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IT Unplugged

M2 Technology

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Introducing "IT Unplugged" - your go-to podcast for all things IT, Cybersecurity, Business, and Technology! Join our experts as they break down complex topics into simple, easy-to-understand concepts. In each episode, we'll explore the ever-evolving digital landscape and provide practical insights to help your business navigate this exciting world. From cybersecurity best practices to the latest tech trends, we've got you covered. No IT jargon, no complicated explanations - just straightforw ...
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Join our hosts as they break down complex data into understandable insights, providing you with the knowledge to navigate our rapidly changing world. Tune in for a thoughtful, evidence-based discussion that bridges expert analysis with real-world implications, an SCZoomers Podcast Independent, moderated, timely, deep, gentle, clinical, global, and community conversations about things that matter. Breathe Easy, we go deep and lightly surface the big ideas. Curated, independent, moderated, tim ...
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Get ready to tune into the heart of innovation with Tech Pulse MMCOE – where campus spirit meets the frontiers of technology. Join voices from MMCOE’s vibrant community—students, faculty, and tech trailblazers—as we explore breakthrough projects, emerging trends, and the future of engineering. Where Campus Meets Cutting-Edge Tech. MMCOE Vision: To be a globally renowned institution through excellence in engineering education for holistic and sustainable development MMCOE Mission: M1: Empower ...
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Welcome to CashflowRemote.com — a next-generation platform built for people who want real skills, real income options, and real global freedom. We bring together Web3 and AI, high-value IT certifications, DeFi strategies connected to real-world commodities, and a practical roadmap for international living powered by crypto mining, trading, and digital entrepreneurship. The future isn’t one technology. It’s the integration of all of them. AI is reshaping how work gets done. Web3 is changing h ...
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Send us a text Read the companion essay What connects a Marshallese navigator who reads ocean swells with his stomach to a London taxi driver who holds 26,000 streets in memory? Both represent the absolute pinnacle of human spatial cognition—and both reveal what we're losing as we outsource navigation to GPS. In this episode, we explore fascinating…
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Send us a text Please have a look at our corresponding Substack episode. There is a moment, inevitable in any prolonged crisis, when you realize that the structures holding everything together were not built for this. They were built for normal times—for the manageable friction of everyday governance, the predictable choreography of departmental si…
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Send us a text 📖 Read the companion essay: https://helioxpodcast.substack.com/ Everything you thought you knew about dog breeds is wrong. For generations, we've been told that the Victorians created the incredible diversity of dog breeds through selective breeding in the 1800s. But groundbreaking new research reveals a stunning truth: more than hal…
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Send us a text Please take a look at our related Substack episode. What strikes me most about the unfolding narrative of governance failure during the pandemic is not the dramatic collapse of things, but the quiet, incremental erosion of readiness. Systems don't fail in a single catastrophic moment. They fail because a plan written in 2011 continue…
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Send us a text 📖 Read the companion essay What if your memories aren't stored files, but evolving geometric shapes in constant motion? This week, we're diving into a revolutionary kinetic model that treats memory as a dynamic system governed by mathematical forces—and reveals a stunning limit to human perception. We explore how every memory exists …
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Send us a text Please see the corresponding Substack for this episode We live in a world that has become extraordinarily good at forgetting. Not the forgetting of trauma—though we do that too—but the forgetting of lessons, the systematic erasure of hard-won knowledge the moment the immediate crisis passes. We're like Penelope at her loom, weaving u…
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Send us a text Read the companion article on Substack What if speaking multiple languages is one of the most powerful anti-aging interventions available—and it costs nothing? Today, we unpack a groundbreaking study from Nature Aging examining 86,149 people across 27 European countries. The findings are remarkable: multilingualism provides a 54% red…
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Send us a text Please see the corresponding SubStack episode We’re standing at the edge of something we’ve never faced before as a species. Not just climate change—we’ve known about that for decades—but the moment when Earth’s fundamental systems might simply flip into new states we can’t undo. Like flipping a light switch, except the switch contro…
