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2024-04-23 22:07:33
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UC-75_Zh-CLF7hN8dM4EGEGA
|
An introduction to playing with things
|
Toys and everyday found objects have swept through playgrounds for centuries, temporarily filling the pockets of children before losing their place to ever-newer trends. Over the years, the playground has borne witness to all kinds of crazes, including tops and hoops; jacks; fivestones; cigarette cards; skip balls; conkers; Spice Girl trading cards; Pokémon; yo-yos; pogs; Match Attax cards and Bakugan figures to name but a few.
Such fads are central to children’s play, and these items often take hold in playgrounds for months at a time. As one girl put it, these crazes spread like ‘butter on toast.’ Not all items are one-hit-wonders, however, and many may be revived, such as marbles or trading cards in their various incarnations. Non-commercial, mundane objects are equally important to children’s play: thanks to the inexhaustible creativity of children’s minds, a heap of grass cuttings or a muddy puddle can capture the imagination just as much as a Barbie or warrior figure.
Introduction by Michael Rosen.
Explore more films along with articles and teaching resources on the British Library’s Playtimes website: http://www.bl.uk/playtimes
|
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"Playtimes",
"playtime",
"playground",
"play",
"childhood",
"children",
"games",
"Opies",
"toys",
"Michael Rosen"
] | 2016-10-13T10:01:08 | 2024-02-05T06:07:47 | 233 |
ZQEZDid_zOg
|
Play based around physical objects has always been an important aspect of the life of the playground. Adults may fondly remember objects they used for play, such as tops and hoops, in pre-war Britain, or marbles, five stones, jacks and conkers in the post-war decades. As the opies put it, the youthful pleasure of prizing a mahogany smooth chestnut from its prickly casing is not easily forgotten. Marbles, rather differently, is one of the playground games with the most ancient history. Traceable back to 2nd century Greece, the opies record the rich variety of names for different kinds of marbles. Pop-allies, glasses, ballers, dummocks, jaries, moral leggers, bullies, bumpers, cannons, dobbers, gobbies, fighters, phoblers, kings, slammers, smashes, tatty-mashes, yogis, babies, peas, pee-wees, peedies, titches, or tiddlers, blood-allies, cats-eyes, coca-colas, purlies, rainbows, Frenchies, and spiders. Other games involved designed structures such as the hopscotch grid chalked by girls on pavements and playground tarmac. Many of these are not to be found in today's playgrounds, though it's quite possible that they may unpredictably revive as crazies. If the actual objects of play go in and out of fashion, the deeper motives for playing with objects continue undiminished. Games involving throwing, catching, flicking, bouncing, and knocking down various objects can still be seen, even if the materials involved are different. Collecting is still a passion of children, and some of the objects of collection closely resemble those of the mid-20th century, such as trading cards based on football like the match attacks cards we observed on our playgrounds. However, it's also clear that many schools exclude some of the things that children play with at home. These may be such things as game consoles, large and expensive toys, dressing up clothes, and toy weapons. Combat-based games are often seen as representations of dangerous, anti-social behavior to be discouraged. In fact, it's just as likely that they are a timeless and ineradicable part of childhood play as they certainly are for adults. Another frequent cause for concern is that many toys appear to represent a commercial culture. Yet commercial toys have a long history, and the football cards, marbles, jacks, spud guns, and dolls fondly remembered by many adults were, of course, mass-produced and sold in corner shops. Commercial toys can be traced back at least to 1744 and the children's books of John Newbury. These were not only a considerable commercial success, but advertised Newbury's patent medicines, perhaps the first example of product placement. While children may be seen as vulnerable to the commercial world in certain ways, there is, however, plenty of evidence that they use commercial toys and other products inventively, sometimes subversively, to spin their own games, stories and dramas. But if adults exclude certain objects of play, they also actively provide others. Hula hoops, skipping ropes, pogo sticks, pom-poms, balls, wooden blocks, boxes, and planks can be found on many playgrounds. All of these are used extensively and enthusiastically and often creatively. Children display an extraordinary variety of ways to play with hula hoops, for example.
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Jury Chair Address by Tarun Chugh
|
exchange4media is a single stop information platform for the entire industry. Be it news, views, analytical information, in depth analysis of events or trend forecasting, exchange4media publications have a credibility and loyal following.
www.exchange4media.com, @e4mtweets
www.impactonnet.com, @IMPACT_onnet
www.http://pitchonnet.com, @MagazinePitch
www.realtyplusmag.com,
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[
"Marketing",
"Media",
"Advertising",
"Ad Reviews",
"Media News",
"Marketing News",
"Latest industry updates"
] | 2017-10-12T10:53:45 | 2024-04-22T18:20:58 | 664 |
ZQQQ20BjMPI
|
that was better yeah all right so I was telling you know that people aren't clapping really and he nobody should listen to an Iraq's response he said he's gonna have a clapping company setup well yeah so I guess we should get more alive to the awards today and there should be a lot of celebration as well and there's good reason to celebrate because there's a lot of hard work going by each one of you before I get on to the jury process maybe my two bits on on mobility and even before I get there I must say mr. Schroff that was an awesome keynote I think he needs a round of applause for the work he's done and and and why don't we clap guys can we all put our hand together see unfortunately I come from the boring world of financial services where well nobody's ever sung in a keynote but I hope I could or maybe I should do augmented reality next time and I can always hide behind the fact that you know it's a serious affair giving awards and being a jury so maybe I'll just be serious the mobile of course lots has been said already about it the way it's been getting used the way it can get used the way it's still there's a whole lot not yet in the we don't know world but the fact that it's today pretty much like the consumers remote control to start engaging with the brand I think we haven't had a stronger remote control ever in our life today the remote control is actually an enemy usually because you just flip you just flip between programs right but this is that remote control which can offer a lot of lot to the marketing world real-time execution pinpointed analytics therefore pinpointed targeting huge personalization and it being all pervasive anytime anywhere anybody more can be said about it but I guess this is it this is really the world which we were all waiting for and which is why it's very relevant that there are wards around mobile creativity around mobile advertising mobile marketing use of mobile you just saw one from Eureka Forbes where it's not just about talking to the customer but you know the entire process the entire sales process the onboarding process the training process awesome I mean this is this kind of work is really good so I am of course passionate about mobility as lots of you sitting in this room would be and I must say that so were the jurists all the jurists were truly involved it was a very engaging process so jury process is really divided into two parts there was first an online process by which the 250 entries we'd got really through the online judging we kind of shortlisted the top five sometimes top six in each category there were about 84 unique entries which were there for all the categories put together the second round is what you saw pictures of when the jury really met and that was a very engaging eight hours a lot of work done online and then these eight hours the juries were very well chosen by e4m and what I must say is that we kind of ensured that there was no industry bias in the way the juries had been picked up the fact that the jury chair was from life insurance I can tell you there was not a single life insurance advertised advertisement they're being seen so not a worry about that maybe it just kept away because I was a jury chair but I must say that the things that we kept in mind but around transparency be inclusive to everybody and you know giving that little leeway where you're on the borderline that is this what you really wanted to say there's number of times we did struggle in some ways what I liked about this entire process is that we're very open sometimes too transparent and you know when you do these discussions people to get personal as well but at the same time there was a bias the bias largely was towards the usage of mobile so there were a lot of entries which were all mobile centric and these being a mobile mobility award ceremony so this is how we of course had a bias towards that a national bias bulk of the award categories were around this bias but there was some which also had mobile as one of the many media used in giving your message across while people did not really make it in the bulk of the categories but there were some of you categories there as well in terms of things that I must say that does play on the jury's mind is the way you present your case so few words of advice there were videos and there were presentations we did try to take away the bias between videos and presentations but please do not forget this a marketing award and somebody did say on stage that videos are it so there was getting to be this presentation bias that we were getting on to so my suggestion would be it's a set of marketing awards please ensure that you present the best in you and don't really hold back on that bit the second thing that really would be a piece of advice again is that please choose your categories in which you apply for awards a little bit more carefully it was strange sometimes and you know all all the experts would sit together and we would like kind of discuss a advert or a marketing message threadbare then we'd say hello but you know if they'd applied on this other category maybe they would have been an award that was imminent to this but somehow we found that maybe a little bit more thinking in terms of where you applied would have really helped we couldn't have you so we of course then what we did was although we had shortlisted 84 for the jury meet we went back to the 250 and dug out if you know you had applied but maybe it was not shortlisted into the in that category but if you hadn't applied for an award well you apply for a geography exam you don't get a history paper right so you're not gonna get it you're not gonna get that award my heart goes out to those people who did maybe not do that thinking but there's a lot of hard work behind it the last piece of advice would be on the way the results were presented you know there was this bias to go towards percentages and you know when you don't know the base of improvement it gets to be a little difficult particularly if people are we feel as juries that you know if you're hiding behind percentages not there's nothing wrong with percentages I mean a mature sector with a 10-12% growth sometimes because of a ad word or a message is surely good but when you're doing a startup and you talk about some thousand percent growth what does that mean I don't really know that so we were so these are a few things that maybe I'd recommend we you all take a look at on the whole there were some really big brands but I can assure you we did not pay attention to how big or small the brand was what we did pay attention to was what the content was and what were you really applicable in that category and how did you really choose to exploit that category best but I know there's a lot of hard work gone behind this I don't know how many of you are really expecting an award can I see a raise of hand how many people are actually expecting an award okay 70% aren't so we shouldn't be disappointed 30% only seem to so well a lot of work done by you guys and I must say that it is very encouraging to see some of the work there there was some new technologies that were put to use and that was particularly very exciting because when you see innovation which is going to be part breaking getting on to the show of India it is something really that takes a little extra bit from the jury's to like and it is really good a lot of good work keep doing it and don't feel bad if you didn't get the award if you're part of the five in any case you're a winner all the very best enjoyed the evening do keep clapping thank you do keep making a lot of noise and can we hear it out loud for the Maddy's 2017 jury chair mr. third show thank you so much for all your due
|
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UCIP99i3azLdyYRxnUkSLJ7g
|
Sales Training // This is a Game Changer for Finances // Andy Elliott
|
Andy Elliott and Micah Robinson discuss how to create an upward spiral of cash flow where you know exactly where your money is and have full accessibility to it. If you are an owner, GM or GSM, watch this full video to learn more about how Autto Warranty can save and make you more money immediately! This is a game changer for every finance department!
If you’re looking for the BEST sales training videos on YouTube you’ve found it! If you want to make more Money selling cars & learn how to close any customer then Andy Elliott is the sales trainer to study!
Grab your copy of my book now & get $942 in training for FREE!!! Click the link below 👇
https://elliott247.com/get-swpb-free
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https://elliott247.com/online-training
Join My Elite Fitness Program & Take Your Body, Business, & Life To The Next Level!
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Stop Selling, Start Closing. If It Doesn't Challenge You, It Doesn't Change You!
#carsalestraining #andyelliott
|
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"Car Sales Training",
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"How to sell more cars",
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"automotive",
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"negotiating",
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] | 2023-12-28T16:32:19 | 2024-02-05T06:10:36 | 2,661 |
ZQBcMttA4rU
|
Hey guys, what's going on? It's Andy Elliott. I'm here today with my man Micah. Now listen, this guy's making auto dealerships a ton of money. This guy's crushing and killing it. And once you learn the secret how he's doing it in this video, if you're a manager, a general manager, you want to take this straight to the owner immediately. If you're a sales pro, take this to your owner. You got a bonus tomorrow. Check this out. All right, guys. So in this video today, what we're going to talk to you about is my man Micah, number one. He owns a company called Auto. Now listen, Auto right now is just sweeping through the nation. I mean, you guys are currently in Arizona, Utah. You're in a lot. Is it Midwest? Is it up in Midwest? Mostly Midwest and as we're expanding east. Yeah, you guys are going nationwide. I see you guys spreading out, but right now in that area, you guys are dominating. It's probably because you're from Utah, right? That is correct. So you started there. You're branching out. But if you're an auto dealer, I want you to understand something. Okay. Times have changed. People have changed. Things have changed. It was really easy a couple years ago. I feel like a lot of companies right now are struggling not only in backing, not only in backing money, also in front in money and everybody's running around. It's chaos. Everybody's blaming it on each other. And it's honestly turned into a show. Now listen, there are a couple of people and I have a lot of, I love the transportation space. Guys, everybody watching this right now. I know I teach sales in all industries, but I love the transportation space. I love the automotive space and what Micah is doing with his team for auto dealers is insane. He's making them free money, more money, easy money, which is why a dealer opens a business. Okay. They love their customers. They love their employees. They love their team, but it's also a profitable business. Okay. You guys get paid money. Everybody wants to make money, but we want to run a great profitable business where everybody wins. This is the most amazing thing ever. So number one, before we get into what it is, and by the way, if you're watching this, if you're a salesperson, if you're a manager, if you're a general manager, you need to stay tuned in. When I was younger, I shared an idea from watching a message. I wasn't the owner. I shared an idea as a salesperson with the owner and I got promoted. I got a big bonus. He flew me out on a private jet and all this stuff just for sharing an idea that made him a lot more money. People love it whenever you have their back and you're not only just looking out for yourself. So if you're watching this, I want you to watch the full video. I want you to understand everything that we're talking about and then I want you to get this video to the right person in the right hands. And by the way, if you're an owner watching this, I'm going to give you a number here in a minute where you can text and we'll give you all the information if you want to be a part of this. So Micah, how old are you? How, I mean, tell us a little bit about, did you own dealerships? How old I am. Thanks, that question. I appreciate that. Okay, I'm younger than you. Just a little bit. Are you 35? Yeah, right. Yeah, I'm 41. I turned 42 real soon. You just had a birthday too, didn't you? Yeah, 44 going on 18. Fired up, ready to kill somebody. But listen, he's real methodical and how long did you own a dealership for? I still own a dealership. I own two dealerships. I started in 2002. So gosh, you know, 22 years now. And that's really where auto came about is the major hole that happened at my dealership within it. So give you a long story short, it was basically, so I own two dealerships, they're a little larger independence, not franchise. Is this for franchise and independence? Yeah, it's for franchise and independence. So every, every dealership would qualify for this. All right, keep rolling. Absolutely. So what happened was is we were paying like a third party warranty and claim got denied. My dealership had to pay for that claim. So the money's still coming out of my pocket and we, we did the math. It's really easy to pull it up. It's like, okay, we paid this warranty company was almost $600,000 just in the last 12 months. And then they were denying a $5,000 claim. So then I asked them, okay, well, then how much money have you actually paid out in claims? Because the, the claim they were denying was for a K and N air filter on a Ford F 350. I was like, how is that making it so that the engine's worse? And it just made me really mad because my customer, he was mad at me because I sold them a warranty that wasn't paying for things. And we had paid $53,000 total in the claims. So where'd the rest of the $450,000 go? You know, just in that year. And as we're going through it, then I get on reinsurance. Okay, now I can kind of control it. Math ended up the same way. I didn't quite have the denial now. But when I look at my account, $600,000 goes in $50,000 in claims. You'd think there should be right around $450,000 in an account. No, there was 250. Well, now where'd the other $200,000 go? So after going through it, trying to figure out, okay, what's the best way? I started my own warranty company. But I didn't really want to have my dealership's name on it or on the contract in case it was a valid denial on a claim, you know, I don't want them giving me a bad Google review. So started the company at the time it was called First Secured Administrator's long name. But anyways, it kept building. And now we were able to take care of our customers started a call center. Then really what took place was the software. Hey guys, what's going on? It's Andy. A lot of you leave comments telling me that you need help. Do me a favor. I'm gonna tell you the best way to get a hold of me. Shoot me a text message right now, 918-210-0254. 918-210-0254. I'll help you with whatever you need. I got your back for life. Let's get back to the video. And when the software came about, it was, I need it to look like this. I need it to integrate with this DMS system. I need to be able to see my claims. I need to be able to listen to how the claims team is taking care of my customers. I need to see the receipts, the validation, everything, and how much is actually being paid out. And that's where it kept going. Then it created into, okay, well, this car has more risk, so it needs to be priced here. And this car has less risk, so it needs to be priced here. And then it was, oh, finance managers can sell a lot easier if it's this simple. And it just kept evolving. And then it's just grown like gangbusters because now that kind of example of the 450,000 is what should be in your account. It's actually more than that. Because now they have more control of their claims. The adjudication of the claims is all right around them. We have networks of shops. We have discounted labor rates, discounted parts. And then we distribute their customer database right back to their shop. So it's really interesting on how it's, I mean, it's grown my business massively. Yeah, so it makes you a lot of cash. I want to ask everybody a question. When we're talking about warranty companies, we're talking about reinsurance, we're talking all this stuff. Whoever your company, your dealership uses right now, how loyal are they to you? Just a simple question, okay? I know that you're building a business if you're an owner. I know that dealerships right now want to be successful. They want to succeed. They want to make you see everybody get paid. They want to provide good customer service. But how loyal, right, is your warranty company? How loyal is the reinsurance company? How loyal are those people? Are those people ensuring that you're creating the cash flow that you need, that you're making money? Or did they get your business at one point in time and we haven't shopped them again? Because what I'm going to tell you is this is that me and my wife, we literally picked up the phone and shopped our insurance the other day and we've been with them 10 years and we learned that we were getting ripped off. So sometimes you need to reach out and you need to see what is available and don't be surprised when you get surprised. Because with Auto, every time that I've introduced them to a dealer, they always switch. Now, why would they always switch? Because a lot of people right now, they're used to coming into the company, getting their checks, just being around when they need to, maybe answering the phone when you call with the problem. But they're not in there ensuring that 2024 is going to be the best year for you as a dealership. Right now, while you're struggling on the front and the back end trying to figure out why rates are high, everybody's going back into a market price strategy at every company, a race to the bottom. Again, salespeople are weaker and they've ever been. Managers, they used to make three times more and they're making now and they're bitching and complaining and whining because they're not making as much as they used to be. But hell, it was them that was doing it all when really the market was three times better. You got all these things going on, but your company's not in there with you sitting down trying to figure out how to make you more money. If this isn't happening, I want to give you a number because I have this guy's cell phone and I'm going to give it out to you guys. And all you got to do is a simple text and say, I want more information. And Micah, you or someone for your team will really reach out and call them for five minutes and see or explain what you guys do. Let me give this number. I'm going to put it up on the screen too. It's 801-251-6605. Now just shoot a text. I'm not even asking you to call. You just text Micah, 801-251-6605. And I want to tell you something. Since times have changed, things have changed, people have changed. Where are dealers going to find that extra money? I mean, are we going to settle and just say, hey man, that market was good while it lasted, but now we should go back to lower profits? Hell no. Can you make great deals on cars right now? No, the market's still up on cars. Look, is it a little lower than it used to be? Yeah, but the market's still up on cars, buying them out of the auction and trade-ins are still up, but now we're getting competitive on the pricing. So we're giving clients a little more money for the trade-ins, we're getting competitive on pricing, rates are higher than they've been, and we've got a spoiled-ass team in most cases that made more money in the last two years than they ever made and they didn't have to have any more skill. You know why I love you Andy? Because you just described every single almost like selling point of why we're growing so fast. Yeah, so talk to us a little bit about what you guys do. Like what you're talking about is like you get on AutoTrader or CarGurus and that little green icon that we all hate now that says great price or good price, and that's what all dealers are now having to look at, or they get on V-Auto and they're trying to get 95% of market or 90% of market, and all it is is, and we've talked about this, it's like the reason why is we've got to get customers here somehow or another, and most customers are looking at everything on their phone, right? That's why we text message, but that big annoying green check mark that says great price drives down our profits, but you know what's never going to be advertised? It's the service contract cost, it's the stuff that's afterwards, but then let's say that you do sell a service contract, what I'm talking about is you say you sell a service contract for $3,000 and it costs you know $1,500, $2,000, so the F9 manager is happy that he made his $1,000 and 15% of that. Well why aren't you keeping all $3,000? Like I mean we know the statistics on the place. Well but a lot of people are afraid of change. Yeah, exactly, which is why you're growing so fast. Yeah, exactly. Look, it's evolve or die. Okay, I'm just going to let everybody know evolve or die, and by the way I'm not telling you what to do because I know that people that own businesses or that run companies hate to be told what to do, but I'm going to ask you something, all right? Do you feel like you should be financially making more money? It's a very simple question. I ask people that all the time, they say well absolutely, and I say okay, well then we're going to need to research why we're not, and we're going to have to find the buckets of money that we don't see. Okay, and what you have to do is you have to have new conversations with new people. I tell people all the time, if you're around the same, you're some of the five people you hang out with the most, and by the way, it's more than that. Why most people are the same for the next couple years as they, well number one, it was really good. This market won't come back like it was. So now we're on our own for the next five years. The difference between whether now each year dwindles down from where you're at or goes up will depend on the people that you meet, the new knowledge that you learn, and the way that you research areas in your company to make sure that you're getting the best bang for your buck, and that you have the best product in the marketplace, and you're dealing with somebody who's unique, who's rare, who's different, and who stands out. And that's what I love about y'all's company. I think because you own a store, and I think because of the way you operate. By the way, testimonies don't lie. Right. My dealers, they always call me and they say this guy has made us a lot more money. Thank you very much. And by the way, dealers choose me to train and to do their sales training, and they love it. Dude, they pay two or $3,000 a month to have all their team train as much value as I can give them back. This has nothing to do with the sales team. Your sales team can only do so much. Your finance manager can only do so much. Your manager can only do so much. This is just technology and a process. And basically, I'm going to call it a new partnership that you put in place with your current existing business already that just produces and makes more money with what you're already currently doing. You're not asking anybody to change anything. You're just increasing the cash flow. You're exactly right. The body is filling up with more cash on the same exact system you have now. So really, is there any change? No. But people say, well, my warranty company guy now, or the guy that we use now, or the people that we use now, we're loyal to them. We've been with them 13 years. Well, keep getting it stuck in your butt like I did at my insurance company. And I mean this. And then you call one day. By the way, what I love about you guys is when we get on this call, they're going to show you what you're doing now and what it would have looked like if you would have used them. This is so funny. I'm laughing because I had a dealer just like three days ago tell me this exact same thing. I really love my agent, love him to death. And I said, I'll tell you what, I will pay your agent. I'll give him $50,000 of your money and every year if you want to sign up because guess what? You're paying him right now $300,000. And I'll take the extra. Well, the deal is, can I ask you a question? Is loyalty a two-way street? I mean, just because a manager was with you when you opened your company, if today he's not working anymore, he's a barstool warrior, he's sitting on his, he doesn't get up in TO deals. He doesn't call in approvals. He doesn't train the team. He doesn't motivate the team. He doesn't talk to customers. Should we keep him because he was loyal since we started our company? No, loyalty is today he is talking to every client. He's calling in deals. He's shaking hands and kissing babies. He's coming in with a great attitude. He's bringing the fire to the sales team and the company is growing and the needle is moving. That is loyalty. It's a two-way street. And I think right now a lot of people, they become paralyzed with fear. And I want you to understand something. Early adopters with your auto program save the most money. Oh, yeah. Early adopters. You need to understand this, okay? The dealers that I have that are using him because they get better deals early on before he explodes too big, right now they're racing in and they love doing business with him. And by the way, it's a new fresh look. When is the last time someone else from his perspective came in and looked at your business? I'm just going to ask you or looked at the company's business and go, man, I see cash here. I see cash there. I see cash there. Do you want to stay the same or do you want to collect this? Well, obviously say, I'd like to collect. Okay, cool. And by the way, when something's new, people start to prove themselves again. Sometimes it's good to change things out. There's a company of ours that we train and the same manager that's been in charge, that's been in the owner's ear for the last like eight years was the one reason why the company was sinking. And I told the owner, I go, dude, your loyalty to him, you're, can I say this? Blind loyalty because you're blind. Your blind loyalty to that guy is costing you millions a year minimum. They, they removed him. Okay, put him in a different position. They didn't fire him. We don't need to fire anybody. We need to put him where he belongs over here where we do nothing because he wants to do nothing. And then we brought someone in who wants to do something. Who wants to be loyal? Who wants to prove themselves? Who wants to make more money? And now the store is thriving. They're kicking they're almost number one in the nation. How in the hell do you have this massive turn to this? Well, it's because you start researching. I would tell you, so as a salesman, as a manager, as a general manager, even as an owner, you guys need a Texas 801-251-6605 and just ask Micah say, Hey, I want to test you. Let's see. And in five or 10 minutes, I'll be willing to bet. You're like, you know what? All right, we need to make this a longer meeting. Let's get on a zoom. Show me how this works. And you're going to be blown away. So, yeah. And I mean, just testing us, the funny thing is we have all the stats to prove it. We can sit there and see it. And then can you be real specific and tell people exactly what you do? So if a dealer is watching this and he says, what, by the way, listen to me, not, not how much can you save us? Not how much money can we make, but give them specifically, what is your wheelhouse? Okay. Perfect. So basically, let's say, let's use an example that a finance manager sees every day. He has a service contract. He puts it into a computer system. And it puts the VIN number in, puts the miles in, it pops out of price, right? And the potential packages. And ours is very similar, except for it uses AI technology that says this is the best most sellable product for exactly that car. Then it prices it out, say it's $1,500. Our price analytics take all these things, everything into effect, more than others, but that's a whole nother story. Then they sell it for $3,000. Finance manager is happy. He made his 15% on 1500, right? For a dealer, they're either usually sending that money off if they're on a reinsurance to somewhere either offshore or somewhere where they don't have that $1,500 on a reinsurance example. For others, they're sending it to a third party. And that third party is obligated to pay those claims, and they're just keeping their spread of the $1,500. And that's fine, except for once you start to get into it, and you start realizing, okay, how much do claims actually come out? When you put this big bulk of, let's say you're doing 50 warranties a month, or even with our program, 15 to 20, you make way more money. So let's say it's 20 warranties a month at each $1,500. That's per month, okay? That's what we call the reserve, okay? So that wholesale cost, that dealer's now putting into his own account, paying the claims from that account. And at the end of the day, he usually keeps about 75% of that money. That's money that he was giving away, didn't have cash access to, and that's the other crazy thing. You actually have access to it right now. When a dealer's on reinsurance, it's three, four, five years before he actually takes the money and actually has access. You have control, yeah. You have control of it. Now you have control of the claims, you have control of the investment, you have control of the money, you now have control of getting more people growing your business. Flooring is what now? 12 to 16%. Yeah, it's crazy. It's crazy. So you know what I did? I took that money, and I started buying cars with it. Then I started charging myself 12 to 16%. You're just smart with your money. You just keep doing it, and it's crazy. It turns into like, I want to say, an upward spiral of how much cash flow, control, and growth, it just stimulates. It's kind of interesting. So we came up with, literally, there's no program out there like this. And when people partner with you, it's not only what you guys do by going in and showing them where the money's at, and then how you guys are going to retrieve it, which is what you do, but also you plug in all the technology, you plug in the software, and how long does it take to get a dealer set up? Realistically. Realistically? Yeah, for guys like, dude, I'm all in. I see the money. You know, yeah, I want that extra 100 grand a month, hypothetically, more or less. Well, I'll tell you this right now. We do our due diligence on our dealers, okay? Because we will, first of all, Hey guys, what's going on? It's Andy. A lot of you leave comments telling me that you need help. Do me a favor and tell you the best way to get a hold of me. Shoot me a text message right now, 918-210-0254. 