Bruce Lee died in the summer of 1973 at just 32, leaving behind a filmography of films he made in Hong Kong and popular worldwide, including in the United States.
Lee’s most famous film, Enter the Dragon, was released shortly after his death, while the unfinished Game of Death was finally completed and released five years later. However, after that, both Lee and the martial arts genre remained hugely popular (Justin Lin directed a mockumentary, Finishing the Game, about the completion of the latter film.
Enumerative Versus Analytic Studies
2024-12-04
The distinction between enumerative and analytic studies is extremely important in the design and analysis of either complete counts or samples. In both types of study the ultimate aim is to provide a rational basis for action. A problem exists, and something is to be done about it. In the enumerative problem something is to be done to some portion of the contents of the bowl, regardless of the reasons why that portion is so large or small.
Hello folks, if you are preparing for Java Developer interviews along with Spring Boot, and Microservices, you should also prepare about things like messaging brokers, Kafka, RabbitMQ, and ActiveMQ like what is the difference between Kafka, RabbitMQ, and ActiveMQ?, which is also one of the popular questions on Java interviews.
Messaging systems play a crucial role in modern distributed architectures, where applications and services communicate with each other over a network.
The season is coming to a close, and David gives us his final pick: Masakazu Ishiguro’s Heavenly Delusion. Heavenly Delusion is a sci-fi (comedy?) manga that has a huge fan-following, thanks to its great art and story AND an anime too! But will that be enough to make the Mangasplaining crew fans of it too? Listen on and find out!
Listen and Subscribe to the Podcast:
Google | Apple | Stitcher | RedCircle | Amazon | Radio Public | PocketCast | Spotify
The one and only Larry Wilmore closes out Season 2 of the Free Black Thought podcast. The man who should require little introduction as Emmy Award winner and has been a television producer, actor, comedian, and writer for more than 25 years. He can currently be heard as host of Larry Wilmore: Black on the Air on The Ringer Podcast Network.
ncG1vNJzZmieopqyo7jAnKKtoJ%2BqtKnAjaysm6uklrCsesKopGioX5q9boGRZpmlmZOgerC6jK2fnmWRnr9uuMCrqbJlp565rrvRng%3D%3D
Episode 003: Mona Lisa Overdrive
2024-12-04
Welcome to the third Wolf Podcast.
Today I’m talking with
, the Founder of Broken River Books. Find him at his substack and on tiktok at @brbjdo. He’s also the author of a number of books, including the cyberpunk series Gods Fare No Better. One of my favorite writers and a long time friend.We’re talking William Gibson’s Mona Lisa Overdrive, the final book in the Sprawl trilogy. It functions as a sequel to both Neuromancer and Count Zero, picking up characters from both and throwing them into a narrative together.
This week in Episode 005, we have guest Nikole Mitchell in a conversation that took some wild turns and then went deep in myriad ways.
Nikole is a woman who went from being a pastor in Minnesota to a life coach and — here’s the real twist — OnlyFans model making millions in Southern California.
Along the way she upended her entire life as a wife and mother, ultimately finding a lot of healing from past trauma in her new line of work, healing that she had at first sought in the church and that she now offers others, considering her work a ministry as much as it is entertainment.
Episode 28. Steven D. Levitt (Freakonomics co-author and University of Chicago Economics Professor)
2024-12-04
Steven D. Levitt (Freakonomics co-author and University of Chicago Economics Professor) joins the podcast to discuss his career, including being an early leader in applied microeconomics and how the Freakonomics media empire got started, along with his recent decision to retire from academic economics. (Listen to full podcast episode here at the New Books Network)
Jon: “This is the Capitalism and Freedom in the 21st Century podcast, where we talk about economics, markets, and public policy.
Writer, publisher, and over all nice guy, Chris Reda breaks down his new line of comics and graphic novels that are gracing the shelves of shops across the North America. Based in the cinematic dreamland of L.A., California. Chris, along with with his partner in print Mason Mendoza, founded Critical Entertainment to bring their own unique stories to the printed page.
Bucking the all too usual restrictions of traditional production ( for context, the usual floppy issue rolls in conservatively at a monthly 22 page release that’s formatted in a standard print size), Critical Entertainment lets the story dictate the print needs of the individual story.