ears Marking VE Day 75 years on By thebirminghampress.com Published On :: Wed, 29 Apr 2020 07:00:34 +0000 National Military Service Museums to bring nation together in Virtual VE Day Festival. Full Article Community Local history RAF Museum Cosford VE Day 75
ears Calling time after thirty two years By thebirminghampress.com Published On :: Sun, 22 Mar 2020 23:59:38 +0000 Doorman finally steps down from Broad Street. Full Article Business Eating out Employment Tourism Broad Street John Maughan Revolution Westside BID
ears Survey reveals fears for future of Birmingham nightlife By thebirminghampress.com Published On :: Thu, 23 Apr 2020 11:43:48 +0000 Southside BID calls on government to #RaiseTheBar. Full Article Attractions Business Community Eating out Employment Food and drink Music Ming Moon Missing Snobs Southside Wing Wah
ears Neural 62, Spiked Pieces, Celebrating 25 years of Neural By neural.it Published On :: Thu, 30 May 2019 09:23:52 +0000 Issue #62 Winter 2018 ISSN: 2037-108X The new Neural issue (co-edited with Rachel O’Dwyer) is hot from the press. Subscribe now! Because only subscribers will get a free extra 25th anniversary cover sticker. You can also subscribe to the magazine Digital Edition accessing → Full Article
ears Lauren Leander, Phoenix ICU nurse, appears on 'The View,' shares details of counterprotest at coronavirus rally By rssfeeds.azcentral.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 14:53:13 +0000 Leander, through video conference, told the hosts about the rally at the Capitol where she stood, arms crossed, amid rally attendees. Full Article
ears Borosil group eyes Rs 2,000-crore turnover in 5 years By retail.economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2019-11-18T07:56:54+05:30 The Borosil group, which comprises two listed entities Borosil Glass Works Ltd and Gujarat Borosil Ltd, expects to attain a combined turnover of around Rs 1,000 crore in the current financial year and from there, it hopes that it has "potential" to double it in the next 4-5 years. Full Article
ears TTK Prestige aims to double turnover in 5 years By retail.economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2019-12-07T14:51:21+05:30 Besides, TTK Prestige has plans to expand its distribution network further and expects higher sales from fast-growing online channels. Full Article
ears JSW Paints aims at Rs 2,000 crore revenue over three years By retail.economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2019-05-03T11:56:18+05:30 The Sajjan Jindal-led JSW group’s JSW Paints entered the highly competitive paints industry in India with an initial investment of Rs 600 crore. Full Article
ears We are aiming for Rs 3,000 crore in five years: MD Indigo Paints By retail.economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2019-12-09T08:17:55+05:30 From Rs 12 crore in FY09, the Pune-headquartered company, which is gunning for an IPO, closed FY19 with revenue of Rs 600 crore. Here Jalan talks to TOI about his plans for the company. Full Article
ears Consumption would be the alpha generator in next 5 years: Siddharth Parekh, Paragon Partners By retail.economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2019-10-16T14:55:59+05:30 There is a lot of deal activity because businesses are looking for capital. Full Article
ears Bata to add 500 more stores in next 5 years on franchise model By retail.economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2019-10-17T15:09:49+05:30 Bata has already identified 180 such markets in smaller cities pan-India. Full Article
ears Boutique Living to be a Rs 500 cr brand in 5 years: Asim Dalal, MD, Indo Count By retail.economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2016-08-24T16:52:07+05:30 The Rs.13000 crore domestic bed linen market is expected to be more than Rs 19,000 cr market by 2021 and there is a scope for us to explore the domestic market at this point in time. Full Article
ears Looking to double the number of retailers to 4K in two years: Rahul Gautam, MD, Sheela Foam By retail.economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2016-12-09T14:57:16+05:30 "We have 2,200 exclusive dealers or retailers and therefore what has worked well for us is this exclusive chain right from manufacturing to the consumer." Full Article