918-210-0254. I'll help you with whatever you need. I got your back for life. Let's get back to the video. We need to make sure that that dealer is a good dealer. He's loyal. He's honest to his customers. He has good financials. Now, he doesn't have to have be multi-multi-millionaire, but more importantly, we want to have quality dealers. Yeah, we have quality dealers, because if my warranty contract name is on a company, I don't want any other dealer being hurt, which is, this is the other point I was saying is, I've never had a dealer leave our program. In four years, never had one dealer stop selling our stuff. That's why it's been awesome. So it takes, on average, about a day. That's how, as soon as we have the financials and we set them up, we can hook into their DMS. We can set them up on the platform. It's all customized to them. They have their own logo. We set up all their warranty program for them, and it's not just service contracts. It's every product they sell, from Gap to Paint Protection to Undercoat. Every single thing is now in-house. So any ancillary product. Any ancillary product. Instead of going to five different websites or two different menu systems, I really wanted to keep it all in-house for the dealer. So the idea was to make five contracts in two minutes. And you know, as like a finance manager, they're all over the place, and it's like, well, it's easier on your people. And at the end of the day, listen, and you notice you said upward spiral, right? Like when's the last time you heard that used in the marketplace, right? Like other than when COVID hit and everything spiked up and then, you know, you could land a 747 on car dealership lots because they didn't have any cars and everybody made more money. Now that the normal market's back in, almost all dealerships are completely 100%, right? Back to where they were. Or worse. Or worse. And we're watching interest rates go high. Old age units increase. Old age units from a long time ago get smacked. So dealers are taking massive wholesale losses. Salesmen aren't great at selling anymore, literally, okay? We're cutting, we're trying to back in an expense from every area we can. In the last place that people will look, or even not even look when they're at a dead end, is this area that you help them with. And I think this is the time right now where it's like, dude, like, and I said this, if you have your eyes shut, don't be surprised when you get slapped, right? Like you got to keep your eyes open. You have to look. It's a vulva die. And how we've been killing it, you know, our company went to nine figures in three years. And how we did it and really took over now is because we look at all these holes that we have and we're always thinking like, look, let's stay like, I always say stay out of the tunnel, right? So like, everybody's in, in a dealership in this tunnel and they're all working hard, right? You got to back out, dude, you got to get out of the crash site. And you got to be like, okay, dude, like I can't change rates. I can't train my team. I've got managers that literally are defeated. And I'm not saying that they're not telling you that they aren't, but most of them are. They're defeated. They made more money last year than they ever made. And this year, their wives are seeing them bring home less checks or husbands, whoever it is. And they're like, what's going on? They're having to go back to work in more hours, make less money. And then they got the stress of the dealer saying, we got to freaking make money. And at the end of the day, you don't want them to break the law, do you? You don't want them to do something bad. No, but, but, but they want to please the owners. They want to go hard. They want to, they want to take care of business. Nobody wants to fail right now. So to me, it's easy for the dealer to say, okay, hold on. Okay, I know what I can do with my team. Obviously self development with human capital on my team, making sure our cars are priced right, making sure our finance team is trained, make sure that we have everything. Let's look over here in this area. It seems like the last place people look and why don't we look there first? Why don't, why wouldn't you take the low hanging fruit? Like if you walked up to a tree and there was just, why would you climb to the top of the tree? That's training your team. That's doing, that's what I do. That's doing all that. That takes time. Dude, you plug into something like this, you start making money right now. Your company is the low hanging fruit. The stuff that's already going on, not only does it simplify and get easier, but you make more money and you do it now without any change. That's crazy. That's like magically waving a wand and owning each one of your car for $5,000 less on your lot. Like that'd be cool, right? But that doesn't exist. But this exists. That's why you got to open your eyes. That's why people got to have a different look on business right now. That's why the smart people are getting rich and the people that are inside of the tunnel are going broke. That's why you got to back out of the crash site and especially as a dealer. That's why I said if your salesman or a manager or general manager, like, listen, if you guys want to, I'm not going to say pull the pressure off you because I think it's really healthy for you to have a lot of pressure on you, especially as high performers like we do well when our backs against the wall. But dude, cash is real. Money is real. This is not a joke. And right now, the dealers have taken really good care of a lot of companies for the last year or two. And right now they need help. And right now, you know, if they've had your back, like you need to have their back. This video needs to get in their hands. Hey, I was going to ask you, I assume you were selling in 0708. Yeah, when the recession or the housing deal, yeah. Let me ask you your opinion. Did you like it or not like it at that point? I loved it. And I figured you were going to answer it that way. Okay. So tell me why you loved it. Well, number one, all the SUVs immediately went half price. Okay. So I'm going to tell everybody why I loved it. And I'll tell you a lot of different things, but I will tell you one of the reasons why I loved it. Me and my wife had about 700, 800 grand saved up at the time. Okay. All of the Tahos, all the, all the 40,000, because they're about $40,000 rides, all the heavies, we'll call them all the heavies, all the V8s, all the trucks, everything, all the Toyota Tundras, Toyota Tundras bring all the dough. They got these Crewmax Tundras that were listed for 40 grand MSRP. Dude, they were dumping them at the auction for 20 grand. Me and my wife took our whole bank account and went by every one of them we could buy with all 700 grand. Wait, wait, wait. So you're telling me. Six months. And I'm a car salesman. You spent money in the downtime. I'm trying to figure this out. Yeah. Because that's what, that's what people that are smart do. Okay. They, well, number one, remember when COVID hit, right when it started to hit, most people started laying off all their people. They started, dude, a lot of people that I know that were extremely successful went and bought a thousand cars with COVID hit and everybody tripped. They bought them low. Then when it went up, they cashed out. And six months later, I got rich just because I went and bought all those heavies. Now that was my personal decision. From a business decision, I was selling cars. Okay. Me and my wife. And it's funny because everybody was going, nobody can get approved. Everybody's got to put money down. And my deal is like, dude, nobody has to pay cash for anything. This is crazy. We can still leverage cars. Everybody that has a heavy, okay, a VA or bigger truck or car or an SUV is going to be wanting to trade it in because they can no longer afford to drive it. We're about to get rich. We just hit the lottery. So I sold every freaking car there was. I literally knew I was going to take in all their trade-ins for half of it. Now most of the people came in, they were so upside down. They had to get Helox literally on their houses, which I went over and made a relationship with somebody across the street. It was like, I can literally get the Helox money on a house if somebody has any equity in it within a week. I have an appraiser. I can get it done and get it handled. So people would come in, they're 20 grand upside down. They couldn't put freaking $1,400 a month in gas. So you know what I did? I said, done. I got a deal hypothetically speaking. If we have 14 grand of equity in your home, if you own it, this man will take care of it. I'll go and write up the contract now. I'll put the car on hold. My general managers had saw me do it tons of times. They would get the cash, put it down, deals done. And there were 10 pounders left and right. My point is, is that you thrived because you had the cash flow, right? Or I was resourceful, which is what reaching out to you is, is resourceful. Rich people are resourceful. Poor people aren't. People say, and I want to say this, people say, I can't shut your mouth. You don't want to. You don't want to make more money. Let's just be honest. You don't want to make more money. People don't want to make more money. They say they do, but they really don't because they say like I can't or you don't know like what we're up against or you don't understand our market. Shut your mouth. You don't want to. Real leaders always will find a way in a legal way. And because when I'm telling you, there's loopholes. There's ways of thinking not outside the box of your business, but on the edges of how can we operate in our company to move? If you're going to think like everyone else who's the same, you're going to get the same. That's average. You want to know why everybody's average because people can form, produce, and consume. They consume, they can form, and they produce. That's all they do. It's a cycle of and they live in it. And that's why people aren't growing. That's why you got to evolve. And that's why, listen, I said that you're some of the five people you hang out with the most. Some of you right now, you're literally hanging out with people that are the wrong people. You're hanging out with people that are justifying where you're at, where you're at. You need to be around people that say, dude, listen to me, you're better than this and you should be farther than that. And there was ever a better time to be great. It's when everyone's asleep. Now's the time to go back and check your insurance. Make sure they're giving you the best rate. Go through, dot your eyes, cross your T's. Come on, man, let's not be done. Let's not assume we have the best. Let's make sure we do. Right? Wouldn't that be stupid if you found out? It's kind of like I always ask people, have you ever, have you ever caught someone stealing from you or something? Yeah. And it really hurts. But then you look back and you realize there was probably a time that you should have double checked them early on and you just didn't. You, you didn't have to get stolen from all you had to do is dot your eyes and cross your T's. You guys right now, get this video, do yourself as a dealer. If you're a dealer, independent franchise, you guys need to text the 801-251-6605. Just tell Micah what you're doing. That's it. Let's just have a five minute conversation with him. And if you can't help him, okay, or if you guys don't align, we love you. Have a blessed day. Let's move on. You can stay the same. It's, it's such a good point that you're saying, even talking about it within insurance. And even, even when we say, even using the word steal is kind of, is strong, but it's, it's realistic. But let's say willingly taken advantage of, you know, whatever you want to call it. You don't even realize how much advantage. And so like, if you're a salesman, if you're a sales manager, finance manager, owner, I would encourage you just, and it's very simple math, go to your controller, ask them, how much have we paid this company in 12 months? You can pull up. Yeah. And I wasn't saying like, so like the company, people are stealing from you, but like, if you've ever caught someone steal, I had a guy who was stealing on the back lot for me a long time ago. He was wholesaling cars. You know how it is. Oh yeah. Right. And they steal, right? Yeah. They're just grease deals and they each get a little cut. And you know, I just want to tell you this. I one day sent a wholesale buddy of mine to the back lot to try to grease his ass, to just make sure. Cause like, I knew this guy wasn't stealing from me. I just want to know, and it made me sick to even test him. And he greased the guy. My point is I should have done it a long time ago. But you had a loyalty and a relationship. And then all of a sudden, Well, that's what I was saying. Like I just, I, the word assume was like, I just want to say like, let's not assume that we have the best deal. Let's not assume, you know, nobody's hurting you, but there's not a way to save more money. Let's just not assume like, like that's where you get your ass kicked. People that are smart in business, they double check everything. They make sure and they do it consistently and often. Okay. So anyways, I just want to say a lot of people haven't changed insurance companies in 10 years because they haven't even checked. Well, they think it's a headache. And by the way, they're like, well, this guy's been with me or like, Oh my God, how would they take this? Well, how are you taking it? Not making what you're worth. How are you taking it? Looking at your bank account and seeing the numbers are down. Is your warranty company calling you and they're upset about it? No. Yeah. No. Quit thinking small. Okay. It's time to dream bigger. It's time to partner with people who want to see you earn more, make more and have the cash flow to treat your customers better, your company better, you know, whether it's buying cars, use the cash freely, which we will need right as rates continue to increase, which we've only seen them continually go up. Dude, if rates stay high for another two years or three years, you're going to need this cash. Yeah. Okay. So I just want to tell you, it's just so many reasons to make a call. And that's why I try to tell my people like this channel, we created this channel, this podcast to give people options. Okay. To let salespeople like see another way of selling or a different style to let managers see a different way of being a freaking leader, right? Because we're in a world right now that's starving for leaders. And how if they want to retain and hire the right people and make the right salespeople that do, they got to be better leaders. And then also for owners to also be like, Hey man, you know, like, I need to plug into things that can help me be better and sharper web tons of owners that train on our channel. Well, let me give you an example. And this happened last week. So we had a sales manager, kind of what we're talking about takes an influence wants to show the owner more money. He calls us tells us, okay, this is what my dealership is, we're able to take his inventory, we're able to take everything within it. We can see the loss ratio, how many claims, what the price point should be. And then we go back to him. And it takes us about a day to do that. But we actually customize the information for a dealer. And we can sit there and say, in four years, this is how much money you have in six months, this is how much money you have. And this is just based upon what you're doing right now. This isn't even no changes, no changes. And there's not been one person that goes, Is this for real? And then we can prove it to him. It's really interesting on how it works. But it's just like you were saying, in the down times, you need the leverage, you need the cash flow. This is what helps dealers thrive, because there's a lot of dealers that aren't on this program. They're given away money. And those are the dealers that fortunately for guys like me, but unfortunately for them, those are the guys that are going to hurt. Those are the guys going in a downward spiral, the guys that can go in an upward spiral and take advantage of now the opening market within them. It's kind of like you, the COVID criers, as I call them, the guys who are now crying about how it was two years ago, those are the ones that need you more than anyone, because they don't understand how easy it was two years ago. That's it. It spoiled everybody. It ruined it. It was the worst thing that ever happened to our entire market. And people say it was the greatest thing. Yeah, why was going on. But then afterwards, everybody got lazy. And so you need to do two things. Number one, obviously, I believe and I think that all of you are working really hard, and you're doing the right thing and you're grinding. And if you're doing that, that's called hard work. And then the other side is making smart moves and being smart. You got to be smart. You can't just work hard and not be smart. So I think that everybody watching this right now, we've explained what auto is, we've explained what Mike, his company's doing. You can understand just from a perspective. He's blowing up. He's crushing it. He's killing it. What I love is that you're not too big. Okay, I love that because a lot of people right now, they need attention to their stores. They need a little more help than their current company or any of their companies willing to give them. And one of the things that you like to do with your team is grow cash flow, is to create more revenue for these stores, is to make sure that you are helping them win big. And to me, I'm always thinking like, when I go to use somebody, I just got a new CPA. We're earning a lot of money. We keep outgrowing CPAs, right? But I interviewed a couple of them and a couple of them just seem to be too big. You don't have the customer service. My wife, when she wants to get on the phone with the CPA, she wants to get on the phone. Three days later, she ain't flying with her. And so like to me, like you seem like the kind of guy, like when we're needing help, like you're going to help people. And that's the reason why the Elliott Group has thrived so much, because all these other big companies, they outgrew everybody. So I just want to say, as you're growing massively, it seems like you're growing your team at the right pace and obviously you're always available. You love your company. You rep it. You wear it on your shirt. You care a lot about it. And you want to see people win. You take it personal. And by the way, if any owner is watching this or if any owner gets his video, like does anybody else take your financials personal? No, it's probably just you. So reach out, text the number, the 801-251-6605. And then, Micah, any last thing you want to say? No, man. It's been great. And I do want to say what you've talked about. I mean, thank you for being the best salesman I've ever heard. I'm just telling the truth. I know. I know. It was funny when I introduced you to this and in three minutes, you got it. And then you spit back out kind of reselling me on my own. I was just like, this guy's legit. And just looking into you, I just really want to thank you for really getting to know you over the last while. It's been interesting. Evan has been awesome. Yeah, our team, they're great. And so to your point, I text and talk with Evan every week. And we've established a great relationship. He helps my dealership a ton as well. So it's cool when you meet somebody and they actually do what they say they're going to do. Just doesn't exist anymore. I was telling everybody on stage yesterday, I was in Dallas. I said, the hardest thing I've ever done in my life and my hardest part of my life is keeping my word. I deal with so many people and I always keep my word. So as I've grown, when I was little, it was easy to keep my word. But now as I've gotten bigger, it's really hard to keep my word. Not because I don't want to, but because when I say I'm going to do something, I'm going to freaking do it. I was going to ask you that. And it kills me not to do it. I can't even sleep at night. And my wife, she's like, Andy, we'll do anything except break our word. So I always think about that. Did I tell someone I was going to do something today? Like, did I say we were going to do something? I'm always thinking and I want you to know that that's why our company is growing and you have that same thing. And I just want to tell you that a lot of companies don't have that. They want to earn an account. They want to check it off and then go get another one. And they don't want to grow your current accounts. And what I see you as a type of person, whereas if you ever got to a point, regardless about money, that you had enough accounts and that you knew you could take care of what you had, you would call it, draw a line and say, we're done. I'll take care of my current accounts. I'll keep everybody happy. This is the way I'm going to roll. And people don't operate that way. They're like, more and more and more and more and then boom. And it falls off. Exactly. And that's why, I mean, we haven't had a client leave. It's because we're very personalized in our service. Every dealer has their own claims manager. Every dealer has a point of contact, including me. My cell phone is, I mean, and ask my wife, I do take calls and text message. Project me at 2 AM. It's part of the game. Yeah, part of the game. But I was going to ask you that because I was, it was interesting because Evan showed me a picture a couple of days ago. And it was like right when you were starting and it looked like you guys were in a laundry room almost. And there's like you, Jackie, and there's like three other people. And it was just like how it all started. And then now you see it all in there. So, and really, I think you can tell me, but within the last what 12 to 16 months, it's just like, oh, everyone knows in the car industry who Andy Elliott is. Well, because everybody didn't need training. Well, right. But like, do you feel like in 2023, do you feel like that's changed you all? Fame changed you? Anything like that? Hell no. Look, money magnifies who you are. Okay. If you're an asshole, when you get money, you're going to be the biggest asshole that anybody's ever seen. If you're a depressed person, when you make money, you're going to be the most depressed person with money that anybody's ever seen. I was happy when I was broke. Okay. I wasn't, I wasn't like, I wasn't proud of myself, but I was happy. I've always taken care of my family. I've always taken care of myself. I've always tried to figure out how to be number one. But now the market is just right for a guy like me that wants to be unique, make connections, stand out and be different, has a different place in this market. And so I'm trying to tell anybody and everybody that the rules have changed. Things that worked three years ago don't work today, but you're doing what people did three years ago and you're wondering why it's not working. It's because the rules have changed and no one told you. That's why. So I know that the next 10 years, right? They're going to be based off the greatest sales team in the history of time because if you don't sell something, you don't make money just so everybody's aware. If you want to get rich, sell something. I don't care what you sell. Just be very good at sales. Number two, be the best leader the world's ever seen and be so good that your name isn't even a leader that's damn sure not boss. It's leader or mentor. Okay. And then number three, make sure that you understand technology and that you partner with people that want to go with you on your journey to make more and earn more. And some people are with you just for a portion of your life. So like this, I had best friends growing up. They're my best friends, but they're my friends anymore. I outgrew them. I matured. How many of you right now have matured? Okay. And you're ready for some new friends. You're ready for some new connections. You're ready for some new relationships to take your business to the next level, to take your, your life to the next level. You got to outmature your competition. And that's what I did. I grew up and self-developed so hard and learn that people are sick and tired of being sick and tired of dealing with amateurs and freaking fakes and people that aren't pros. So I was like, well, if that's what the, if that's what the marketplace is, which who's who pays us the marketplace? If that's what they're sick of, dude, if I become this over here, that they want to become the marketplace will reward me. Now I'm getting freaking rewarded. So anyways, it's common sense, but it's not so common anymore because everybody, I told you, they're getting civilized. They're conforming and they're hanging around people who are whining and crying. So if this video has made it to your hands, and by the way, if you've made it this far in the video, you're top 1%. Okay. So congratulations on that. But lastly, let me give you this number 801-251-6605. You guys just text Micah and say, Hey Micah, I want a five minute conversation. Look, if it doesn't work out, cool. Love you. Love Micah. Y'all have a blessed day. What if it does? What if it does and it makes you hundreds of thousands of dollars? What if it does and there's a better way to do things? What if there's something you don't know? Never assume that you know everything because you don't. Okay. And then also the rule in life, especially as for business owners and for anybody that wants to be great is getting rooms with people doing bigger things in you. And I don't share many people on my channel. So if I share him with you, it's because you need to know him. Okay. Relationships are the new currency. You want to make a lot of money? You got to make a couple of new relationships. So maybe it's time to reach out and don't make a decision. I'm like, I'm going to switch my stuff. No, just call him. See what it looks like. He'll paint a picture, show you the blueprint, give you the facts, and in the end of your decision. So love you, bro. Appreciate it, man. Kill it, you guys. Reach out to him, and then we'll see you on the next podcast. Hey, guys. I just want to tell you, you're the true one percenters. You made it till the end of the video. Do me a favor. Share it with the friend that wants to go to another level. Make sure you like the video. Comment below so I know who you are. Set your notifications and then subscribe to the channel. We got daily sales training videos dropping. I'll see you soon.
|
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|
UCk40c_9_HL3IVj_2lCIBu0g
|
Nivel 1 - ¡Bienvenida a la Pompeu!
|
Pompeulàndia, guía cómica para disfrutar de los primeros días en la Universidad Pompeu Fabra
| null | 2021-09-01T09:53:34 | 2024-04-23T01:16:44 | 68 |
ZqWf0a9xMB4
|
Nivel 1, bienvenida a la Pumpeo. Creo que me he equivocado de campus. Estoy en la siuta de ella. Immigrado se da en... Tu primer día ya la estás leyendo, Laya. Laya, ¿te acuerdas de mí? De las jornadas de puertas abiertas? Claro, Marc, ¿no? Derecho... Pues sí, pero ¿qué haces tú aquí? No es tu campus, ¿no? Además, creía que empezabas mañana. Lo sé, pero recibí un mensaje en mi correo que me citaba hoy aquí. Nos vemos en el campus de la siuta de ella. Aula 40.108, el lunes a las 10. En la Pumpeo te descubrieras a ti misma. Este es solo el primer paso. Parecía sobre el inicio de las clases, pero creo que era broma. Yo de ti aprovecharía para ir. Conecta ya con la UPS. Sí que nuestros perfiles en redes sociales.
|
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"url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZqWf0a9xMB4",
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UCwlZZGmE1e_6PI2e-HOPOQw
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Xun Gong, "Grade II in Tangut and Hexi Late Middle Chinese" | SOAS University of London
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This talk titled “Grade II in Tangut and Hexi Late Middle Chinese" was given by Xun Gong (CRLAO, Paris) as part of the Recent Advances in Tangut Studies Workshop which was held at SOAS University of London on 28 February 2017.
You can find out more about his event at https://goo.gl/9HyA1d
Although they lost their polity to the Mongols, the Tanguts played an important role in the development of Buddhism and secular institutions in both Tibet and China. The study of the language and literature offers many insights on intercultural exchange in an important period of Asian history. This event brings together eight scholars at the cutting edge of Tangut studies to explore this lost civilization, its language, religion, and culture.
|
[
"SOAS University of London"
] | 2018-02-07T15:57:49 | 2024-02-05T06:13:27 | 2,007 |
zQIwyCF0ZnE
|
I must first begin by thanking Nathan Hale for providing me with this excellent chance to present a little bit my, it's not really even work, my working progress before such, before an audience with such an irradiation, which I can only dream of. And so today I, as you know, I have been working on the problem of grades in Tangud for a moment. And so today I'll just pick up where I left off back in Hamburg where, because I didn't treat the thing about the grade two. And so today I'll talk about it and talking a little bit, I'll be also talking a little bit about Chinese also. So I call the, I call the late middle Chinese, the Chinese dialect that is spoken by Tangus and the Chinese dialect that the Tangus learn, or learn Chinese well. So let's start with some basic information. So the most interesting to me category, phonological category in Tangud is the start of grades. So usually, by usually I mean by Huang Cheng, usually we reconstruct three grades for a Tangud on the basis of a conjunction of rhyme, order, and dictionaries. So in dictionaries like the one have all these C characters. And we have other lexicographic materials that present the exactly the same order of rhyme, of rhyme categories. So it's something that is very much agreed upon by the Tangud philologists themselves. And the other thing is the Tangud Chinese transcription evidence. There is a slight asymmetry between the Chinese to Tangud side and the Tangud to Chinese side, but for the grade problem it's okay. So as an example, we take the rhymes R34, so R34 to R37. And we see that so the first rhyme in this group transcribes almost only Chinese syllables in the Chinese grade one. And the second rhyme in this group, R35 transcribes only Chinese characters of the grade two. And the remaining two rhymes, R36 and R37, more or less indiscriminately transcribes Chinese grades three and four. In fact, these two are in near complementary distribution. And if we look really hard at the near part, we see that they are usually artificial. And we can, for most of these groups like this, we can make a case for real complementary distribution. So I agree with Gong Huang Cheng in reconstructing only three grades. So the traditional reconstruction of the value of the grade is made by Sofranov basically as a mirror image of the Chinese reconstruction at his day. So he considered the grade thing basically a thing of mediums. So the first grade has no mediums. The second grade has some kind of weak yard. And the third grade has some kind of strong yard. This is carried over a verb by Gong Huang Cheng. So you have the Niesge-Geslawi Yoda represented by a volcanic E in Gong Huang Cheng's reconstruction and the stronger yard represented by real yard. This creates the problem that it's very difficult to pronounce EA and EA. What's the difference between EA and EA? Well, I can pronounce a lot of things, but this one is a little bit difficult. So Gong Huang Cheng made a decision to, he basically invented an aliphany where in grade three the vowel is slightly raised. So you have EA and EA. What is pronounceable? A little bit pronounceable. But sadly it is not supported by the transcription evidence. So my favorite example is just the basic mantra in Mahayana Buddhism. Om Manipal Nehum. And if we look at the usual reconstruction we have Om Manipal Nehum. Clearly it doesn't work and it needs to be updated. And I have the whose part to consider the updating basically done. So at the moment let's start with a little bit context. So Tanggut, it is known already at the time of Wolfen Deng and Wang Xinru, that Tanggut is a Changi language closely related to languages like Chang, to Minyak, to Garongic languages. But at this time those languages are not very well described. So basically in order to be able to do the nice kind of comparison you need to really do great dictionaries of those languages and you like thousands of words before you can really get to something. So now with Guillaume Jacques, who has worked for more than a decade on Japook, he has a very great dictionary of Japook and he has looked for all the possible coordinates and he found some 300 of them. So now we have something very solid to work on which is the cognates between Tanggut and Japook Garong. So based on comparison with Japook Garong, which I will not explain today, I happily and gladly redo the presentation that I have done in Hamburg and elsewhere if you want it. And so basically what I suggest is that there is a phonological distinction of uberlarization, so between uberlarized vowels which are pronounced like bah, bah, and non-uberlarized plain vowels which are pronounced bah, bah. So the distinction between grade 1 and grade 3 which were reconstructed before as bah versus biah is now reconstructed as bah versus bah. This distinction of uberlarization triggers an aliphony for the velar, so basically the yain initials between qa and qa. It is very clear that grade 2 is uberlarized as grade 1 but we don't know what the thing distinguishes grade 2 from grade 1. So for now I will write an R for grade 2 and we will have a look in detail. So where does the uberlarization in Garong come from? Well, the first origin is what I call the primary uberlarization. It must be reconstructed back to proto-Changgi and it has some correspondences within my other silent Tibetan languages but it's too early to say anything serious about it. However, if we just look at Changgi languages the thing is quite clear. So for example, for past long it's boh uberlarized in Tangut and in zhibu garong the language I'm working on is dazwu dazwu with the velarized or uberlarized vowel which I call emphatic vowel and we have the same thing in Minyang the language which shares the name of Tangut is ba ba. So for willow it's uberlarized in Tangut and it's emphatic in zhibu etc. So this is the primary uberlarization which is inherited from proto-Changgi we also have secondary uberlarization so basically the root wasn't uberlarized at the stage of proto-Changgi but now there are other things which went to the syllable and which makes it uberlarized. So for example, if we have a uberlar if we have a uberlar called emphatic vowel so for example to we which is ta in zhibu there is the ge and this ge goes to the syllable and so we have not la but la for snake it is the same ta but in the first position so basically we should have pu or something for snake but it's ha pu and this ra this uberlarized element goes on to the syllable and makes it pu and not only uberlarized but veeler elements basically veeler codus and em which I hypothesized as having turned into some kind of another word than to this ge and these also make secondary uberlarizations so what do we find here we find the ubiquitous pattern the basic conspiracy in the historic phonology of Tangu which Mark Miyake describes as compression I have changed his definition a little bit and for me what is compression compression is that materials phonological or phonetic materials around the syllables so for example the codus or pre-initials or even some kind of minor syllables they all went to the main part of the syllable and become some kind of pan-syllabic feature which works for the syllable as a whole that is for example how we usually explain the origin of retroflexes in Tangu so you have pre-initial R or codon R which just extends to the syllable as a whole and itself it has disappeared so this is the compression and so the uberlarization in Tangu fits very well into this great picture of compression so we have left the second the grade II unexplained it has something to do with R so I will write it as R in capital letters but what is it? first we will look at this transcription evidence for this great R so for the Chinese transcription there isn't much to be said first it transcribes grade II second it transcribes grade III with Zhuangzu shengmu so with retroflex fricte for African as an initial the Tibetan transcription is more interesting I think it's for the Hanbi and Hanbi and am I right? where we have the vowel R in the second in grade II transcribed as R so for example this character which is Ba is transcribed as Ba and you never find the first find the grade I syllable in comparable circumstances transcribed with an R that's all we have got for the transcription materials it's quite hard to interpret it's more interesting to consider the etymological origins of the grade II capital R so the first origin of the grade II capital R is eulerization plus medial R so for example if you have Ka without the R you have Ka in grade I but in fact because there is an R it's krak so the R is reflected as the grade II also for wele it's zhembr and it is duly reflected as Ba with this capital R for white here the eulerization is not primary but comes from the code M however because there is the R so code M brings eulerization and eulerization plus medial R brings grade II the same medial R a non-neuvelarized context just disappears so for example this is a word which is shared by almost every Changi language so it's quite useful gr which means sinew and it is there is an R but it has disappeared because it's not eulerized so the same thing for clear water which is angri and just gi there's no difference between gi and gr so that was the first origin for grade II in Tangut and now things get more interesting here we have the R which has an euler initial with the vowels e, a and u so basically if any of you speak a language with euler so you know that it's very difficult to pronounce pi it's almost impossible to do q with a normal e so there is always some kind of intervening transitional element between euler initial and high vowel or front vowel and however in Tangut this thing is categorized the same thing as the other origins of grade II that is why I think that Miyake's hypothesis that 104 and 204 are grade II rhymes and not grade I rhymes is correct because basically you have other you have other initials one and two and one but you have almost only in fact euler initials in 104 and 204 so the R thing here is some kind of transitional element which has a low vowel in one of the garantic languages which is a variety of crossgap spoken in Wozi we have the same thing so for difficult which is you have however a normal word with a in Japhook is just reflected as e in crossgap and grade III e in Tangut and why we have this in Rai is because it's difficult to say if you say in Rai and you don't pay very much attention it becomes in Rai the last the last origin for for the second for the grade II in Tangut is retroflex initials I think I don't have the time to explain it clearly here so I've just declared by Fiat that the the shivalence so the Chantu the Chantu initials are pronounced are pronounced retroflex before a euler before a euler rise Rai so what does it say it means that because we have because shivalence are only compatible with grade II but not grade I it means that the R the capital R is some kind of transitional element between retroflex sound and a vowel and any vowel so for those of you who would love to look at a little bit at the argument I leave it here and let's go to the summing up so in order to recapitulate the evidence about the capital R so what does the capital R feel like first there is some kind of throttiness or backness because it is only a euler rise context and it's a transitional vowel between a euler and a high or a front vowel so it must be something like R or O or A or something like that that's our first intuition the second intuition is that the sound has an R-like character so otherwise it's impossible to explain the R in the Tibetan transcription and it would be difficult to explain also the origins with in R and with retroflex however we also know that it's not a real R because first we have the middle R in Tibetan and it's never transcribed as a middle R in Tibetan also it's in the how do you call it in the in the mantras if there is a word like and it will never be and you never find a grade 2 character used to transcribe in fact you have very few grade 2 characters in mantras basically it's used to transcribe the long vowel and nothing else and thirdly if it's really R it's impossible to explain why it becomes grade it's not okay grade becomes grade it's strange so what do I feel about it well I think that it's the I call it the eye hypothesis because I think it is an eye so phonologically I will call it a pharyngeal and phonetically it's the vocalis vocalis correspondent of an eye which is the A and very pharyngealized so for example white is pronounced difficult is pronounced grade and to cross the river is pronounced down and why do I think so well first it satisfies the the throatiness because you can't get really you can't get more throaty than the eye it's almost the most throaty consonant available and it also counts for the R-like character this subject is seriously little treated in the literature but if you ask anybody who works on Caucasian languages or on Arabic and you ask them what do they think in American English and in Mandarin Chinese you have this kind of rotic vowels and they will tell you that they are not rotic the principle acoustic and articulatory in those vowels is the pharyngeal construction and we find everywhere this kind of this kind of affinity between roticness and pharyngeal construction for example in the Chinese transcript of Arabic if you have an eye then it's rendered with one of the rotic vowels in Chinese that's my theory about that's my current theory about the grade 2 in Tangut and let's just project it back to Hexi late middle Chinese well, it means that grade 2 has some kind of RTR quality and it has a pharyngeal so my hypothesis is that the iron hypothesis is not only true for Tangut but it also works at least for Hexi late middle Chinese now the question is this is this grade 2 iron in Hexi Chinese influenced or co-evolved or anything like that by Tangut or it's more widespread in Chinese and in fact the Tangut is influenced by the Chinese well on the nature of grade 2 in Chinese basically we have two theories the A theory and the E theory the A theory is almost correct because if you look at modern dialects and if you look at all kinds of information it's clearly something like A however how do you get from Ra to A it's very difficult on the other hand if we use this iron hypothesis and so if Chinese grade 2 is characterized by strong pharyngealization then it's very natural to have the vowel A which is in fact the pharyngealized counterpart of A associated with grade 2 one is that we have this association between retroflex initials and A in Tangut and it's also very projectable to Chinese because not only in Hexi Middle Chinese but also in the early Northern Mandarin contemporary to Hexi Middle to Hexi to Hexi Middle Chinese we have the same thing we have the whenever you have a retroflex African or African in grade 3 syllables it is classified together with grade 2 so not only original grade 2 is grade 2 but in late Middle Chinese or in early Mandarin or in fact in most kind of Chinese retroflex plus everything gives grade 2 and we still have some modern reflection of this in dialects from standard Mandarin to Sano-Vietnamese every time if you the original retroflexes cause a lowering of the vowel just put Cantonese here but it works for any other language for most other languages as well so I have argued for the I true nature of grade 2 in Tangut and I project it into Chinese but it's not in fact it turns out that it's not dialect of Chinese but very common Chinese and the only thing it gives us is that the Tangut treatment you will arise into this kind of vowel from Chinese why do I say it because in modern Changi language you never find this treatment this particular treatment it's either preserved or lost without any trace or become some kind of real celebrity or it triggers the particular Tibetan sound change which brings gr to zh for example for the worst sign you have in northern in northern which is the select big vertices treatment and we have the Tibetan treatment zh in southern and this if you look at the dialect map the treatment are really scattered so it means that in most of the Wuhan map of Changi the middle R is preserved to a very late date so the most plausible scenario that Chinese all kinds of Chinese always had some kind of wine for grade 2 and Tangud has developed under the influence under the influence from Chinese so in our final slide can we speak about Heizhish Park I got interested in the first because I thought it would bring to some very clear area so Hexi Chinese is influenced by Tangud and Tangud is influenced by Hexi Chinese however I think Tangud is very strongly reshaped, restructured by Hexi Chinese however Hexi Chinese is just some very generic kind of north western Chinese even if the strange thing is that is this the only thing we can know anything about Hexi Middle Chinese is by Tangud transcriptions and if we just read the if we just listen to Tangud's speaking very heavily Tangud accent Chinese it just sounds like normal Chinese without any Tangud accent what does that mean it means that Tangud is so much reshaped by Chinese so that the phonological systems are almost completely compatible with that kind of thing for example in Hamdou where you have melodic languages with phonologies so those people if they speak Chinese they just speak it like normal Chinese etc however we also know that for example for the compression for all kinds of compression the dialect the Tibetan dialect used to transcribe the Tangud and have shared the same sound changes so I think we have a typical situation which I call the the Ottoman Balkan situation you have the Balkan Shafut where Balkan languages coexist in some kind of in some kind of Paxpanic and they influence each other and they are all influenced by Turkish it's barely influenced by by Balkan languages and I think we have the same thing so Tangud and local Tibetan influence each other they are all influenced by Chinese but Chinese is not influenced is not very much influenced by Tangud and that's all I have to say thank you very much
|
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UC_TneqvSfh-KsIyZMlJjVsQ
|
Intent matters in Biden docs probes, says analyst: Department of Justice serves at pleasure of Biden
|
#Kanal13 #likekanal13 #subscribekanal13 #warinukraine
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Intent matters in Biden docs probes, says analyst: Attorney General Garland and others at the Department of Justice serve at the pleasure of the president
Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives launched an investigation into the Justice Department's handling of improperly stored classified documents possessed by President Joe Biden, and questioned whether his son, Hunter, had access to any. Legal experts say the investigation will come down to intent.
