One Piece Episode 190
- [Ian] Welcome to HubShot's Episode 190. In this episode, we chat about HubSpot's account-based marketing features. We start playing with crop-less workflows and test a neural network pad content creation tool. Plus, how to make your Google business listing awesome. You're listening to Asia-Pacific's number one Hubspot Focus Podcast where we discuss Hubspot tips, tricks, features, and strategies for growing yourselves and marketing results. My name is Ian Jacob from Search and Be Found and with me is Craig Bailey from XEN Systems. How are you, Craig?
One Piece Episode 190
- [Craig] That's right, we would love our listeners to connect with us. And thank you for the people who have connected since last episode. We love hearing from you guys and we appreciate everybody that does listen. So please connect with us on Linked In. We'd love to have a conversation with you.
- [Craig] Yeah, so I think this is another notch, or another nail in the coffin of that HubSpot SEO tool, frankly. I suspect it's not being used widely. It's probably not well understood. And for the people that would use it, they've probably got more complex requirements and here's a limitation. So you've got a pillar, let's call a pillar inbound marketing. A pillar and it has a few spokes. And one of the spokes might be content strategy for inbound marketing and that spoke points to your content strategy purview, place of content. You want to create another pillar called content strategy, right, and you just can't allocate that same piece of content to it. And so, how do you create multiple hubs and spokes that link to each other?
Edward: Well, they're not, but they're not going to war with the other nation. The other. The nation declared war, not the nation, the emperor, the empire, the squirrel empire declared war. On earth, on all the countries on earth. Cause they don't care to them. We're all the same. We're all, we're all people, we're all humans. And so the US says Hey, no one else is taking care of this. No one else has the technology to take care of this. But this fantastic four working with nasa, developed the technology to go after the scroll home world. And they went straight there and they negotiated a piece so that the scrolls, wouldn. Anyone on Earth again, it wasn't like they negotiated a piece just with America. They could have done that, but why would that, that would be a terrible thing for them to do. They said, Hey scrolls, go ahead and invade our planet as long as you leave this continent alone.
The preview trailer of this episode will show that Kawaki is trying to escape from the research facility. While Naruto is also showing interest in Kawaki to find out more about his powers and his connection to Kara. All of sudden the trailer ends with Kawaki entering a ven and trying to run away.
Kawaki is planning to escape from the research facility, so the episode is tilted as Escape and he still treats Kakei Sumire with enmity. Meanwhile. Sarutobi Konohamaru is already in Konohagakure village. While Naruto receives a report about the current mission. Naruto is showing interest in the connection between Kawaki and Kara and in order for Naruto to hear the Kawaki story first. He finally decides to head out towards the Advanced Technology Research Institute.
In the previous episode, Garo and Kawaki clashed their weapons while Garo comments that Kawaki is weak. Kawaki replies that he wants to show how strong he is. what they should do about the Leaf Shinobi Delta aks Koji. Koji replies that they will figure out something later, all they have to do is relax and watch. Kawaki seems to have the upper hand while they continue to blow each other but, the attacks are canceled.
Then I made what I hoped would be a good mental and emotional choice not to rush to the train, but to take another Uber. It seemed better than dragging my suitcase with the broken piece for several blocks and only cost a few dollars more than the Dinky Train.
A few weeks ago, I was a guest speaker at the LEAF Houseplant Festival, which took place at the Eco Village that's in Market Harborough, in the UK in the county of Leicestershire, and this was a great event, one of the first ones since the UK kind of started opening up after the pandemic. There were lots of great stores and the Windowsill Plants shop, which is in the Eco Village, was also open for business. Soil Ninja was there, which is an interesting UK-based business selling substrates for houseplants and it was interesting to have a chat to them and I gave a talk and that's what you're going to be hearing in this episode.
I'm sure that if you're a regular listener some of the things I'm going to say will be familiar to you, but if you're a new listener, well, this is a useful episode for boiling down the tenets of how I look after my houseplants and there's also some questions at the end which throw up a few interesting issues and I hope you get something out of that too.