ears HSIL eyes Rs 700 crore sales from consumer biz in 4-5 years By retail.economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2017-11-06T08:15:02+05:30 The company is present in built-in kitchen appliances and claims to be the number three brand in the country. Full Article
ears Noida: No orders for next 2 years, say garment exporters By retail.economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-04-28T12:18:11+05:30 According to exporters, payments of previous dispatches are also withheld by importers in the UK and Europe. These exporters employ about 50,000 people, and 60% of them are women engaged in tailoring, thread-cutting and other hands-on work. Full Article
ears Mahesh Bhupathi's Sports365 aims to be Rs 1,000-cr firm in 5 years By retail.economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2015-11-28T09:00:42+05:30 Sports365 is also supported by icons as Yuvraj Singh, Deepika Pallikal and Bhupathi's wife Lara Dutta and is partnering with foreign sports brands as their exclusive partners in India. Full Article
ears How The Approval Of The Birth Control Pill 60 Years Ago Helped Change Lives By www.northernpublicradio.org Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 14:35:44 +0000 Updated at 9:44 a.m. ET As a young woman growing up in a poor farming community in Virginia in the 1940 and '50s, with little information about sex or contraception, sexuality was a frightening thing for Carole Cato and her female friends. "We lived in constant fear, I mean all of us," she said. "It was like a tightrope. always wondering, is this going to be the time [I get pregnant]?" Cato, 78, now lives in Columbia, S.C. She grew up in the years before the birth control pill was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, on May 9, 1960. She said teenage girls in her community were told very little about how their bodies worked. "I was very fortunate; I did not get pregnant, but a lot of my friends did. And of course, they just got married and went into their little farmhouses," she said. "But I just felt I just had to get out." At 23, Cato married a widower who already had seven children. They decided seven was enough. By that time, Cato said, the pill allowed the couple to Full Article
ears Sears Hometown Stores In Sterling, Plano Will Be Closed By www.northernpublicradio.org Published On :: Mon, 11 Jun 2018 15:24:04 +0000 Sears Hometown Stores in Sterling, Plano and Moline will be closing during the current business quarter, the company announced over the weekend. The websites for all three stores already are announcing “Store in liquidation” sales. They are among “90 to 100” underperforming Sears Hometown locations remaining after 21 stores were closed in the previous quarter, President and Chief Executive Officer Will Powell said in the quarterly earnings announcement. Sears Hometown and Outlet Stores, Inc. , was spun off from Sears Holdings Corp. in 2012. Most of the 882 Sears Hometown locations are independently owned and operated, offering Sears brands like Kenmore and Craftsman as well as other national brands. The Sterling and Plano stores both are owned by Sean Austin, according to Plano Sears Hometown Store Manager Redell Morgan. He said the last day for the Plano store will be July 23. Morgan said he is the only full-time employee at the Plano location, which has six part-time employees. The Full Article
ears COVID-19 fears shake Florida’s consumer sentiment with steep drop in March By Published On :: Fri, 03 Apr 2020 16:44:00 Full Article life
ears Pollok gaffer MacKinnon fears lockdown will leave Juniors in trouble By www.glasgowtimes.co.uk Published On :: Mon, 16 Mar 2020 05:00:00 +0000 THE indefinite lockdown of Scottish football is set to plunge the Junior game into a crisis like never before, according to Pollok manager Murdie MacKinnon. Full Article
ears Looking back at Apollo 13: 50 years on By www.glasgowtimes.co.uk Published On :: Fri, 10 Apr 2020 05:00:00 +0100 Today marks the 50th anniversary of the launch of one of the most dramatic missions in human spaceflight: Apollo 13. Full Article
ears Letters: Fears over lockdown if rest of UK eases measures before Scotland By www.glasgowtimes.co.uk Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 16:30:00 +0100 I’M very worried about what’s going to happen after the weekend when the rest of the UK begins to ease lockdown, while Scotland chooses not to. Full Article