(c) Reuters
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Tags: Ukriane, Russia, Putin, Putler, Russian invasion of Ukraine, Zelenski, Kiev, Kyiv, Kadirov army, Kadirov, Kherson, Bucha, Kharkiv, Ukrainian pilots, vagners, Russian tanks, NATO, drones, Moscow, Kreml, war victims Ukraina,
|
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"son xeberler",
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] | 2023-01-15T04:15:11 | 2024-02-14T18:42:57 | 149 |
ZQ7DblzOzTw
|
Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives launched their own investigation on Friday into the Justice Department's handling of improperly stored classified documents found at President Joe Biden's Delaware home and Washington think tank and questioned whether his son Hunter had access. Top Republicans on the House Judiciary Committee demanded all relevant documents and communications between the department, the FBI, the White House and Biden's attorneys. They said the Justice Department's appointment of Robert Her as special counsel for the case this week raised fundamental oversight questions. Despite the letter, former Assistant U.S. Attorney Reed Schar, now a partner at Jenner and Block, said Her has a reputation for being independent and fair. He is perceived both with in the department and more generally in the public sphere as someone who is not going to be particularly favorable to a Democratic president, whether at the same time someone of the utmost integrity who is not going to pursue anyone just because of a political affiliation. Her will investigate whether the classified records from Biden's time as vice president had been improperly stored, a situation that echoes a wide-ranging inquiry directed at former President Donald Trump's handling of classified documents. But legal experts say their cases are not the same. Trump resisted returning the papers, forcing an FBI search that turned up about 100 classified documents, and raising questions about whether Trump or his staff obstructed the investigation. The White House, in contrast, said Biden's attorneys found a small number of classified documents and turned them over after they were discovered. Schar said the criminal statute involved requires intent, and the comments by Biden's team is likely to signal the defense strategy. I think that's part of an argument you can see coming, which is we didn't know we had these, we certainly didn't intend to take them, and as soon as we found them, we raised our hand and we tried to return them as quickly as we could, and that's all driven by trying to make clear that there was no intent to have these classified materials and there was no violation of the statute. The inquiry is a distraction for the Democratic president, who has criticized his Republican predecessor's handling of classified material, and could cast a shadow over Biden as both men gear up for a possible 2024 election rematch.
|
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UCkY5L8JYwx7BT0cOXYZX_dw
|
COVID-19 Vaccination: Third Pfizer Dose 86% Effective In Over 60s | AFRICAN
|
A third dose of Pfizer/BioNTech's COVID-19 vaccine was 86% effective in people over 60.
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#PlusTVAfrica #AfricanNews #AfricanNewsOnPlusTvAfrica
|
[
"News",
"Politics",
"Nigeria",
"Africa",
"Plus TV Africa",
"Plus TV",
"Plus",
"Plus TV Nigeria",
"Plus Television",
"Plus TV News",
"Justin Akadonye",
"Aneta Felix",
"Osarogie Ogbonmwan",
"Top News",
"news",
"trending",
"AFRICAN"
] | 2021-08-19T14:47:47 | 2024-02-05T06:26:46 | 71 |
ZqQRQMIo_eM
|
The third dose of Pfizer-BioNTech's COVID-19 vaccine was 86 percent effective in people over 60. An Israeli healthcare provider said on Wednesday, citing initial results from a study of thousands of members. Israel began administering third Pfizer doses last month to confront a surge in local infections driven by the Delta variant. Some 1.1 million eligible Israelis, people over 50, healthcare workers and others have received their third dose. United States and several European countries are expected to begin offering boosters to the elderly and people with weak immune systems and some are considering whether to make a third dose available for more widely. Nonetheless, Israelis health officials worry that cases will continue to mount given that another 1.1 million Israelis around 11 percent of the population are unvaccinated. Severe cases have also continued to climb, mostly among the unvaccinated.
|
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|
UCYyRpJBseu43EojDdSUcSyA
|
Number the Stars - Chapter 9
|
This video is part of the Lesson Plan on "Number the Stars" by Lois Lowry. English captions and English voiceover are available.
Developed by the Statewide Outreach Center at Texas School for the Deaf.
Lesson Plan: https://www.texasdeafed.org/Page/1414
About SOC: www.texasdeafed.org
| null | 2021-09-28T18:17:24 | 2024-04-23T15:49:06 | 52 |
ZQ9QI_4ppsU
|
The next morning, as Anne-Marie awoke, she went out to the barn. Uncle Heinrich was there, and he was milking the cow. She came up and sat next to him. She said, Uncle, you lied to me. And he said, I know, don't be mad at me. And she said, wait a minute, you told me the Aunt Birdie had died. I don't have an Aunt Birdie. Uncle Heinrich said, it's important for you to be brave. Now there's lots of things going on with the soldiers. It's just important that you be brave. If you're curious to know what happens, go ahead and read.
|
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"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
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|
UCVeW9qkBjo3zosnqUbG7CFw
|
BsidesCT 2018 TRIVIA Challenges
|
If you would like to support me, please like, comment & subscribe, and check me out on Patreon: https://patreon.com/johnhammond010
E-mail: johnhammond010@gmail.com
PayPal: http://paypal.me/johnhammond010
GitHub: https://github.com/JohnHammond
Site: http://www.johnhammond.org
Twitter: https://twitter.com/_johnhammond
|
[
"bsides",
"ct",
"connecticut",
"bsidesct",
"bsides connecticut",
"2018",
"bsidesct 2018",
"bsides ctf",
"bsidesct ctf",
"capture the flag",
"bsides capture the flag",
"bsides conference",
"security",
"cybersecurity",
"security conference",
"conference",
"conference competition",
"conference ctf",
"john",
"hammond",
"john hammond",
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"trivia challenges",
"osint",
"open source intelligence",
"recon",
"reconnaissance",
"open source information",
"open source intelligence gathering",
"google"
] | 2018-11-05T19:26:20 | 2024-02-05T16:03:22 | 435 |
ZQ7V-B1ENUw
|
Alright, what's up YouTube? How's it going? It has been a hot minute since I posted a video So I wanted to get back into the swing of things in this set of videos I want to showcase some of the challenges from the B sides Connecticut CTF or capture flag competition. I was there just this past weekend It was awesome. I actually gave a talk. It was just a blast and the game is still actually online I don't know if you'll be able to reach it by the time you watch this But it is CTF dot B side CT org so I competed with a good friend of mine Caleb His name is illicit tiger in the discord server. I don't think he's that active all that often But we played on the team named it butter overflow The team name was my idea, so I totally want to take credit for that and that was that was awesome We came in first place and it was just a really cool thing actually won a small little HP stream laptop from it And it comes with Cali installed So hopefully it'll just be a nice tinker toy for hack the box or vulnerable some some dedicated stuff So I don't have to use my own laptop. It was really cool The the competition had this nice little setup for the challenges just based off the set of Connecticut shape I didn't use this I went for the classic theme because it's just a regular CTF D game So I want to showcase a couple of these hopefully I can talk about the conference more in another video There's some other interesting stuff with that But in this video I just want to run through the trivia challenges and I'll do everything else that I can in later videos So trivia first challenges number actually before I dive in Sorry, I just want to cover because the point value on some of these is very interesting in the rules page You can read a little bit about the CTF. It's simple. Don't be a jerk kind of fun kind of cool, etc and The scoring rules is that this is using dynamic scoring It'll automatically just a challenge values based off the number of teams that have solved it So each challenge will start at 500 points and it will go down as people solve it But the scores for the people that solve the challenges will obviously or not obviously because sometimes this doesn't happen But it's better when it does They will change as well with the value of the challenge itself. So whatever. Let's dive in That's why some of the challenges have very very low point because a lot of people solve them Some of them don't because not many people solve them etc But you'll be able to see that when we actually take a look at the challenge You can see the number of solves and who solved it and when so there we are cool So challenge number one is Connecticut's first besides conference was in 2011 Can you believe that how many besides kinetic events have there been including this one? So this video is not going to be that technical right because it's just going to be covering the trivia challenges This is an interesting one. It's a simple dialogue But I actually just kind of I had a conversation with one of the organizers there ill will or ex ill will I think on Twitter Cool guy awesome guy Thank you for one thing for squeezing me in for the conference and all if you happen to listen, whatever So I had a conversation with him before the competition got started before the conference really got going like well I got my bad and was registering everything was just saying hello He said that they've been doing this right since 2011, but they were doing it every other year So that would have meant 2011 one 2013 one 2015 another 2017 following that and then 2018 this year was one they've just started to go Okay now each year so that is from what I believe a total of five and I believe that's what I answered Maybe I'm wrong right now. It doesn't it just says you've already solved this, but the thing turned green. So Maybe that was already what was that the correct answer? It's just gonna get just gonna turn green whatever I put so I believe it was five I didn't save the answer, but I just tried a few numbers and got it Some of these challenges are interesting because I was able to just literally try numbers and guess the flag in a horrible way But we'll come to those challenges when we come to them next challenge was what's my pen name? This didn't come out until about later in the afternoon Same thing with I've seen this before this trivia challenge was released later in the game I think who is this guy was the only other one that came out just at the very start of the game We solve it just a minute in so this said this one of who is this guy is a picture is your dot jpeg Which we can download looks like I've already got it downloaded Fired up and it's a picture of this dude. I don't know who he is. So let's go ahead and try and Google it I use Google images like Google reverse images Because if it's a thing that exists, maybe we can just track it down Google images images.google and we can drag and search for something specific with that. So let's go ahead and just open a File manager and drag that picture in Okay, and if my internet connection is not the best here But it kind of googled specifically for the animal looks like it found a newt in there or whatever It looked like it was able to find that picture here and let's a linked in thing I tried that name Daniel Smith, etc. And then I went ahead and clicked on it But I just got the Google image results itself It looked like just this description here was Josh Leffers. I don't know if that's anyone Special or important, I don't know but I went ahead and submitted that and that was the answer It was Josh Leffers. So just some cool recon trying everything that you could find Just I don't know throwing stuff at the wall seeing what was sticking. So okay. Next one was what's my pen name? It says Eric Corley is the only description in the lead that we have so I simply googled that right I'd Google Eric Corley pen name and That came up very quickly Frequently known to it was the pen name of Emanuel Goldstein. So Was able to copy paste that in and get the W Next one is I've seen this before and this is a simple string that looks like nonsense But you might be able to recognize. Okay, these are words spelled backwards So I've I think I had it open and idle when I was testing with it earlier We can go ahead and just paste it in and go ahead and reverse it. So it says spandex. It's a privilege not a right I hadn't seen that before but again simple Google stuff recon OSINT It looks like After some scrolling down through that it was from the movie hackers at least that was the assumption So I honestly just tried that there wasn't a whole lot of guidance in this this challenge I just entered hackers and that was the correct flag. So okay very cool That's just the trivia challenge category. So again, there's not a whole lot of technical stuff in there The really cool stuff will come in later videos But I hope this may be a little bit fun a little bit interesting for you guys to watch Please do like comment and subscribe Before I go I do want to give a quick shout out to the people that support me on patreon Thank you guys so much I cannot say it enough $1 a month on patreon will give you a special shout out just like this at the end of every video We're just gonna have your name added at the very very end here And $5 a month on patreon will give you early access to everything that are released on youtube and online before it goes live So I like to try and record a lot of things hopefully when I'm going on a good streak And get them ready and prepared for youtube to schedule their uploads and then gradually release them So if you want the content right when it's ready, that's the best way to do it Just a simple five dollars and I'm and I'm super grateful for it Thank you for helping support and helping me put food on the table Just a dude trying to live and stuff. So All right, please do join our discord server link in the description It is a cool community full of cti players and hackers shut up. I'll stop talking about my spiel and crap like that I'll let you get on it today. Thanks again for watching guys. See you soon. I love you
|
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UCOYjmNfEFcUPDgihxwSSReA
|
Data Life Cycle
|
In this session, I will discuss data life cycle.
✔️Accounting students or CPA Exam candidates, check my website for additional resources: https://farhatlectures.com/
📧Connect with me on social media: https://linktr.ee/farhatlectures
#cpaexam #cpaexaminindia #professorfarhat
|
[
"data life cycle",
"data life cycle in cloud computing",
"data life cycle process",
"data life cycle in hindi",
"data lifecycle management",
"data life cycle explained",
"data life cycle in tamil",
"data life cycle شرح",
"data life cycle google",
"data life cycle cissp",
"data life cycle phases",
"data life cycle management",
"data life cycle and the data analysis process",
"data life cycle plan",
"data life cycle definition",
"data life cycle diagram",
"data life cycle capture"
] | 2023-01-31T15:00:46 | 2024-02-05T06:15:14 | 784 |
zQv4jT77_Yg
|
Hello and welcome to the session in which we'll discuss the concept of data life cycle or DLC. What is the data life cycle? Well, the data life cycle outlines the steps for managing and preserving data for utilization and repeated use. Why? Why do we need to preserve the data? Why do we need to maintain the data? Well, by implementing a cycle, the organization can enhance the possibility that the data will be functional. It means useful for us, useful for our purpose for our objective and have a longer lifespan. Simply put, we can use it for many years to go. So that's the purpose of the life cycle is to manage the data, preserve it for useful use. For this process, we're going to be using six steps. And usually those six steps, more or less like the COVID six steps of the data life cycle. The first one is plan and design, build and acquire, store, use, share, then archives slash destroy. And this is a picture of it. And if you know anything about Farhad, anything I anytime I have a series of steps, I'll explain each step separately. So I'm going to go over the step of plan and design, build and acquire in the data life cycle. Before we proceed any further, I have a public announcement about my company, Farhad Lectures.com. Farhad Accounting Lectures is a supplemental educational tool that's going to help you with your CPA exam preparation, as well as your accounting courses. My CPA material is aligned with your CPA review course such as Becker, Roger, Wiley, Gleam, Miles. My accounting courses are aligned with your accounting courses broken down by chapter and topics. My resources consist of lectures, multiple choice questions, true false questions, as well as exercises. Go ahead, start your free trial today. No obligation, no credit card required. Starting with plan slash design, which is step one of six, well, as those terms are very helpful, plan design, it means that that's the first step. I'm planning and designing the whole process. And that's an important step because it's going to lay the foundation for the entire data management process in order to achieve whatever my desired goal is. And the first thing I have to determine is what is my objectives? Why do I have this data? I have to clearly define the goals and objective of the data collection. You don't collect data to hoard the data. You want to use it for something. You want to use it, for example, for improving business operation, making data-driven decision or conducting research and reporting. So the first thing is, what is the objective? Why am I doing this? The second thing is what type of data am I dealing with? Identify the types of data that is required to reach my objective in step one. This includes determining the attributes, such as demographic information, transactional data, time series, et cetera, whatever I need. Well, the third thing I have to decide on in this plan slash design is how am I going to collect this data? Deciding on the method of data collection. I can use surveys, experiment, purchase the data from a third party. This could be acceptable as well. The method choosing depending on the type of data I am using and what is my objective. Then I have to have a management plan. Well, how am I going to manage the data? Develop a data management plan that outlines the procedures for storing, protecting, and preserving the data for future use. This plan also should address security, privacy, ethical consideration. Here, I'm just putting down the map. I'm going to talk about these steps a little bit further down the road. And last is in this step, I want to examine which method, which analysis method am I going to be using to extract the meaningful insight, to extract meaning from the data. Because the data, if I cannot obtain the knowledge through analysis, it's useless. So this could include statistical analysis, machine learning. I could use data visualization technique, as well as other steps. In step two, which is build slash acquire, in this step, data is either built or acquired through various sources. The steps involve the following activities. One is data collection. Now I am either building the data from my own transaction or remember I can acquire it. So data collection. Depending on the methods decided in the plan design step, remember data can be collected through survey, experiment or purchase. It's important to ensure that the data collected either way, either internally or externally is accurate. That's important, relevant to what we want to do, and of high quality. Well, after we obtain the data, we don't accept it as is, we're going to do some data cleaning. Once the data is collected, we clean it, we remove any errors, inconsistencies or duplicates. And if you ever work in data, whether for academia or in the real world, you will know that data always need cleaning. And that's, that's a tough, that's a tough task sometime. Also formatting data formatting. After cleaning, you will need to format the data to be inconsistent structure that can be easily processed and analyzed, especially if you are using a special software or some sort of a proprietary software to analyze the data. This could involve converting data into specific format, such as spreadsheet or a database or some other proprietary format. Then you have to verify the data. The final step in this is to verify the data, the accuracy of the data. This includes checking for any discrepancies, any missing values, any outliers, whether you want to keep them or not, they may affect the results of the analysis. In step three, we're going to determine how to store the data. So the store step involved storing the data collected in step two after we collected in a secured location. Now the storing could be physical, could be, could be computerized. This step is important for protecting and preserving the data for future analysis and decision making. The first thing is we have to determine the data storage. Well, it can be stored in a physical location, like a storage room or digital location, such as a database, which is computerized on a server somewhere. The storage method, either method chosen, whether it's physical or digital, should ensure that it's secure and accessible. So it's always secure and accessible. Then we have to make sure the data is being backed up. Regular backups of the data should be taken to ensure that the data is not lost in case of disaster or technical failure. Well, also we want to make sure it's secured. That's for sure. We talked about data storage at the beginning. How can we secure the data? Well, if it's a physical data, well, unauthorized access, locked doors, we want to protect it from theft, loss, fire, so on and so forth. Now, also if it's digital data, data encryption, access controlled, disaster recovery procedure. Also, we might have to deal with data privacy here because sometime organization must ensure that the data is stored in accordance with data privacy regulation inserting guidelines. Step four is use of the data. In this step, the data stored in step three is used to analyze and analyze and used for decision making. Here is where we're going to extract meaningful insight and knowledge from the data to support whatever we are doing, our objective, the business decision, improving operation, so on and so forth. First is data analysis. The data collected now goes through some sort of an analysis. It could be statistical analysis, machine learning, data visualization technique, or to extract the whole purpose extract, extract meaningful insight, just get more information. After we get the information, we need to interpret this information. And this could be, this could be, we could misinterpret this information. So this includes understanding the relationship between variables, identifying trends and making prediction. And this should be, this is I would say the most important. If you have the data, the software run it, everything is good. The data is good. The software is properly working. Now, do you interpret the data properly? And after you interpret data, let's assume you interpret it properly. Are you making the right decision after you interpret the data? So the insight and knowledge gained from the data analysis are used to make decision in various areas of the organization, such as product development, marketing, operation, whatever that decision is. Also, we can use visual representation or data visualization to do what? To gain more insight. It could be graphs, charts, and I have several lessons about data visualization, then they can help communicate the information, the insight, the knowledge gained from the data analysis to the stakeholder, to whoever is interested in this data. Sharing the data in this step, the results of the data and decision are shared with stockholder and archives for future use. So data sharing, the result of the data, like who are the stakeholders? Who are they? We're looking at management, employees, people who are making decision could be customers. If it's some good news about our product, partners to provide them with valuable insight, this can be done through presentation, email, other form of communication. Also, we want to make sure the data is accessible and the results are accessible in case somebody would like to double check them. This could involve implementing a data management system and tool to provide secure access to the data. Also, we want to archive this data. Archive means what? It's somewhere for future use, should be archive for future reference and use. This may involve storing the data in an archive database or physical location. Also, we want to have some sort of a data retention policy. How long do we keep it? We should establish how long we should keep the data. Sometimes it's by law. We have to keep it a certain amount of time, like financial information. Sometimes we want to also do our own data retention policy, right? Our own data retention policy. So we can keep it to make sure that the data is not deleted, destroyed, and needed when necessary. Last thing is archivings or slashing, destroying. Sometimes we might have to destroy the data. The final step of the cycle is destroying the data that's no longer needed. This step is crucial in protecting the privacy and security of individual and the organization. And sometimes we do so in compliance with data privacy regulations and guidelines. We cannot keep the data we have to destroy it. So data deletion is important. Which data do we delete? The one that we don't need? Or we want to prevent any unauthorized access to it, misuse, or sometimes it's required by law or industry. We have to know something about data sanitization. Data that contains sensitive information should be sanitized to prevent the recovery of the data. Basically destroy it and don't let anyone be able to do what? Recover this data. This may involve wiping the data from storage system or physically destroying the storage devices. Also we want to make sure in the destroying process we are in compliance. In compliance with what? Organization must ensure that the destruction of data is done with data privacy regulation and guidelines such as the general data protection regulation, the GDPR, we're going to talk about this much more later on, and HIPAA, the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act. If you're studying for the CPA exam, you're going to have to know a thing or two about those two guidelines and regulations. Also we want to document the destruction process to make sure we have evidence that we did what we did. Documentation of the destruction should be kept to ensure that the data was destroyed in a secure and compliant manner. As accountant, documentation is important for us. We want to keep track of everything that's going on. What should you do now? You should go to Farhat Lectures and look at questions such as this one that's going to help you understand the concept. What's the first step in the data life cycle? Hopefully you know that the first step is to plan and design because that's important. You don't start the process until you have a proper planning, proper design of the system. Again, on my website, farhatlectures.com, you will have access to additional questions plus solutions that's going to help you not only understand but be able to learn the information, whether you are studying for the CPA exam, the CMA exam, CISA, data life cycle or taking an accounting information system course or you are studying for your certified internal auditor. It's all going to help you just basically ingrain this material in your brain that you'll be able to answer those multiple choices. The answer to see the first step is the data life cycle, which involves defining the goals and objectives of the data collection and analysis and determining the type of data I'm going to be working with, the method of collecting and storing, basically drawing the map for the whole data life cycle. Good luck, everyone. Stay safe, invest in yourself, invest in your career.
|
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UCJ9v1a6TH9iN1Gl5TqEvzRw
|
2022 Bowman Chrome Baseball Release Day w/ LSC!
|
Live Group Breaks and Case Breaks!
Check us out at http://www.laytonsportscards.com
Be sure to subscribe to our new LSC Baseball Breaks Channel! https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCxeVWp4QwgGZz61y5bf2w6g
Our new Discord has launched! If you are a Youtube Member or Twitch Subscriber, connect your Youtube OR Twitch to your Discord account to gain access to all channels! If you DON'T, you will not be able to see all channels and chats.
https://discord.gg/rwcWdxZQt5
Amazing Breaks at Great prices!
One of the Biggest Breaking Operations in the World!
