Longmont Public Media is a dedicated media maker space, focused on creating diverse content for all platforms, by and for the community. Whether you're interested in crafting or learning to create video or audio content, LPM is here to serve both you and the community at large. Visit longmontpublicmedia.org for more information and to submit your content.
I’m just an interested viewer that subscribed months ago and so this Meeting , I do desire to share two recent items just last night : 1 A Tour of The University of Colorado at Boulder - Engineering , Science etc. right with what is spoken about AI. And then I looked at the United States Department of Labor and Statistics , and Specific Data about job classification . In the Colorado Workforce .gov the Staff gave me a lot of helps .Still I did not go to school . I found that a recent 1-2 year Tech. College diploma yielded at the time an annual salary average of $36,000. Who knows how many are going to avail themselves of your bright future projections based on facts .Truthful Meeting . Thanks .Peace. From a superfan .
Awesome meeting of Leaders at W.O.R.K. ~ Personally , I remember the Main Street Project , Twin Peaks Mall , it’s different now . I ho❤pe for all of your Council . Thanks ,the Map with arrows showing the specific projects describes expertise .
Still digging that Had Cowgirl 🤠, but to be Right, it's not a Tiny Deck,!? It's a Way to keep the slam dancers in check 😂 and it's a Performance Stage 💃✌️🙏🫂🌸🎸🤠 Best of Luck My Music-In-Law 🤘🎸🤠
I wonder if the City of Longmont realizes that TinkerMill isn't actually open to the public. It's doors are locked 24/7, unlike LPM which has regular 9-5 hours where anyone can just walk in.
That's cool. I hopped freight trains from Wells, NV via Ogden, Salt Lake City, and Grand Junction to Denver in 1973. The trip from Glenwood Springs and up through Rifle to Winter Park to the West Portal of the Moffett Tunnel had stunning views. So stunning while sitting with my legs dangling off the edge of the opening of the box car, I looked and pulled them in just in time to not lose them before entering the tunnel. I took a deep breath to keep from breathing the diesel exhaust...30 seconds, a minute, a minute and a half and I had to give up. It was a long stinky trip through that tunnel to the East Portal.
I need assistance from whoever manages the mountain children home. I recently discovered my infant baby has been relocated from my home deep in the rockies to this facilities cottages. This was done without a court order or reason. The father was not made aware. The child's actual home is near the hospital she was born in Kremmling. After almost a month of not knowing her location, I found it through pictures on facebook. I need permission to be on these grounds and assistance from management to help create a healthy visitation schedule. I'm worried about my infant girl being at a troubled children's home, so please keep an eye out for her safety. I do not approve of her being there. But being that the family is not recognizing any of my parenting or visitation rights, I'm currently powerless to do anything. I do not feel what is happening inside of this compound falls in line with the values the home was founded upon. -Concerned father, missing his baby girl.
Joan Peck is wrong. This went to bid, three companies bid on it and LPM won hands down. She's not being honest here. She knows it went to bid. She was there as a council member when it went to bid and she voted on it after a lengthy bid process. What this is, is a move to keep most of the revenue from Comcast for franchise fees. Why? Because almost every other city in Colorado has done the same and destroyed their Public Access TV stations. They just 'stream city council meetings and a couple of other meetings' and nothing else. It gives them back Comcast franchise fees and it silences a local media outlet. That's what Joan Peck is proposing. This is a key and essential source of local content, information and news. It's also a true focused media makerspace that's full of amazingingly talented people that consistently give back to the community. The 'other' makerspace in town (TinkerMill), which, rumor has it, is the company that asked to bid on this has a couple of dozen 'shops' that are all good at what they do, but none stand out as extraordinary with hundreds of dedicated members. At most, their most popular shops have a half dozen or so members that care about that particular shop. It's also a 'dirty' makerspace in the sense it's a lot like a wood shop, machine shop and a messy artists space (all good, but, not at all geared toward the needs of a video or audio recording studio). Tinkermill tried this years ago (recording studios/video/photography) and failed. It was just too big of a stretch. Don't get me wrong, Tinkermill is great at what it does. But this is not what it does. Tinkermill also is NOT open to the public anymore. They lock their doors 24/7 and only open them during occasional public tours, unlike LPM which is open to the general public, just like the library, during regular business hours all week long. If you want access to Tinkermill, it's been reconfigured from it's original intent as 'free and open to the public' to having to be a paying member to get easy and regular access. Tinkermill would also have no studio space, and no equipment. Over the last 5 years, LPM has accumulated hundreds of thousands of dollars of equipment and 10's of thousands of hours of expertise that it lends out to it's members and makes available to the general community. That equipment is owned by the Non Profit Longmont Public Media group and would not be passed on to anyone winning a bid. That equipment and expertise would no longer be part of any contract with the City of Longmont. Lastly, If Longmont wants to destroy one of the amazing things that helps to make Longmont truly special, and why I love living here, and to silence local voices it doesn't like, this would be a really good way to do it. I'm really getting tired of politicians attacking and trying to cripple media, especially local media. I hope you are too.
Thank you for the drone show. We enjoyed watching it from downtown. Was the music played live at the Innovation Center, or dubbed over later? It would be really cool if it was available over a local radio station, such as KGUD (90.7). We look forward to future performances. :)
Great work!!! I really enjoyed this. My father and I just took the zephyr and have been looking up all the stuff along the way. A trip to the needle might be in our futures!
Hello, it looks like you confuse the common hazel, Corylus avellana, which is also a shrub with Corylus colurna, the Turkish hazel wich is indeed a tree. Regards from Belgium
Hi, you make a good point. Some botanists take your view, others my view. In Oregon, where I did my grad school, and where the majority of North American production of filberts/hazels occurs, the specific epithet 'avellana' is used. But that doesn't make you wrong 😊. --Joel
Similar, yes. My understanding is that "hazelberts" do not include C. cornuta in their parentage, whereas the hybrid population I'm working with does. But certainly quite similar. --Joel