ears City Visions: ‘Fight of the Century’ celebrates 100 years of the ACLU By www.kalw.org Published On :: Mon, 09 Mar 2020 13:05:00 +0000 This year marks the 100th birthday of the American Civil Liberties Union, an organization dedicated to preserving the rights and freedoms guaranteed by our Constitution. Host Grace Won celebrates this historic event with the ACLU of Northern California, as well as Michael Chabon and Ayelet Waldman, local authors and the editors of the new book, Fight of the Century: Writers Reflect on 100 Years of Landmark ACLU Cases. Full Article
ears How The Approval Of The Birth Control Pill 60 Years Ago Helped Change Lives By www.kosu.org Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 13:45:00 +0000 Updated at 9:44 a.m. ET As a young woman growing up in a poor farming community in Virginia in the 1940 and '50s, with little information about sex or contraception, sexuality was a frightening thing for Carole Cato and her female friends. "We lived in constant fear, I mean all of us," she said. "It was like a tightrope. always wondering, is this going to be the time [I get pregnant]?" Cato, 78, now lives in Columbia, S.C. She grew up in the years before the birth control pill was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, on May 9, 1960. She said teenage girls in her community were told very little about how their bodies worked. "I was very fortunate; I did not get pregnant, but a lot of my friends did. And of course, they just got married and went into their little farmhouses," she said. "But I just felt I just had to get out." At 23, Cato married a widower who already had seven children. They decided seven was enough. By that time, Cato said, the pill allowed the couple to Full Article
ears How The Approval Of The Birth Control Pill 60 Years Ago Helped Change Lives By www.iowapublicradio.org Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 13:45:00 +0000 Updated at 9:44 a.m. ET As a young woman growing up in a poor farming community in Virginia in the 1940 and '50s, with little information about sex or contraception, sexuality was a frightening thing for Carole Cato and her female friends. "We lived in constant fear, I mean all of us," she said. "It was like a tightrope. always wondering, is this going to be the time [I get pregnant]?" Cato, 78, now lives in Columbia, S.C. She grew up in the years before the birth control pill was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, on May 9, 1960. She said teenage girls in her community were told very little about how their bodies worked. "I was very fortunate; I did not get pregnant, but a lot of my friends did. And of course, they just got married and went into their little farmhouses," she said. "But I just felt I just had to get out." At 23, Cato married a widower who already had seven children. They decided seven was enough. By that time, Cato said, the pill allowed the couple to Full Article
ears Overcome the Fears and Finally Take Action on Your Podcast with Stop Podcrastination By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Sat, 28 Sep 2019 22:00:30 +0000 It takes a lot of guts—audacity!—to podcast. But sometimes, we get and get so focused on the process without ever actually podcasting. Full Article Podcasting Video Tips how to podcast Podcast Movement 2019 podcrastinating procrastination
ears 10 Years or Life By beta.prx.org Published On :: Sat, 06 Oct 2018 07:00:00 -0000 An accused man faces an impossible choice in New Orleans. Plus, a new district attorney in Philadelphia sets out to undo the work of those who came before him. From reporters Eve Abrams and Laura Starecheski, and editor Catherine Winter. Full Article Court Crime Criminal DA District Attorney Louisiana Marijuana New Orleans News & Politics Philadelphia Prosecutor Society & Culture Tough on Crime True Crime WHYY WWNO
ears Five Years on Nauru By beta.prx.org Published On :: Sat, 16 Feb 2019 08:00:44 -0000 Children refusing to eat, talk, or even drink water. A surreal mental illness sweeps across families stuck in an Australian immigrant detention camp on a tiny island nation in the South Pacific. Don’t miss out on the next big story. Get the Weekly Reveal newsletter today. Full Article ABC ABC Radio Asylum Australia Australian Broadcasting Corporation Children Documentary Donald Trump Family Separation Health Immigration Island Mental Health Middle East Migrants News & Politics Obama Oceania Olivia Rousset Pacific Refugee Refugee Crisis Southeast Asia Trump