BREAK SCHEDULE: https://laytonsportscards.com/pages/break-schedule
PERSONAL BOX BREAKS: https://laytonsportscards.com/collections/personal-boxes
RANDOM RESULTS (Found under "Quick Links" at bottom of our website! : https://laytonsportscards.com/blogs/results
Follow Us:
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Multistreaming with https://restream.io/
| null | 2022-11-23T19:23:18 | 2024-04-23T23:32:55 | 15,036 |
zQ84Mp9i7Ng
|
Still think Jeremy's gonna score here. I Really do I Mean it's only because they like that have to you gotta push everybody forward cool, we live Make sure I go like this dream Germany. What happened? What's up everybody? Good morning Bowman Chrome Bowman Chrome. What was that? What a bad pass Trying to possess it now No, I was gonna say I don't know if I would have done that. I Probably try to keep it a little longer Matt's brakes are on the baseball channel I'll get you a link. Give me one sec. There you go. That's a link to his stream So he'll be on LSE baseball today. Make sure to subscribe to that channel So as you can see guys, we are sold out daytime over here I think all the random teams today even through the evening are sold out now. Yes, they are So if you're looking for Bowman Chrome Matt's got you guys covered. He's got PYT cases all day today. He has I Think seven more. I think he's doing eight today. Yeah, so he's his first one is full He's got the other seven with spots to go not a ton of teams, but there's some good teams there So again guys all the random team breaks even through the evening for Bowman Chrome specifically are sold out today So there's a link in chat to Matt stream and I'll also give you his break schedule He's got seven more PYT cases today with spots left Yeah, dude, you shouldn't see it Germany. What happened? Hey, man, I mean Japan was just waiting they were just waiting I think they subbed on there like attackers They were like, okay, we'll just play defensively for 60 minutes. And then it was like, okay Send in the send in the attack. I mean Japan at least is like they're a solid team Yeah, it's not like it's like most of their review beating or all of their starters play in big leagues everywhere. Yeah, so Yes, this is this isn't this isn't a crazy upset, but it's an upset. Oh, it's very much an upset, but it's not like Just the way Germany have been like flat in the second half. Yeah, of course Kai. Good luck today, man Yeah, guys, there's a link in chat from Matt stream again. He's got seven more PYT cases with spots left. Oh, oh, man You guys I was just telling Dylan. I was like, I was like, I think Germany still ties it up here. I think that I think they See you guys there's origins football tonight, there's international blaster random team style breaks. Those are new to us over here So those are our first breaks of those there's PYT origins. There's one-on-one PYT's Super first case Oh, no, no, okay, okay super ohtani That'd be pretty wild. All right, well, let's go ahead and do our first random here It's been a little while since I've walked in on a day time and that's been all sold out But hey, Bowman does that right especially right before right before a holiday This is gonna be awesome, man. Is it buddy? Yeah, could all be in match channel, too The two streams it also is it also is pretty early and there are a lot of people probably running a lot of errands today To be to be fair. Yeah, gotta get to the liquor store. You know what I mean? Yep, you got to go If anyone's going to the grocery store today, good luck. Yeah, cuz I went to Target yesterday at like 11 a.m. And it still sucked like 11 a.m. It was like I was like made a decision I was like, I don't think I'm gonna come back to Target until like mid-January. I Don't think I'm going back. I Did not and I did not enjoy myself God dude, I feel so bad for every retail worker retail workers deserve like $50 an hour on Black Friday through the next like four days Okay, here we go with the random for 2022 Bowman Chrome baseball hobby 12 box full case number one Random teams. Good luck everybody a Six and a five eleven times For okay got that set up Eleven times here we go one two three four five six seven eight nine ten and eleven Carla down to David F and eleven times on the teams. Good luck everybody one two three four five six seven eight nine ten and eleven blue jays Down to Phillies You go Carla blue jays David F Cubs Ron H Dodgers Mark L Nationals Chris B Padres Tim B. Guardians Kuniaki T Rangers David S Angels Brian R White Sox Chris E Pirates Thomas F Yankees Brent C Rockies Carla with the Braves Robert S Brewer's Melissa Mets D-backs PJ's and Giants Nicholas S twins Ryan J Mariners Anton has the Reds Brian R Royals Brian M Red Sox Mark L Tigers Marlins Michael R Astros Stephen L Orioles Brian W A's Lewis M Cardinals Tim B Ray's David F Phillies Get those results posted. We'll start in a minute here It's over Japan did it Another upset it's like an upset. It's like an upset every day now. They did it. That's Spain and Who's expanding Costa Rica in a bit Costa Rica maybe make it to today That that'd be even that'd be much crazier than this upset that'd be much crazier Well, of course we guys get that young kid Jewish and Bennett. So yeah, guys, I'm gonna drop your link. Oh heck. Yeah, Travis That's what's up, man. I would take off work for this too, especially since you'd have Theoretically, I don't know what you do, but maybe tomorrow off as well. I mean, it's a good. It's a great idea So yeah guys, I'm gonna give you another link to match stream again He is Doing PYT cases. He's got seven. I think it's seven cases of spots left It was just a minute ago that could be changing pretty quick. I see a lot of orders coming in So he does have PYT today all of the random team bowman chrome cases are sold out for today even through tonight Black Friday deals, I think are gonna go live tonight So be on the lookout for that it's either tonight or tomorrow so be on the lookout for black Friday deals guys It's mostly gonna be sealed stuff Sam is ripping tonight and Yeah, personal tonight after group breaks obviously not breaking tomorrow. No one's gonna be here tomorrow at all so Like everybody's taking a day off Which as we should I think think we're in an industry where we should get the day off All right guys I've already had two Thanksgiving meals. I really don't want any more Thanksgiving meals Thanksgiving down and it's the Wednesday before Yeah, they're good Ryan. They're a solid squad. They're a solid squad not they're not to be trifled with All right, y'all. Let's go ahead and get started Everybody for us to your rip in 2022 bowman chrome baseball hobby 12 box full case number one random team style And there you go, there's your results for the random. Thank you very much everybody for joining Good luck You can always find those results of late sports cars calm and there is a Lincoln chat as well I don't know if I said that already It's like it's like automated at this point All right guys here we go Let's have a good day Get into the holiday with some big hits Okay So again, each mini box should have an auto and maybe some other numbered stuff to chrome autos per hobby box We do have these in stock for personals. I already forgot the price It's because it is very early for me. That's what I'm saying Travis. Here we go guys Six packs per mini box. We have these in stock for personals 309 at 99 for a hobby box Choice we don't have in stock Probably I think we should I don't I don't even have it. It might get it today. Okay. Here we go. All right. Oh Folly again certain old Gorman. That's a really cool looking insert That's sick man. I like that a lot actually Arias rookie shades of greatness Jordan Lawler Cool insert there Hernandez. Oh Choice, please Friday. Okay. It's not the same day this this time around Got blue refractor Anthony Volpe nice one Yankees Blue refractor number 23 of 150 Good start for the Yankees there costa Munoz right first auto maybe I Think Brandon Marsh and our first auto is going to the Padres a Yendri Rojas first bowman auto Padres starting the day off with a hit some Marcello Meyer John Kenzie Noel Happy Thanksgiving Eve everybody shades of greatness Colton Couser inserts look sharp man and Elohimenez refractor White Sox 199 of three of sorry to be 499 White Sox refractor Elohimenez Danny DeAndrade Valcazar Got it came to the league Henry Davis. Well, dude, that's awesome. That's a sick throwback right there That's a cool insert Daniel Vasquez yasam Mercedes Good guys Matt's live. There's MJ Melendez doing a PYT breaks. Yep. He's rookie. I Love this fall. I love it Curtis Mead fall league raise insert there young keel Fernandez Adrian Placencia Torque rookie base Stop rookie base a shades of greatness Josh Lowe raise rookie like the shades digging that insert to Get the mic closer to me. I just realized it was farther away than I realized Wander rookie base an aqua Robert Hassel Padres numbered 80 of 125 125 Padres Robert Hassel Maybe one of his last Padres cards big show Tatis Astros now first woman auto is Roiland Machandi Machandi Machandi Mackenzie, I don't know There we go Astros to base in the first box. We'll see some color after this colos first chrome Curtis Mead There's a three card pack here. Got shades of greatness Pedro Panetta Thicker one here. So extra base in this one. I'm guessing. Oh a black shimmer First bowman Joey Weimer one-of-one Brewers Yeah, buddy first box of the day one-of-one Milwaukee Robert s That's how we do it. Yeah Yeah, Rob, is that you? Joey Weimer one-of-one black shimmer All right, we'll take the two base autos With the black shimmer You said super fractor Okay, I mean you did say super Joey Weimer Lane Lane did call it Yeah, it's pretty fire Hawkeye strikes again. He don't miss Queen looking to Show Caleb Caleb will not be awake for another five hours, I think I Was like two base autos we gotta do we gotta do a little better than that the black shimmer Man, what's up guys? And that's how we like to start it off. Love this fall league in Sermasade every time Bobby Miller It's great confidant vocaro. There's a vocaro first chrome Lade shades of greatness Jackson Job Jason choreo make you up. That'll wake up chat. Yeah, that'll wake me up, too Elliot Ramos Joe Ryan first bowman blue Tampa Bay. Will he bet you look at that batting stance? Willie Vasquez look at that batting stance 122 of 150. Oh My god, that hurts my wrist just looking at it guys probably got mad forearm strength. Look at this batting stance doing The way he holds the bat like what the heck Kenzie Gore okay, that hurts my arm looking at Anthony Gutierrez first bowman auto we're at sexist Boogie didn't know Solid one right there She's a great as Jackson Merrill well our our minor leaguer didn't A shimmer of Benny Montgomery Rocky shimmers not numbered right correct Hey you big time-dose you got his own card and he was like Contreras Kirby shades of greatness Josh Lowe Mesa Nelson Velasquez Yeah, Rob, there's an O'Neill cruise Ricky base a Magenta I believe or is it? No, it's fuchsia and bowman isn't it Jordan Lawler d-backs 41 of 199 we go d-backs nice color there. I think it's fuchsia and bowman And it's too early for me to remember all these parallels Like I look at the checklist in the morning and even the night before and I just it doesn't work Nice here. We go Nathan Hickey. That's a really nice one for the Red Sox first woman purple auto 160 of 250 sick auto Look so sick looking auto to Nathan Hickey Red Sox good in goodness product Mitchell and Harris Nathan Hickey is quietly as a Red Sox fan I've noticed that he's quietly like climbing a lot of rankings that people have Pedro Panetta Invicta John Kenzie Noel But the Invicta back Guardians Hope you're all having a great day. I'm gonna have to go a little fast with the boxes after this But you know, I just like looking at the cards so far. It came to the league Jay Allen Reds Those are fun inserts Fall League Nick Gonzalez For the Pirates Matt McClane first Chrome and a Bergola All right time to speed up just a little bit guys don't want to fall behind Well, yeah, I mean Matt's got PYTs guys all the random team cases today are sold out. We've got more listed for the weekend though We have a 20 case or Friday morning. We have a 20 case break 10 hobby 10 choice random player style It's on the site. We got more breaks tonight with Sam. He's got origins football He's got the international blasters of origins football. We've got one-on-one basketball Cheap eminence football guys cheap 2k a spot random hit style, which is low low gonna hop fall league No, Brian De La Cruz or Ellie De La Cruz was um in 2022 Bowman Chains of greatness blaze Jordan Yeah, J. Row Royce Lewis rookie base a purple rookie Juan Yepez. There we go Cardinals. That's nice 13 out of 250 Good color start off Juan Yepez Yeah, it's not a massive upset, but it's an upset. You know what I mean say a Suzuki. There we go Hunter green and Nathan Hickey speckle this time to 2 to 2 99 red socks. Who's got him? Brian and there you go, buddy two Hickeys now. Oh hero base Chrome confidant biggest first Bowman and this is gonna be Jackson shurio for the Brewers But his first Bowman base was in 2022 Bowman So he only has but first Bowman auto is in this but that's how it should be Edinson Polino first Bowman shimmer red socks not numbered nice Polino There's Jason shurio His brother I believe foam judge Sanchez I Like this he can to be Belgium. I'm going for all the North American teams. That's who I'm rolling with this tournament We got to stand together the North Americans you guys stand together in numbers because we're not the best Bobby went junior rookie base Nice to see some chrome base for these guys a refractor for the Brewers headbert Perez 157 of 499 Tovar Diaz Ella De La Cruz is is 2022 Bowman. Oh My god, dude three Hickeys It's like high school all over again three Hickeys 120 of 499 first Bowman refractor auto Red Sox That is the last time I'll make that joke guys. I promise It's the low hanging fruit. I'm sorry Invicta Averson Artega Giants Matt McClane Bergola Hickey rainbow is literally in play right now like there's enough autos left to do it Colts of Montgomery. It came to the league Mesa Velasquez. I mean you got the same Hickey You got to make one Hickey joke Let's keep it rolling big hits to pole still Moreno on the fall league There us Ryan wreck Ryan Wreckley, that's a cool name Ryan Wreckley That's a strong baseball name Rez Freeman Khalil Watson shades of greatness Who's everybody chasing in this set? Personally first Bowman yellow Roderick Arias Yankees very nice 52 of 75 We go there's a pretty good case so far actually first Bowman auto is Estevan Machado blue jays Base auto blue jays Should be a microfiber Somewhere there Jay Allen shades of greatness by is on the Invicta for the Cardinals Joshua Bayez Again guys Matt's live at LSE baseball PYT say he's still got a few spots left not a ton But he's got some teams left for the cases today. Make sure you go say hey to him go like a stream I'll drop you a link after this box Bobby would junior rookie base Sam's live at 5 p.m. Eastern guys He's got Lots of basketball and football breaks tonight that have spots available. So let's get those filled up You got personal tonight And we're not breaking tomorrow. It's Thanksgiving American Thanksgiving Yeah, rookie auto should be a tougher hit for the most part. There's also a lot let a lot fewer of them rookie Um aqua ray wave Gavin sheets 54 of 199 white socks Yeah, right Nick. Yeah, because there's not there's not gonna be there Usually there's not like rookie a lot of rookie base autos whereas like a prospect should get a lot more base autos Usually how to go a manual and and Manuel Valdez Blue ray wave first bowman auto 88 of 150 astros Astros with their second hit, I believe There we go. That's pretty nice. Um nice valdez So yeah, usually in crime bowman chrome rookie autos are tougher hits Roger gary s first bowman chrome I think dale accrues might have insert autos Got first bowman shimmer drew baker for the rays Gutierrez, Khalil Watson Let me see. I have a little chi chi right here uh reds They do not have any ledl accrues autos They do not Dude tomorrow is going to be the best Thanksgiving sports day we've had ever Three football games four world cup games probably the hopefully last time we have a A november december world cup Praying that we never have it in the mid season again Yeah, the reds do have a decent chase It is um The name does escape me hunter bishop Yeah, Ricardo Cabrera. Thank you rich Mackenzie gore Sam Bachman Refractor henry mendez brewers numbered 397 of 499 henry mendez Brady house I mean he should he got a nice yankees roger gary s First bowman blu ray wave auto 24 of 150 What a hit What a first case thomas f with the new york yankees you can magnus for sure Beautiful hit congrats on that Yeah Second big hit big hit of the day There we go. That's beautiful The auto might not be the cleanest, but I mean arias man That's the guy you want one of the bigger names in the set There we go There we go. We still got over half a case left She means I also need to speed up a little bit more Yeti cappy and victor acosta vocaro base again You're in confidant Yeah Our me and matt our matt and I competing today for biggest hit Winner keeps their channel. Did you ever paint your rookie? Even though they're both of rich's channel Play for keeps Oh, oh travis said yes. Okay travis is down. Don't tell matt that that's what's at stake He's gonna pull like the he's gonna pull like the jitchorio superfractor. I'll be like, well That backfired immediately I think a giant slice card here rookie purple eliot ramos Pink slip style remember that stupid show 83 and 250 that show was so fake They were so willy nilly like oh, yeah, I will just raise your pink slips ridiculous Curtis me That was the faker show of all time. I don't think it was a hundred percent fake, but a lot of it was Base packed there I just hope you're all having fun. It's a great day wander franco shades of greatness insert Shimmer Pedro Pineda a's again shimmers are the non numbered parallel in this bowman set. There's a rodrick aria's base. Keep it going Again guys random team styles are sold out All day on the main channel even into this evening sam has a few cases tonight that are sold out Y'all are the best. We appreciate it. But yeah, these in stock for personal is 309 99 a hobby box. You get two autos I'm not sure the guarantee on parallels But you usually get like one color one parallel for box as well that usually in some inserts is also so Right. Yeah, they're the drag racing ones I always thought it was fake. Maybe I'm wrong. I never really watched it though Ezekiel diran Arizona fall league What's up dj? How's it going man Mackenzie gore John kenzie noel Oh, is that an orange? Oh, that's pretty it came to the league orange. Jose Ramos Dodgers That's so cool two of 25. That's a really cool one Dodgers It came to the league Was that thunder Was a trash I was like, I didn't think we're Is this the summer? I was a little confused And auto Mets Simon Juan first woman auto it could be Simone, I guess Simon Juan first woman auto Mets tiny auto not a bad auto. It's just tiny Not the best auto but yeah Yeah, that show was that show was ridiculous from what I remember That was like the early days of reality tv though. They knew nothing They thought all you had to do was Get people that couldn't act together Oh, that's nice purple shimmer first woman Anthony Gutierrez rangers number 223 of 250 Now they definitely get people that can somewhat act For the most part O'Neill cruise rookie base You know, be cool. See a big rookie auto in here as well That'd be fun Cleo Watson Anyone got some big plans for tomorrow Oh, what is that Joey Weimer Six of 75 first yellow orange Hope of the checklist. I don't want to sound like a fool right now Again guys, I do look at all the checklist before obviously, but Me personally when I break before like noon. I don't retain the information My brain doesn't my brain is not awake yet. So This is a beautiful one here. This is uh Just yellow Here's yellow That's what checklist says, right Yellow orange vapor. That's what okay. There it is Yellow orange vapor. Okay Orange. Yeah, that's what we'll call it orange The Joey Weimer, uh, the Joey Weimer rainbow is coming along nicely. I would say for the brewers I think it's your obligation now if you hit a one-on-one on the break I think you're kind of obligated to go for the rainbow, right? Nora, hey Vera first bowman refractor auto 129 of 499 white socks You go white socks nor hey Vera Yendri Rojas Rosemann There do go I just knocked over the base stack refractor rookie Royce Lewis. There we go twins numbered Royce Lewis 183 of 499 Yes, six Thanksgiving breaks tomorrow. They're all free Whichever one you can join they're free Isn't that great? I'll give you the schedule link and then any of the breaks that break, uh After let's say 2 a.m. Thanksgiving Our uh Here it is. Here's the break schedule for you. Huh, that's weird. There's none scheduled Hmm Well, maybe next year Playing the show. Oh, I'm like, oh, let me do that. Oh, you know what I need to do. I need to get the new pokemon game Is it I hear part of it. It's like technically it's like not a good game, but it's still a pokemon game It's pretty fun My wife has been playing a lot of arceus recently, which is which is a fun game But I was like, I hope they like expound on this. It seems like they did So that was a fun game. It just got like I was like, okay After like playing 40 hours of like it's a little repetitive Yeah, guys black friday deals be on the lookout aqua ray wave cabray and haze pirates numbered 197 of 199 Redemption. Okay. Who's redemption in this? Invict a autograph. So that's those like 55 point cards. Invict an insert autograph of carlos culminara's tampa bay rays And I don't know if this is A mistake, but we also have a first bowman auto for the a's of junior pares. So I think we have an extra hit It would appear Nice colors culminara's insert auto for the rays and a junior pares a's first bowman base auto Okay, I believe that that should be an extra hit We take those every day of the week, man Get a few chicotel marté diamondbacks 294 of 299 future red sox One would hope it came to the league george valera. It came to the league Yeah, see j-ro. It's pokemon. So I think like they're just getting away with it because everybody loves pokemon so much They're becoming like the ea sports Game freak is they're just putting out the games rinse and repeat with the with the pokemon games And you know this sucks to say but to be fair Everybody puts out games too early now Everybody does that or like 99% of people do gold rookie refractor ebra cabrera marlins. Man the gold looks nice Two out of 50. There you go marlins solid rookie pitcher there Yeah, japan beat germany right before you right before we started here jeremy vargas first bowman auto brewers You go brew crew Yeah, that was that was that was Dylan and I were watching and we're just kind of like a little stunned just like germany. They're a little stunned Yeah, michael, we got a lot of great bowman brakes listed on the site guys for match channel and this channel Got a fuchsia shimmer nick york red sox 168 of 199 red sox another team that's having a good break All right, let's get some hits for teams that haven't hit yet. I'm gonna spread spread the uh the love around That is a big Cowboys are big favorites over the giants nine and a half I mean, I think though. I think they'll win by I think they'll win by 10 at least but It's just crazy that vegas also sees that the giants aren't they're not I'd say they're not a bad team. They're just not inspiring I feel so dude Safe on barkley. I feel so bad for him Like it's it's ridiculous It's ridiculous Cowboys with my 40s. I could see that. I wouldn't doubt it. They beat the vikings by almost 40 then First bowman purple twins yasa mercedes. That's a solid one 75 out of 250 The yasa mercedes christian vaquero You pulled an areas Yeah, we pulled a roger garious Let's see in the recap. That's a pretty one first bowman auto charlie welch mariners big fan of uh His grape juice At least I was when I was a kid I don't even know the last time I actually had grape juice My mom used to get the concentrate frozen stuff First bowman shimmer eric rinandes white socks And shimmer is not numbered I don't even know if that's that's minute made though, right? I think that is yeah James altman My mom used to get that like the white grape one. I think I like a lot the white grape was I think it's like great Yeah, welch is just good though refractor eddie's lennard dodgers numbered 436 of 499 first bowman auto liam spence cubs cubs liam spence There you go cubbies maze of alaskas Oh, yeah, I went back to the stash. I'm super lazy about shaving. You guys know this wander franco So like when my beard comes time for trimming I just shave it all off And then I'll grow it back out because I don't shave a lot. It grows out slow. It's great That's my that's my favorite. I'll actually shave my face like once a month Yeah, sometimes you got to go stash I was gonna do something real quick. I guess I'm gonna do it after one sec guys All right, let's see another big hit here. We saw the arias to see another big name They're dodging us we're having a good case Color-wise is up with the other big names are dodging us so far We still have another quarter case here though. We're gonna be a little behind of this first one So we'll speed up on the next case Yeah, guys totally sold out today for daytime bowman chrome even through through tonight on the main channel is sold out So, yeah guys got those pyt spots with matt today. There's a pain your chrome It's all chrome pain your rookie. I should say it's all chrome That's the product matt manning You're like scott calvin in the santa claus John kenzie. No, well refractor guardians 253 or 499 Motherfuckero hit the quaw first bowman base auto jaden rudd blue jays jaden rudd uh and guitar right now it's probably like What seven eight p.m. Or something like that? I'm not entirely sure but when the two p.m. Eastern games starts it's like Like nine p.m. Or ten p.m. At guitar like the two p.m. Eastern games are late start times over there They're only doing it though. So they get more viewership. I mean I get it, but josh low No, I'm not I don't see oh we have to change the channel Got a purple nick york now red sox numbered 57 out of 250 You have to point out the cable box right next to you Not right behind the top loaders And then it maybe it's just on fox a gold Mini diamond first bowman auto yarlon susanna for a 50 out of 50. Excuse me Here we go. I mean for pitchers. That's one of the better ones right there He was part of the the uh the soto trade right? I believe he's a padre now. That's a really sick color match nice card padres Nine hours ahead of us. Gotcha in central. Gotcha rare backwards much of the base Maybe that happens sometimes He's that he's he's a power pitcher for sure and a gold shimmer now Dodgers will not die as that's sick too There we go Dodgers 42 of 50 Gold mini box right there a gold auto and a gold Uh base Oh, I need to go set fantasy lineups. I kind of stopped caring, but I got to set my lineups still Once I lost cup and got it in the same week after having a few other injuries. I was like, okay Especially this late in the season it's it's one thing to lose it earlier to go Okay, I have time to like figure this out and now it's like who are you gonna pick up now? Yeah, especially cup piguero And then Goddard went down. I was like, okay, you don't have if you if you don't have the starting pad and you're not Going to get a good one. It's it's over for you. Julia Rodriguez base And aqua rewey freddy freeman Dodgers one 74 of 199 there you go Dodgers soft astronaut pania first bowman auto astros and manual valdez second one of these for the astros microfiber on that one Some of these just have a bit of car dust on them guys. It's not not out of the ordinary to see that in uh All chrome products. It's going well bj having a good day Just need to get another sip of my coffee after uh after this break for the next one And then we'll be rolling we'll be rolling eggy risario I'll also drop you a link to matt's lsc baseball stream guys You can go say hey to him go like his stream go grab a pyc spot He's got a few more spots daytime today kwan base a speckle first woman speckle danier cleba 283 of 299 I mean, yeah, it's it's a it's a good product. Just it's a pretty solid prospect list Some big names. There's a lot of guys that are in like the middle area of like prospects I don't like huge names that could be come there. So I think this could be a product that ages fairly well orange first bowman auto blue jays esteven machado 11 of 25 nice hit toronto Machado We go nice card there. Eric Hernandez triantos first chrome But it's good. I mean like I mean it's been the same design that we've seen but it's good stuff Yeah, bj. They are uh Yeah, they got some huge prospects for them first shimmer james triantos Yeah, that's a pretty stacked in this with a caro and the house. That's a tough one, man I feel I like i'm a red sox fan and even I feel like that like they're not as good as the gnats In this but they're still a really good team And I I kind of feel the same but It's kind of been like that for the red sox in the last few bowman products. I think Like they've had a lot of their good prospects Get first bowmans recently That third tea in toronto was silent. Ah, gotcha. Honio cruise rookie Good to know I feel like a spelling error Abrams. Oh, we got a green christian yellich brewers 42 of 99 I think 42. Yeah 42 Oh, I thought it was one nothing already. I was like what now they're showing like Highlight alexander of aviace first bowman auto raise aviace henry davis insert Toronto Just say real fast First bowman shimmer willy finas mets And uh shimmer is not numbered Anyone give Costa Rica a chance in this next match? Usually I'd say no, but with this world cup. I'm gonna say I'm gonna say they have a shot Julio Rodriguez rookie the only teams that really handle their business so far have been Like really well that should have would be england and france so far I'll brew on a Uh yellow orange vapor Pedro panetta a's eight of 75 First bowman auto red sox eddinson polino. That's a nice one red sox having a great case Three numbered hickies and now the polino Just late steam mate Refractor rookie mariners george kirby Numbered 488 to 499. Do you think he plays kirby and uh smash brothers? Dude, I hate playing against kirby and smash brothers drives me nuts So I'm like I'm not good with him. I'm not very good at smash rows to begin with like I'm not good with kirby So it's always me with someone else's good at him stupid stupid like swallow move like spit out. Oh my god, dude That's one of the most annoying annoying moves Because if someone's good at it, you just Think you're throwing money on canada over belgium I mean, hey, why not? I think this is the world cup to do it. It seems like Mid season world cup craziness It doesn't be like a wednesday to me either because I have tomorrow off And also like bowman release day feels like a holiday to begin with so this doesn't I don't know Yeah, france. They look very good. Their depth is very very good and it showed That's pretty cool looking a i'm gonna call this aqua pink before I look at the checklist Numbered to 125. Yeah aqua pink vapor. That's really sick. Look and I like that And then I mean with the with those shades on this is like one of the most 80s looking cards I've seen That's nasty That is a samuels of ala padres first bowman chrome That's sick aqua pink of vapor Well the content replacement is too many. Yeah, uh, sebastian espino first bowman auto blue jays People are trashing that That's an l-take. I like that. I like those vapors Refractor big show show. Hey otani 176 or 499 mvp snub right there Probably the best player the best season to net to not win an mvp was that was his season this year hit the kwan Cleo watson insert Jeremy peña Got yellow bobe shit bow flows yellow 73 of 75 Simon Juan Cesar prieto Duran got a first bowman cracked ice auto riccardo cabrera Took a minute to register for me riccardo cabrera Congrats reds That is freaking awesome There we go. We'll mag this one 40 of 100 in the atomic Great last hit awesome first case His auto is a bit messy, but that's sick. I like to look at I like to look at his car though just the batting stance Steven kwan again We're no purple shimmer. She's not aqua shimmer purple shimmer will mondia's dodgers 225 out of 250 All right, y'all give me a sec. We'll do a quick recap here Just gonna recap the autos and anything else that we mag throughout the day Again, I'll be a little behind going to the next one, but we'll slowly make our time up here. Everything's sold out No, I went slow on the first few boxes there. So all right So here we go. We had a culminara's rays in victor auto redemption insert there Blue jays espino red sox polino. That's a nice one rays ovaries Astros valdez blue jays rudd. I like that you organize it. Thank you Cubs liam spence brewers vargas a's pares Mets simon Juan Blue jays estavan machado rangers gutieres astros machandi Padres yendri rojas refractor auto the 499 white sox nor hey vera A gold the 50 yarlon susanna first bowman auto for the padres Blue rayway valdez astros the 150 refractor hicky to 499 red sox speckle hicky to 299 red sox and purple Hickey to 250 red sox and an orange estavan machado blue jays to 25 Not gonna make any more hicky jokes Atomic first bowman auto riccardo cabrera 40 of 100 for the reds blue rayway rodrick arias 24 of 150 yankies first bowman. That's a pretty one Probably the biggest auto we pulled in that uh one right there I mean that in a cabrera pretty close and then the first bowman black shimmer joey weimer One of one first box today pulling a one-to-one lane called it too And that'll do it Um, we got a lot more this stick today guys That's okay. If you don't follow like prospects, it's okay to not know any of these autos totally. Okay Trying to get my my band-aid finger out of the photo. All right, let's see So now you're gonna want to get the bags of the orange stickers, you know, I mean, yeah I'm twitching already Yeah, that was a pretty good case guys a good case start of the day I think we'll see some bigger autos as you go along. I think we'll see like bigger cases auto wise But it's hard to beat a one-of-one chrome first bowman with a bat like that's that's gonna be a tough to beat for a base parallel I would say Yeah, that weimer is he's big time When is his first bowman gonna be He's our number two I didn't really see was so I thought he was like inside the top 10 I mean top top to his top 10, but I thought he was like around that area That's awesome, man. Yeah, that's I knew it was huge. I know it was that big Because he doesn't have autos in this yet All the bowman chrome random team styles are sold out for today We do have that lsc baseball some uh break spots left check out the site. There's some pyt's over at lsc baseball Matt still has a few teams left on those I'll get your link to his stream and we get that upload we're gonna keep going guys Oh, that's me Get a match channel. Yeah, choreo is has got to be number one there Still a big one though All right, getting this uploaded now guys Hey guys all random team styles are sold out. We have more listed for the week We're gonna be breaking a lot of bowman chrome, uh, even when we come back after uh, thanksgiving guys Keep your eyes peeled for black friday deals going live later this evening and into tomorrow It's mostly going to be sealed stuff Um, yeah, it's gonna it's gonna be good stuff guys All right, let me double check our names. We'll do this next random I'll have to start talking about Thanksgiving food now I'm Thanksgiving down already that I'm done I think my wife and I we're not doing anything tomorrow Like everyone is gonna be out of town. So we're like, oh, we're just chilling I think we're gonna do stakes I was like let's cook something I'm cooking a damn turkey Trying to something easy Maybe we'll go to waffle house tomorrow That'll be open Appreciate that mk. Yeah, whenever sometimes I try to change the ticker. Sometimes I don't save it correctly It's like half the time I want to say Sometimes I catch it. Sometimes I don't And being that it is Basically like 5 a.m. My time My schedule I did not yet. Yeah baseball all day and then in the evening. There's uh more basketball and football Um, what's it gonna say here? Yeah, candler, seriously I think unless there's a mandatory evacuation In the area, waffle house will be open during hurricane e and the waffle house that I live next to was open It's outrageous, dude. It's outrageous Mad respect though If I do go I'm I'm I'm tipping like 100 bucks Because they're working on Thanksgiving and I did that for years Here we go with the random for 2022 bowman chrome baseball hobby 12 bucks case number two Random teams. Good luck everybody We go nine times on this random five and four one two three four five six seven eight and nine Travis l down to brian w and nine times on the teams one two three four five six seven eight nine Mets d-backs down to blue jays I also did not update my tonight's sheet All right, travis l Mets d-backs carla with the yankees wei ming rangers roger k reds tim b brewers Justin d a's anton with the tigers and marlins how z redsox foo h guardians jonathan o rocky's rustle b mariners brent c giants carla with the angels sal has the fillies p jason cardinals vincent b pirates matt m astros michael g orials guy h podre's vincent b cubs sam a twins tim b braves brian m nationals Uh matt p royals nicolas s white sox matt r dodger scott b ray's and brian w blue jays Let's get these posted. We're gonna start in just a moment here Be right back guys. I'm going to go to my coffee. We'll update tonight's sheet for you Yeah, that'll I'll go into wawa or something if I need anything I would always end up stopping at wawa on my way into Work at the resorts on Thanksgiving or Christmas or whatever. Be right back y'all. What's up, Andrew? Yeah, wawa solid I used to eat wawa a lot But I don't really the one I live next to It's it is So horrible to get in and out of the wawa and it's always busy like Constantly busy. I'll go with like midnight And like there's like eight people getting gas Look what the heck dude. All right, here we go Everybody forced here ripping 2022 bowman chrome baseball hobby 12 box case number two random team style check out your results right here Thanks again everybody for joining and good luck Let's see what we got So when is judge gonna sign with the giants already? Is that supposed to happen soon? Good get him out of the division, man Put him on the west coast I thought he's he's never like great against the red sox though. He's never killed the red sox Honestly, I wish they would sign him Guy gets to october and then Calls it a year every time Here we go y'all Cubs could get him you think you think they have a legit chance brian What I would be worried about is if the Yankees are actually smart with their money That's what I'd be worried about But not that it matters red sox don't spend money whatsoever now apparently Yeah, do you think the cubs are gonna get one of those short stops brian? Big for aging class bobby wit And you guys check out our 2022 bowman chrome 20 caser on friday shimmer on helis a's Hey guys, gonna have to go a little quicker on this one