Chargers: When Supply Drives Demand
"Suddenly we are now looking at cars that can go three hundred miles on a single charge right and while they're still too expensive for many people they're expected to get a lot cheaper in the next few years but now people are worried about how long it takes to charge. Yeah and that's a. That's a fair question i guess how. How long does it take to charge and electric vehicle. More than fifteen minutes less than two days. Yeah that's not helpful right so i could throw a whole bunch of numbers that you to explain why there are so many variables that affect this but the most important thing actually isn't the numbers. It's the fact that most electric car owners most of the time charged their car like this. My name is duane ross. I live in corrales new mexico. And i have a two thousand thirteen tesla model s when i bought this car headache. Standard tesla charger installed in my garage. And you just plug that in and of course the charge and then he goes in his house and lives his life. Yeah in the case of someone like duane. Ross and others. It doesn't really matter how long it takes to charge. Because you just leave the thing there overnight right right and it would be parked anyway. Yeah also more convenient than having to go to the gas station from time to time. Plus it's cheap like a lot cheaper than paying for gas is the way i understand it I could see how this works for daily driving. But let's say. I want to take a big road trip right across the whole country. What then that's where. Fast chargers come in. Joyce bryner has a tesla model three. She recently stopped to charge up at a brand new super charger in gettysburg pennsylvania. It sounded like this can hear the power ramping up there. So this is a gonna charge me fast and Let's see what car says here. Looks like of got twenty five minutes to get to eighty percent charge. This is kind of staggering so charging the car at home would take hours and hours charging on the go using one of these fast chargers takes. What like twenty thirty minutes half an hour. Maybe not much more than that. That's amazing yet. That is really quick. There aren't very many fast chargers. That actually are that fast. You might take longer especially at an older charter. Though pricier i take it then then obviously charging it at home because it's well i guess it's just it's it's almost free at home right right and this case. Brynner's charged cost a little over eleven dollars not too bad compared to gas but more expensive than home. Okay so even at a state of the art charger. It's obviously still a lot less convenient than a gas station just because it takes awhile right but remember for most drivers. that's also not a very frequent experience. Mike davar needs with the market research firm s. Clint and he says if you ask people who are considering electric vehicles they really focus on the idea of waiting to charge. Is i think psychologically waited more than it deserves. And the inverse of that is the fact that they don't tend to appreciate how much they'll benefit from nocco gas stations so even though fast charging this rare occurrence for most drivers a lot of companies are really focused on making it as fast as possible and putting up as many fast chargers as possible. Yeah i could see how that would get people over that mental hump so that they just by the thing and then after that they're they're mostly just charging it at home. Yup that's the psychology. Are you ready for the economics. Are you seriously asking me. If i'm ready for the echinacea. All right here. We go the fastest. Fast chargers are super expensive to install like more than one hundred thousand dollars per charger. That means you can only really make money off of them. If people are using them a lot if the utilization rate is really high but remember most people mostly charge at home. Oh there's another hump to get over sure. I spoke to end smart. She's the vp of public policy at charge point which is charging company. And with the fast charger you often have low utilization. Not because it's not an unnecessary piece of infrastructure but because it's in a location which is vital to two drivers occasionally but not necessarily used frequently every single day so in other words. People really want a fast charger to just be there. And in fact they won't buy an electric vehicle unless they're already confident that there are fast chargers everywhere and they're super fast and in fact way faster than they are right now. They want the whole package but they don't actually want to use those fancy chargers all the time it's easier and cheaper to charge at home. It's actually better for your battery too. So it's kind of like if everyone wanted a gas station nearby but they could just get the same gas at home for a fraction of the cost right and in that situation. And you're the gas station. How do you make money. Well i mean you can always just get money from the government. The taxpayer That is happening as i understand. Yep charging are also cutting deals with utilities and of course they're they're joining forces with automakers right because they want to chargers to exist so that people buy their electric cars. The automakers do. Kathy's oy is the ceo of vigo which is fast charging network and