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Send us a text 📖 Read the companion essay: https://helioxpodcast.substack.com What happens when we can grow miniature human organs in a dish? When brain organoids develop neural networks that fire electrical signals indistinguishable from premature newborns? When the distance between "cells in a dish" and "something that might experience suffering"…
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Send us a text Please see our corresponding Substack episode. There's a moment in every national crisis when a government must choose between managing decline and gambling on renewal. Canada's 2025 budget represents such a moment—not because it's perfect, but because it dares to imagine that the arithmetic of austerity isn't the only math that matt…
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Send us a text 📖 Read the companion essay: https://helioxpodcast.substack.com/ What if toxic leadership isn't just bad management—it's causing actual neurological damage? In this episode of Heliox, we go beyond the surface-level discussions of workplace culture to examine the actual neuroscience of trust. This isn't about feel-good platitudes. It's…
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Send us a text Please take a look at this corresponding Substack episode for references and the letter template. There's a particular kind of exhaustion that settles into societies after a crisis passes—or appears to pass. We've seen it before: the collective amnesia that follows disasters, the way urgent lessons fade into background noise as life …
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🎧 From Gears to Gigabytes – Conversations Across Generations | Tech Pulse MMCOE Podcast What happens when decades of wisdom meet the curiosity of tomorrow? In this special episode of Tech Pulse MMCOE, two inspiring professors from MMCOE, Pune — Dr. Manisha R. Dhage, Head of AI & DS, and Dr. Vikas Deulgoankar, Head of Mechanical Engineering — join s…
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Send us a text Read the article on Substack 11 million children in the U.S. are growing up with a parent with alcohol use disorder. Many will carry that trauma into adulthood—often repeating the same patterns. In this episode, we explore: 🧠 Why adult children of alcoholics are 4x more likely to develop their own AUD 🧠 The neurobiology of trauma: Ho…
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Send us a text Please take a look at the corresponding Substack episode. We're standing at a peculiar threshold in human history, one where the question isn't whether artificial intelligence will transform our world, but whether we're asking the right questions about that transformation before it's too late. I've been thinking about this a lot late…
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Send us a text Please see our corresponding Substack "Between, between" ( a Halloween-appropriate song ) 3:32 An introspective pop anthem of changes in our world and our perception at this time of year, vanquished by a cold ocean swim On CBC Early Edition in Vancouver, Stephen Quinn lost his voice this morning… which got me thinking about the origi…
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Send us a text Read the article on Substack For decades, the message seemed clear: a little alcohol might protect your brain. The famous U-shaped curve suggested light drinkers were safer than both heavy drinkers and non-drinkers when it came to dementia risk. But what if this reassuring narrative was built on a fundamental misreading of the scienc…
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Send us a text Please see the corresponding Substack episode When the orthodoxy says “it can’t be done,” someone inevitably proves them wrong—but only if they’re willing to fail fast, think sideways, and trust the data over doctrine. There’s a peculiar comfort in impossibility. When experts across an entire field agree that something fundamentally …
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Send us a text Read article on Substack Nobody thinks about wheat until there isn’t any. This is how empires crumble, how revolutions spark, how the comfortable illusion of stability shatters like kernels too heat-stressed to fill. We scroll past headlines about heat waves in Horeana, India—127 degrees Fahrenheit, we read, a number that doesn’t com…
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Send us a text Please see our corresponding Substack episode We taught cells to build their own quantum sensors. Evolution just became a tool for quantum engineering. Nature had the answer all along. There's something profoundly unsettling about the way we've organized knowledge. We've spent centuries building walls between disciplines—physics over…
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Send us a text Read article on Substack These dogs built mental filing systems where “things you pull” and “things you throw” became umbrella categories so robust they reorganized the dogs’ understanding of their entire toy collection. Function trumped identity. We do this too, of course. We reorganize our mental maps constantly based on use-contex…
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Send us a text Please take a look at the corresponding Substack episode. There's a moment in the quantum computing story that should make us all stop and stare at our coffee cups. A classical computer would need 20 million years to accomplish what a quantum system did in 15 minutes. Not twenty years. Not twenty thousand. Twenty million. Let me sit …