Now, if you've listened to my biological control episode, you may be wondering what biological controls are available for aphids. I think we did mention these briefly in the episode? You can get lace wings. Their larvae eat a heck of a lot of aphids, so they're a good choice, or, indeed, ladybirds. These are popular solutions. The only thing is, obviously, in the home rather than in a greenhouse setting, are they going to land in the right place? Are they going to get right to the source of the problem and have you got enough plants to deem it worthwhile investing in this biological control? Those are the things to think about with biological controls. I'm not sure where I would put aphids on my sort of pest top five when it comes to houseplants. This spring I'd probably put them at the top because they have been really troublesome. I think the problem is that because I don't treat them with the seriousness that I treat, say, seeing some thrips, or some mealybugs, is they tend to then be allowed to proliferate and then I get distorted growth and the rest is rather annoying.
Jane: Thank you very much for coming and listen to me waffle on about plants! So I'm the host of a podcast called On The Ledge, which is a houseplant podcast and it's been going since February 2017, so I'm quite tired now! I've done 186 episodes and covered everything from James Wong's apartment, to soil science and everything in between. What I'm going to try to do in this talk is just give you a bit of a potted summary, if you'll excuse the pun, of my philosophy of looking after your plants and then I'm going to leave lots of time for questions. As I've just said, I do have, on this table, some lovely plants, but also some little tiny baby plants that I've brought with me. I'm just going to tell you what they are before we start. So if you ask a question, you can come and take a plant and you can come and take some On The Ledge stickers if you want to. The plants I've got here are... I've got a baby, baby, baby, very small Pachyphytum oviferum, which is a lovely Jelly Bean succulent. I've got two Saxifraga stolonifera, the Strawberry Saxifrage, which is one of my absolute favourite plants. I've got two very baby, oh no, actually one very baby Hoya serpens plant, which is a lovely foliage, tiny-leaved foliage plant and I've got a Begonia soli-mutata, which is another lovely foliage plant and I've got an Agave as well. So there's lots of choice there. At the end, if you ask a question, please feel free to come and take a plant. I will be eternally grateful and so will my husband! So that's who I am and I hope that things will come to your mind as you listen to me talk, but let's go with the slides. I don't have loads of slides because I don't really favour slides but please feel free to ask questions afterwards.
On the other end of the slide, we've got the Maidenhair Fern and it's the opposite end of the scale in that you've got this incredibly tracing-paper-thin leaf. I don't know if any of you have tried to grow Maidenhair Ferns, but they really do challenge a lot of houseplant growers because those very, very fragile leaves are used to having a nice moist environment, a constant, set level of moisture. They need moisture around the roots and they need moist air and some of us struggle to provide that. Because they're paper thin, those leaves can't store water in the same way that the cacti and succulent leaves can and, therefore... Actually, they do really well in a self-watering pot. That's what I'd really recommend, if you want to grow a Maidenhair Fern, or a lot of the other members of the fern family. A self-watering pot is a really good way to go. It doesn't have to be an expensive one, self-watering pots are quite pricey but you can just get a piece of nylon cord about 10 cm - 15 cm long, or a couple of pieces ideally, stick one end through the bottom of the pot and stick the other end into a vessel of water underneath the pot and you've got yourself a very simple self-watering pot.
Jane: That's a really good question. Well, I think that, for me, I just love seeing plants thrive and just boasting about it endlessly and being so pleased. It's actually quite disappointing because my family just don't care! I'll be, like, "Have you seen this amazing flower?" They're, like, "Yes, mum. Whatever!" but I just love having plants do cool stuff that I can then look at and observe. This Maranta that I grew, it was just so exciting to see these new leaves coming out of literally nothing and regrowing. So that, for me, is what's really exciting, is seeing those changes happen. I just love pottering about with them and learning more about them, which is probably good because I do spend a good proportion of my week talking about them and talking to experts. The other great thing about my podcast is if ever I've got a question about something, I can just literally go, "Oh, I'm just going to go and have a chat with somebody because it's my job!" which is very handy! So I do, sort of, often ask listeners to come up with ideas for episodes and they usually do because they want to learn about some specific type of plant. It's been a lifelong thing for me. I've been doing it since I was a little kid, so I can't imagine not doing it. I'm also very excited when I see people discovering houseplants at any age and it's enormous fun. Something can set you off. You go into a garage and you see a really abandoned-looking plant and you pick it up and you start tending to it and then, ten months later, you've got a jungle in your house! I'm sure some people can relate to that! So yes, it's a lovely thing to do and I'm really excited that more and more people are adopting the houseplant growing hobby. So yes, thank you for supporting this festival and, hopefully, getting more people on board with all of that scene. 041b061a72