they have a deal with gm essentially agreement with general motors is building a bridge between where there's enough cars on the road to make money which is a little time in the future to two right now. So that helps us will build the of demand because general motors has come to the party and is helping make a contribution to the building that infrastructure so he also says look people right now mostly charge at home but that could change in a few years once more. People who don't have garages start buying electric cars. So maybe utilization goes up and this is really interesting camilla because like we normally think about how demand drives supplies like people want man for something. They're willing to spend money on it. So you know. Accompany supplies it Here's always saying that. Like no once the supplies out there. Then it's going to drive up demand so build chargers and people will buy the vehicles to use the chargers she also says maybe you can get a bunch of shipping transportation companies to use these fast chargers and that'll help cover their costs. So companies are optimistic. Then they see a path to profitability. Here yeah but. I think it would be fair to say that. It's a lot easier to get there. If people were a bit more rational. If people used fast chargers as much as they worry about fast chargers they're either be a lot more charging or a lot less worrying. Yeah and in either case. Just less of a conundrum

The Mason Minute
Old Toys (MM #3490)-IG
"The Maison with Kevin Nation recently. I've become obsessed with these videos that pop up on my Facebook timeline about people who restores Old Time toys know what I mean. Old Time toys. I mean old time Tonka trucks and Buddy L's and Nyland trucks the kind of metal toys. I guess they're pressed metal toys from the 50s 60s 70s and I guess into the ATS for that matter. We took the Tonka trucks and we were going for at least if you were a boy you had the Tonka trucks and I had a lot of these variations of trucks and jeeps and dump trucks and cement mixers and all sorts of things and well it's fascinating watching these guys basically take old rusted-out always and bring them back to life. Now. It's almost the same video each and every time they're done by a bunch of different people, but it's the same thing you basically watch them refinished down to Bare Metal repaint and kind of hammer everything out and once you've seen one you've touched them all but what's interesting is I find myself watching them all the time and they're not short videos. They can sometimes be up to twenty thirty minutes long. They're insane, but it's amazing every night a new one pops up on the screen and I'll sit there and watch it for 15 or 20 minutes log.

The Mason Minute
Old Toys (MM #3490) - burst 1
"The Maison with Kevin Nation recently. I've become obsessed with these videos that pop up on my Facebook timeline about people who restores Old Time toys know what I mean. Old Time toys. I mean old time Tonka trucks and Buddy L's and Nyland trucks the kind of metal toys. I guess they're pressed metal toys from the 50s 60s 70s and I guess into the ATS for that matter. We took the Tonka trucks and we were going for at least if you were a boy you had the Tonka trucks and I had a lot of these variations of trucks and jeeps and dump trucks and cement mixers and all sorts of things and well it's fascinating watching these guys basically take old rusted-out always and bring them back to life. Now. It's almost the same video each and every time they're done by a bunch of different people, but it's the same thing you basically watch them refinished down to Bare Metal repaint and kind of hammer everything out and once you've seen one you've touched them all but what's interesting is I find myself watching them all the time and they're not short videos. They can sometimes be up to twenty thirty minutes long. They're insane, but it's amazing every night a new one pops up on the screen and I'll sit there and watch it for 15 or 20 minutes log.

The Mason Minute
Old Toys (MM #3490)
"The Maison with Kevin Nation recently. I've become obsessed with these videos that pop up on my Facebook timeline about people who restores Old Time toys know what I mean. Old Time toys. I mean old time Tonka trucks and Buddy L's and Nyland trucks the kind of metal toys. I guess they're pressed metal toys from the 50s 60s 70s and I guess into the ATS for that matter. We took the Tonka trucks and we were going for at least if you were a boy you had the Tonka trucks and I had a lot of these variations of trucks and jeeps and dump trucks and cement mixers and all sorts of things and well it's fascinating watching these guys basically take old rusted-out always and bring them back to life. Now. It's almost the same video each and every time they're done by a bunch of different people, but it's the same thing you basically watch them refinished down to Bare Metal repaint and kind of hammer everything out and once you've seen one you've touched them all but what's interesting is I find myself watching them all the time and they're not short videos. They can sometimes be up to twenty thirty minutes long. They're insane, but it's amazing every night a new one pops up on the screen and I'll sit there and watch it for 15 or 20 minutes log.