ears Six Years Separated By beta.prx.org Published On :: Sat, 15 Feb 2020 08:00:00 -0000 An asylum-seeking migrant girl is separated from her family at the border and enters U.S. custody at 10 years old. Now, she’s 17 and still in a shelter, even though her family is ready to take her in. They just can’t find her. They turn to reporter Aura Bogado for help. We then revisit our 2019 investigation into an immigration judge who rejected nearly every asylum case that came before her. Finally, we follow a transgender woman as she tries to claim asylum Don’t miss out on the next big story. Get the Weekly Reveal newsletter today. Full Article Al Letson NPR Al Letson Podcast CIR podcast Center for Investigative Reporting podcast Honduras ICE Investigative Reporting News & Politics Obama family separation Reveal NPR Reveal News Reveal Radio The Center for Investigative Reporting podcast Trump family separation asylum seekers border separation child asylum seekers detention family separation immigration
ears Issues Of The Environment: Earth Day Celebrates 50 Years! Part One - Origins In Ann Arbor By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Wed, 22 Apr 2020 11:36:08 +0000 Today marks the 50th anniversary of Earth Day. A group of environmentally aware and concerned students at the University of Michigan formed the group ENACT during a rather heady time on campus in 1969. Through activity and organization, it led to the first-ever Earth Day in 1970. In Part 1 of a special, Earth Day edition of "Issues of the Environment," WEMU's David Fair caught up with David Allan to look back at the five decades since that event. Allan was a founding member and co-chair of ENACT and an organizer for the first Earth Day. Full Article
ears Issues Of The Environment: Earth Day Celebrates 50 Years! Part 2 - Looking Ahead During COVID-19 By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Wed, 22 Apr 2020 11:41:53 +0000 Today marks the 50th Earth Day in the United States, which traces its origins to Ann Arbor. Normally, there would have been a huge celebration, but the coronavirus pandemic has put a halt to that. For Part 2 of a special, Earth Day edition of "Issues of the Environment," WEMU's David Fair spoke with Jonathan Overpeck, dean of the U-M School for Environment and Sustainability. They discuss an online celebration of Earth Day and look ahead to what the future may hold. Full Article
ears Ten Years After “The New Jim Crow” By www.wnyc.org Published On :: Mon, 20 Jan 2020 12:00:00 -0500 The United States has the largest prison population in the world. But, until the publication of Michelle Alexander’s book “The New Jim Crow,” in 2010, most people didn’t use the term mass incarceration, or consider the practice a social-justice issue. Alexander argued that the increasing imprisonment of black and brown men—through rising arrest rates and longer sentences—was not merely a response to crime but a system of racial control. “The drug war was in part a politically motivated strategy, a backlash to the civil-rights movement, but it was also a reflection of conscious and unconscious biases fuelled by media portrayals of drug users,” Alexander tells David Remnick. “Those racial stereotypes were resonant of the same stereotypes of slaves and folks during the Jim Crow era.” Full Article books history life mass_incarceration michelle_alexander politics prison_reform the_new_jim_crow
ears Issues Of The Environment: Celebrating 25 Years Of Bringing Environmental Information To You By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Wed, 01 Jan 2020 11:50:00 +0000 Every week, for a quarter of a century now, WEMU's David Fair has delivered "Issues of the Environment," which has brought information involving our community's environmental health. He has welcomed numerous guests to discuss matters, such as managing food waste, monitoring climate change, and fighting hazardous chemicals like PFAS. This week, David welcomes Washtenaw County water resources commissioner Evan Pratt for a look back at 25 years of "Issues of the Environment." Full Article