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Send us a text Read the article on Substack There's a psychological concept called "coercive control" that helps explain what happened here. It's the use of tactics designed to isolate, intimidate, and dominate another person, often through seemingly mundane interactions. Refusing to communicate about schedule changes, interpreting every gesture as…
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Send us a text Please take a look at the corresponding Substack episode. We've been looking in the wrong direction. While cardiologists scrutinize cholesterol panels and blood pressure readings, while researchers parse genetic markers and lifestyle factors, something vast and invisible has been influencing heart attack risk all along. It's 93 milli…
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Send us a text Read the article on Substack We are not minds that happen to have bodies—we are integrated systems where every movement carries information, every gesture contains intelligence, every stumble might be a prophecy. The researchers noted something else troubling: while grip strength—that macho measure of vitality we love to test at carn…
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Send us a text Please take a look at the corresponding Substack episode. The future of health might be less about restriction and more about strategic abundance We've been having the wrong conversation about food. For decades, the debate has endlessly revolved around what we should eliminate—meat, dairy, carbs, fat, gluten, sugar. We've turned eati…
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Send us a text Read the article on Substack The precision of this dating technique creates a kind of temporal vertigo. We're looking at eggs laid during a specific geological moment when climate change was reshaping the planet, when species were adapting and migrating and ultimately preparing—unknowingly—for extinction. The parallels to our own mom…
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Send us a text Please see the corresponding Substack for more information We've been trying to see our planet clearly for decades now, and we're still not very good at it. That's the uncomfortable truth behind Google DeepMind's recent release of AlphaEarth Foundations. This foundational AI model does something we desperately need but haven't quite …
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Send us a text Please see the corresponding Substack resource. We've been sold a particular story about progress. It goes something like this: breakthroughs happen suddenly, genius strikes like lightning, and revolution arrives in a single dramatic moment that changes everything overnight. The reality, as usual, is messier and more interesting. Con…
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Send us a text Read the article on Substack So instead, we'll continue to normalize the abnormal, to treat a 36% chronic illness rate as just another statistic, to let individuals bear the cost of collective failures. We'll keep moving, keep consuming, keep pretending that the bodies breaking down around us are isolated tragedies rather than predic…
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🎙 Tech Pulse MMCOE Series | Episode 1 Guests: Vice Principal Swati Deshmukh & Dean Dr. Pradip Krishna Tamkhade Two leaders. Two perspectives. One mission. 🚀 In this insightful conversation, Vice Principal Swati Deshmukh and Dean Dr. Pradip Krishna Tamkhade share their journey of building MMCOE from classrooms to culture — from 240 students in 2006 …
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Send us a text Please take a look at our corresponding Substack Episode. What if your immune system could borrow another person's cellular memories? Today's breakthrough made me cry—cancer patients clearing COVID in days 🧬✨ It’s a question that sounds like science fiction, but the answer is unfolding in real time through a therapy called TVGN489. I…
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Send us a text Read the article on Substack Another team of researchers traced the origins of inequality using what they call the "Energy Hierarchy Inequality Hypothesis." They discovered that inequality isn't just a side effect of human greed—it's the predictable result of an ancient algorithm we've been unconsciously following for thousands of ye…
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Send us a text Please see the corresponding Substack episode How the world's most powerful tech companies are treating AI safety like nuclear physics—and what that means for the rest of us The transformation is remarkable. Just a few years ago, AI safety discussions felt like philosophical thought experiments—distant concerns about robot overlords …
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Send us a text Read the article on Substack As global temperatures continue rising and our collective mood potentially shifts toward persistent negativity, what happens to us? How does chronic heat-induced irritability affect social cohesion? Political stability? Our capacity for the cooperation and empathy we'll desperately need to address climate…