Front End Happy Hour
Severless: Improving How We Serve up Websites and Applications With Jerome Hardaway
"Is serving a consultant? Please describe what is server list? It's been someone at work start speaking Greek they're like does. Oh Man service is a practice of. Instead of having thank goodness isn't a word. Instead of having like a like hard server that you're putting all your data off you're having something in the cloud another someone else's server. Is the practice of using servers that in API's in cloud signal. Sears yeah. So using API's in cloud technologies to serve data to the wet Ri-, handle all your date in cloud of the NBA API says two times. Really years. I had a long day at work. So this is great like how is that different than I make a website I put those files in the cloud like how would it be different than that? Like the the traditional way we sort of think about deploying a website to the cloud or putting it somewhere mean actually into. What you're saying to the cloud. By is either how people have actually been four score in seven years ago even touched up teepee, right? Like crazy old school so You think of FTP and putting your files way someplace in like a our. Core like situation. Oh. Here is my files and I'm dragging and dropping I'm waiting Dow Upload and then I'll hopefully though cash it takes twenty thirty minutes, right? Well, we'll. You're thinking of services and things that you have. I'll go off the most simple format right on one of my favorites allow the first thing. I. Introduced students to his search right surge dot S. H. so they build their bill their website. And they go on. into the CLI and a US surge of which is. A service that takes their tools, turns it all into a cdn then shoots it the Internet with his own domain name that you can either mass or you can make on the fly. They come up light really craze domain names like everybody else. So that is like the biggest lie it's easier it's faster. It's leaner right I think that's the biggest and it's empowering right I think that's the biggest w for specials coming in fronting game from a modern perspective is just So, much leaner for the new for the newer devs to come in and they're like, Hey, I get actually spend eight bucks on a domain name and use notify and surge and content full, and that's that's it at my blog up and running in like a week right and he's all like services tools that help you know Hitler cms in exact nature they in power the front end kind of makes me excited about them I think your your definitions solid on. So I. I think to make it a little more clear cassava like. Man I'm new the game I have no idea what you're talking about like all that stuff like making it even simpler. It's the idea of like you write a function right function takes input producing output. Right, basic functional programming. So imagine taking that function and being able to upload it somewhere. So that response to Internet requests. So it's not just your machine it's anybody. And that's the basic idea beyond Yeah. You can do that. You just taken input given output except you don't have to worry about any of the in between state it just works and then you can update it quickly over time. So it's pretty powerful stuff what I find fascinating Andrew you're you're touching on it is like Fifteen years ago. To make a web page, you needed to be a front end engineer like you need to engineer needed have skills you need no html css a little bit of javascript that hasn't changed. We have like shop fi and squarespace anybody make website. Now it doesn't take any skills. Okay. So tenure five years ago you wanted to play server to actually do custom stuff beyond like a wordpress site you need to be a friend engineer. You need to know that sort of thing you know how to deploy server all these things. Now at twenty, twenty you any of that. So you can build entire webpage silent how you want all that deploy deploy multiple regions have ends up all that stuff and never know any of the other stuff you'll leave your front engineer as much anymore. I think it's like the tail. Of of several lists. And we'll talk about surrealists why the name but but the tail that is just how it keeps evolving and like if you don't keep your skills fresh, you will give up behind because you're like Oh. Yeah. That's one of those who call themselves a webmaster. Like remember that I remember. That's a good point

The $100 MBA Show
Guest Teacher Alain Hunkins How to Increase Your Impact and Influence by Building Your Credibility
"Today's guest teacher. Huggins is the author of cracking the leadership code, three secrets that building strong leaders if you want to get the first chapter for free, hang onto the end of the episode, Show you how you can get it on the sought after trainer Speaker, consultant, and coach for over twenty years. He's worked with big brands like Walmart Pfizer, City Group General Electric IBM? GM. State Farm Insurance Microsoft and more and today. He's GonNa break down how to build your credibility, your authority with your team with your actual clients with anybody who work with some simple steps you can take. This is especially important for new to this if you are. are dealing with new clients or you have new teams joining your team. The first thing everybody's thinking about when they meet you is, is this person? The real deal? Can I trust them? Will they deliver? Are they the leader I'm looking for? Is this the business or client I want to work with and that all boils down to are you credible? Let's make sure the answer is, yes. So I'm GONNA pass it onto onto, teach you today's guest teacher lesson, but I'll be back to rabbit today's episode and share with you that linked to get the free, first chapter of allowance book cracking the Leadership Code, but for now takeaway on. Hello there, my name is Alla. Pumpkins. Thank you for joining me today. Today. You how to increase your influence and impact five building your credibility. So, let's get down to business. I'd like to start by giving you thirty thousand foot high level overview of our lesson today. We'll start by looking at what credibility is. Then take a look at why it's so important, and then look at the three biggest actions you can take to build your credibility, but let's start with a story about a leader named Clint. Clint is the CO founder of a software company that's grown rapidly over the last three years. He's smart outgoing and he's great in front of customers. In fact, the sales team