just because we're behind but Yeah, pretty straightforward product call out some of the bigger names. We'll keep moving here hooky Andrew painter Placencia there Vasquez All right staying to estrica are They have begun purple headbert pares brewers Number 159 of 250 brew crew Yankee l. Fernandez first bowman chrome Dr. Green Royce lewis first bowman base out of willy vasquez raze Man with the crooked wrists Best pull today Purple shimmer first bowman christian buchero nationals nice card 144 250 go nationals You could magnate buchero. There's a roger garyus base ever Uh, I usually just say the uh the 2021 Tom brady kaboom one of one from absolute last year I don't know if it is for sure, but That's the one I that's the one I like to go with green pita lanzo mets 96 of 99 green polar bear Yeah, so that was the clutch factor rpa lamelo ball one of one from last year that that's another that's another really big one first bowman auto marlins is jr. Sanchez When you're done with that can I get Yeah, the inserts are the inserts are pretty cool in this Inserts aren't even super sought after and in bowman chrome, but some of the some of the collar on them can be pretty nice Invicta warming burnabelle quava it came to the league jose ramos Y'all for sanchez. Do you have like a Thanksgiving dish that you love the one that you hate or just kind of like everything a little bit? Like gravy That's that's a weird one. I'll say you probably get that a lot though. Yeah a gold for nando tatis. Nice podre's color match Number 24 to 50 Yeah, that's uh, that's a take. I you don't hear too much on the gravy And first bowman auto yankees benjamin cowls Benjamin cows Yeah, I'm kind of like okay with at least everything not like a lot of things Jackson meryl roger r.e.s shimmer tigers jackson jobe and shimmer is not numbered logo no hop I was gonna say it's too early for a barbecue a barbecue sandwich because it feels like it's 6 a.m to me But it's literally like it's like lunchtime right now first bowman refactor michael hernandez Number 402 of 499 Oh, spain just about took the lead right away Should have had it and a first bowman gold mini diamond auto danier cueva Nice hit rangers two of 50 danier cueva Sick hit right there Paulino. Yeah, I'm I'm a big believer in like food freedom Eat whatever meal anytime of day because breakfast is honestly better at night anyway Like a breakfast burger is great. Like that should be a morning thing Yeah, almost almost missed the chance They got costa rica pinned back a bit right now. It looks like every time I look up I mean spain has the ball and the attack in thirds. So refractor alec bomb fillies Some like smudge up here. We're gonna take a microfiber to see if that comes off. There's something down here too Number 68 of 499 Hernandez What's up, elin biggest hit of the day so far probably oh man, it's tough. There are a few really nice ones last case We had on eel cruise base here um So the magnet cards we had last break were first bowman Black shimmer like base parallel jackson or not jackson weimer, but uh jordan weimer We had a blue ray wave roger arias auto And then atomic ricardo cabrera auto Those are all really big. Yeah refractors are numbered in this In bowman chrome cj abrams and bowman actually an all bowman purple harry ford mariners nice one there 225 out at 250 Vasquez mercedes first bowman base auto blue jay's esteven machado yankeel franandez corn beef hatchet eggs and a waffle is a good dinner. Yeah, yeah, dude Any breakfast food is is good for dinner like it literally all is first bowman fuchsia shimmer rosemont or rosemont verdugo 80 of 199 Padres pretty color there pretty card pretty card pretty card What happened six? What happened osprey colos? Did I miss something? I missed something crazy? don con de los santos Oh, I'll use another conversation my bad, uh fuchsia luisa and alacuña rangers That's a no. That's a vapor So 199 11 to 199 Has that vapor parallel so this would be a 199 a Fuchsia pink fuchsia pink vapor. It's like the same color That's a 199 rangers. That's like the same color man. I guess fuchsia is more purple than pink Oh almost again In spain is just missing the chances here and orange First bowman auto gnats evan lee 16 to 25 There you go gnats Probably hoping for a different national there, but that's still a nice one. Actually i'm gonna Get this out of the sleeve. We're gonna get some Microfiber action a little bit of dust on the surface of that card Before we get in a top order for you gnats remember guys Basketball and football breaks tonight with sam starting at 5 p.m. Eastern I mean he has bowman chrome, but all the random teams cases for today All of today are sold out matt has pyt still over at leighton baseball Just a few teams left for daytime over there as well guys We got a lot of bowman listed for this weekend as well We're gonna be breaking a lot of it between both channels. We have a 20 caser friday morning a 20 caser So after you when you wake up at like 6 a.m. Because you fell asleep at 7 p.m on thanksgiving You got to join that break. It's gonna be awesome 20 caser random player style shimmer jordan lullard debacks Fakero base Just some base so far brennan No big young keel yet, but this is only we're only a quarter of the way through the second case. So still very early I don't know if matt has pulled any either Hey, lani white jr on the uh bowman ascension's insert. I haven't seen that one yet Lani white jr pirates I'm gonna topple that because I haven't seen it yet in a full case. So I think that might be rarer to topple that one for the pirates torque Stott Aqua ray waves up and up res royals number 99 of 199 Yeah, I figured it would be I figured it would be brennan Brookie. Oh our first rookie auto is a base tj freedale for the reds. It's our first rookie auto of the day Case hit. Oh, we didn't see one last case. Yeah, we didn't see one of those last case A tops update 2011 break. I mean if you could find some sealed tops update 2011 The issue would be filling that break There it is That is that offside. I thought that was offside. That was offside. They're gonna review that for sure. That's gonna go to review I mean everything's reviewed, but Would you join the break baseball dude? April aria. Say green refractor. Zack v in rocky's green v 55 at 99 Is that not offside? first bowman auto brewers antonio pinero Go to crew. Oh, no, it was on side. It was on side the defender touched it When I looked up it looked offside because of where the player was but yeah, almost got it this time I mean spain is about to put up like four goals on these guys Costa Rica defense and midfields is getting worked right now I mean, hey, you wouldn't I you think spain to win this game. You're probably in control of the group after uh Japan beat germany, but japan's no slouch. I mean spain's got to take them seriously, too Obviously man, they put two on germany in the second half choreo has first bowman autos in this Just not first bowman base. Yeah, so he had his base in 2022. So these are his first autos Juan there a refractor Of morcella meyer red sox 415 to 499 a base metz auto jt schwarz Is that his No, that's not his first moment. Is it I think there's there's who's the player that doesn't have the first, but it is his first They left it off of somebodies. I don't think it's schwarz I don't think that's a first. I could be wrong though Yes, house auto is a first. I don't know if it is he the there's a player the notable player I forget the name Victor Acosta shimmer Padres that doesn't have first on his car, but it is his first bowman Gabriel arias. Yeah, young keel might not be top three, but he's right around there Brennan Definitely one of the top guys a purple first bowman Samuel Munoz Padres on the chrome base parallel 205 out of 250 Gotcha, okay I get so confused man when that when they space it out like that First bowman cracked. I saw the Leandro Balcazar 42 of 100 reds Nice it for the reds there Herrera A fuchsia rookie alex thomas nice card diamond backs 185 at 299 Eric Hernandez james triantos Seya Suzuki rookie base So certain rookie bases are coming up a lot more than like Julio Rodriguez and Seya Suzuki Like yeah, like we see Kwan and Pena more. I think yeah, or we have so far. It's weird Maybe we're just getting weird collation or something. Yeah, we've seen like one Julio We've seen like four pengas a purple andruvon white socks number 198 of 250 Damage on that uh cubs card there. I'm going to send an empty box and I'll put the cubs That alexa sarnandez A green first bowman auto for the blue jays louis meza 89 of 99 Dude Dylan's been talking crap all day Sean. I can't even say what he said on stream Is that intense? A purple shimmer angels arol vera is like ma'am. I'm easily the best top loader here 143 out of 250 So yeah easily easily the best top loader Julio Rodriguez base spoke out into existence And he was like whoever was here last night really messed up bad like I don't even I can't I had to we fix this mess A yellow orange vape. I believe benny mount gummary 66 of 75 rockies Oh, yeah, Sean. We had some big first case started off scorching hot first bowman auto rangers jojo blackman Jojo had a rodrick arias blue ray wave first bowman auto an atomic ricardo cabrera auto a black shimmer one of one Jordan weimer Sean g what he probably wasn't awake, but the japan germany game I would imagine yeah, I would have been yeah bobby with junior rookie purple shimmer louis rodriguez dodgers stuck here eight of 250 I wish I was waking up right now Star release day breaks at 2 p.m. Breaks like an hour Then the nighttime will start Ha ha first bowman aqua pink james triantos nice card there cubbies 35 out of 125 Aquapink vapor ricardo cabrera voice louis and a first bowman auto for the match will be finas finas base auto Need some other big stuff in this case. That's what we need fuchsia rookie shane boss rays number 271 of 299 blaze jordan blue for the red sox 78 of 150 First bowman base auto wilfred veras white sox Dodging a lot of big names so far today in the autos Yeah, it was brian. That was a good one Invicta lani white Oh, there they go again. Yeah, the route is on I think Hebert Perez We're on paces for nine goals One yeah pez I feel like the faster you're starting world cup the better because then you could just like kind of Take your good players out in the second half of the first match and First bowman refractor uh yellen confidant reds 187 to 499 nice confidant ricardo cabrera torquelson first bowman base auto pirate jack herman shimmer first bowman nelson valasquez cubs Come on. Let's see a jackson. Let's see a jackson choreo cleel watson gold of 50 first bowman blue jr. Perez a's 108 of 150 so let's help her tighten up Nice jojo blackman gold mini diamond first bowman auto 38 out of 50 rangers You go rangers And guys basketball and football breaks tonight as well with sam all of our random team style bowman kermers sold out for the day Matt still has pyts available though first bowman green shimmer ryan wreckley number 62 of 99 giants These boxes are 309 99 speckle pirates leobard piguero 162 of 299 banya cueva Yeah, the early anderson got waved bobby wood jr. Rookie a speckle first bowman auto gram ashcraft 179 of 299 reds solid card for the reds there Pitcher auto but numbered pitcher auto fuchsia rafael devers red sox number 222 of 299 He knows that too stott melendez Perez purple mookie bets dodgers Number 49 of 250 Wonder franco base a refractor first bowman auto rangers anthony guttier as 305 out of 499 Okay, guys, we're gonna be a few minutes behind. We'll catch up a little by little today. I think But we're right around on schedule just a few minutes And guys grab your one and one basketball spots for tonight origins football Eminence football tonight to random hit style good price to just 2k a spot for random hit refractor max shares are Mets numbered 33 or 499 Julio Rodriguez base on Gabriel Moreno Blue rookie refractor spencer torquelson tigers. There you go 67 out of 150. It's a solid card atomic tristan casas fall league insert red sox numbered 88 of 150 First woman green auto color match jr. Perez a is 31 of 99 pretty card green and a's that's one of the better color matches that there is An atomic in victolani white jr. Pirates numbered 130 of 150 purple shimmer first bowman giants ryan reckley 13 of 299 yankeel finandez When you'll cruise base Hey, see you later, john Have fun watching world cup Abrams nice a brian akunya first bowman aqua pink vapor 100 of 125 twins So again, his first bowman's were in 2020 his first bowman autos were in 2022 bowman And philly's gavin tunkel first bowman base auto philly's gavin tunkel Hair match What's up cars fan top guy pulled today Uh, well in the first break we pulled a blue ray wave roger arias auto and atomic ricardo cabrera auto and a black Shimmer one-of-one base of jordan wymer. So Those are all pretty big the wymer might be the biggest. I like his one one I know it's base, but he's a pretty high up prospect of the brewers rookie purple mckinsey gore padres five out of 250 Best first in this would be an auto of jackson shoryo That's ha make auto dante williams orials 39 of 100 Orioles As of right now it'd be jackson shoryo for the brewers First bowman auto. He doesn't have base though. His base was in 2022 bowman Shimmer first bowman william burgola philly's They call it a penalty here. Oh boy Yeah, this one. This is a route. This is a route Torkelson stodd first bowman pink fuchsia vapor wilford veras number 93 of 199 white socks Roger garry s first Yep, still break number two first bowman green auto sit on raffaella red socks 77 of 99 Big hit boston That is where yeah boston Hang on i can read how was he with the red socks big raffaella Pretty love the green with the red socks. We'll get that mag of course That's awesome, man Say don i think it's say don Do that or say don i or say donna three in the first 30 minutes or it's a goal every 10 minutes They're still on pace for nine goals This is honestly bad for germany too. They're on the same group So then two teams would have three points. They would have zero Oh boy. Oh boy germany He had a fractor josh donaldson yankees Number 38 of 499 Dude say don such a beast He's already on the 40 man roster. I wonder if the red socks trade him this off season I'm a red socks fan. I can see it happening germany might be cooked. They might it might be true shon gold max muncie a's nice gold 33 out of 50 Yeah, you're probably right shon anything can happen really first bowman auto braves tyler collins But i i think you're right. I think you're right Not to say germany can't get the uh the results against spain, but you you really cannot count on that like at all obviously I know japan isn't a slouch, but yeah first bowman purple shimmer says our prieto for the orioles 14 out of 250 Hey, stacey. How's it going? bow crow. Yeah, happy bow crow day And more madness at the world cup more craziness more upsets speckle warming bernabelle rockies 99 out of 299 bow crow Another good case here pretty solid case Coming to an end space auto jackson maryl padres. Is that his first? That's his first bowman, right or no No, no, it's not no, it's not no Go podre's nice jackson maryl though. I think he's technically there. He's is he their top prospect right now I'm doing well I need to stand up and move around over this i'm feeling I don't think I ever get enough sleep before release. They breaks I'm gonna go away from the screens for a bit after this and I'll keep going Yeah, we just a few minutes behind going to the next one again guys Do my best to catch up or we're right about on time. Um, so Reds fredel padres maryl Braves tyler collins philly's gabin tonguel pirate jack herman white sox willford veros Mets willy faunas or faunas Rangers jojo blackman mech jt schwarz brewers antonio pinero Blue jays esty van machado yankees benjamin cowles marlins jr. Sanchez rays willy vazquez Or fracter auto the 499 rangers anthony guttieres speckle first bowman auto reds gram ashcraft to 299 Yeah, definitely now Atomic dante williams to 100 orials green jr. Perez a's the 99 always love the green with the a's there Green louis meza blue j's to 99 A jojo blackman gold mini diamond to 50 for the rangers and an orange evan lee nationals at 25 Nice color in this case. You got some nice stuff here a first bowman purple shimmer christian vaquero Number 144 of 250 for the gnats nice base parallel there Awesome vaquero an atomic leandro balkazar 42 out of 100 first bowman auto reds Green Say don raffaella first bowman auto 77 of 99 red socks And a gold mini diamond first bowman auto danieta quiva 2 out of 50 rangers that'll do it for case number 2 Thanks, everybody case 3 coming up next You get that one upload a guy step away for a couple minutes and i'll come back and we'll let do the random for case 3 I won't keep going so just a few minutes behind but there's nothing too crazy Matt's doing py t's over on the baseball channel everybody. He's still got spots left for today all the random styles for today and tonight are sold out We've got 20 case are going on Friday 20 case a random player style 10 hobby 10 choice Yeah, first case we had a black shimmer jordan wymer first bowman base parallel He does not have autos in this set. I believe that's just his first chrome So that was a huge one a blue ray wave um rodrick uh roger arias And a an atomic of ricardo cabrera. So yeah, we've had two really good cases so far I'd say as far as like Top hits good color in that case too outside of the top hit. So I think we're doing pretty good so far Yeah, we're still we're I So the rookies are obviously tougher to hit. There's a lot fewer of the rookies themselves and a lot fewer of their autos i'd say Um, usually don't have quite as many base autos for the big names But I want to hit like a wit or a j-rod man. I want to hit one of those guys like a big some big color I think it was a mistake brandon that they did. I think it was a mistake. I don't think it was on purpose But I don't know. I'll be right back guys. We'll keep going Appreciate it everybody All right guys one second we'll do the random Sorry about that had to step away for a second No, there's no there's no ellie the cruise autos in this my friend ripped one box What Tell him not to rip anymore. Yeah, he said them done. It's either you buy a case you rip no more like it's I know for a fact it's the nationals in three different key by keepers But like I said, I'm not I'm not ripping anymore for myself. I wouldn't I wouldn't you can't do better number three number three Guys matt is live over at leighton baseball He still has five cases With spots left. He's doing p y t's five cases still there's a link to the site They're all listed in an order there. You can check out which teams are left And he'll be breaking for the rest of the afternoon as well I'm as us. We'll be going till about four ish Depending on how long we run here a little it is a little behind but uh, all right case three random. Here we go Just a sec Here we go with the random for 2022 bowman chrome baseball hobby 12 box full case number three random teams best of luck everybody a three Three times here names first one two and three Karla down to oren and three times on the teams now one two and three Rangers Down to dodgers Got karla with the rangers jacob p royals eric v tigers marlins h chi padre Sal pi mariners brent c guardians paul f metz d backs andrew l redsox eric v giants paul w pirates Chance d braves wey ming white socks travis l rocky's nicolas s cardinals karla cubs paul f yankies christ c brewers brian w rays roger k astros guy h blue jays Tim j angels christy a's jacob p orials shon k reds oran w twins p jason nationals gabriel s fillies and oran w with the Dodgers we'll get those posts. We'll start in a moment. Here comes your link. Give me one sec guys about 15 minutes behind Plan making up five minutes of case here and there Hey guys grab your spots for tonight plenty of one-on-one basketball origins football Eminence and what else might be there's a few other of those like football mixtures and stuff Yeah, there's like a origins gold standard black and elements mixer Yeah guys So yeah plenty of space left for personal tonight Bowman chrome hobby in stock for 309 99 rip it or ship it So with that said Let's get to it Everybody forced here ripping 2022 bowman chrome baseball hobby 12 bucks full case number three a random team style You can always find the results of latent sports cards.com Thanks to everyone for joining. Good luck On set chris i'm looking now I just see a chris t and chris c for 2022 bowman chrome baseball hobby 12 bucks full case number three random teams Yeah, I just have chris t and chris c here. Do you have an order number? Oh, you're in case three p y t Um here you're probably on match channel then So if that's a if that's a mats mlb breaks and that would be On the baseball channel. There's a link to the stream right there Um, I can also look for you though. He might be in case three right now Yeah, he should I think he just started case three chris But there's a link to the stream right there for you. All right, here we go guys All right, super factor time I mean we did pull black shim already, but That's pretty awesome. Oh, here they go again Method pretty cool I know I'm looking at it right now Dude, I just I just said let's pull a super We've got some work to do. Let's go. I do. This is oh god Here we go. Y'all buckle up That's great. I know they're relics from this That's nasty cars though. Is that a fall league patch? I think so. Yeah Oh, that's so cool. I look like a fall league logo too. That's filthy. Honestly Matt's pouring supers out here this guy Uh brewer speckles salfreilich numbered 79 78 of 299 and that'll do it for the half First bowman auto royals daniel uh vascas Kansas city, there you go rookie refractor pirates rowanzee contraros numbered 67 of 499 Colos roger arias base I'm pulling nice stuff. I might I might rip a box of this. I don't know owner of soccer Need more money Oh my god, Luis Rodriguez pink fuchsia vapor 37 to 199 digers James this guy This guy Matt Competition has really begun now based on a match gt schwarz Yeti capi ensin polino All right A green shimmer refractor christian hernandez cubs nice Hernandez 63 of 99 All right, come on now see this case up a bit We can do better than the first box Is everybody excited for Thanksgiving or just kind of meh just happy for a day off Jay jable day atomic arizona fall league marlins 30 of 150 first woman base auto rain donkong dodgers I wish they had Thanksgiving day basketball too rookie refractor rays shane baz Number 306 out of 399. So then at least since you have to watch the The damn lions play everything's giving you new we can at least watch some good basketball Yeah Like get like selfish heat or something like that Cool. Yo rogeri guys rookie mariners And I guess I don't want to compete though Because they go big on christmas Would utb taxis or tennessee? I honestly don't know A blue refractor erin judge very nice 140 to 150 Yankees erin judge blue refractor Big money judge texas okay A yellow rookie jake burger white socks number 60 of 75 For for sure gary for sure or megatron at least Nice louise rodriguez dodgers case hit moment ascensions odd 31 of 100 nice card Still signings auto like that man. That's crazy Put some work into that thing When you'll cruise base insert on the old cruise For some reason I thought they came back from half time already and scored a game because I saw the They're still on the replay. I'm like, oh, wouldn't be surprised they scored again Future shimmer jordan lallard diamond backs 44 of 199 the real ut Yes, yeah, yeah Culture was cool. I'm fine with it I'll probably have the florida florida stay game on a friday night here while i'm breaking at least Because there won't be anything else on Anything to be well, there'll probably some nba you But I mean if there's a good basketball you'll probably watch that instead of for the florida stay Yeah, or I'll flip we'll flip back and forth. We'll we'll we'll play by here. Suzuki rookie base Zavala base At least it's rival week rival week go and then it's conference championship week Yes, we're there aqua pink vapor Pedro panetta a's Number 81 of 125 Hard to hard to see anyone put georgia winning it again this year though green first woman autogram ashcraft 29 of 99 reds A fuchsia rookie josemaranda twins solid rookie there 86 at 299 I think that's one of his first rookies too if i'm not mistaken. I don't think he's been in this kind of products this year Couser it came to the league oh man, oh man, oh man Julia rodriguez base and aqua hendry mendez Brewers 94 of 125 Okay, so as I set this redolpo Castro down there was just a base Castro. I see this, uh I don't know how I miss it the first time but Still been holding the wrong angle big like Dent, I'll call it. I'm gonna send an empty box and wrapper with the uh Pirate spot it is just a base, but it is a rookie so Castro solid If you want to get that replaced to send the empty box and wrapper with you Ruhon base first woman auto red sox dan daniel macklevinny right macklevinny. Yeah Keep looking at it purple shimmer Carson williams rays number 216 of 250 balkazar the jesus All right, we need to we need to spice this case up Need a big hit Jack some life into this case. Come on an aqua jon kenzie noel guardians 108 of 125 Whether it be a big parallel big auto both First bowman auto jake rucker twins first bowman base auto Jake rucker must be related to dairies When you'll cruise insert Lonnie white and victor Jeremy panya base alvarez insert Ryan reckley Stephen kwan base Ran rookie aqua aqua ray wave josh low rays 189 of 199 Solid rookie there Kyle Raleigh big dumper first bowman uh refractor auto collin burns 156 of 499 orioles The orials nice numbered first bowman there Good to get a bat Cabrera shimmer Lonnie white jr. Pirates Quava Walker All right, let's see if I start the mess with it. Let's just get worse Hey guys, these are in stock for personals 309 99 rippets. We'll start after group rates tonight And then we also have ship sealed options as well. There's a kwan the ding on that Oh, there's a lot of things in this kwan. Actually, it's pretty mangled Just got caught on something. I'll get I'll grab anything boxing wrapper for the uh The guardians Kyle Raleigh a lot of base cards in these few packs here I wouldn't be surprised if there's a few that just have like two cards in it because there's a ton of cards in these packs fuchsia pink vapor any slender dodgers 173 of 199 first bowman speckle auto jack herman pirates 72 of 299 Maybe I don't know they keep having more cards in every pack. Maybe it's just how it's going to be Yankees refractors on carlo stanton numbered 162 of 499 Vachero base The rarer than they seem these first some of the first bowman chromes are rare Averson artega de Jesus jason choreo blue refractor blue jays color match vladimir guerrero jr 19 of 199 gold glove laddie jr. That surprised me who won gold glove this year Speckle first bowman reds rickardo cabrera nice parallel Reds 218 of 299 lindes yep as first bowman auto mariners andy thomas torkelson stott Wanderbase a uh first bowman shimmer will you find us for the Mets? Michael Hernandez Rojas And you guys make sure grabbing your spots for tonight's group breaks Got more bowman this weekend for random styles pyt still going on an lsc baseball today Still teams left on mats breaks not a ton, but there's still some good ones left So still time to get it on some bowman chrome release day breaks here It's gonna kind of be like release day part two on friday with our 20 casers It's 10 cases of hobby 10 cases of choice random player style Again, that's breaking friday morning That's gonna be a foam and those are always can't miss A daytime 20 case or got a bunch of more a bunch of different nixers and dual cases and All types of crazy bowman chrome breaks guys, so make sure you check out the site mats even got 2022 and 2018 bowman chrome mixers, so rookie seya sezuki aqua ray wave there you go cubs 40 of 199 Nice seya Danny the Andrade Nice card cubs j-rod base Got speckle first bowman auto ryan reckley there we go giants nice 138 of 299 Ryan reckley Yeah, yeah, we don't have to do that, you know travis uh, that's so that's that's dillins job That's a dillins job That's not just one person's job. That's like a two person thing Yankee el fernandez Which fernandez yankee el fernandez jimmy is that you're talking about? The rockies player Then yes, that's a huge card. That's that's a mat. That's a really big card. Yes. Yes. Yes. Very big card very big card He's probably a top five player in the product Blue harry forward mariners 26 of 150 top. Okay top first bowman. Let me specify before someone's like oh tawny's better Fuller Rodriguez is better first bowman auto reds yell in confidant Yeah, man, that that's that's for sure a big one Yeah, I I think top five some people have them like a little more like top 10 But yes an orange of that guy. Oh, yeah, congrats man. Congrats on the big hit So, hey, you don't have to know any about prospects. You just got to ask the people that do I don't know a lot, but I've been told by people that know What? First shimmer Roderick Arias yankees nice card not numbered on the Arias Nice to get a parallel of him. No for you yankees Oh, there's Brennan. Uh-oh We'll see if Costa Rica could get something going here They might they might be coached to them a journey might be going Jamaica not be feeling good. They're gonna have to beat Costa Rica for sure I don't think any wins are guaranteed the world cup and then they're gonna have to maybe even beat Spain It's tricky though. It depends on the schedule because like if Spain wins two games and they play him third They could rest. You know what I mean? Like that happens a lot That's why I'm worried about the united states green iran bial on helis a's number 58 of 99 Because england plays wales third so if wales beats iran And gets three points there then they have four points one in the england game England could arrest their start as if they beat the u.s. That would be that would be a disaster That'd be terrible and atomic auto jackson maryl 41 of 100 padres awesome maryl That's technically his first bowman, right? Is he the player that I was thinking of earlier? And we go 41 of 100 jackson maryl padres top prospect right there I think it's it'll it'll be sam and I think He's gonna have he's gonna have to have help is opening the 20 cases is gonna take like an hour on its own But sam is breaking that morning. I I imagine lane will probably help Just open and flip through some I believe choice releases on friday. I think that's release day for choice But we said earlier pretty sure pico armstrong refractor cubbies 460 of 499 pca yankiel finandez first bowman base voice lewis first bowman auto christian vaquero Congrats gnats First vaquero auto we pulled on the main channel over here. There we go Base, but still big We'll get that mag for you nationals. There we go first vaquero of the day over here Had a nice color parallel earlier. That's the first auto Staya Suzuki and your painter case is getting better here Case is getting better here a shimmer henry mendez brewers Appreciate it baseball dude Yeah, you can find this schedule anytime on the website right behind you up top Right in that like package kind of like paper package. Yeah, they're all in there But just in like not the best place As you can oh, that wasn't so bad. I thought that was gonna be worse I think I thought everything was gonna have to come off the top A blue refractor of ronald the cunea jr. Atlanta 108 of 150 speckle first bowman daniel vasquez royals 212 of 299 eddinson polino first bowman Dolo first bowman base auto ryan reckley giants Ryan reckley eric hernandez james triantos I don't know travis. I don't know bobbywood jr. Rookie You will have to wait What are you in case three still case three future shimmer garret mitchell brewers numbered 147 of 199 Trying to go a little faster trying to catch us up It's not easy to do though That's a torquoise and a nelson. Velasquez pink fuchsia first bowman vapor 188 of 199 cubs Wander franco rookie a base rookie auto diamondbacks drew ellis And that's only a second rookie auto. We pulled today. Roger arias first bowman base Delacruz a refractor of bobechette blue jays 374 49 there's a ding on this bobechette top left corner So I'll send an empty box and wrapper with that Haven't had really many issues all day, but in this case you've seen three ding cards This is a vola first bowman That's pretty good travis You're gonna take advantage I didn't see a tailor. I heard about I didn't see it though. Well, that's pretty crazy tailor Huh, they must be doing something then Oh, no cruise rookie. I wonder what they're planning First bowman refractor yelling confidant for the reds 163 of 499 Yank yell for nanda's first bowman base. Oh, that's awesome tailor I wish I would rip some some tops chrome now CJ abram's first bowman base auto Mets will he finas or finas? Almost some more big hits his last few boxes Guzman on the Invicta Henry Davis, Jordani de los Santos, Oscar Colas Weimar Ramos Joe Ryan A purple denser guzman angels 198 of 299 250 excuse me 250. I was like 299. That ain't right. Well, here we go again with spain on the on the push. Oh redemption. Who's redemption? Bowman chrome prospect auto so base first bowman of dylan lyle nationals. There you go gnats I believe that's his first bowman Pineda Detmer's buxton first bowman shimmers Samuel Zavala You go Padres nice Zavala there non-numbered parallel Oh, there they go Now they're for sure gonna sub some guys out. How they get this one. Oh, yep. I was saying I looked away and then they scored Oh, I just couldn't clear Roger carious first bowman Miranda refractor west cath white socks 343 of 399 Is Zavala first bowman base? A leondro balcázar reds redemption. There we go first bowman balcázar redemption That'd be the base we pulled alive uh atomic earlier, so You might see some numbered live and you might see some uh redemptions here for balcázar There you go reds congrats on that one. Good stuff Pacheco Invicta Spain going for more fresh bladé palino I guess it appears so taylor. I guess I guess so I don't know. I've only had the atomic pull. So maybe it's only a certain numbered. Maybe I got no idea. You know purple refractor rookie louis heliankis Number 205 out of 250 first bowman base auto jonathan mechia cardinals Yep, there come the subs torkelson I'll probably still score more with the subs Wander franco base a first bowman shimmer a bryanna cunha twins non-numbered on those shimmers Keep rolling two more Super fracter super fracter They got to get big dumper to sign his autos Julia Rodriguez base chris pratt's mario voice is like it's a me mario it's laughably stupid Which is crazy because the movie looks pretty good actually an aqua ray wave alex momo fillies Number 131 of 199 every other voice casting in that movie is like they nailed it. They nailed it and they were just like Who's popular? That's what we need for mario chris pratt I should have got sasha barron cohen or something like that Yellow jt schwarz auto one of 75 metz Italian club cars No, I I do a mustache like I have a system. Oh, we got a nice color coming up with the o'neill cruise orange shimmer first bowman one bin show There you go cardinals nice card two of 25 One bin show. I don't know if show has autos in this I am not sure Oh, he does He does there you go carls. That's a pretty nice one actually Great-looking card too I don't normally love like when there's something when there's like the cards get busy If there's like a shimmer like a like a ray wave or a wave or whatever But the shimmers I I've kind of always like a little more than some of those other ones If it's gonna have like a bunch of stuff around me that and like atomic A bowman ascensions his case hit brewers headbert pares purple first bowman simon won for the metz 184 of 250 That guy's way off sides. I thought first bowman auto kade marlo mariners Was he not? They want more goals fuchsia blue jays vladimir guerrero jr. Numbered 109 of 299 One been show. All right guys last one case number three here case number three It's crazy Hope in canada can be belgium. That'd be awesome Someone's got to win a game for north america at the world cup yellow cruise ascentsia aqua aqua ray wave selling marté metz 128 of 199 First bowman gold auto jack herman 45 out of 50 pirates There you go pirates nice gold Color match love that color match for the pirates O'Neill cruise alex thomas rookie refractor dbex Numbered 14 of 499 Matt mcclain bergola J rod Louise heel green refractor willmondia's dodgers 35 of 99 first bowman base out of liam spence cubs O'Neill cruise rookie christian vaquero base first bowman shimmer anthony vulpe yankees And that'll do it for the case once that guy's got your recap coming I'm surprised I haven't started sneezing yet chrome dust everywhere All right, so redemption nats dylan lile chrome prospect gotto redemption reds Well, uh leonardo balkazar Have I been saying leondro? It's leonardo by the way Mariners kade marlowe cubs liam spence cardinals jonathan mechia Metz willy faunas dbex drew ellis Giants ryan reckley reds yellen confidon Mariners andy thomas twinge jake rucker red socks daniel macklevenny Dodgers dane roncone Metz jt schwarz Royals daniel Vasquez A bowman ascensions insert auto louise rodriguez dodgers that one's 31 of 100 It's a pretty cool one All right, so first bowman We have refractor to 499 colin burns orials speckled to 299 ryan reckley giants and jack herman pirates Green to 99 gram ashcraft reds yellow to 75 jt schwarz metz gold to 50 jack herman pirates And a base christian buck arrow auto for the nationals Congrats on that one and an atomic jackson maril auto 41 out of 100 for the padres Thanks again everybody case 4 coming up next What's up sgs big bowman first for the autos like for jackson choreo for the brewers yankiel finandez Rockies Uh christian vocaro nationals brady house nationals jackson maril padres rodrick arias yankees Sedan e rafael a red sock samuels avala padres De la santos for the pirates is solid a few other solid guys would be like what leonardo balkazar samian munoz anthony guttietis is a good one So a few other pretty solid guys, but those are those are the definitely the bigger names that I said that I said first As of right now The big one is for sure jackson choreo for the brewers. He's the like he's like the guy There's a few other blue chippers in there too Case 4 coming up y'all one sec here Almost ready for the random Be on the lookout for black friday deals everybody We'll start getting those up on the site tonight um It'll be done manually so they won't all go up at the same time, but like progressively throughout later tonight and Tomorrow and friday. We'll have black friday deals up there. It's mostly Stuff that is going to ship sealed to you I think we may do some black friday like breaks for deals and stuff like that You'll have to I don't know a ton about it, but yeah a lot of sealed stuff will be uh big time marked down Random time for case 4 here 2022 bowman chrome baseball hobby random team case full case number 4 Good luck everybody What's up gary? Well, yeah, I mean we also have a lot of people here that You know make sure that the breakers know because we there's a lot of releases so You know I put in some work, but there's like you know like lane and matt put in a lot of work I go to matt and lane for sure about You know baseball products specifically