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Daily Archives: April 2, 2022
Power Moves: A new focus for Lynsie Campbell and big tech names on CMU’s list of honorary degree recipients – Technical.ly
Posted: April 2, 2022 at 5:40 am
Power Movesis a column where we chart the comings and goings of talent across the region. Got a new hire, gig or promotion? Email us: pittsburgh@technical.ly.
This week, serial founder and entrepreneur Lynsie Campbell announced that she would leave her role as startup czar for the Pittsburgh Regional Alliance after starting six months ago to fully commit to growing her new startup studio, Better Work Ventures (formerly named Hooman).
While Ive met a lot of great people during my time with PRA, Ive found (to no surprise) that I cant just talk about making things better for founders in the region. I have to do something about it, she wrote on Twitter. Im an executor and a builder. I need results.
Outside of building Better Work Ventures, Campbell is also the general partner of seed stage investment firm The Fund Midwest, as well as the founder of past startups LaneSpotter and ShowClix and the author of a book on entrepreneurship, This Better Work. Shes also an active voice on social media detailing her own entrepreneurial journeys as well as pointing out challenges that exist for several founders looking to grow their companies in Pittsburgh.
Carnegie Mellon University announced the list of honorary degree recipients for its 2022 commencement ceremony, which will take place this spring on May 13 to 15. The names encompass leaders in creative, entrepreneurial, public, scholarly and technology-minded pursuits, notably including hometown hero and CMU alumnus Billy Porter, who will receive a doctor of fine arts degree and deliver the commencement address for bachelors degree graduates.
In the realm of technology, honorary degree recipients includes chemistry Nobel Laureate Frances Arnold, who will receive a doctor of science and technology degree, and Portugal Minister for Science, Technology and High Education Manuel Heitor, who will receive the same degree. Both of these recipients will also present keynote addresses to graduate students at commencement.
Additional honorary degree recipients in the realm of tech and include university professor of computer science and robotics and Moza Bint Nasser chair in CMUs School of Computer Science, Raj Reddy, who will receive a doctor of science and technology, as well as US Army Reserve Command Chief of Army Reserve and Commanding General Lt. Gen. Jody Daniels, who is a CMU alumna herself and will receive the same doctorate degree as Reddy. And in the realm of business and entrepreneurship, Jim Rohr, the retired executive chairman and former CEO of PNC Financial Services Group, will receive a doctor of business practice.
This years honorary degree recipients and keynote speakers are among todays most accomplished changemakers, artists and innovators, CMU President Farnam Jahaniansaid in a statement.As we prepare to celebrate the achievements of three classes of CMU graduates, showcasing the impact and leadership of these honorees will help to make Commencement 2022 a truly exciting and historic occasion.
Ganeshan Venkateshwaran. (Photo via LinkedIn)
Pittsburgh-headquartered digital transformation IT service provider Mastech Digitalannounced that Ganeshan Venkateshwaran would be appointed as the CEO of Mastech InfoTrellis, a subsidiary of Mastech Digital that leverages enterprise data for business intelligence. A press release noted that Venkateshwarans role will focus on growing the data and analytics services segment of the company by providing new services and expanding its global footprint. Previously, Venkateshwaran worked as an executive at both Trianz and Wipro Technologies.
I am excited to join Mastech, with its rich history as a technology services innovator, dating back to the iGate Corporation years, he said in a statement. Today, the company is squarely in the middle of the digital transformation space, which is ripe with innovative solution opportunities. Im thrilled to have the opportunity to lead Mastech InfoTrellis in its journey to capture the next wave of growth by creating value for our customers and providing our employees with positive career experiences and personal advancement.
The Women in Manufacturing Education Foundation announced 22 new members that had been elected to its board of directors for 2022, with terms beginning on April 1. The North American nonprofit is a part of the Women in Manufacturing Association, and serves as the larger organizations arm for providing educational opportunities to women interested in manufacturing careers.
The foundation named four new first-term members to the board, including representatives from Amazon Web Services, Novelis and PLZ Corp. Among a number of board members listed as continuing their service for the foundation was Michel Conklin, who is the executive director of Pittsburghs BotsIQ, a manufacturing workforce development program for high school students.
On behalf of the entire WiM organization, I am excited to welcome this new group of leaders to the WiMEF Board of Directors, said the foundations president, Allison Grealis, in a statement. I look forward to working with them to continue developing and delivering effective and affordable programming that helps women advance in their industry careers.
Founded in 2015, Pittsburgh startup Knotzland aims to make use of the millions of tons of textiles wasted every year by turning them into bowties and other accessories. And this weekend, founder and CEO Nisha Blackwell shared that one of the companys bowties made its Oscars debut on the neck of Danny Glover.