is nicknamed Clinton Midas because everything he touches turns to gold. However for all of Clint's strengths, he has this tragic flaw. He's consistently late for meetings ten, twenty, thirty minutes. Late is par for the course with Clinton sometimes even more. In Clint is also the master of excuses as to why he's late. He'll say, well, this customer meeting went long or this operational issue needed my time or gosh, the traffic from the airport was horrible. However is much as Clinton tries to explain and excuse his way out of it. His team is just not having it anymore. It's having an impact on engagement morale. In fact, two of Clint's direct reports have quit in the last week. And the sad truth is clint doesn't have a clue as to why and the reason because Clinton has never stopped to recognize the importance of credibility. So let's start and take a look. What exactly is credibility. Credibility comes from the Latin word credibility, which means worthy to believed. Credibility, is the main ingredient in trust and trust is the glue of human relationship. Turns out credibility shares the same etymological root as the word credit, which means alone or a thing entrusted to another. So, let's take a look at why that is so important. So if you want to influence others, you want them to do something because it's important to you. So, how did they decide if they're going to do it? Well, it's based on your relationship credit score. If you have a high credit score, you've proven yourself as a low risk, high return person and the other person is likely to help. They think you're a good investment. However, if you're a high risk low return person forget about it, they're not going to help fact is people own their own talents and skills, and they only offer them to you on loan. So having a high level of credibility or relationship credit score is your way of proving that you're worth loaning to. For people to truly follow you. They have to believe you're worth following. And how do they decide it's through your actions or is Albert Schweitzer the Nobel Prize winner. Put it. Example is not the main thing influencing others. It is the only thing. So. If you want to increase your influence and impact and others, you need to grow your credibility. To take a look at the top three things that you can do to make that happen. The first. Showing up on. Time to lesson from Clint. If I could only choose one practice to grow my credibility. I'd say show up on time you should treat your performance in this arena is a big deal. It is think about it for a moment. Timeliness is the easiest and most visible thing to measure sure either here or you're not. Fact is lateness is about much more than just a few wasted minutes. In life being on time is the most basic social contract that of presence. When you're late, your behavior sends a clear message. I have other things going on. That are more important than you are. And when you're on time, you send a clear message that you value the other person. So you to choose what's the message that you WanNa send and know that your actions speak a lot louder than your intentions. The second thing that you can do to grow your credibility is to do what you say you're GONNA do. You see when you open your mouth and promised to do something you cr- create expectations in those who are listening to you for them that promise is now this open psychological loop of tension that seeks resolution and it stays open nagging at them as they think, will they follow through or not? The fact is people crave closure. So every time you do what you say you're going to do you strengthen the connection between your words and your deeds, which is exactly what's meant by walking the talk when you walk your talk your seen as congruent and when you don't. You're not. You're out of integrity something's off, which is what Ralph Waldo Emerson Express when he said who you are speaks. So loudly, I can't hear what you're saying. See Doing. What you say you're going to do is the precise deficit of accountability. have. You ever wondered where accountability comes from. It comes from the world of accounting in finance. There's a balance sheet, there's on one side assets. The other side is liabilities and the to need to equal each other to be in account. Well, in human behavior, the two sides of your behavioral balance-sheet are what you say you're going to do. And what you actually did. And when you follow through and do what you say, you'll do the two sides balanced out and you're accountable. So a top tip around this. Do you say what you're GonNa do is write things down. Keep a written record of what you promised to do your way better off being someone who under promises and over delivers than the other way around. This means you have to be clear on your commitments and also be willing to say no from time to time. So. We've looked at our first two actions. Showing up on time doing what you say you're going to do our third one is around being consistent. This is the practice of doing what you say you're going to do not just once, but repeatedly multiple times over an extended period of time. When you start to build the deposits in that emotional bank account, your credit score goes up. The, no. One's going to throw you a party for showing up on time. However, the little things done over time compound and have a multiplier effect. As an example, take the CEO of Campbell Soup, a man called Doug. It now doug was CEO of Campbell Soup, for ten years and in his ten year period as the leader of Campbell's. Doug wrote Thirty Thousand Personal Handwritten. Thank you notes to his employees. Now, by the way over those ten years, Campbell's only had twenty thousand employees, and if you do the math, it works out to more than eight. Thank you notes per day seven days a week for ten years. Now, that's pretty incredible to me. Now, I'm not saying you need to start writing eight. Thank you know today, but I think Doug Conan's example of the power of consistently and showing how that multiplies and compounds over time is great. It's so easy in this world to think that we're too busy to do the important things. See if you WanNa know what a person values. Look at their calendar and see where they spend their time because that is the ultimate test of what you're truly valuing because ultimately, every action that you take will either strengthen or weaken your credibility and connection between. which either strengthens or weakens your influence and your impact.