That's eight times. It's six and two. I don't know if Sorry, I'll show it again here. It wasn't eight. I think I just said six and two and then ended up putting a six But it is eight one two three four five six seven and eight All right, karla down to nicolas s and eight times on the teams one two three four five six seven and eight and eight Giants down to astros Need belgium or draw Well, I'd like to see canada way not that it you know matters too. I want to see the usa win more but If if we can get some north american teams to advance that'd be pretty sick. I think Whether it be mexico canada or united states All right, so we got karla giants christ g jays danny y royals roger k twins Wei ming reds paul f pirates h lin a's michael t fillies tim j nationals Byron c dodgers guy h braves oran w white socks matt p rays h g tigers marlins christ g guardians danny y angels guy t rangers danny y cubs daryl m brewers paul f redsox travis al mariner sal p orials brent c yankees ronald a cardinals Karla mets d backs michael t padres oran w rockies nicolas astros. Let's get those posts. We'll start in a moment 20 case for on friday guys random player style Those release friday sgs Yeah, I assumed it was gonna be same day because I think in the years past has been same day they released but those released friday Let me grab my water bottle and we'll start I had to finish my coffee Okay Let's go everybody forest here up in 2022 bowman chrome baseball hobby 12 box full case number four random team style title on twitch My title is not update. Oh, yeah, it does say 10 bucks Tuesdays. I definitely changed it That's weird There right now. Is it like not working or something? What's that? Yeah, take a look at those a little bit longer while I change the Change the title on twitch Uh, maybe it's something we're re-stream. All right. Let's get started. Thanks everybody and good luck I read this case. Let's see it sal Haven't seen a red yet. Haven't seen a super fractor yet. Let's do it Last case was not the best as far as color goes As far as like big names goes, I guess for his decent color, but Kind of missed the big names for the most part. So here we go Case number four y'all Bad head of red shimmer james wood. Yeah, we saw that that was like right after the super fractor. He pulled Think I want to see kosher ghillie scorer one I always want to see the little guys, you know Get something Got a blue refractor Juan soto nationals Numbered five out of 150. Maybe one of his final nationals cards As far as like chrome base cards and stuff Yeah, Taylor, I think was that thing was nuts. That was beautiful. I didn't know that was in that Orange first moment william burgola fillies ego fills number 10 out of 25 Take low numbered first moment parallels all day There's just like a fall league patch, right? Oh my god, that was game warrant. Oh, it probably was first moment auto guardians jason choreo Jackson's I think younger brother I think he's younger student 17 so Oh, there's the fifth goal Nice jason choreo for the guardians. We'll mag that for you Cal rally this for this time. Is it got it? Does that split equate that got a shimmer colton cows or orioles not numbered Must be cool to have first bowman same time together Oh, wow, that was a nice goal. That was a crazy strike. Watch this right off the foot Off the volley christian vaquero first bowman base Duran speckle peak armstrong cubbies 52 of 299 jason choreo base Gavi gavi with his first world cup goal ever gold mini diamond no miller 27 of 50 twins auto Yeah, 48 boxes of hks. I don't know that's gonna be crazy So quad case for fracter salvador pares royals Yeah, we have a lot of crazy breaks this weekend 283 of 499 It's gonna be like bowman a thon in here bowman mania bowman palooza Jeremy painia you'd say Bowman bogdanovich, and I would think that that's an NBA player Bowman chrome bogdanovich plays for the plays for the The grizzlies for sure backup shooting yard averages eight points and two assists over over 14 minutes a game Pretty efficient honestly Bowman bogdanovich It's pretty close to the other names though. Clearly Rodriguez rookie Oh, yeah, that j-rod case hit super that was nuts Cosmic has been fun It's a pleasant surprise. I think So stupid this is what happens when you just open in the same product all day green tray swing Yankees the good and the bad I guess 66 of 99 So acting like a fool Never not think about that now. I just ruined that First bowman base out of braxton fulford braxton fulford That sounds like a like a like a um Like a uh like a folk artist Like this guy plays banjo for something and braxton fulford Yankees Fernandez first bowman base Braxton fulford. Yeah for sure in a uh full band Plays too many string it plays mandolin if anything shimmer rays Curtis me What am I even saying anymore So happens when I wake up before 9 a.m Yeah, I do want to see a red. I want to sa- sau called it. There's our case hit brewers bowman ascensions headbert parez He's been non numbered Do want to see some red that'll get us back on track. I pull a big hit I'll stop talking like an insane person Javier Baez tigers aqua ray wave 58 of 199 that bias contract was tough after last year First bowman purple auto rangers jojo blackman 55 out of 250 not over fractor cardinals 141 to 499 probably gonna go down as one of the better infield defenders ever He probably already is right Wins a gold glove every year wins a platinum glove every year now. So If not, he is the best. I don't know. I don't know back in the day No one ever like gets into the hall of fame and was like, yeah, I played such great defense Like they only care about your defense if you're also a good hitter Like griffy Like oh, yeah, he has to turn once. He also played good center field, but he also hits the gunner ones Costa rick is gonna need two late field goals Yeah, if they could just kick it over the goal between the uprights twice boom Yeah, Smith was it since those go offensively though Yeah, definitely in for defense We're talking about the uh, you were there travis. I'm pretty sure during the uh cosmic the uh Oh, that was super uh yellow orange jayson choreo Guardians having an awesome break Number 46 of 75 on the base parallel yellow orange vapor Jayson choreo First bowman base auto dillon dodd braves Dillon died Yeah That's how I am with every player named force. There's like one nick madrigal refractor 389 to 499 There was an offensive lineman named force something that was drafted past like four years or something something like that I never heard his name again, so it's not good But there's that ashore's pitching prospect force witley's supposed to be pretty decent But he but he had like tommy john like a year ago That's I feel like that's like half the pitching prospect doesn't make you worry She's like okay. Well, maybe in like two years. It'll be good Timeline pushback you're done blue refractor Ashore's 147 150 yet the force buckner is good Obviously force griffin is one of the most famous athletes with force Probably the most famous Got a yellow rookie alec tom is diamond back. That's pretty nice 53 of 75 Roncon de las Santos Force slam. That's his name. Thank you. Eric dude. Eric knows it all every time I He's got he's got the sports trivia like down first woman refractor auto twins jake rucker 16 to 499 We'll get that dust off on the left and right there with the microfiber And atomic and victor jose rodriguez white socks. That's number 29 of 150 fuchsia shimmer averson artega giants 36 of 199. Oh, it was his third surgery on that arm. Oh, that sucks, man Yeah, he was he was filthy Sean For scum Alabama legends Has anyone been more hyped at a high school than Bryce Harper? Probably not For baseball anyway I mean, there were a few guys back in the 90s But I think back then it was different. It wasn't as covered and now it's like things get like oh things get like way too hyped up You could it's it's not the same because he was international, but jason demingas He was like super hyped. I know it's not technically high school But as far as like a minor league prospect jason demingas parallels that I think But harper came up quick and he was good early too speckle jose ramos dodgers 30 of 299 Yeah, force grip in school. Apparently he's a pretty down earth guy, too. Which is good to hear I always like when the Some of the best are you know are grounded bobby wit jr. Oh, louis rodriguez are pulling these left and right 49 of 100 bowman ascension's auto. We pulled two of these today That lou rod insert auto magnet man shimmer mets francisco alvarez Yeah, that's the thing is people would like hate on harper, but I mean he lived up to it Like he's won two mvps Came within two games of world series the leader of his team. I mean he lived up to it You can't really do better. You can't do a whole lot better than Bryce harper You could be trout, but that's not like a you know way better than harper Wonder franco. We've got a first bowman pink fuchsia vapor one binchow cardinals 167 of 199 first bowman base auto antonio pinero brewers Yeah, harper also fought pappabon i'm a red sox fan, but you know pappabon was out of pocket a lot in his playing career Miss sailor bina he only got away with it because he was a like probably an elite closer for several years christian vaquero You know like he leaves, but definitely a You know championship caliber closer obviously jason shorrio Yeah, trout just never really had the down years when he's been healthy, but I mean trouts Trouts like the unicorn among like baseball players. It's just He is like the griffy. He is like the kid. He's like the griffy since griffy is out there as far as like complete player As far as hitting in the defense Heck yeah triple b torkelson stott Not that they're the same player, but aqua first bowman danie de andrade twins 38 of 125 First bowman base auto wilfred veros for the white sox has a piece of dust on the top right. I believe we'll get that off microfiber First bowman shimmer austere colas white sox I don't even know trap necessarily attracted shohei otani. I think he just I think shohei otani Wanted to go to the west coast team and the angels offered him the best deal at the time First bowman aqua pink vapor your danie de los Santos nice one pirates 29 of 125 nice parallel for a A good name there first bowman green auto daniel vasquez 16 of 99 royals Nice low numbered hit for the royals first bowman green Yeah, I think that had a lot to do with the tail. I'm pretty sure you're right on that rookie fuchsia wander franco. There we go 94 of 299 rays Looking back it seems insane that teams wanted shohei to like pick one way or the other Not seems insane. It is insane Looking at shohei otani like, you know what you should pick one You can hit 35 home runs and have a 2 tba over like almost 200 innings You need to pick which one you want to do That's probably not it ryan. I think it's just the angels Last big contract. They really shelled out was uh Pujols now was just that was honestly just a sell tickets really, right? Roger garyas post 30 year old puhols speckle south fralig brewers number 277 of 299 Zavala first bowman it seems like That would be the likely team if not the Yankees, right brennan an orange shimmer first bowman auto jaded red blue jays 14 out of 25 Jaden rudd that's uh paul's nephew About to score again, aren't they? colmenara's I'm not even pushing up that hard either Julio Rodriguez base Jaden rudd Biggest this is probably the most lopsided victory in the whole world cup right here Save to say spain's probably moving on the next uh the next round A blue west cat white socks numbered 47 out of 150 first bowman auto raise willy vazquez The crooked wrist willy vazquez When you'll cruise hey anything to drive up that price for him I want my Yankees over paying for him first bowman shimmer willy vazquez raise As long as they give erin boon and brian cash from the lifetime contract i'm cool Ryan you're blue jays fan, right? I just want to make sure I'm red sox fan. I know you do that, but like Yeah, i'm fine with him saying up with the Yankees first bowman purple yendri rojas padres Number 238 out of 250 There's probably a chance he goes to the cubs. I'm sure he'll have more meetings with teams first bowman speckle auto northe vera 297 of 299 white sox shimmer raise karsten williams You guys sam is live at 5 p.m. Eastern He's got He starts with more bowman chrome all of his random cases are sold out as well though So we have more bowman chrome listed for friday for random styles There's pyt over on match channel currently That's still have some spots left not a ton of teams, but there's still some Get you guys a quick link for Just the just the whole site here his few cases that he has left. He has three left with spots Uh, you can see right at the top of the home page right there cases 6 7 and 8 over on matt's mlb breaks Um, yeah, just a handful of teams left for him today guys some good teams left though Oh wow seven geez man First bowman refractor rodrick arias yankees. There you go 383 of 499 first bowman base auto estevan machado blue jays This is like more goals than spain scored when they won the world cup in 2010 They scored like eight goals the whole the whole tournament in 2010. Really? Yeah Yeah, I mean I mean there really hasn't been a home run hitter like that since sosa. Well, I guess I mean For a few years stanton was that home run hitter? Yeah, they won't have to worry about gold differential Heck, even if you're spain, you can just draw the final two matches and move on with that gold differential It does not matter It does not matter They're gonna outscore the group Oh nice bowman ascension jordan walker Case it cardinals aqua ray wave ryan mount castle numbered 182 of 199 for the orioles yankees finandez placencia Jeremy panya. Yeah, I really want to see him sign with the meds. That'd be great Juan garedo first bowman auto rakies base Oh, come on spain. Don't just stop stop trying to score goals It's kind of it's kind of rude It's kind of rude at this point Unique cappy straight turner dodgers refractor numbered 174 499 Yeah, spain wants Uh Eight goals the ocho That's what happens when you have uh five substitutions in a world cup though steven kwan rookie hit the kwan south called it south called a red refractor rookie joe ryan twins Number two of five Nice card twins Good rookie pitcher there Good stuff. We will get that magged for you, of course Noice First red of the day. So we pulled a one of one and a red a It came for the league autograph insert autograph brewers headbert parez That'll look pretty cool for the brewers there Those are fun inserts Wander insert Pulled a red I saw purple show shimmer will mondiaz dodgers 62 of 250 It's coming. It's coming. You heard that since you walked in it's coming. He said it's coming. Yeah, right here Since since you just walked in asking I gotta show you now. Come on spain. This is just rude now. Oh It's just rude Then they've scored two recently as well. It's like come on now. You guys either has been scoring for everybody Farron has two gavi got his first Yeah I want to say Dude, I think marata had one almo had one or two So they're for they could just draw the last two in advance based on gold differential. It does not matter And Yeah, germany germany's in deep. You know what? I think so Bobby wood jr. It it depends if they if they play spain I don't know the schedule if they play spain next they're in a lot of trouble because spain's still gonna try next game Yeah But if they get to the if they get into the third games, they might rest aqua fuchsia or no not aqua fuchsia, but a pink fuchsia karsten williams vapor 171 of uh 199 raids spain. I mean you're not scoring 700 pan Maybe tana mcdougal first woman out of white socks Thursday That the problem is rookie refractor hunter green reds the problem is germany pretty much happened with the next two 303 or 499 Because you would think everybody beats costa rica then The tournament ranked 32nd out of 32nd out of 32 Yeah, I mean after the win today, japan very much has the advantage. Yeah, they have it in their hands It's theirs to lose Yup. Well, it's spain's to lose Yeah, I mean the second spot. I don't think anyone's worried about spain Refractor that looks like a variation to me brandon marsh Angels rookie yet is because there's no numbering on it. Here we go photo variation brandon marsh angels That's pretty cool looking card actually Last world cup Yep, it's about to happen again Say a rookie we've got a first woman auto benjamin cowles yankees Belgium canada next come on canada No, Belgium's gonna come on. I don't know about destroy. I think it's gonna be like three one green shimmer Luis Rodriguez Dodgers Numbered 85 out of 99. It's gonna come down to how canada is what they feel. Yeah, I hope canada wins I want north america to show up It's gonna come down to how japan and germany play spain because both should be coast area What's up bun? How's it going man? dandy duffy fans. Yeah, I guess I guess we are all dandy duffy fans You need this specific code from the The qc code is just seen for every box, right? for like Ryan c and chat is saying empty box Stephen kwan rookie base a first woman refractor louise meza blue j's 59 to 499 Ryan send an email with with what product it was Raleigh first woman speckle auto rosamund verdugo 22 out of 299 padre solid hit Oh, here. He has one in here. He already has the email sent never mind. Ryan. We'll get that forwarded to the right Yeah, let me forward it right now I'll forward it to you and critique Roy's marking ton up. Yeah, I believe with the products. It should be the same code. So you may just need a box of whatever it was Yeah, just forwarded it Sorry to get to earlier Ryan we're busy today obviously black friday coming up in the day off tomorrow And and bowman obviously Appreciate your patience though, buddy Sorry you're missing a hit though that all that always thinks when that happens Arias first bowman purple matt mclean. There you go reds 18 out of 250 Doesn't mclean doesn't have autos in this does he? When is mclean gonna sign? Both of them. They're the same draft. I'm more worried about I know you are because you're a rangers fan When is mclean gonna I mean he's got a sign soon. That's his first chrome right there christian focaro base Nice mclean for the reds though that um Hey first bowman base out of louis maza blue jays Oh, that stinks von Mills mafia. What the heck? Why are they bench mills mafia acting like his mills his fault that they stink Shimmer first bowman joy wymer brewers go brew crew Yes, that's a nice bit clean for the reds. He doesn't have autos yet. So that's his first chrome It's not like kyle allen is gonna do any better. That's what I'm saying is like they're acting like it's mill's fault Also, my Again Honestly, they probably only benched him because of how he acted in the press conference. Yeah exactly what happens They're like, oh, you don't want to be you don't want to be a leader In the team meaning said if you're not going to be accountable, I'll be accountable for you Hey, that's a wake-up call though. Yeah, it's zach wilson's time to like Get it together or like it's your time, dude He's got the town But yeah solid literally looks like i'm just gonna handle this. Yeah, I mean all young quarterbacks have real games you just gotta You know be accountable and get better green marco luciano. There you go giants 12 of 99 Is it uh Zavala first woman auto willy finas met. Oh, that's nasty. That's a good one Did you oh, yeah, he did I just never ever pulled one you're right ryan, you're right Well, I don't know why I was saying that it's because I literally never ever pulled one of his autos Matt McLean he had him in 22 bone days at autos. Those are his first chromes base fuchsia first bowman danier quayba for the rangers 30 of 199 arias base brennan honestly, I joined one break for today and that's it Uh, I took the rockies in a p yt. Oh, you're chasing the same player then I always chase the rockies though. I chased warming I chased tovar I chase like bergola blue first moment fillies 146 of 150 Yeah, the problem with the rockies and I don't mean any offense to you brennan Their players are amazing in the minors and then they come up to the majors and never do anything first bowman auto for the royals Michael Garcia Tovar was the easiest flip in the world A fuchsia corey seager rangers 248 to 299 tovar should probably at least get the chance to start for them out of spring training He'll be expected to take that spot. Yes very much So Yeah, he's putting the rematches first and going to order the barrel all the stuff Veteran right here. You should tell uh, you can tell your dad to start doing that He was in here earlier and I was like, I was like, I was like, yeah, shall we get the best top loader today? He called me trash. Yeah, he called me trash You're all gonna have to have like a top load off Top loader Who can print the sheets the best who's the better top loader between between the two silvers Torkelson stott choreo jason choreo Yeah, we got a lot of fun bowman Different different things guys. We've got dual case of like hobby and choice. We've got the 20 caser We have matt has like 22 and 2018 chrome mixers. Keep in mind hta does not come out until friday That's why you don't see any mixers or anything like that today. Today is just the hobby released it Votto to 250 reds Yeah, I was I thought I assumed I didn't know it was coming out different days Oh, nice a salmon munoz first moment refractor out of for the Dodgers 43 out of 499 There we go Dodger that's a very bright card Nice card LA All right, so we hit a red. Let's see a big auto to end it off here A red auto or like a gold auto Lane says super Shimuramo's Dodgers Sorry, I tell you McLean base bergola First woman refractor alex de Jesus number 215 out of 499 We should keep it. We should keep a count of how many topplers break You know the two most famous marquette players. Oh, that's a pretty solid one mason our first woman auto for the rays There's one that's currently The two most famous marquette basketball players, I don't even know well dwayne weighs the easy The other one's really easy once I say football or basketball basketball There's no marquette football players. They have football, but it's like is it do you want football? No, no, no I didn't think What's up Caleb? All right guys good. Do the recap here in a second. Caleb. What's up, man? Say good morning to Caleb everybody. He probably just woke up Caleb I had to start at 10 a.m. This morning, man craziness outright if you ask me Not not that outright not that preposterous. Yeah, it's super easy All right, here we go. So we had redemption headboard Perez. It came for the league redemption auto brewers Okay Uh base autos here rays mason our that's pretty nice one. Actually, what's up Travis royals? Michael Garcia Mets Willy Fannas Blue jays louise meza yankees benjamin calz white socks tana mcdougal Rockies Juan Guerrero Blue jays Estevan machado rays willy vazquez white socks wilfred veras brewers antonio Pinero Braves dylan dod Rockies braxton fulford Jason choreo. There you go guardians. We got a mag this one Get that mag for your guardians. Congrats on that one. We had refractor auto to 499 twinge jake ruckard Honey night cinnamon all the choreos white socks speckle nor have air out of 299 I debated bringing churros churros that'd be awesome. Uh speckle for dugo Padres purple the 250 blackman rangers A I pulled the second one of these I pulled today to 100 louise rodriguez insert auto dodgers Bowman ascents Does he yeah, that's why it's the way it is. Oh my god. I was wondering if I was like I'll look at like that Does that say he signs it upside down green vazquez royals in 99 gold mini diamond noa miller to 50 twins A orange shimmer jaden rudd blue jays the 25 There we go some nice color in there We had that refractor auto samia munoz the 499 dodgers A jason choreo yellow orange vapor to 75 The guardians and a red rookie joe ryan twins. Congrats on the red twins two out of five first red today that we pulled Gary you seen jimmy butler Thanks, everybody. We'll uh get on to the next one because at this point jimmy butler is like a certified like Super star in the nba Yeah, like he's not the luca yannis level, but he's like the level below that He's one of the best playoff. Let me retake that. I want my band-aid finger in the photo Cut yourself I cut part of my thumbnail off or my middle fingernail off last night Yeah, things happen That's playing too much cod. That's exactly what happened. I was playing too many video games now I was cutting vegetables with a knife that wasn't sharp enough and it yeah, just I was so mad Put the the the choreos together. Yeah, that's why I said Right just problems. Yeah, I would I would I was like, let me make sure I'm not like Underestimating you can go Okay Little pry because he's not like the No, he's not the chase. Yeah Yeah, if that was like a base, I wouldn't have even magged honestly Oh, not at all von You know who's better than jimmy butler Kyle you missed a one-of-one black shimmer non-auto You've missed some churros You know who's better than jimmy butler bowl bowl Bowl bowl didn't go to marquette though. We're talking about marquette players I don't care. I have to inject bowl bowl into every conversation You've seen all the memes where it's like the NBA has never seen a player like victor women yama And then they're like, oh wait, they have bowl bowl. Yeah, but it was bowl bowl Like the magic are tanked for women yama currently they have like healthy players that they're saying are injured So we're gonna have two unicorns plus palo on the floor. Good luck everybody in three years No, you know who I feel really bad for right now. Um, so I mean this whole math side Wherever you had started on the right Mitchell k and nicholas s know what these are twice or w twice All right guys one second to the random that coffee got me jittery earlier I forgot what was in it Leslie matthews is also a really good marquette player. Oh, yeah I want one of the Howard brothers to do something They're just too small Best two-way player. I think you could argue that for sure for jimmy. I don't like I don't know if he is like you're saying but Definitely one of them I only root against him because he's on the heat now though. That's it. That's the only reason I do Jimmy Butler has also given us some great memes by the way So that also goes a long way in how I view NBA players or any any any athlete or any any person Any person? Oh, did you see the new meme that from You saw the the shipping computer background Oh the more Brad No, no, no, it's different now. It's going to change it Let me show you then we'll do this random guys. It's very important that I show Dylan this though. Okay. So first of all This is uh, this was unintentional uh-huh That was completely unintentional. It looks like it. It looks legit It looks legitimate and then there this was this was throwing the Steph Currypole. This is the background now I know That's the new meme. Is that what's on the computer over there? That's what's on the computer right now I gotta show you guys this so Sam and I unintentionally recreated a meme You can see where this is going Look at that uncanny. It looks exactly like uncanny. Look at that. Oh my god I just so good So good There's another one. I gotta see if I can show it though. It has the computer background. I don't know if I can uh That was Sam Sammy. It's like look at this He was watching something back and it's like we unintentionally recreated this meme. It's funny all right, all right Random time for 2022 Bowman chrome baseball hobby 12 box full case number five random teams. Good luck I've printed frame and hang honestly. We should we should in 11 5 and 6 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 and 11 Mitchell k down to evan c and 11 times on our teams 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 and 11 Tigers marlins down to fillies All right, Mitchell k tigers marlins nicolas s royals gunner reds Noah twins brent c dodgers tim j angels christ g guardians jason k ashows carla padre's michael m redsox ken has the gnats and the blue jays jordan n with the cardinals Eric j a's travis l braves matt f cubs gunner has the mets and d backs christopher p mariners carla rays travis u whitesox Jerry f yankees byron c rockies oran w brewers wayming h giants oran w rangers christ g orials Noah d pirates evan c fillies the results post will start in a moment The photoshop pickle rick in the background too Oh, man, I think it was travis. I imagine it is because that was the most recent thing Let me find the other one so This is I won't show you the whole thing because I just want you to see the desktop of it, but this is the uh This is the background photo on our one of our shipping computers right now. This was during the step curry one of one timeless moments Dude, I walk out like Monday night and I see this On like the other side of the shipping room it is bright everything. I turn off all the lights and everything You know like oh my god. What is going on right now? And so I was like, oh, this is the new meme This is the new meme right here I zoomed in on jake, but it's all like it's all choppy You can't tell if he's worried or what? Oh god, it's so good Oh Sorting shipping is funny, man. They're funny. All right. All right. All right Oh god All right, we're 20 minutes behind let's get started Everybody forced here ripping 2022 bowman chrome baseball hobby 12 bucks full case number five Random teams check out the results while I get some water. Thanks for joining everybody and good luck Dude jake's reaction was pure nervous energy. It was it was amazing It was so good. It's like when you're watching your favorite team play and something crazy happens You're just jumping up and down All right, here we go Can you drop another result? We'll send you another results link so you can check it out again Super frack your time. I'm calling it right now this case. All right guys. Come on, canada Let's go canada. I don't think canada will win. They shouldn't win, but come on canada abram's base rookie a pink fuchsia vapor j. Allen reds 137 of 199 We've called a lot of hits before though. Yes Braxton fulford rockies bowman chrome prospect autograph redemption. That'll be a base auto for the rockies first bowman Braxton fulford Joe ryan rookie james wood And to be fair, I say I say let's see a super early. Let's see a red or something like that every case purple shimmer page or panada a's number two or three two fifty You call it every time you hit it once and you can say you called it Oh, what is this now? Well, we got here 56 of 150 Rockies arizona folly relic card michael tuglia Game used there you go. Rockies are the nice relic again to 150 Look at that one there again Well extra hit there yep has rookie base torque stopped Amal kazaar wander rookie base purple refractor max muncie a's 116 of 250 Oh, there was like a scratch. You can see it right in this light There you go I just noticed that scratch Going diagonally Sorry about that a's we'll get the box and wrap her out Pre-solid muncie parallel there Not the oh two redemptions in the box Pretty wild Bowman chrome prospect auto A Padres Yarlon susana Eagle Padres big picture there Literally big he's huge ramos and victor yankiel fernandez first bowman Montgomery insert Belgium unbeaten in last 12 World Cup group stage matches Geez Even if Canada had a draw, I think that'd be pretty good for them. Yeah Hey, you never know. This is the world cup for upsets though, apparently Blue refractor big show Here we go Angels 29 of 150 ohtani Dempsey Clint Dempsey my goat. There he is first bowman rezado Stanley Castillo Tampa Bay Yep has rookie Balcazar Okay guys matt still has some pyt spots available over on latent baseball a green shimmer first bowman Parallel white socks wilford veros 23 of 99 yasa mercedes Deandrade torque Damage on this Ezekiel Durand insert for the rangers Right near the bowman chrome logo I will get a box and wrap her out to the ranger spot now Oh god Come on taylor. Come on man First bowman base auto yasa mercedes twins nice card there Paulino first bowman Few show rookie Gavin sheets white socks number 283 of 299 rs. Miranda colas insert Yeah red spot is definitely good They have um another damaged same insert different player this time Damage on the top I will send a box and wrap her to the blue jay spot now in the merino Reds have um What's the first bowman refractor auto nor have arrow white socks 318 of 499 Reds have um Dude, oh my god It's like top five player in the product. Why can't I think of his name? Let me just look real quick I'll tell you I'll tell you who you're looking for with the reds You are looking for the Leonardo Balcazar and Ricardo Cabrera those are the big reds right there So reds are definitely one of the better teams in this product I would think they're at least the top like seven or eight team with riccardo cabrera and leonardo balcazar cequiel dorain de los santos colas first base pink fuchsia vapor eddies lennard dodgers 187 of 199 So good yarla It's okay to not know prospects not a lot of people do Luckily I got people telling me Sebastian Espino first bowman auto blue jays Hey, well good luck to you So the top prospects I would think by a good bit. There's a couple that I think are pretty up there jackson choreo for the brewers And christian vaquero for the nationals I think are probably the two tops Then you got guys like rogerick arias jackson maryl brady house who are all very very good Yankeel Fernandez for the rockies sedan rafael a red sock samuels avala padres or dany de los santos pirates All pretty good We just talked about jayson choreo leonardo balcazar You got a yellow colil lotson marlins numbered 57 of 75. Oh, and then for the reds you can also hit First bowman chromes of matt mclean. He had his first autos in 22, but now that he got his first chromes Like base he didn't have those in uh in bowman. So also something like secondary to look for Oh almost missed that that's very tough to see if you're just kind of flipping through cards Ivan johnson reds auto 31 of 67 31 of 87 arizona fall league auto For the reds. Ivan johnson or ivan or ivan johnson Eagle reds A green shimmer first bowman red socks ensign palino nice card 90 of 99 moonshots in denver with uh sterling thompson i'm excited for the uh i'm excited for the red socks and draft For um, oh my god, what's his name marcella meyer's best friends Got drafted by the red socks in the first round Mikey Dude, i'm so bad with names today. I didn't go home and take a nap. I'm terrible you guys released Wednesday release daytime forest is like a shell Of nighttime breaks forest Yeah, of course smooth of course first bowman purple rangers anthony guttieta sees a solid one too 178 of 250 at least for the rangers. That's probably your best guy guttietas And a marsh first bowman auto reds leonardo balkazar. There we go. Cincinnati Congrats on the hit. We'll get this mag for you Is it romero? Mikey romero. Okay. I had Mikey right Mikey romero Thank you taylor Yeah, first rounder for the red socks Him and marcello grew up together first bowman shimmer joey wymer brewers He might not be the biggest chase in the product, but he'll be one of the names for sure first round high school short stops so Stop melendez if you assume me. He's in draft balkazar base appreciate it taylor I had the Mikey part right at least hit the kwan Kunja jordan lala bowman ascensions d-backs Case hit funnest Ali we've got a refractor for the a's ruby ellen helis number 23 out of 499 Didn't you hit one of his autos his first bowmans? I think so, yeah He's he saw a player. I think he was part of the manaya trade That's pretty kade marlowe first bowman purple auto mariners nine out of 250 kade marlowe Kade marlowe is more of a hockey name. I think I'm saying that because of patrick marlowe rookie refractor tiger spencer torkelson 139 of 499 Okay, taylor, but okay. Come on taylor you draft you draft all the high school short stops you can get And then they end all on the being like outfielders Hey, see a sgs I don't see a before tomorrow have a happy Thanksgiving You know, I'm gonna go to the grocery store today and just cause more chaos Not gonna do anything just walk around with a cart and get in the way Buy like a box of band-aids or something I'm gonna go put like the rest of the tin foil the foil like uh baking dishes in my cart or the rest of them I don't know. Yeah, so now I was gonna get them. I'm just gonna go cause chaos today Dude, I was saying earlier eric Alec thomas there jonathan mehia first pink and fuchsia aqua Vapor it's 110 of 199 cardinals. I'm saying all the colors and vapor basically I went to target yesterday. It wasn't even like It wasn't even like late and it wasn't that crazy. It was around like noon I still hated it. I'm not going back. I told Dylan I'm not going back to target. There's a calconley braves base auto there I'm not going back to target until like mid january. I'm not going back That's what the Padres do to taylor. Okay That's what the Padres do man shimmer blaze jordan red socks That isn't even made doesn't it? I didn't make sense This guy's just talking nonsense this taylor guy christian vaquero first moment. Come on now Where's that super fracter? I said we were gonna pull it purple joa del angels Numbered 101 out of 250 first woman base auto rosamund redugo Padres This guy's acting crazy right now. Invect a west calf. You're just mad because you don't have any Aaron judge or uh, Paul goldschmidt base cards to sell back. Say a Suzuki Just like just like me I did it once eric I only waited lines like an hour though That was back when I was in college. I wanted to get the uh Xbox one was the last one. I wanted to get the xbox one bundle And I also did it for my buddy. He's like, he's like dude, I'll give you like 40 bucks if you grab me one, too Like you pay for it obviously And then he gave me 40 bucks on top of it like okay done like I just grabbed two and that's all I got I left I was I waited line for an hour. I just chilled Like my wife was my girlfriend at the time. We were just hanging out in line Uh, but of floor that's not so bad because this is get cold here So it was like 65 degrees a nice evening But that was when I used to open on Thanksgiving And so I think back in those days. I usually work Thanksgiving morning like at the resort and then I saw I came home and just like Yeah, first bowman refractor Edinson Paulino for the red socks You go red socks numbered 180 499. Um, there's a scratch down the left side of this right along his glove here I'm gonna send a box wrapper to the red socks now That's a minor scratch. I'm not sure if they'll replace it, but it's worth a shot with a nice polino like that Yeah, I'll never go again. I'll never do it again That was also back before everything was online as well. That was like one of the xbox one came out like 2012 2013 something like that Yeah, it's gotta be at least first woman speckle Orioles auto Isaac de Leon 88 of 299. Yeah, I was back in those days But I thought it was worth it for sure I remember I got like the assassin's creed bundle and like it was only like 250 bucks. I was like, this is great That Olson fuchsia 82 of 299 braves I think my wife grabbed some like some clothes real quick and some Some blue rays the red one we got out. We were in the store for maybe like 15 minutes. It was awesome But I'm glad I'm glad target doesn't open on Thanksgiving anymore Blue refractor Phillies Alec Bohm Number it's 77 of 150 Dang