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Wisconsin businesses face an unprecedented challenge: the labor force is shrinking while demand grows. In this episode of IT Unplugged, Brandon sits down with Laura Strickland, Partner Success Manager at Carex Consulting Group, to uncover the shocking reality behind Northeast Wisconsin's labor market. (Check out September's LMI Report: https://www.…
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Send us a text Please see the corresponding Substack episode How the engineering principles behind massive AI systems reveal timeless truths about cooperation, specialization, and the delicate art of working together There's something almost mystical about watching a thousand chips work in perfect harmony. Each one a specialized genius, none capabl…
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Send us a text Read the article on Substack Perhaps the most interesting revelation is that there's no statistical support for a single, overarching "general factor of personality"—no master trait that ties everything together. Instead, what emerged is a complex three-tiered hierarchy: 28 specific facets at the base, six broader traits in the middl…
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Send us a text See corresponding substack episode How a microscopic invader exposed our dangerous addiction to simple stories We love our neat packages. Lock and key. Good and evil. Us and them. Simple cause, simple effect. It's how we make sense of a world that often refuses to cooperate with our need for clarity. But what happens when reality ins…
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Send us a text Read the article on Substack In today's episode we discuss a research article investigating the impact of long-term musical training on age-related changes in brain activity, specifically during speech-in-noise perception. The study compares older musicians, older non-musicians, and young non-musicians using functional magnetic reson…
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Are remote IT workers really more productive, or is it just hype? In this episode of IT Unplugged, Brandon and Ben dive deep into the remote work debate that's dividing the tech industry. What You'll Learn: Why 18% of IT jobs are fully remote (and why that number might surprise you) Real cybersecurity risks of remote work - 75% of IT professionals …
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Send us a text See our corresponding substack. Your job might not exist in 5 years. But here's what will: your ability to adapt, create, and stay human. New episode explores the real future of work. 💼✨ More than half the workforce needs retraining or upskilling. Essentially, yes. The good news is that employers seem to recognize this. 85% say they …
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Send us a text Read (or listen to) the accompanying article on Substack In today's episode we explore the multifaceted nature of laughter, examining its philosophical underpinnings and neuroscientific mechanisms. It discusses classical theories of humor, such as superiority, relief, and incongruity, and how they relate to both voluntary and involun…
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Send us a text Read the corresponding Substack episode How Apple's latest announcements reveal a different path forward—one where surveillance capitalism isn't inevitable We're living through a moment that Douglas Adams predicted decades ago in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. Remember the Babel fish? That small, yellow creature you stick in y…
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Send us a text Read the article on Substack First, understand that risk is not binary. The dose makes the poison, but we don't know what the safe dose is for most of these chemicals, especially in combination, especially over decades of use. Second, recognize that "clean" is a marketing term, not a scientific one. Read ingredient lists. Understand …
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Send us a text See the corresponding Substack for more. We're living inside a linguistic conspiracy so elegant that we can't see it. Every time you say "time is running out" or describe someone as "looking up to" another person, you're not just using colourful language—you're revealing the secret architecture of human consciousness itself. This isn…
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Send us a text Read the article on Substack Our brains are actually running two distinct but interconnected learning systems when processing social interactions: Algorithm One: The Social Reward Tracker This system, centered in the brain's reward regions like the ventral striatum, focuses on the immediate question: "Am I in or out?" It's tracking w…
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Send us a text Please see the corresponding Substack episode 🧠 Just discovered AI that learns from "imperfect" data—like us humans do. Turns out the future isn't about perfect info, but smart partnerships. 🤖✨ The future of scientific AI isn't about feeding machines more perfect information. It's about teaching them to be better partners in the mess…
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Send us a text Read article on Substack Your outfit today? It's not fashion. It's a complex semiotic system broadcasting your values, tribal affiliations, economic status, and worldview to everyone you encounter. The researchers examining fashion as "a form of life" aren't being pretentious – they're recognizing that clothing functions as a dynamic…
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