VUX World
Designing human-like voice bots for IVR with Einav Itamar
"For those who? have. Never. Come across Volk. It is is A. Platform describe as a platform technology enables you to. Automate in coming calls into the in the Houston. conversationally, I. You describe. It. Wa. You're automating. Both incoming and outbound calls using the I. We also providing solutions for Omni Channel. On top of feats, you know many auto companies. The are Chad with companies are trying to into the space of voice. But then the extent that you get these, you know naturally suitable because voice is much more complex than I'm your shed, but we went the other way around I created. A solution that is good for contact center. Now, we're also studying to provide the solution channels and to provide also on me across channels solutions. Across. Messaging Chats websites in-app in many other channels, swell. Rhonda's this because eventually customers today expect to get the best service across the channels to get it also to be consistent and fluent. so you're talking. On about trade-offs, contacts and trade offs, and how you kind of you develop the plow foam to try and counteract some of the. Can you elaborate a little bit on what kind of trade offs? You UTAH. Yeah, sure. So S I mentioned. I. Think Sense. There is such thing as customer service. There is always a trade off between. You know. The company's you know our clients at one to provide. Good. Customer experience, but Dan their cost. For providing customer experience and especially. When there is a your scaly. So as no telecommunication companies and banks as A. Growth in a number of customers, a number of agents, it becomes more and more challenging to keep the level of customer experiences still keep the cost same. Venture. Customers what we experienced when we are calling. Is. Experienced long waiting times. We experienced sometimes inexperienced agents or you know all short agents, we know maybe limited access to internal systems or. Out Maybe. So So. Then on the other hand when companies try to solve skill ability issues and use technologies like. Then again, they get. They throw their customers into amaze rights with the that is not great. Awesome experience, and then sometimes they try to. Come these using. Trying to divert customers the other channels that they're more scalable like email and chat, and so on. That eventually, still customers are still calling and again receipts during co-lead more and more again because if you want something and you now. You still need to call. So it's not one or the other, he needed to provide great customer experience across channels and I think that if chat was where like a trim two or three years ago. Now, it's clear that the voice is as important as jet and you need to provide again a solution across channels and. Make sure that you don't need voice s like. Sumptuous is. Completed to. Jets. It's interesting that you mentioned or what you mentioned earlier makes me think about how a lot of times customer service can actually be a differentiator. Sorts can be a competitive advantage for starting companies. In. The US you've got a handful of companies that are just like really known for good customer service like jet blue, a trader Joe's. Maybe, there is something that you as well. Cain any companies that Spring to mind. You're like, okay. I. Don't mind calling them. I think John Lewis Typically tend to have a pretty good customer service, but another one from the US is Tom's shoes. Of you've had this dog is where some very agents have spent like twenty thirty minutes on the call was among and something. I think any complaints they ended up just giving you a new pair of shoes in insulin, and then there's another one about flower. Flower. Company where? They, they missed delivery to someone's There was an important delivery wasn't birthday with something else and the Mr Delivery, the person foreign open ended up giving them free flowers not announced just free flowers everyone. Constantly after that. For Making one mistake. So it just shows how important is to have customer service because people like me who have nothing to do with it tells stories about. That's going to be really expensive if you're going to be willing to stay on the phone for hours with the human. So I guess Vocal Da da driven customer service help companies close that gap a little bit when it comes to that customer service advantage. I don't think they relate to that. you. You mentioned several companies that could. A similar experience. No. Before costs and for civil ones. Not just automated, but I will make sure that. The customer experience comes first. So this is our ideal customer. So for instance, American Express is also where known. In. you know in in their? Ability and willingness to invest quite a lot. In order to provide great experience. So when we met with them initially, they were very excited about us both from the ventures you need. innovation and business the different business units. So that got us into a place where they invested in as they are one of our. Trusted the Bucknell's and we are Again one example for. For Great Company that believes in US and knows the importance. So great customer experience and not just

On Being with Krista Tippett
Its really settling in now, the losses large and small