Taylor. That's a long time. Purple refractor Pirates Lee over piguero Number 230 of 299 best buys always the craziest first woman auto Dodgers rain dunk on the the funny thing about All the best like black Friday deals is they're giving you the things that like are not the best Like they're literally just cleaning out of things that like Yeah, there are some good deals But nowadays it's really like get rid of things A lot of those places Like they'll put a lot of things on sale, but the best things they won't put heavily on sale shimmer head bit Perez brewers Yeah, like you might get like 20 bucks off a bundle, but you're gonna have to get like the big bundle Yep That's how it always is they're never like the console itself is 25 bucks off No, it's like you have to buy all of this because we can't move this bundle You'll see some ps4s on sale. You'll see stuff like that on sale But like a switch use a switch you won't see on sale either Nintendo games and consoles Just do not lose value for some reason Like you probably still have to pay like 50 bucks for legends of arceus. Oh, yeah Every mario game is the same price forever like never change. Yeah, they'll never go on sale Exactly Jeremy paying your rookie First bowman refactor joey weimar and ice-card brewers 382 of 4.99 joey weimariner Baccaro first base Nats That's cool one. Have fun watching man Green first bowman out of Padres y'all in susanna 86 of 99 How tall is he? Yes, six six. I knew he was huge six six. Good god I think he throws really hard too got refractor dylan carlson cardinals But I think he was in the uh the soto trade the 4.99 cardinals I believe he's a national now I'll show it again after you top load it Stephen Kwan Yeah, there's a lot of light scratches on a lot of it just happens with chrome products sometimes Unfortunately cow Raleigh Yeah, the the tennessee pitcher dudes did insane Got a purple kebrian haze pirates number 90 of 250 Get that card. Oh, there's yeah Sheets first bowman base auto royals michael garcia green shimmer louis rodriguez dodgers number 22 out of 99 Bondo davies come on canada. It's like vertical. Yeah, it was like Out of the top load Yeah, so dylan was saying out of the top load you can see there's some light scratches like vertically on this It's hard to see in the top lower with a sleeve and everything but they're light I'm gonna send a box wrapper with this one too um I don't know if they'll replace this one because it's really tough to see But like I said, we're at the shot especially on the first bowman green Like I don't know where like manufacturers like draw the line of like factory damage and kind of just like Minor things like that, but hey It cannot hurt to try Yeah, spandler's great today feel bad for kosherica though That's brutal. I feel bad for like the like the goalkeeper You just have to sit there and like know that your defense is just over matched all day Yeah, I I think germany or toast. I think they're done Oh, yeah colton. This is number five Random teams case number five Yeah, it's number five. I always have to like double check when you're doing the same thing all day Okay Bobby wit jr. Rookie proper refractor first bowman auto jr. Perez a's 87 of 250 Color on the batter. Oh, I gotta grab some wax to take home a riff tomorrow Yeah No, I think I'm gonna grab some soccer some pokemon Pokemons is honestly the most fun to rip. I think it's the most enjoyable riff Yeah, pez Vasquez mercedes Yeah, japan was on the ropes in the uh in the first half. Nice a first bowman aqua joey weimer brewers 78 of 125 I know it's pretty cool, right ryan? When's the last time they were on the world cup 86 or something like that? That's a long time man whales last world cup was Like the 50s a jake fox purple refractor auto 131 of 250 cleveland I'm rooting for canada. I don't dislike belgium, but you know I like the underdogs and like I said can of the usa mexico. Let's go. Let's go North america world cup. Let's go first bowman shimmer will he find us mets? Gotta get that height built up for 2026 already Alfonso davies. I mean, hey If anyone's gonna I mean jonathan david's very good But if anyone is needs to play really well for canada to like really have a chance alfonso davies has to play really really well He's one of the best players in the world man as far as like 20 year old Mate now arguably the best at his age So good Does it all You can move those over now if you want An aqua blaze jordan redsox number to 67 of 125 yourland confedon If you're local, we're gonna have some in store black friday stuff too as well We're gonna have a deal on singles And all that good stuff first bowman reds auto Graham ash crafts non numbered christian vocaro base O'Neill cruise wonder franco fuchsia louis robert whitesox number 291 of 299 The optimum is crazy. He does it all though. Like I said Logan davidson damaged seen a lot of these inserts damaged too Have a boxer rapper for the uh was the pirates A sorry A's logan davidson rookie aqua ray wave alec thomas d-backs 58 of 199 ice car d-backs A base auto Yankees cooper bowman. I think that's his first. Is that his first bowman auto? I'm honestly not sure Bowman bowman shimmer first bowman yason moral bell for the rangers ponzo davies 2021 conca calf men's player of the year. That's right He should um, he should come play for the us. That's what he should do I know canna's penalty underdog, but like They were really good in qualifying and recently like they've been really good. So I don't think anyone that's been paying attention would be shocked too too much at a at a upset here, but It'd still be an upset for sure belgium been a powerhouse for a few years first bowman blue alex de hazus dodgers 42 of two or 42 of 150 I have not watched his twitch streams. Maybe I'll check them out First bowman refractor auto adrian sugar stay for the giants 287 of 499 and victor yosua garcia All right, everybody Matt is live over at leighton baseball He has two more py t cases that have teams available Check him out on the top of the home page there. Sam has also got Some basketball and football breaks tonight. You can also find those there. He starts at 5 p.m Eastern his bowman chrome cases are sold out We're also that random team bowman chrome cases today guys Um, also On the site you'll find where I think we have breaks listed through through monday now So you're gonna want to check out the site and grab your spots a lot of teams sell very quickly So if you're looking for specific teams and py t bowman You ought to go grab them No brady house autos yet I think matt pulled a green one on the baseball channel. So matt did pull one Gutierrez and arias bobbywood jr. Rookie base an aqua first bowman william burgola fillies 46 of 125 a zavala first bowman base Redemption dailin lyall nationals bowman chrome prospect auto redemption Nationals dailin lyall shimmer brewers salfrelich One of the best breaks grinds frat friday night friday night breaks I thought Thanksgiving day breaks before so the best breaks Yeah, they'll go live from home on instagram and hurt some boxes not for you guys I don't think rich would let me break on Thanksgiving You don't like to make me spend time with you aqua yosua garcia fillies Numbered 119 to 125. I don't want you to complain about it later. So no Jimmy penia ryan you buying any uh, you buying any reds and breaks Cade Marlowe first bowman refractor auto mariners 315 to 499 They're good again green shimmer averson artega giants number 98 of 99 Gotta make sure I set my lineups tonight because I will forget tomorrow for sure Especially for the history for the first game Oh shoot, it's like 1230 right? Yeah, it's like 12 or 1230 speckle jackson joked tigers Numbered one of 299 the first one Make sure you check out this uh weekend schedule rhyme We got a lot of different bowman mixers and multi casers and all those other stuff So not that not sure who'll be interested but uh, I know you like I know you like baseball I know you like bowman. So I've got a lot of options roiling machandi first bowman auto astros and then again guys Um black friday deals will start going up on the site tonight rich will start adding them manually It'll take a little bit of time But yeah, just be able to look out over the next couple days for black friday deals on the site Our fantasy is ESPN. Unfortunately. Yeah, Yahoo sleeper. They're all better. I stepped on a fell on a fell skirt I like sleeper too. I love sleeper. That's what my dynasty league is First bowman yellow orange vapor cesar prieto 16 of 75 partial color match for the orioles Partial color match. Yeah sleeper has the most It has the most features combined with like accessibility and like ease of like use that I've come across It's not perfect, but I think it has the most pros over cons Yeah, I heard that ryan I was surprised. I almost pulled the trigger on the red sox in some of matt's cases I almost did it but Spent too much money the past couple days and it's like groceries and whatever Pink fuchsia vapor averson artega giants 45 of 199 But they're they're good in this too First bowman auto leandro or leonardo balkazar reds again We'll get that magged for you a nice balkazar That's an awesome name. I hope he's really good because that's a sick name Leonardo balkazar refractor paul gulchman cardinals Numbered 440 to a 499 sounds like a classical composer name or something like that Yeah, some like some artists from like 1700s of some sort Wow leonardo balkazar's seventh symphony Oh, he's just okay. I heard he was pretty good purple shimmer yosua garcia fillies 221 out of 250 Hey, you went to your local card shop and they had mad on the tv. That's awesome He's on the tv of my local card shop too, which is this one They always put him on over me first bowman auto greg cullen orioles rookie refractor angels read dethers 188 to 499. He said i'm too loud No comment Have you guys met the other breaker that breaks here sam? I think i'm too loud Bobby with jr Yes, remember when lane used to break lane was always loud A blue refractor first bowman ryan reckley on the back for us here giants 141 of 150 Uh, no no big marlin sits today All right guys. Give me a sec. We'll do a recap. I'm gonna step away after this one once I get it uploaded I think i'm too loud. You just wait till y'all watch tonight Good luck. I'ma come in here and start rylan sam up to in chat We talking trash on the on the hawks and stuff I'll be like man is air and judge even good michael tugley i'd rally to 150 game used from arizona fall league rockies Redemptions gnats dale and lile susanna for the padres Fulford for the rockies those are all base chrome prospect autos um rays castillo braves conley twins mercedes Dodgers don't come blue jays espino royals garcia uh padres verdugo reds ashcraft um astros roylen machandi yankees cooper bowman orials zack cullen refractor sugestay giants to 499 refractor mariners marlowe refractor white sox vera speckled the 299 dale on orials purple the 250 marlowe mariners jake fox guardians And jr. Perez a's green the 99 susanna for the padres. So his color is live. It seems like what is base or not and evan johnson insert auto to 87 for the reds arizona fall league insert auto Then we had uh two block is our base autos there you go reds Thanks again everybody Two more cases daytime coming up I think and i kyle i think in sleeper Like a defensive touchdown will not affect your defense I think that's one of the the big draws originally for me was sleeper was like If there's a defensive touchdown, it doesn't count as point scored against your defense and special teams And even with that i like my league is getting rid of defense and special teams. We got rid of kickers already Thank god, dude kickers. Oh kickers and fantasy like I only joined the work league because it's the work league, but I will not join a league with kickers I will not do it If it's free with friends like like the work league that's fine, but like if there's money involved no chance zero percent chance It's the most rend it's the most randomness They should just remove kicking from the game honestly I think there'd be so many more lopsided games if you got rid of kicking So jake fox isn't on the checklist is interesting. He's pretty solid prospect too, right? Like he's not like amazing But he's pretty solid I know we just showed his auto right there. All right, let me do this random Then i'm gonna step away for a second and check the schedule. How far are we behind? We are Not very far behind, okay Still like 15. We're probably just finished 15 minutes behind guys. Nothing crazy. We're probably finished on line for 330 today Still early enough. Thankfully But thanks for filling up these breaks these breaks are full when I got here today And then sam's bowman chrome breaks tonight filled up at like What like 10 30 or something like that they were full quick Matt's breaks are almost full too guys if you want to grab some There's just a few teams left on his breaks. I'm going to give you just the site link Click right at the top there those he has Pyt cases matt's mlb breaks cases seven and eight just a handful of teams left on those guys So grab those spots up good teams too reds and fillies on case seven and then case eight has braves and giants So some decent teams there man reds are good See optimum exactly exactly. I dropped fast this week to get full Just take kicking out of the game I have to type in this All right, so I got to upload case five All right case six here Let's see brine f Carla twice kris g twice kris b Hold an m Derek uf w j S Randoming now for 2022 bowman chrome baseball hobby 12 bucks full case number six random teams Seven five and two one two three four five six and seven Ken K down to james s and seven times on the teams One two three four five six and seven Tampa Bay down to boston, okay ken k rays travis ufilies travis
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What's Unique About UH2?
|
Here’s what’s unique about #UH2, according to Jason Chua, Co-Founder & COO at #UH2
| null | 2021-05-26T17:45:19 | 2024-02-15T01:24:00 | 44 |
zqKgYUjGfYE
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What's unique about Universal Hydrogen's approach to hydrogen aviation? Well, we've taken a look at the problem on an ecosystem level. So we're not looking at individual point solutions. We tried to look at all the different gaps that existed along the hydrogen value chain. So the two main ones that we identified were you can't get hydrogen airports today. There's not this wide distribution network for hydrogen as a fuel. And so we're solving for that. And the other thing that we saw is that there really aren't aircraft that are designed to fly or large aircraft that are designed to fly with hydrogen. So we're working on a relatively large aircraft powertrain to solve that problem.
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In5D Radio - Psychic Medium Morgana Starr - Episode 30
|
On Monday, June 23, 2014, In5D Radio hosts Gregg Prescott and psychic/medium Sherrie Elisse interviewed Psychic Medium and Angel Communicator Morgana Starr, who was raised in the wilds of Africa by missionary parents. This along with looking for healing from Fibromyalgia and Chronic Fatigue syndrome, has led Morgana to spirituality and her work with Angels. She is a Native American Pipe Carrier, Reiki Master Teacher, Akashic Record and Past Life Reader. She is nationally known for her work directly with Archangel Anael, channeling her in books, blogs and group sessions, where she speaks in angelic tongue.
The show begins at 7 PM Eastern, 4 PM pacific and 12 AM, midnight in the UK on Blogtalk Radio.
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/in5d-radio/2014/06/23/in5d-radio--psychic-medium-morgana-starr--episode-30
To schedule a reading from Morgana, please visit Morgana's website!
http://www.morganastarr.com/
Morgana's book, Angels Legacy. Preorder at this link:
http://www.morganastarr.com/Orders_&_Payment.html
You can find all archived episodes here on BlogTalk Radio, on our In5D Youtube channel, In5D.com and on iTunes.
|
[
"psychic",
"medium",
"spirit guides",
"guardian angels",
"guides",
"angels",
"morgana starr",
"reiki",
"orb",
"orbs",
"pyramid of protection",
"pyramid",
"protection",
"Mediumship"
] | 2014-06-25T14:50:33 | 2024-02-05T08:55:48 | 6,915 |
zqLydomMPIU
|
Plot Talk Radio. You're tuned in to N5D Radio, the next dimension in radio, where we bring you the hottest, in-depth, spiritual, metaphysical, esoteric conversations and news. Get ready for spirit, body, and mind to expand in three, two, one, one, one, one. Namaste and welcome to N5D Radio, coming to you from the 99% quartz crystal sands of Sarasota, Florida, every Monday night at 7 p.m. Eastern, 4 p.m. Pacific, and 12 a.m. midnight in the U.K. I'm your host, Greg Prescott from N5D.com, and for the next two hours, we're going to be raising the vibration of the planet, galaxy, and universe. Tonight, Psychic Medium Organistar joins us, and we'll be taking your calls in the second hour, but first, I'd like to bring on my co-host, coming to you from San Diego, California, Psychic Medium, Sherry Elise. Hi, Sherry. How are you tonight? I'm very well. Thanks, Greg. How about yourself? Well, got off to a little rocky start there, but I have a feeling that tonight's show is going to really kick some ass. So we know that Morgana is with us, so why don't you introduce her? Well, I'm sure we'd like to. Today, we're happy to welcome Morgana Star, and Morgana has accomplished Psychic Medium, and Angel Communicator, who uses her gifts to help others gain peace and direction in their lives, through the use of her gifts, as well as the help of angels, through her connection with Archangel Amiel. The Archangel of Love, Having a Feminine Energy. Morgana unites with the angels to rediscover your life's path. She is also a Raking Master and Teacher, offering healings and Psychic Development classes, including an Angel Arts Certification Program, some of which from her local and Coco Beach, Florida, and some online. She also regularly co-hosts two weekly Web TV shows, One Sisters for the Soul and Angels Unveiled. Welcome to N5D Radio, Morgana. We're very happy to have you. Thank you, Sherry and Greg. It's really nice to be here. Happy Mercury Retrograde, huh? You know, that was so appropriate with the start of the show. Mercury Retrograde all over it. Yeah, and a couple hours ago, it was storming really hard here, and I said, okay, let's just pull a tower we need in, and then you could just go away, because we don't need any of that stuff on top of Mercury Retrograde. No, no, no, no, no. So tell us, when did you first know that you had a psychic ability? You know, that's interesting. I would say the first time that I really consciously was very aware of it, was as an adult about 20 years ago, and I was searching for some healing from Fibromyalgia Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. Couldn't find it in the church. I was raised very religious, and so I was led to healer after healer until I found my Reiki Master. My Reiki Master incorporated a couple symbols that are nontraditional, and one opened your third eye. And within two weeks of getting my Reiki attunement, I was doing readings online and making a living that way. So, but then, you know, looking back on it, I had those gifts in Africa. I never really quite fit in with my family that were missionaries, but I was quite comfortable with all what I saw, you know, the invisible monkeys and stuff that I played with. And very in tune with Mother Nature over there. So when you were growing up, you weren't in tune with those abilities at that time yet, right? When I was in Africa, yes. I was very in tune with them, but not as a conscious thing. They always talked about me living in my own world, and didn't understand how I... Because while my animals would come to me, they wouldn't come to anyone else, and my family always made comments about, you know, she doesn't even seem like she's part of the family, and they didn't mean it to me. It was just an observation. So I knew something was different, but I was so ingrained in the religion that I was in, such a Christ Christian church, that I didn't go into it any deeper than that. So Lacan got shut down for many years, and it was getting very ill to bring it back. So what are your views on religion now? That's a big question, Greg. Let me see. Okay, so I have my dad working with me now, which I'm very fluffed. When he was here in his human form, he was a right-wing minister, and was very dogmatic for many years, but then softened toward the end, and even had me do Reiki, but on him, he went to spirit when he was this past January, and since then he's come in to help me explain that and the softened things even more for people. So like I explained to him one time when he was here in his human body was, I'm glad for the foundation I had. Religion can give you a strong foundation, and a good understanding, a good faith, but it's very rigid, and I don't believe that the God of the... I think there's two different gods that people talk about in the Bible. The one is kind and loving, and the other one is do as I say, or equal in the house. Yes, the bipolar gods, yes. That's what I call them, but it's really... My belief system is that's two different beings, two different angelic beings. I subscribe more to the ancient Samurians who call them myths and legends. I have some of that in people that sign up for my newsletter. I send them a free angel e-book, and it's got some history in there and explains a little bit about that, but that's where I see more of what it truly is. Religion's had its place, but that's what I'm hearing. It was a time for it. It's not really the time for it now. You're preaching to the choir. Mm-hmm, figure that. I kind of think that my own beliefs on the Bible is that it's basically demigods. They're not the real Creator, but the gods that came here, similar to what Zechariah Sitchin was talking about. It's their interpretation of these Samarian texts that create these religions, basically, that keep us more divided and separated than they do bringing us together. Correct. If you divide the population, you have control over them, and you can subjugate them. This is part of what I believe... Well, not part of this is why the angel wars began, was because of the group of angels that wanted humankind to have free will. Because they just loved us so much and saw that the humans had that ability because they implanted it in us as they spliced DNA in us so that we can eventually get to that status. And then the others, you know, they wanted to use us as batteries, and they feed off of our fear, and the only way to get that fear is to get on the control from the Bible, religious dogma teaching creates that fear, and that's not who I see as our real Creator. And I'm more gone at who exactly do you think or believe that angels actually are? I believe angels are a whole separate being, a whole separate race that came here to this planet and wanted to make it a better place, worked with us. This will be coming out some of this information. It's being channeled to me in my third book. My second book, Angel Pregacy, is out. Actually, you can get it through me now. Otherwise, it won't be out through Amazon for another month or so. But angels can come in and they can take human form. There are some embodied angels walking this earth right now. And I believe that they're here just to help us to evolve. And like Greg was saying, we're raising the vibration. We have to raise our vibration to even be able to access that angelic energy. I don't know. I kind of talked in circles. I don't know that I answered your question, Cheri. No, you did perfectly because I've read a couple of things about angels and I'm trying to figure out myself, make my own decision about them. But I have read her name Cynthia. I don't recall her last name, but she describes them very specifically as a certain race of beings with a sacred origin. But they're very much just like any other extraterrestrial type of species that have lives and have mates. They're not some kind of cherub-looking, unisexual type of energy. They're actually a whole race of beings. So it seems like that seems to be your description as well. A little bit. I wouldn't say that they have their whole separate lives because their lives are the angels that are connected with this planet, with this earth, are here. And they take human lives and they take human spouses so that they can understand what we go through in order to help us with our challenges. My belief is an embodied angel that is chosen to take a human body. When that body sleeps, that angel will go to, let's say, your guardian angel, Cheri, and say, you know what? I know what it's like to go through a divorce because my human body that I've taken is going through that or went through that. And here, you can help your person now with this situation. Now, do these guardian angels, do they only come here to earth? Do they go to other sentient planets as well? Oh yes, there are many other planets. There are so many different realities too that overlap ours. The ones that we work with, though, are here, my belief are here on this planet, but they've also created another planet for when earth is not going to be here anymore. And now came through in a channeling about a year ago and told us we only have about three more lifetimes with this planet. And then what's happening and the reason we, as spiritual people, are feeling this real sense of urgency, because everyone we talk to right now, they're like, oh, I've got to hurry up. I've got to hurry up. Well, we've got these three lifetimes last and we've got to raise our vibration to such a level that we will go to this new planet and possibly be at that angelic status and be the angels of the new earth. That's what these angels on this earth are working to help us achieve. Okay, you mentioned that there's only three more times, three more incarnations left on this planet. Is there a timeline that you have, perhaps? It's a variable timeline. I'm being told somewhere between two to 300 of your earth years. But, you know, we do have a choice. We might be able to make it go longer, but we may choose what we just don't want to when we're just tired and want to go to the other planet. Because it's already populated. Some souls have already gone there. But the angels that are connected with this earth, they don't know if they're going to make it or not to the new planet. Interesting. They're so tied into this planet and to us that they may not be able to make the leap. And when I had a conversation with an angel that was giving me this information, it was, it was really tough. It was very emotional because it's like, please remember us. Please remember what we did for you and take these teachings to this new place if we don't make it. And angels can buy. People don't understand that. They look at angels as law, you know, kind of like what they think of what's in the Bible. And this is real interesting to me because I see over and over, and I did the same thing, new age spiritual people getting their beliefs of angels from the Bible. Oh no. Yeah. There's a lot of them out there that do that. And so I think we're more being told to re-examine that. I mean, share something with you that, again, this came in a channel and when I have a class, sometimes I will go into a real deep trance with a noun and bring stuff forth. And this was a really, really hard one when she showed me how important grid work was. And I know you guys are familiar with grid work, right? Yes. For many years, a noun has been showing me to use her symbol to push into the earth and push it through to the other side of the earth. And if you've been on my website, you see the symbol it's a point of star, otherwise known as the star of Ishtar with angel wings around it. Every angel has a symbol. This happens to be hers. And I could tell you story after story of miracles by seeing happen with this particular symbol, people using it. But like I said, she said to do this for grid work. So I just did it. You know, I just did a question and taught my students. And she showed me how angels have been doing this. And it will reinforce your feelings on doing grid work, whether it's with a noun symbol or otherwise. But it's grid work is to hold the planet together. When extensive earth started to shudder is what I was told. An angel would volunteer for the task of holding the planet together. And they would dive, like dive through the core of the earth. And she showed me, because I do a lot of visual stuff, so they show me in pictures, kind of like those anchor bolts that you put into a wall, you know, where it goes out. You know what I'm talking about, Greg? Yes. Okay. So their energy is anchored on the one side that they go through. And they go all the way to the other side of the earth. And when they get there, they instead of pushing their energy out, which would disrupt the earth, they pull it in. So it ties the energy into the earth. And when they do that, they implode. Oh, my gosh. And they keep saying this. They do that knowing they're giving them their existence. When they give their existence, they give their existence. They don't get another lifetime like we do. Not when a guy like this. And I really think we've taken a lot for granted with our angels. And this is why she showed me this. You know, since I was a child, I always had an affinity to palm trees in the ocean. I had a dream one time where I met my spirit guide and she introduced herself to me as Tamara. And I was enamored about her name that I kept repeating it over and over again in my dream. So I would remember it. And I said it so many times that I woke myself up. So here it is about three o'clock in the morning and I couldn't sleep. So I Googled her name because every name means something. Sure. And as it turns out, Tamara means palm tree and it made complete sense. Awesome. Yeah. You know, it is cool when you get a confirmation from spirit in that way. And then having some interesting conversations lately and reading with Metaton. Have you guys ever worked with Metaton? I haven't. Sherry? You know what? I get the most communication from Archangel Uriel, which is funny because I just recently read that he works with justice and law and politics and it's funny because I have a law degree. And so all of the things that he seemed, you know, fire and all this and I'm a fire sign, everything made sense. So I was like, wow, that's really weird. So, you know, of course it's kind of disbelieving when somebody, you know, comes in and says, I'm Uriel and I'm like, are you the Uriel? And it's kind of like, yes, that Uriel. And I'm like, okay. You know what I mean? It's really hard to believe. You know, it's very hard to believe. It really is. So to say that I believe that angels are trying to get across to us too. I mean, there's hundreds of thousands of angels and there's thousands and thousands of archangels. So the ones that we know about again, come back to the ones that we know about in the Bible. Uriel, Gabriel, Michael and Rafael. So those angels don't come to everybody and they come differently. And in fragments. So like when I work with Amal and her energy is totally different than anything that I've ever experienced. And she's not what her name Googles, which a lot of people have gone and they'll say, oh, she's this, this, this. And it's like, well, if you've met her, you would understand. She's a lot more than that. As a fragment of her energy works like with you, Sherry, you have a fragment of Uriel's energy that works with you. That's not the whole energy of that angel. Part of that angel, archs can fragment their energy all over the earth. So someone can actually, and that probably is an embodied part of Uriel walking around the earth. So there's a difference between being embodied with that angelic energy and working with that angelic energy. But it is really powerful. You know, that's so interesting that you say this because I also have a connection with Archangel Michael who has told me, you know, different people. He said, that's me. That's me. That's me. And I do quite understand what he was saying. And I think what he was saying is exactly what you said is that there's fragments of them everywhere. Right. And I really believe sometimes they use the names that we know we can understand. I worked with Michael for many years because that's what I knew. I knew he was the guardian protector. But the time I stopped working with him was when I had to pull a demonic energy off of somebody very quickly that had taken her voice. She couldn't even speak. And I put on her in a dark ceremony. And I saw it and I asked him to go in and he stood right back and crossed his arms and said, I'm not going. I won't go there. You send an L. So I sent an L dragon form in there, swept that thing out. And in this particular case, I sent it back where it came from. I don't usually do that. But there was reasons behind that. Sometimes you just react when you work with angels. From then on, because I do work with some really intense energies, I just go straight to an L. She'll call me if I need to come in anyway. Did you say dragon form? Yes. Oh, that's so cool. I see an L as very soft, very gentle, kind and loving, mothering. But she's also like that fierce tiger. You hurt my cum and I'm ripping your face off. So she does take what I see it. And again, I'm their visual person. So I see it like the dragon energy going in there, breathing fire. That dragons historically than my understood. We seem to have lost the call. You got her. All right, folks. I was on the other line talking to you, but you weren't here. Oh, I don't know what happened. Once again, Mercury retrograde. Oh my God. The rest of the computer went offline, but the rest of the computer didn't. Could you hear us and Sherry singing and all that good stuff? I think they're just singing at the end. That's what I do when I have nothing better to say. There you go. Well, you know, as I was trying to get everything back and going, it was just reminding me about how when we raise vibration, it does mess with things whether they're retrograde or not. And that always is a challenge when we get to a higher level. And when we work with angels, we certainly do that. Now, is there a difference between spirit guides and guardian angels? Absolutely. Spirit guides are people that have passed on that have ascended in their energy to a higher level. Now that's not a good example. I was going to say Jesus is a spirit guide, but he was an embodied angel when he came here. But people that you think like Mother Teresa, because of what she did, she can on the other side be a spirit guide now. So it is the goal of souls to raise our vibration up to a spirit guide and then you're in charge of one person. And master guides are in charge of more people. Where I would see someone like Mother Teresa, she probably is a master guide and they're affirming that she is. So she works with several different people. And then angels, like I said before, they're a whole separate being and their vibration is so high. I don't choose to work with my guides anymore. I work directly with the angels because it helps me access the other side much easier. The only, if you want to call them guides that I work with, but more it's just chat with and get a different perspective. It's my dad on the other side now. He moved up really fast from his religious dogma to one of the true spiritual light of his soul. So that's been a real blessing. He's always wearing golden rows, golden flowing rows and has a Gandalf-type feeling to him only young. So he helps with getting this message out here to the common people, the people that don't really understand what angels are about and what the message of hope is all about. So can you turn off your psychic ability at will? Because I know that if I were to see entities around me and angels, like if I'm having an intimate moment with my girlfriend, I'd be like, go away. Can you turn that off when you want to? Yes. I have to really consciously do it. Because I'm so much in that space. I'm very blessed. I'm in a home that we call our home Troy. And it's very protective. It's very special. The people on my Facebook page have seen pictures of it. And so I'm always in that angelic energy. But I do a zip-up. I've got that on. I've got a lot of YouTube out there with some little hints. And so not only bring a pyramid of protection in that the angels gave me, but zip up like you're zipping up a sleeping bag. So you zip all your shockers closed. A funny thing that happened a few months ago. I went to Publix, one of the local grocery stores here. And I had just finished a reading. I should not be driving after I just finished a reading. But I did and went to the store. And I'm walking down the aisle. And all the debt people were coming to talk to me. Because I was so open. And I remember having my hands out to one side, brushing them away to one side, brushing them away to the other side. And aloud I was going, I'm not talking to you. I'm not talking to you. I'm not talking to you. And then I looked up and I saw the guy at the meat counter just staring at me. Because there was nobody else that he could see in the aisle. So I called my friend and told her to come get me. The people in the flight just carried me away. So is it true? I have a friend in the chat room. Her name is Shawn Kohan. She's also a psychic. And what she tells me is that as a psychic, when you open up that channel and the people on the other side realize that that channel is open, do they kind of flood to you? They're like, hey, this person down here gets it. Let's go get some, give her some information. What about me? Absolutely. That's why the very first thing that I teach my students is boundaries. And for mediums coming on, they need to have the house protected. Our house has guardians around it. And psychics that have come to our house, they see hundreds of spirits on the perimeter of our yard. Because they're drawn here, but they are not allowed in the perimeter. We have a certain amount that can be in the yard that even those don't come in the house. So you have to set those boundaries. And if you don't, you're going to wear yourself out. They're people. They just don't have bodies. One of my students said, well, I've taken a shower and this guy comes in and starts talking to me. And I don't want him there. What do I do? My answer is just how I'm believed. You know, it's not your job to save the world. And it's hard for us as healers and empaths, but we really have to protect that field with us. And a lot of people get the boundary, the protection where you're feeling it. Now, Sherri, you're a healer also, right? I don't call myself a healer, but I do try to, in my readings and in my normal course of living, I try to be there for people and to try to help them in any way I can by emotional. Maybe I'm more of an emotional healer. I try to heal even if it's a smile, a hello, whatever I can do. So I would say that I don't have a modality. I just do whatever I feel like somebody needs or they want or they desire. What I find with a lot of people like that is that you'll get very tired in certain situations. Like a lot of people, most of my clients, if I talk to them about going to Walmart, they're like, ooh, I hate going there. And that's probably true with you guys too, because you are both of your empaths. You can't be a psychic without being a little bit of an empath. I think that goes hand in hand. How far you want