ears Issues Of The Environment: Earth Day Celebrates 50 Years! Part One - Origins In Ann Arbor By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Wed, 22 Apr 2020 11:36:08 +0000 Today marks the 50th anniversary of Earth Day. A group of environmentally aware and concerned students at the University of Michigan formed the group ENACT during a rather heady time on campus in 1969. Through activity and organization, it led to the first-ever Earth Day in 1970. In Part 1 of a special, Earth Day edition of "Issues of the Environment," WEMU's David Fair caught up with David Allan to look back at the five decades since that event. Allan was a founding member and co-chair of ENACT and an organizer for the first Earth Day. Full Article
ears Issues Of The Environment: Earth Day Celebrates 50 Years! Part 2 - Looking Ahead During COVID-19 By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Wed, 22 Apr 2020 11:41:53 +0000 Today marks the 50th Earth Day in the United States, which traces its origins to Ann Arbor. Normally, there would have been a huge celebration, but the coronavirus pandemic has put a halt to that. For Part 2 of a special, Earth Day edition of "Issues of the Environment," WEMU's David Fair spoke with Jonathan Overpeck, dean of the U-M School for Environment and Sustainability. They discuss an online celebration of Earth Day and look ahead to what the future may hold. Full Article
ears How The Approval Of The Birth Control Pill 60 Years Ago Helped Change Lives By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 11:59:00 +0000 Updated at 9:44 a.m. ET As a young woman growing up in a poor farming community in Virginia in the 1940 and '50s, with little information about sex or contraception, sexuality was a frightening thing for Carole Cato and her female friends. "We lived in constant fear, I mean all of us," she said. "It was like a tightrope. always wondering, is this going to be the time [I get pregnant]?" Cato, 78, now lives in Columbia, S.C. She grew up in the years before the birth control pill was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, on May 9, 1960. She said teenage girls in her community were told very little about how their bodies worked. "I was very fortunate; I did not get pregnant, but a lot of my friends did. And of course, they just got married and went into their little farmhouses," she said. "But I just felt I just had to get out." At 23, Cato married a widower who already had seven children. They decided seven was enough. By that time, Cato said, the pill allowed the couple to Full Article
ears South Carolina Sheriff's Candidate: I Wore Blackface 10 Years Ago By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Thu, 10 Oct 2019 15:35:00 +0000 The nearly four-minute campaign ad begins with scenery of a small town sheriff's race in the South. A camouflage fishing boat winds down a picturesque waterway. The talk from a front porch rocking chair is of hunting, Christian values and guns. Then, more than halfway through the video, Craig Stivender, a Republican candidate for sheriff in Colleton County, S.C., reveals a picture of himself in blackface with his arm around an African American woman. "To those of you who may be upset, I understand your disappointment," he says in the video. Stivender, who is currently a fireman in the rural community just west of Charleston, goes on to explain the photograph was taken at a Halloween party for law enforcement nearly a decade ago. He says he released the picture to begin his campaign with full transparency. The election is in November 2020. "Basically if I'm going to run on honesty and integrity, I'm willing to put out things bad about me," he said in a telephone interview. Stivender Full Article
ears Steve Martin On His Years As A Comic — And Walking Away From Stand-Up By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 17:52:00 +0000 DAVID BIANCULLI, HOST: This is FRESH AIR. I'm David Bianculli, editor of the website TV Worth Watching, sitting in for Terry Gross. Today on FRESH AIR, one of our favorite interviews from our archive - Terry's conversation with comedian, actor and writer Steve Martin. He's also an accomplished bluegrass musician and has been posting occasional videos on social media playing banjo in the woods. Last month he visited CBS's "The Late Show" with Stephen Colbert in a special socially distanced comedy bit with Colbert sequestered inside his house and Martin with his guitar, strolling in a forest, determined to sing a song that Colbert is just as determined not to hear. (SOUNDBITE OF TV SHOW, "THE LATE SHOW") STEPHEN COLBERT: So we go now live to Steve Martin in the middle of the woods. Hi, Steve. STEVE MARTIN: Hey, Stephen. Thanks for having me on. COLBERT: Well, Steve, you're certainly welcome. MARTIN: You know, Stephen, I was thinking that something we as people need to remember right now Full Article