"So. I have not prepared my questions I just want to. Settle into talk with you for. Twenty thirty minutes. And you know we are putting the show that we did a few years ago. which really lays out the notion of ambiguous laws, the myth of closure? But, but what I wanna just reflect on with you. This morning very directly is. What does ambiguous loss mean. In a global pandemic. Well I. It means a essentially the same thing that it meant on the individual and family level, but suddenly it has this global meaning which I never intended until the phone started bringing so to speak the emails came in. With the pandemic saying isn't this ambiguous loss, so as irritation, I was delighted that people, journalists and ordinary people put it together That's that's a dream that an academic wants. Is that whatever you do is useful to the general public. but then I began thinking. Of course it's ambiguous loss but it's more abstract, and it's beyond the individual or family now it has been raised to a higher level. Right to help us make sense of this nonsensical thing. That's going on this invisible. Annemie. So so. We're kind of going through a a global civilizational. Moment of ambiguous loss at a societal level. Yes we we We have lost indeed. We have lost our freedom to go about our day. As we always have we have lost our freedom to visit with our loved ones or to have lunch with their friends and and I must say again because the school thing is coming up the young people have lost. Not only a year it may be two years. of what they usually do is go to school in the usual manner, make friends socialize, learn, learn and that generation will have to carry that the rest of their lives. I. I I'm finding personally and and picking up A in others. Obviously, this is not a you know scientific. Study I've done, but it feels to me and myself and in others that. We I've I've kind of hit this moment I don't know how many months we are on now from March but Yeah certainly, but certainly in March and April and May. There was a sense that you know this will. Right that this is something we have to do so that we can get through this. And even things that got canceled got rescheduled for I July and then September October. And I feel like. What's? It's really settling in now. The the losses and are large and small as you say I mean I mean people have lost loved ones, but there's also this loss of. Going to the office of certainty like your kids will go to school I mean on. My son didn't really graduate from College of. Some of these things. People will bounce back from you know I. I actually really trusted our kids. Who knows how this will affect them? It it. It might be just you know. transformative in in generative ways that we can't imagine. And yet they're all these losses large and small all at once. And were carrying them individually, but were also carrying them in the same at the same time. Yes I just wonder how for you. This stretches open. This note because this is ambiguous loss, but it's a form. You perhaps could never have imagined. It's happening to you, too. Personally it is, it is as you know. Caregiver. For my husband, although I have help, which is why I'm talking with you right now, and that that went quite well because I could get respite by going out for lunch with friends or going for a walk I mean the four the pandemic before the. Yeah! Yes, uh-huh, and then pandemic kid and Caregivers are finding that The can't they don't have their freedom. They had to take a break You're stuck inside, and and that makes it doubly stressful. I think for caregivers including myself. So. So I've heard you say that. It's one thing to write the book about this about ambiguous loss. And another thing to go through yourself. and. I wonder. What you might share what you might offer about how you have been wrestling with that and what there is. In this. You know I'd say ambiguous. Loss is a description of a human experience hadn't quite been described before. You didn't invent the experience you invented the language named. Right you named it and so here we are with this. A magnitude of you say it's been completely taken out of the individual level, or even sometimes it would happen to two distinct communities. So. What are you know from being in this field from being the person her name this to? This helping you walk through these days you might offer up to other people about walking through these days these months and these years ahead. I think I'm in it to everybody else. Struggling and I suspect I've spent forty years studying ambiguous loss because I don't like ambiguity. I remember when I first went to the University of Wisconsin in Madison in one class or another, we were describing each other, and somebody called me decisive. And I took that as a high compliment. I don't anymore I mean I've I've come to believe in both and thinking which I write about. I don't like binary thanking. You're working with your banker or some someone like that. And there's a middle ground. A middle way to go when you're dealing with people and when you're dealing with problems, we have huge problems right now and to see that someone was wrong when the pandemic began about what they thought about it a scientist. and now they think differently. That's binary. Thinking and I can't I can't. I can't take it anymore.

The Curious About Cannabis Podcast
Dr. James Taylor on Chronic Pain and How CBD Inspired a Transformation in The Waiting Room
"Today I'm really excited because I'm joined by doctor. James Taylor from North Carolina in some of my home stomping grounds in the southeast James. Thanks so much for being willing to take the time and speak with me today or Jason. It's modern thank you. Yeah totally okay so just to prime our listeners a bit. Do you mind speaking a little bit about the work that you do. And how it connects to to Hampton CD and all that so are merely a pain physician we have seven pink clinics in North Carolina it was the opioid crisis. Prices that got me involved. Oh in the CBD space About two years ago as premiers coming from medical boards and hospital administrators straighter on We've got to change the way we manage pain CBD came up and opportune time for our medical practice to look figure out what is what do or what is it not do. Offer patients in pain It was very taboo back then in North Carolina to Even even think about this bring it into our a practice So initially when we did that we had a symposium and we brought a lot of people to the symposium we brought the police sheriffs departments attorneys board and members You know anybody we could think of that. Might want to object and so we gave him the opportunity to object if we were going to bring. CD into the State of North Carolina and start using it with the patients No one objected They all agreed were in the middle of an opioid crisis. And we gotta pull out every tool we possibly can use in order to positively affect that So our journey only began their our. We studied some patients and felt good about continuing to recommend this to our patients. And we've