Ive learned many times over my 30+ years on this planet that, while you can not choose the cards you were dealt at birth, your upbringing, or predetermined socioeconomic opportunities; you can choose to show up, work hard, be consistent, study your craft and the greats that come before you, Blackwell wrote in a post on LinkedIn. The movement may be slower and the road will not be straight, narrow, or easy, but the fruits will be so much sweeter!!
A number of staff members at CMUs College of Engineering will begin a professional development program hosted by the university called CIT Leads. Now in its fifth consecutive year, CIT Leads brings together managers, leaders and other contributors to go through seven experiential learning models in a way that minimizes additional work for participants outside of the classroom. By assessing emotional intelligence and DISC (dominance, influence, steadiness and conscientiousness) profiles of each participant, the program enables staff members to better understand their leadership styles and how that might fit or conflict with others.
This will help them create better work productivity, transform conflict into collaboration, and become more effective people leaders, said Samuel Boyer, founder and leader of CIT Leads, in a press release on the news. The release did not specifically mention the timeline of the program or the names of this years participants.
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How Prepper Moms Tackled The Pandemic | KCM – Katie Couric Media
Posted: at 5:38 am
Preppers aka survivalists had been readying themselves for such a disaster for years, or even decades.
Cast your mind back to March 2020. For most of us, that month was defined by fear, uncertainty, frantic Google searches for Covid-19, and anxious surveys of our toilet paper supplies. For a rare few though, there was another emotion in the mix: Validation.
Preppers aka survivalists had been readying themselves for such a disaster for years, or in some cases, decades. They didnt need to panic-buy milk. They already had it freeze-dried or knew how to make their own. One subset of preppers, prepper moms, was arguably the most well-equipped for the arrival of the pandemic. Elite homemakers, already experts in self-sufficiency and quarantining, were primed when Covid reared its ugly head. But who exactly are they? How did they prepare themselves so thoroughly? And how did they wind up navigating the last two years? We delved into this fascinating subculture and spoke to one of its most celebrated figureheads, The Survival Mom, to get some answers.
As is the case for most phenomena that rise to notoriety online, there isnt a 100 percent solid consensus but there are strong common threads. Like traditional survivalists, prepper moms are proactively readying themselves and their household for major emergencies be that a natural disaster, extreme political upheaval, or a pandemic. The difference is that while old-school survivalists often focus on protection against threats from the outside, prepper moms tend to frame their approach more in terms of alternative homemaking and self-sufficiency.
Mira Ptacin, an author and self-avowed prepper, described the difference between prepper moms and traditional preppers to the New York Times as she managed the tricky first phase of the pandemic. Instead of embracing my inner Mad Max, I could channel my own mother and grandmother, and a bit of Survival Mom, to be a nurturing, resourceful, and resilient homemaker ready for anything, she wrote. If Mad Max is the yang of prep the masculine, overt energy then I wanted to tap into the yin of prep, the earthy, feminine energy.
Ptacin took her inspiration from The Survival Mom aka, Lisa Bedford. Ptacin sensed Bedfords take on survival was a far cry from that of the male prepping community,much of whose focus appeared to be on prepping in case of civil unrest, which Ptacin sensed to be code for brown and Black people. Lisa on the other hand focuses on another type of prepping: Ultimate homemaking and community resilience.
As Covid cases rose around the U.S. at the start of 2020, prepper moms watched warily to see whether the general public might take heed of their example. A blog posted on The Survival Mom (last updated in mid-March 2020) offers some solid advice.
My preparedness plan for a pandemic is simple, it says. I want to have the ability to close my doors and not go into public places for up to six months. (Four to six months is how long the experts believe it will take to create and deliver a vaccine to the public.)
There were a few other useful nuggets albeit ones predicated on the assumption that people have space to spare. Stock up on medication and hospital supplies for your family, it advises, and understand how to create and maintain a sick room in your home. In the end though, most of the controversy was centered around supplies.
In a video titled WHAT TO KEEP IN A PREPPER PANTRY which has nearly 380,000 views Frugal Fit Mom says shes been training my entire life for situations like the pandemic and offers her tips for food staples to have on-hand in case of emergency. While shes fully capable of getting into the nutritional weeds (she notes that while brown rice is more nutritious, white rice has a longer shelf life), she can be comfortingly realistic, asking, What makes more sense than pasta and sauce?
As shop shelves emptied fast in March and April 2020, lots of people pointed a finger at preppers, and blamed their hoarding tendencies for the food shortage that followed. Preppers were quick to protest that such behavior is far removed from what they do explaining that by their very nature, they were ready for the pandemic long beforehand.
I call this the nonsensical hoarding phase, Ben Hansen, the chief of media for PrepperCon, told the New York Times. Its when people say, Weve got a hurricane coming and the power might be out, so they start stocking up the essentials.