ears 10 Years Of Spectacular U.S. Job Growth Nearly Wiped Out In 4 Weeks By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Thu, 16 Apr 2020 13:02:00 +0000 Updated at 8:43 a.m. ET The number of people filing for unemployment climbed by another 5.2 million last week as the toll of the nation's economic dive amid the pandemic continues to mount. That number is down from the revised 6.6 million in the week that ended April 4, the Labor Department said . But in the past four weeks, a total of 22 million have filed jobless claims — nearly wiping out all the job gains since the Great Recession. The dramatic reversal followed a decade of spectacular growth in jobs that brought the unemployment rate to near 50-year lows along with record low jobless rates for blacks and Hispanics. Now the job market is on its knees. Don't see the graphic above? Click here. The unemployment rate is expected to surge in coming months , with many full-time workers pushed into part-time jobs or not working at all. The economy lost about 700,000 jobs in March — ending 113 straight months of increases. And overall job losses are likely to be 10 to 20 times that big in Full Article
ears How The Approval Of The Birth Control Pill 60 Years Ago Helped Change Lives By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 11:59:00 +0000 Updated at 9:44 a.m. ET As a young woman growing up in a poor farming community in Virginia in the 1940 and '50s, with little information about sex or contraception, sexuality was a frightening thing for Carole Cato and her female friends. "We lived in constant fear, I mean all of us," she said. "It was like a tightrope. always wondering, is this going to be the time [I get pregnant]?" Cato, 78, now lives in Columbia, S.C. She grew up in the years before the birth control pill was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, on May 9, 1960. She said teenage girls in her community were told very little about how their bodies worked. "I was very fortunate; I did not get pregnant, but a lot of my friends did. And of course, they just got married and went into their little farmhouses," she said. "But I just felt I just had to get out." At 23, Cato married a widower who already had seven children. They decided seven was enough. By that time, Cato said, the pill allowed the couple to Full Article
ears A Few Schools Reopen, But Remote Learning Could Go On For Years In U.S. By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 09:01:00 +0000 May 7 is the date that Montana Gov. Steve Bullock, a Democrat, declared it was safe to open up schools. The state has had fewer than 500 reported cases of the coronavirus as of this week. But according to the state's Office of Public Instruction, just a few school districts in small towns have taken the governor up on the offer. That gap — between a state executive proclaiming schools OK to open and the reality of tiny groups of students gathering in just a few schools — shows the logistical challenges educators and state officials around the country face in any decision to reopen. Willow Creek School in Three Forks, Mont., is opening its doors and expects a few dozen of its 56 students to show up. Troy, a northwestern Montana town, is holding limited and voluntary "study hall" visits, focusing on special education students, as well as some outdoor activities. The town of Glasgow says it will open its schools on a limited basis to students without devices. Libby, a town of fewer than 3 Full Article
ears Audience Q&A: Being Black At UT 63 Years After Integration By kutpodcasts.org Published On :: Fri, 28 Feb 2020 17:58:56 +0000 400 years ago, a group of 20 enslaved Africans were brought to the shores of the Chesapeake Bay for the express purpose of working the land, thus beginning one of the most shameful periods in America’s history. Although Diversity and Inclusion have become a mission of so many academic and corporate entities, the vestiges of... Full Article Views and Brews integration race UT ya'ke smith