just continued to try to understand this this even better of of what it's doing for these folks and how we can positively impact. Their lives in that journey has been a very up and down journey journey. A- and so being new into the cannabis space You just don't realize all the variables that you're going to have to deal with but it seems like we take two steps forward one step back. Three three steps forward four steps back in so that kind of roller coaster. I'm understanding what folks in the canvas world have been up against so the last number of years. Yeah and I've got to say I'm a little surprised that there wasn't much resistance in those early conversations. But that's that's great to hear as well just that there's A desire to try to bring in any safe tools that can be brought in to try to alleviate some of those opioid problems that we're that we're dealing with now and what it What forms of? CBD are being administered in North Carolina. Because I have to admit I'm not super familiar with what's Osman going on there. Recently are people using Like tinctures or edibles different. What types of products are they engaging will primarily tincture In our medical practice we stuck with tincture. We wanted to keep it simple. Yeah you know. Our patients aren't the the most educated and we typically serve the poor and the elderly orderly So we didn't want to bring a large variety of different things so the tincture. We kept it simple. But in the state of North Carolina of of him stores are opening up all over the place that have Food products the smokable him The tinctures bay products The whole Gamut You know the North Carolina and FDA. They have come out a pretty strongly to say. Hey we don't want this food products right but they still sell them. And nobody's out a monitoring regulating them in. Uh we'll see where all that end. Yeah it's it was interesting to me to see Saw Picture very recently of a store in Tennessee that was a CD slash him dispensary and it was set up very similarly to all the cannabis dispensaries. You see you out here on the West Coast or in states that have legalized. But it's all hemp products. That's fascinating to me. That that's spreading across the country and giving people access to canvas products even if it's in that limited CD sense that they wouldn't have access to otherwise. Have there been to your knowledge. Any issues regarding Product safety contaminations or MHM product consistency in that realm. Oil is for the public standpoint. I don't think the public of of see's much of that. I think there's a couple of news articles where some product came in how they came from out West that probably contained. THC mother was not a hemp to rob product worked but there has not been a lot of media attention on Tainted are bad product of now we have a laboratory and we do testing So half my patients take a product that we kind of oversee from growth to extraction the other half of my patients take products they get online So that's very good for me. I'm able to see what these other products are In the new all take sometimes these products from the patient and test them and see what's in them in so we're discovering quite a bit Eh. What's on the label is not necessarily what's in the bottle? Yeah you know tattle on anybody But I think it's a bigger problem than we all realize. Yeah I completely agree just for my own analytical work that I've seen there's Quite a lot of inconsistency batch to batch When manufacturers are making products and then sometimes the differences in product compared to label sometimes that's genuine just product manufacturing variability and sometimes it's militias sometimes? It's just outright companies lying in order to get product somewhere where they it can be sold. Can you speak a little bit to how you know. So you specialize in pain in trying to to help people deal with particularly Egli chronic pain How do patients seem to be reacting and under what kind of dosages yet great question so when we initially brought it into our practice We took one hundred patients in. We studied them at that point. We didn't know that there were different. CANNABINOID profiles we didn't didn't know how to dose it We just did not know a lot. We just put this bottle of CBD in front of a hundred patients And said take a half a dropper twice a day and that should last in thirty days and now come back and tell us what happens and we follow them over about a three month period of time so with not even much knowledge we Able to gain so much insight. Now's a pain physician. We were looking for a pain reduction and of them. Not Needing their opioids And what we found on our initial survey is there. Pain did not affect their pain whatsoever. but what we found or was number one. They slept so much better interesting. He came back other sleep. Went from about four four and a half hours to six hours a night and they started reporting that they were dreaming though so we set. Gosh this is good. You're sleeping better. You're dreaming you're getting more restful sleep deep someone who's got a chronic medical condition. This is very valuable to give you that a rejuvenation of that you need in order to face the next day With your continued chronic condition. The second thing they came to us and told us is that they're anxiety level was less that they were less anxious in. They found that when they were having an anxiety flare instead of reaching for alcohol or Benzodiazepine which we know those plus narcotic will equals death? They were reaching the battle hymn the very quickly they realized if they took other tincture within twenty thirty minutes their prices was starting to dissipate. And so we saw this as risk reduction. Yeah Yeah Yeah exactly. So we can protect our patients out. This is a wonderful reason to continue to pursue those. Yeah and that actually echoes a lot of what I've heard from other physicians and nurses. That have talked to that. Sometimes the therapeutic response you get from canvas product isn't necessarily a direct reduction of the symptoms that you're necessarily targeting but Hits other symptoms that accompany that problem that over time are likely to have a positive effect on the core