In her August 2020 video A WARNING TO ALL YOU NON-PREPPERS OUT THERE! Prepper Princess addresses the claim that preppers were hoarding food. So you thought it would be ok to blame preppers for the food shortage? Let me set the record straight, she says, associating the issue with non-preppers who got scared and adding that real preppers were already well-stocked.
For some firsthand insight on prepping over the last two years and how the pandemic has shifted some preppers definitions of sensible precautions, KCM spoke to Lisa Bedford, aka, The Survival Mom. Bedford shares why she became a prepper in the first place and how this unique period in history has further shaped her outlook.
KCM: Can you tell us a little about yourself?
LB: We live in Texas, about 35 minutes outside of Houston. My kids are now 20 and 22, but when we began prepping 12 years ago, they were 8 and 10. My husband works in the energy sector.
When did you become interested in the prepper lifestyle?
Between2008 and 2010, when the country experienced a severe recession. My first reaction was the desire to be proactive and mitigate any effects on our family. In Phoenix, other than intense heat, there are rarely any natural disasters, so my prepping was odd and out of place to family and friends. Very few of them saw the need to have on hand any more groceries than necessary. When I asked a friend if she had ever thought of stocking up on a few extra weeks worth of food, her response was, Now why would I want to do that?
By far, most survival and prepping websites were geared toward men. I gleaned a lot of information, but eventually had a lot of unanswered questions. Knowing the number of yards at which our home would be safe from rifle fire wasnt nearly as important to me as knowing what to pack in an emergency kit in case we ever had to evacuate.
My research led to writing about it, which led to my blog, teaching live classes, developing online courses, my book Survival Mom: How to Prepare Your Family for Everyday Disasters and Worst-Case Scenarios and a survival-training membership site for women.
Theres a fascinating post about pandemic preparedness on your site which says that ideally, youd like to have the ability to close my doors and not go into public places for up to six months. Was that what you did in the end?
That article wasnt written by me, and that wasnt my own response when Covid arrived in the U.S. back in early 2020. In fact, we were outside as much as possible, knowing the importance of Vitamin D and maintaining strong and healthy bodies. We rode our bikes for miles every week, ate nutritious foods, and got plenty of rest. By the end of 2020, we were healthier than we were at the beginning of that year.
I reviewed the typical symptoms of Covid and made sure we had OTC drugs to deal with cough, congestion, body aches, etc. I had toilet paper on hand, but we stocked up on additional TP as much as we could. I also hadnt kept up with our supply of dog and cat food, so as the weeks went by, I made sure we always had an extra couple of bags because there were times when our particular brands werent in stock.
Your advice is directed predominantly at moms why is that?
This is very general, but more often than not, a mans focus on prepping is on protecting the home and family and providing for the family. So the emphasis is on things like firearms and home security. Again, generally speaking, most women and moms will want to know, How do I feed my family in an emergency? How do we do laundry in a power outage? How do I stock up on things like diapers and baby formula?
Since I began this journey as a mom with younger children, those were among my own questions.
A well-prepared home and family will have all those bases covered: security systems, home/personal safety, food storage, power outage preps, seasonal preps, etc. Ideally, a family works as a team, with even younger kids involved with things like gardening, canning, and other practical skills.
Did you notice any changes in attitude from people, as a result of the pandemic?
My goal was always to provide sane, commonsense advice based on the best information available from trusted experts. As it turned out, those experts were not the ones on TV every night. But, yes, people who followed my advice have told me they were prepared for the pandemic.
Has your attitude to survivalism changed in any way as a result of the pandemic? Is there anything youre doing differently?
We had Covid twice, and we all survived. My 80-year-old parents had Covid once or twice, and they recovered. I personally do not know anyone who died from Covid. What I learned is the importance of filtering out alarming headlines and nonstop fear-mongering. Those things lead us to make poor decisions, which is something everyone, especially prepper-minded people, should beware of. Fear leads people to do things they would never otherwise do.
Right now, inflation and food and supply shortages present a far greater threat to the average family. For example, the price of gasoline increased by 30 cents in my town in one week. Todays trip to Aldi was nearly $90 for not even half a cart of food and household supplies.
Families and individuals need to focus on how these two crises inflation and shortages affect their everyday lives and plan accordingly.
Suppose someone has been stocking up on food, household supplies, hygiene products, and has been developing smart skills like cooking from scratch and cooking a meal without electricity. In that case, they have the foundation for surviving prices that are beginning to look like low-end hyperinflation.
Its not too late to prep, but beware of taking your easy life for granted. Everything is the same until one day it isnt. One lesson I hope people have learned is that anything can happen, and life can change in a moment. Family relationships and friendships are some of the most important things to cultivate right now. Being prepared is more than spending a lot of money on stuff: Its also building a supportive and trustworthy community.
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How Prepper Moms Tackled The Pandemic | KCM - Katie Couric Media
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