ears Part I: Being Black at UT 63 Years After Integration By kutpodcasts.org Published On :: Fri, 28 Feb 2020 18:53:09 +0000 400 years ago, a group of 20 enslaved Africans were brought to the shores of the Chesapeake Bay for the express purpose of working the land, thus beginning one of the most shameful periods in America’s history. Although Diversity and Inclusion have become a mission of so many academic and corporate entities, the vestiges of... Full Article Views and Brews integration race UT ya'ke smith
ears Episode 0x18: 12 Years of Compliance: A Historical Perspective By faif.us Published On :: Tue, 13 Sep 2011 09:58:00 -0400 Bradley and Karen play a speech recording of Bradley's presentation at OSCON 2011, entitled 12 Years of FLOSS License Compliance: A Historical Perspective. Show Notes: Segment 0 (00:36) Bradley mentioned that time travel requires special verb tenses according to the Douglas Adams' book, The Restaurant at the End of the Universe. (01:48) Bradley gave a keynote at Ohio Linux Fest 2011 (01:58) Segment 1 (05:02) This segment is a recording of Bradley's OSCON 2011 talk, entitled 12 Years of Copyleft License Compliance: A Historical Perspective. The slides are available on Bradley's website so you can follow along during the talk if you like. There is a live denting identi.ca thread from Bradley's talk. (03:50) Bradley wrote a blog post about a minor GPL violation in the Emacs codebase. It has since been fixed. RMS mentioned the NeXT/Objective C GPL violation in his essay, Copyleft: Pragmatic Idealism. Segment 2 (52:35) Bradley will be speaking at the Google Summer of Code Mentor Summit 2011 and at LinuxCon Europe 2011. (55:05) Send feedback and comments on the cast to <oggcast@faif.us>. You can keep in touch with Free as in Freedom on our IRC channel, #faif on irc.freenode.net, and by following Conservancy on on Twitter and and FaiF on Twitter. Free as in Freedom is produced by Dan Lynch of danlynch.org. Theme music written and performed by Mike Tarantino with Charlie Paxson on drums. The content of this audcast, and the accompanying show notes and music are licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share-Alike 4.0 license (CC BY-SA 4.0). Full Article Technology
ears Stories With Bears By bestof.metafilter.com Published On :: Sun, 16 Feb 2020 14:38:53 GMT First Class Bear by Dai Lygad (cc by)Mr. Searles was the man who arrived to solve the problem of the Bear Who Had Not Bathed Before Hibernating in the Basement. True encounters with the Bear Whisperer. Full Article bear BearInTheBasement bears BearWhisperer SteveSearles WildlifeManagement
ears 284: ‘30 Years of TidBITS’, With Adam Engst By daringfireball.net Published On :: Fri, 8 May 2020 20:02:48 EDT Special guest Adam Engst joins the show to celebrate 30 years of TidBITS — the only publication going strong today that started as a weekly HyperCard stack. Full Article
ears 30 Years Later, Immigrants Shed Vietnam War's Burden By www.washingtonpost.com Published On :: Sun, 8 May 2005 19:03:50 GMT Thirty is now the median age of the 1.2 million people of Vietnamese heritage living in the United States. Thirty is young enough to be haunted by Vietnam, old enough to have created new lives. Full Article
ears RADIO: Radio host and All About Jazz Contributor Ed Blanco celebrates 13 years of Jazz Café on WDNA 88.9FM By news.allaboutjazz.com Published On :: 2020-04-30T16:45:38+00:00 Jazz radio host and All About Jazz contributor Ed Blanco, in May 2020 celebrates 13 years as producer and host of Jazz Café, an early Sunday morning jazz show on WDNA, 88.9FM in Miami, Florida... Full Article
ears Reopenings bring new cases in S. Korea, virus fears in Italy By www.seattletimes.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 21:30:48 -0700 ROME (AP) — South Korea’s capital closed down more than 2,100 bars and other nightspots Saturday because of a new cluster of coronavirus infections, Germany scrambled to contain fresh outbreaks at slaughterhouses, and Italian authorities worried that people were getting too friendly at cocktail hour during the country’s first weekend of eased restrictions. The new […] Full Article Business Health World
ears Technology’s had us ‘social distancing’ for years. Can our digital ‘lifeline’ get us through the coronavirus pandemic? By www.seattletimes.com Published On :: Thu, 16 Apr 2020 06:00:30 -0700 In some ways, we’ve been social distancing for years as more aspects of our social lives go digital. So now, we may be uniquely equipped (if not conditioned) to adapt our lives to stay-at-home orders. Full Article Life Lifestyle Technology Wellness