issue that you're trying to treat as well is it's interesting to hear about People people starting to dream again so that indicates that REMM cycles must be being established for anybody. That's sort of unaware have chronic pain. Wake you up constantly throughout the night and so it's hard for your body. Hit actually sink into the. You know that that depressed and to these rim cycles where you'd really Be Having having you know more lucid dreaming and that sort of more intense dreams And so that super fascinating and there's a lot of debate out there right now about how. CBD Canvas Broadly Affect Sleep is there are mixed voices about that and especially when THC's involves so it's interesting to hear from your perspective and a place that is not dealing with thc that you're seeing positive outcomes with sleep 'cause in areas where they are working with thc it's not what has straightforward. Is that because T- can actually interrupt rim cycles and end. It depends person a person of course to we also so saw that initial observational study. The patients came back instead. They were hopeful and for it. I is perplexed us You know we did. It's a literature. Search found that yes. D- Aachen affects. Serotonin Osso we thought. This was a mild anti depressant effect But over the course of of these last years we realized it's more than that it's neurogenesis it's neuro plasticity. These patients brains. Were starting to grow into win. Your brain starts to develop new luke pathways you all of a sudden have hope you don't patients who are in pain. Chronic pain I think have a form of PTSD you know and they just can't. There's just stock. They don't know life is going to be like this the rest of their life. It's never going to get better kinda stuck in this. RUT IN CD allowed them to have hope in that hope of translated into a lot of positive things in our clinic before our waiting room was it was awful as miserable place to be ENSO's very depressing But all of a sudden replaying reggae music people are talking to each other and sharing. Their experiences really changed our atmosphere of our clinics.

Journey to $100 Million
The Power of Weekly Management Lunch Meetings
"Hey, everybody. It's Eric one of the things that we have learned over the course of the last year is that is super important for different levels of the organization to communicate on a regular basis. One of the things that we instilled very quickly after learning. This was the daily huddle every single day the entire team meets at nine seventeen for a daily meeting where we talk about what you did yesterday. And what's going on today? Another aspect of communications is that the executive team needs to communicate on a regular basis in particular weekly. So the executive team here is myself, and Kevin we are the partners of the company, and we drive a lot of the strategy and businesses that happened here, and we are two separate people with two different backgrounds. And we, you know, unless we try really hard. We could have different opinions and it. It could lead to problems. And so it's very important that the two of us have a weekly touch point, which we call the management launch or partner lunch. Once a week. We get together for lunch and his on Wednesdays, and we keep it really low key. We don't make a big deal out of it. But we do out to lunch, and we go to our favorite diner, which is right down the street. It's denny's. We love going to Denny's for a couple of different reasons. One I guess that. It's right down the street. It's super closest like two minutes away, which means that we're not spending a lot of time figuring out where we're going if we want to go different place every week driving twenty thirty minutes to get there things like that. That's all out the window. We go to the same place every single time. Since we show up once a week, we've gotten to know the staff really, well, AGA is our server she knows exactly what we like to order when we sit down should brings us water, and she brings us coffee because that's what we order every time. So we have a ritual. So we go to Denny's. We talked to iza we get our coffee, and our water we order, whatever we want and we're back in the office, hopefully within an hour sometimes a little bit longer. But it's at this point, not just the partner lunch is the ritual of getting together and spending an hour to an hour and a half just talking to one another. And these are oppa -tunities for us to do all sorts of things like strategize talk about what's been happening in the business talk about our visions, and sometimes frankly, clear the air with each other. Like, I said before we are two different people with different backgrounds and two different tendencies. And sometimes we have friction and we. We need to clear the decks, right? We need to say, what's on our mind. We need to tell the other personal we're thinking and just get it out and work through it. So that we don't harbor any animosity with one another. We we have to clear the deck, and we need to start fresh and his management lunch. Does that every single week if you're working with a partner in particular or management team, or if there are people at your level that you need to interact with on a regular basis? I certainly recommend this. This is a really really good tool if not very expensive from a business expense standpoint, you can write off the lunches as well. But even if you couldn't it's totally worth it. We spend thirty bucks and we spend an hour strategizing with each other. And making sure that we are literally on the same page and a lot of times we will come out with written notes about what we're going to do based on that lunch. Thirty dollars well-spent every single time. I'll do it every time.

Clark Howard
Gunman kills four at video game tournament in Florida
"Technology reporter. Work with somebody like twenty three and me One Codified in just a file on your. Computer it can go in lots of different. Places so once the data is, out it's really hard to keep control of. It I think people should be careful about what they share and be confident that they're putting out there that they're okay with having on the global face Janis news Hello