to go into that and how far you want to develop. An interesting thing that I want to share with people is this modality that the angel showed me about six years ago. And I've already been a Reiki master teacher for 15 years or so. And I do have another lineage that puts me third generation from Dr. Suley. So I have a really powerful Reiki line that I was getting exhausted. And I now told me to stop growing roots to Mother Earth. And I know most of us are taught to grow roots to Mother Earth. And if you remember in the old ways, we'd be put your hands on Mother Earth, let her have your pain, she'll transmute it. You guys probably remember that. Well, Mother Earth is kind of over it. So it's hard job to be that bridge between Heaven and Earth. I would challenge all of your listeners to press the spot in the middle. It's basically your heart chakra. Those of you that know the chakra. So it's in your sternum, the middle of your chest. Press in there and see if you have any tenderness. And I would say probably 95% of my clients have some tenderness. So do you guys feel anything at this point? You cleared it out. I have a concave sternum. I don't know what that means, but... Give me a minute. I'll make something up for you. I'll back. Okay. But anyway, with the heart chakra, when we go through emotional stress, it regulates your thymus, thymus regulatory immune system. So people get cold and fluke when they come down. So if it's okay, I'll walk you through. It takes about a minute. Sure. So everybody just kind of close your eyes. Focus inward. And we're going to ask the angels to go to each and every one listening to this program. And I'm going to ask them to bring a pyramid of light around you. The top of your pyramid reaches the heart of Divine Source and the bottom of the earth. In the top, there's a valve that comes inward only, continually flooding you with divine unconditional love. Going down to every part of your mind, body and soul. All negativity is instantly transmuted into love. Gone out to the corners, where the valves go outward only to balance and heal Mother Earth and vibrate the sides with divine light. So nothing negative can go in or out. Anything negative brushing up against the sides is instantly transmuted into love, prosperity and great health on every level for you and then cloak the outside of their pyramid and out. So darkness will no longer perceive their light. As they shine brighter and brighter, only positive people and positive situations are brought to you. Take a final breath in, breathe in through the top of your head, down to your legs and feet, grounding and centering in the bottom of your pyramid, and then come back to the world. Everybody should feel a little bit better, maybe a little more peaceful. That was beautiful. Thank you. I have that on my website. If you want to go to margonastar.com under free, they can download the video there. Thank you so much. That was so beautiful. I can't remember a word that you said because your voice sounded like a song. It sounded like it was some melodic that I couldn't understand anything you said. I could just feel what it was. That is kind of cute. Anel takes over. Anel's voice is so soft that when I go into deep channel, it's almost like a whisper. Our energy vibration is so high that after I channel her, all I need to do is drink water or have a piece of fruit. It's not like metatron that comes in like a powerhouse that I have to eat beef afterwards. It's cool. This stuff works. It shifted a lot of people's lives. I can't tell you how many people use this pyramid of protection. It's helping in every area of their life. We have a question from the chat room from Deanna Vandewalker. She says, how does one find his or her spirit guide? I feel connected to the universe and my spirituality is opened with love. How can I be sure my Kundalini is awakened? I'll tell you this. You always want to be careful on Kundalini because that is a whole different energy than just normal stuff. When you awaken your Kundalini, you're awaken that whole central sexual energy. You've got to be ready for that power to come in. It is very powerful. In awakening now, the best way that I have found is to work with a mouse. She helps keep that from getting out of balance. I've taught people in sacred dance how to burn that in as well. Breathing in and bringing your chakras up and not being stuck with the different colors of the chakras. Traditional colors of the chakras are also changing. She also wanted to know how does one find their spirit guide? You have more than one. You have at least seven, and they are made up from your six major past lives. A past and then this lifetime is your seventh. Your past lives that you remember are some of the major ones. Past life regression can be very helpful in connecting with your spirit guide. Meditation. Meditation, meditation, meditation. I have some MP3s on my website that you can get for 10 bucks to get you to that state so your guides can come in and start communicating with you. The other thing they are telling me that I should share with you is that this will really help Vianna, I believe, but everyone else who is listening is sort of time, a certain time of the day, aside for communicating and trying to make it the same time every day. And then have your notebook ready. Bring your pyramid of protection in so nothing else is coming in that shouldn't be coming in. And then just write a question. And you can write the question that simply is what is my spirit guide's name? I want to connect with you. What is your name? Write that down. Perhaps. Or doodle on the page. I'm a real big doodler and that zones my brain out immediately. And then write your answer. Don't worry about... Usually it will just come in like three words that won't make any sense, but by the time you've written the third word the rest of it will come. It's a form of a light trance writing. Like automatic writing that vary in a light trance. If you'll do that, commit yourself to 31 days I'm being told right now. You will start getting those answers. It's going to slow your brain down. It's going to tell when your guide's coming in and the energy so that might help you a little bit in connecting with your guide. The main one right now anyway. But you're going to have different ones at different times. I have a question when you were... This is a little bit of a segue but when you were talking about chakras and I read on your website that you said that we actually have 33 chakras. And I was wondering how... I was wondering about that. I've never heard that before. Some of this comes from the teaching of Melchizedek Method of Healing. I facilitated a workshop on that. It's a four day workshop. It is sacred geometry by the ascended master Tos who is another energy of metatron. And the 33... See we have those 8 or so that are within our body and then up higher you get to the 13th up above your body. The 33rd level is the Christ consciousness. And that is one helps you connect with the Christ consciousness grid that covers the earth. When I took my Melchizedek training it really multiplied my readings, my psychic abilities and also my healing abilities. So it's phenomenal work. You know my aura goes from green to blue which is basically the heart and the throat chakra. What is that telling me? I was just saying what you do you seek from your heart. But yet at the same time the new color for the heart is red because red was always in the the root chakra for survival because we had to procreate when there weren't very many humans here we had to procreate for our survival species. Now we don't need to procreate other forms of ourselves but we do need to procreate love. So that has moved up into the heart. So with this green and this blue it may be other chakras that it's working with with you also. That's also in the Melchizedek method that they bring those colors in. I do have a little more advanced about a 40 minute meditation that clears all those chakras in those new colors and it's very powerful. Plus it cuts chronic ties and brings in the pyramid of protection as well. Now is there a preferred way to contact your spirit guides or guardian angels? You mentioned that we could do that where you have 31 days and you try to contact them. Is there like a specific meditation or is there something that you should say directly? Perhaps? I think you have to just remember that they're there. You have to trust the process that they're there and start talking to them. Because I'll tell you our guys sit there and may watch us do the most ridiculous things and they're like, is she really going to do that again? Does she know better? She ran into that wall. She danced off. But they're standing there waiting for us to ask for help. The instant we ask for help, we're acknowledging their presence and then they come in and they start helping as well. Goodness, it's about time we've been wanting to help them for a long time. But they're not going to take our free wall and meet up with an angel. The guardian angel may jerk you out of your space sometimes, but the others won't. I like going for a walk on the beach. I'm on the Gulf Coast and I do what I call it's a walk of gratitude where I walk all the way down just to keep beached until I get to this sea wall and that's to remind me to thank the universe, creator, my spirit guys and guardian angels, my friends and family on both sides of the veil, our galactic neighbors and friends and Mother Earth and I go through each one and I practice, it's called po-o-pono or something like that where you say I'm sorry thank you, please forgive me. You go right down the line there and I do that for each one of them and I always want to make sure that there is the gratitude if nothing else that they're there and the acknowledgement that they're all with me and helping. They look forward to that time to Greg I'm being told and the other thing that you do when you're doing that walk you are doing conscious mindful meditation. People think that meditation you've got to sit for an hour. That's why I put together a beginning meditation of just 10 minutes and then it can go longer if you want but you can stop it to 10 minutes but it's like when you're washing the dishes you can just be in that space be in that space of now and then that's what I teach my students I'm washing the dishes I'm washing the dish and then I've got to go no I'm washing the dish just keep bringing back and what you're doing they told me as you're doing this walk you'll be in totally in that space of where your foot's going that you're in the breathing the sea air and they honor that because you're honoring them. That's beautiful. Sometimes I'll do this I'll envision that there's a huge I call it a love bubble and everybody that comes within my bubble you can almost hear the popping sound and they're coming within my bubble and I'm just sending them love without saying a word. That's very important the other thing to add to that is we need to learn to give through ourselves from ourselves and that's why the pyramid of protection is set up in the way it is so when you breathe you're going to breathe through the top of your head divine love that's going to filter through your heart and then you send it out to them so every time you help somebody or you've done healing you have healed yourself too. I always teach my Reiki students also that you envision your arms are like fire hose and your breath is like water and so you breathe it through and it's always through not from and that helps you ego out of the way too and it's really basically emanating from the heart then correct? Through the heart through the heart okay it's emanating from divine source okay it's emanating from that connection that we have through the Christ consciousness grid and connected with all the angelic realms that go through us and energizes us as it goes out to a person if we give from ourselves we'll eventually be depleted that's just the nature of things. That's a tough one though because I know within 5D I work 12 to 15 hours every day 365 days a year and I always feel like I could do more there's more I need to do but I also know that my guides and angels are saying you've done enough get on have some fun and I have a hard time battling in my own mind if I've done enough or whether I actually should get out and do something for myself and I usually choose right now and we're going to get Morgana back on the line and we're going to start taking some calls here shortly so folks are calling actually we have a bunch of people right now hopefully we can get that to everyone but our number is 646-716-8890 and I'm going to try to get Morgana back on the line here so bear with us once again you know what while you're trying to get her back on the line I will say to people that if they are looking to speak to their spirit guides and angels that they shouldn't have any expectation of what these beings are going to sound like because they don't sound like they should be the head of a country or you know have some old English you know speaking voice they're probably going to sound just like you and I sometimes they'll use different words different phrases than you would ever so that's an indication to you that you're speaking to somebody else also but for the most part almost all of the beings that I ever speak to they don't sound very different they might be a little more authoritative they may have you know different word forms but they don't sound like sometimes when I hear people channeling they do these voices and it's just so unusual to me that I've never heard those kind of things yep I think we got Morgana back yeah I'm so sorry I never have this problem Mercery retrograde oh my gosh speaking of retrograde it's been a tough one for a lot of people this time really it's like a major healing crisis you know before we start taking calls I have another question do you ever receive messages for humanity and if so what are they like positive good things what we can expect kind of things mostly what I the things that I shared with you it's been very angelically related other than that I have not tapped into it doesn't seem like the way that I now want to work at this point in time now she may change that so I don't have any general um oh the point you were making you were making a point or not the forehand is a general message and you said you work this hard and then you want to have fun the angels want us to have fun we're hearing these human bodies to experience so many times we say this is a schoolyard no it's a playground we need to put taking ourselves so freaking seriously I'm a Clappercorn so I'm always taking myself seriously so I think that's part of why and now it's just like okay come on lighten up and um you know since I've really worked directly with her since I came here to Florida then for those of you on my facebook page you see how I like to dress up like a pirate and a valkyrie and all these other things to have fun and have a child out and play and we do deserve us to ourselves as well as to humanity when we're just so serious yeah I need to get out and play more can you be a good pirate arg there's a whole group over there oh yeah I got the hair for it at least there you go again I was telling Greg when I saw your facebook pictures I was like oh she's totally into cosplay you know you look awesome I love how you look and I love that too because so many people that are doing angel communication and other things they think that they have to have a certain person that needs to be very pure and innocent and they just don't understand that you know that you're here you know this is your adventure here and you're not just I'm not just an angel communicator I'm so many more things and one of the things is that you really enjoy going out with your divine feminine and having a good time and I love it I loved your pics I thought you would look absolutely adorable so cute yeah my boyfriend is really good at coming up with the costumes and stuff and it does stretch me it stretches me on my comfort zone but it's not just for me to have fun but for me to help other people have a good time too so for sure we're going to start taking a few phone calls we have a bunch of people in the queue here that would love to talk with you so let's spray let me see I think area code 410 looks like you've been holding the longest here can I get your name please 410 hi my name is Anna Anna hi Anna welcome to M5D Radio thank you I guess are you all doing readings or I was listening a lot but I just wasn't sure if you were doing readings or you're the first caller for a reading okay okay well I just I've been through a lot with my ex-boyfriend Scott and I'm just wondering is he completely done or anything you can tell me about the situation with me and he and I excuse me they're saying the question you should be asking Anna is that are you completely done he he's not going to change who he is or who he is he and really he's not a bad person he's not being a good heart about this ma'am but he has some confusion and some drama in his life that he needs to clear up and I'm being told that at times you're able to look at a person and you see their potential remember you cannot have a healthy relationship with someone's potential okay he's not a place that he's going to be able to bring that out he's very he's had a lot of wounds from his childhood and in some ways and I see this with relationships over and over again because we have a preconceived idea of what relationships are and you cannot expect a cat to bark like a dog and be mad at the cat for not barking like a dog okay Scott is who he is for who he is if you walk away now you can walk away not so damaged and you're able to love again there's a channeling from Archangel Azrael in my book Angel Whispers so you learned a lot in this we had some past life karma to clean up with him it's time for you to take care of you now okay thank you yeah he just I've been trying to pull away he did something really hurtful over a week ago and I just can't understand it you know I'm trying to you're not going to be able to understand it because you don't really know where he's coming from he is coming from a place of pain and hurt and he's lashing out I'm not excusing him I'm just trying to help you understand but honey you've got better things on your horizon so it's time for you to just take care of you honor yourself date yourself and then then you're going to open the way for the right relationship to walk in okay thank you thank you so much alrighty take care bye the only thing I would add to that is just make sure that you forgive too and have that come from the heart no matter what happens in the relationship forgiveness is an interesting thing I love the story of Neil Donald Walsh with a little fall in the sun and it's all about it's not so much forgiving and saying it's okay it's forgiving and saying thank you yes you taught me something I learned something from this experience and I send you love and I walk away it's funny the Rose Crucians have a belief that it's all about the experience your goal in life is not to be happy it's about the experiences and within all these experiences you'll find happiness I believe that yeah there's some truth there absolutely so we're going to move on to area code 662 you're on N5D radio can we get your name please area code hello got your hand up but you're not talking it's mercury retrograde we're going to put that one on hold and then we're going to move on because we have a bunch more here see who's next I guess we'll go with area code 253 you're on N5D radio can we get your name please hi my name's Holly welcome to N5D radio hi how can we talk to Holly say again I'm sorry I talked to you I didn't mean to I wanted to see how I could help you oh I was thinking if you see a move for me will we you're asking if you're going to move soon yes okay I was having a hard time hearing what you said um to talk about what you mean by soon because when you're talking about a move I'm hearing them say put the brakes on it's not quite time yet it needs to wait a little bit later more into September okay and then it will be like open sailing go ahead is there a reason for the brakes there are complications right now it's not going to be like in the right place or you're not going to get in the right they're trying to line something else up for you it's like tuning into that it's like hard to breathe it's like if you move now it's not going to be the ideal location if you can just kind of pull it down not being a rush you're going to find this a piece and that's what they're referring to the place that they have for you in September okay alright sounds great I hope that helps a little bit but yeah they're real excited about the place they have for you they don't want you to miss out on it oh okay I'm listening I'm going to definitely listen alright thank you Molly for calling in bye bye bye what's beautiful too about these readings is that even though it might not be something you're going through you're also getting the healing out of it and it might be something that will occur to you down the road so listen in and you might be able to apply it to yourself or somebody you know correct so we're going to move on to our next caller and that would be area code 305 305 you're on N5D radio can I get your name please my name is Lee hi Lee welcome to N5D radio thank you do you have a question for our guest yes hello or Donna is it more Donna I'm sorry there's a connection that's kind of weird go ahead go ahead Lee you're on what I was going to ask um I feel that I should accept the journey of the shaman to accept myself fully but I'm still really on the border what messages and what could you tell me because I'm pretty open to it even though when it comes to talking like in a crowd about it it still feels kind of weird so I'm open to talk about what they will talk to me about okay what would they have to say to me I'm not real sure of what your question is if you're supposed to take the path of shaman can you help me out Greg did you get that that's what I'm picking up is that what you're being Lee do you want to call the path of let me be specific about the shaman like the Hayawas or coyote ceremony something to really purify myself out of all the negativity that I have worried myself so I can have a clear vision and speak with those that I would like to speak to because I do feel like I came to the dirt for focus and it is engineered in a way like I pre-planned this like I passed my last I like past life past life so what I'm getting here is you're wanting to know if you should if you're on the right path with using shamanic journey and such to cleanse your spirit so to speak and what I guess what I'm just getting is this path you're being led there for a reason you need to go ahead and really work on clearing you and as you clear yourself through this path and there will be others coming it's a step it's a stepping stone to clear your valley and clearing past lives clearing clearing some karmic stuff with some of this energy and doing this work would be interesting for itself. Did that answer your question? When you say doing this work you mean specifically just focusing on like you said clearing just that karma because when you say karma to me it can still focus on broader aspects because there's our karma, there's family karma social karma kind of thing and I feel I'm more intracool in those parts so am I am I correct in believing that I'm very intracool in those parts or am I just steadily focused on myself really I'm only working on myself like am I am I more of a broad worker or am I just really just a small worker working on myself? Some of the karmic stuff that you're dealing with has to do with past lives it doesn't have to do with the one family this lifetime it's every situation there's a betrayal issue that you have with the karmic debt that they're showing me that you've got to clear with this has been part of your issue with having physical problems with your back this lifetime you're going to have to do some really deep work to do this and yes again do this work and you're going to start getting the answers you're going to be peeling the layers of onions so to speak Okay can you tell me a little bit more about that past life I don't know do we have time for that Greg? We have a lot of callers online right now probably not Yeah you may want to make an appointment to go into a past life thing you can cover that quickly in 15 minutes or even in 30 minutes check my website out and see if you want to pursue that anymore Okay please Thank you for calling Thank you Take care Bye I sort of have a question for myself but it might be helpful for other people as well in that I have a problem letting go of someone and I was wondering if you know it doesn't have to just be for me personally but what are ways to help with that? And letting go this is a lot of it has to do with you've got to make sure that you are done comically with this person but the best way that I tell people is I do have a 22-minute meditation that is the Pyramid of Protection that clears your shockers but it also cuts honey ties it's a three-fold modality and that's on my website for just 10 bucks but Sherry you are advanced enough you can go in there you can do the breath work and just see the tie see that person in front of you this is a really good meditation to see that person in front of you energetically and see the cord connecting you and them and then ask the angels to go right there in the middle and to cut that cord and immediately fly it up to the divine force then your connection when you think about this person is going to go up to the divine and then back to that person that helps them from like pushing your buttons pulling your strings I believe I did that on a YouTube too so you guys might check out my YouTube channel and that that will help you in releasing that but for some reason Sherry they keep talking about breath work with you you need to do some breath work in releasing that yeah you know why it's funny because I actually I did look at your YouTube video of that and I did try it and they did cut it and then they came back and repaired it well it does happen they'll put out tentacles I know that I had this issue with an ex of a mind and he didn't mean to but he kept putting the tentacles back after I cut them because he wasn't really ready to let go so I would just go back in and recut them and recut them and recut them until I just finally got it all taken care of no I mean it wasn't him it wasn't him who did it it was a higher beam who repaired it and so I just who repaired it and I said okay well I'll just let this go then because it was kind of weird well that's because of karmic there still may be some things that you can't cathetize you're supposed to finish that I see I see okay in your case that person has something yet that owes you you could have dealt with it yourself because you're spiritually evolved enough even if you still owed that person you could have done it without the tie but that person cannot do it cannot complete that karmic debt owed to you without the tie but they're also saying that's going to be completed in about okay so that'll help well that's great and that's a good lesson like you said Sherry for other people to learn from about cutting the tentacles of these relationships that we have that we feel maybe karmic or not yeah excellent we're going to move on to area code 805 you're on N5D Radio can I get your name please hi this is Donna how are you hi Donna welcome to N5D Radio do you have a question for Morgana? I do I wanted to know if there's a love relationship coming in for me okay I'm sorry I'm kind of chuckling because I'm here and your dad say it's about time yeah that's funny my dad's on the other side yeah yeah and he's working on it oh good don't put so many expectations on it he said he'll make sure the person says one for you it's coming soon I'm asking for a timeline timelines are always funny when we do in spirit but they're talking five months towards the end of this year and it will be with there's a group of people where you're going to meet this person and it will be a friend of it's somebody that knows somebody like one of your friends is going to introduce you to this person oh very much this is going to be one of these good past life things because we get confused we'll meet people that we have a connection with in a past life and we'll have them we'll have that attraction and then we think it's supposed to be romantic and we're supposed to be with them this lifetime most of the time not we're just supposed to clear something up but this one is going to be one that's supposed to be he's very regal he's very and he keeps saying very courtly he's like old fashioned gentlemen oh good there's going to be things that he's going to say that's going to put you in mind of your dad but not in you know in a really good healthy way so it's you'll just it'll come out of your mouth before you even realize it and you're going to say to one of your friends why dad would like this guy and it's because he's bringing them to you so take care of you in the meantime yes yes that's what I'm doing yeah I'm taking care of myself yeah nurturing myself and yeah definitely yeah it's been a long time like you said yeah it's been a long time and you know what you've been okay I mean I have a good relationship with myself and you know you just go about your life I guess if there's nobody in it you go about your life with the things you like you know exactly and that's what's open the way plus this guy had to get some things out of his way so that he was ready to meet you and I'm going to take days ahead and especially with a man that your father approved of yeah I like that okay well thank you for calling well thank you, thank you so much alrighty you take care now thanks bye this is great wonderful information that you're giving there sure you know I call myself sometimes a homework psychic and do just come through for specific reasons to help people do things to empower their lives sometimes they just need the information we're going to move on to area code 617 you're on N5D radio can I get your hand please hi what's your name hi how was everyone today I'm doing wonderful good this is Lisa hi Lisa you have a question for Morgana yes hi Morgana how are you I'm great how can I help you Lisa actually my question is in regards to me moving forward I'm just looking for like a total overhaul of my life meaning change of job change of where I live and even bringing in a relationship and I'm looking for some information as to how I can I can allow this to happen or maybe it's already happening and I'm just not aware of it okay the one thing that they're saying on Lisa is you can really make a definite plan or ideas have an idea of what you want again that we talked before the angels are not going to take your free will they'll give you a couple different choices and then you can pick which of those that you want I am seeing things moving slowly because we're in this military retrograde until the 3rd of July so take this time to just kind of think about if money were no object where would you want to live if you're trying to create that of where you want to live if you didn't make that decision I'm getting your guidance I'm really excited about you making that decision and then they're going to move you you know the job is just going to come in wow I don't know where you're from but I keep getting the word Washington I don't know if that's Washington State if it's the name of a town or if it's Washington Brucie but there's something about Washington that's very important to your future wow because I'm actually in Massachusetts and I don't have a clue as to what's in Washington I don't know anyone in Washington keep that information they're also saying it could be the guy that's coming in for you he could have a connection with that place okay like even whether it's there or something I don't know they're chattering around you they said they really want to move you forward but honey you've asked for a lot hold on and get ready for the ride because you make that decision it's going to move so fast you're going to go oh my gosh oh my gosh oh this is beautiful because I've been stagnant for about 10 years mm-hmm it's time to get moving yeah and it will be fast to make sure you're ready okay so what you're suggesting is that I should write down what it is that I want absolutely you're ordering from the menu your menu and lunch oh I like that be very specific right now we are manifesting like almost immediate yes okay and so you put down what you want to live and what you want to do and they're going to be wow they're just I got chills from head to toe with you Lisa they said that's all they're waiting for okay excellent you know what I'm going to do it I'm going to do it thank you many many blessings thanks for calling bye I often ask people that if money was no object what would you be doing with your life and you can actually get the best answers when you go within and eliminate that whole thing about money you'll know exactly what you're supposed to be doing right and money is a 3D concept anyway it's not what we think it is it's a tool and it's for the flow of energy it's an energy tool 100% we're going to bring on area code 985 you're on N5D radio can I get your name please yeah hi it's Kim hi Kim welcome to N5D radio thanks big fan of all the programming thank you hi Morgana hi Kim how can I help you today huh do you have any messages from the angels any messages from the angels anything specifically that you're wanting to know uh relationship alright they're just I'm getting a mail energy coming in around you it feels like you're your guardian angel Sean Muriel and he's um you've got to stop looking and start being and there is so much that will come that you need to just get out there and have some fun and don't take the relationship game so serious yeah I don't know if that makes any sense this guy put your guardian angel pretty powerful dude here yeah um it's really beautiful it makes a lot of sense good good just get out there kick up your heels honey go dance and go have a good time uh it's uh that's going to change your whole vibration and as your vibrations shifts and changes that will draw the right energy to you of a relationship but you're not you're not to settle don't settle you've settled in the past definitely that you're right thank you so much it's really beautiful okay thank you for calling honey yes we're calling Kim thank you bye thanks we're going to bring in our next caller I've been waiting for quite a while here to area code 252 you're on in 5d radio can we get your name please hi my name is Deanna um the one that posted the question about the spirit oh yeah um well I have tons and tons of questions I have so many things that I've started that's new this year um I'm a new college student I have four children um and uh one that's special with um um autism and epilepsy but my question is what should I focus I'm sorry what should be my main focus right now because I have a lot of things that are pulling my attention that I'm trying to balance and um I've recently discovered a new spiritual side of me that I've um become to accept um however I'm not sure exactly how to to blossom fully uh without the fear um yeah they're talking about a couple things here Deanna um your spirituality I recommend taking classes on um your spirituality um I will have some online classes available sometime soon um tell me the name of your child autistic uh lirica lirica yeah um I guess that there's something this child is really a guest you do understand the guest in this child but not fully and totally part of what you're going to do in college and and as you're learning and growing is learning how to help this child blossom into uh the being that um this year um she's she's very much of the new wave of energy coming in with new deanna uh she's very spiritual you need to want to communicate with her her vibration is so high it's hard for you to hear her does that make sense to you Deanna it does it does it definitely does because I have been able to um pick up things that nobody else that has um so wasn't for me she would have been years without being properly diagnosed with epilepsy um so I am able to hear her and I'm her voice um but you know like like for instance a few months ago she asked me to pray for the aliens so I was um you know aware that she she does has a consciousness that a lot of people that I I don't even know she's beyond um the consciousness that the most humans that you do work so uh she is a very much of a higher vibration part of your mission this lifetime is to understand that and explain and not just be her voice that be the to be the voice community sorry they're coming through real emotionally with it she was brought to you to bring clothes so that you would have that protected mother tiger's energy and um unknowing that you know you must write things down in this prayer like for example she asked you to pray for the aliens that needs to be written down because you may forget that later you have a powerful mission here and she's part of your tool part of your help part of your helper with this mission and you'll you'll get all the help you need calling the angel calling her now she's right there with you she'll bring in whatever help you need I recently started Ray case sessions with um a friend who I met through another friend um and my daughter participated we used um a crystal yeah um for it and she spent the entire time without medication and it was yeah there's something called biogen biogenetic oh gosh I can't pronounce the word I will put that on my facebook page but if you're on facebook find me there I mean email and I'll get you that information but that um helps interfere with the lesser of man frequency she's very sensitive to that and it needs to be shut down so she can think more clearly and shut out some of those internal noises and those crazy crazy wills that we live in um I've also found some big success with even using the nail symbol placing pictures of the nail symbol around people and it needs also to help confirm you'll put that on your facebook page yeah I'll put that one thing on there um I'll send you um send me a big message okay and recently um my my uncle was killed about 10 years ago he was murdered he was very close to me and my mom never came to closure with this however you know sometimes I am very emotional and I think of it but I let his spirit know that I wanted him to move on I did not want him to stay on this earth I wanted my uncle Ronnie to move on so my question for you is has he moved on absolutely he's very energy is very high um he has a I'm getting the vision of him like he put his dog or dog um because he's calling it and then he's like hunting mode he's out in nature and um he's really enjoying his life now and wants to thank you for moving on he wasn't that very long because of what you did honey so good job I hope that helps you a little bit what I did was I just put a link in the chat room for Morgana's Facebook page so you might want to just send her a friend request and uh hopefully I send that send me a Facebook message because I will forget to give you with an Al symbol people can use their symbol I just had it I have one more question if that's possible I've been scared to receive messages from the spirits I've been scared of what I could could be so how do I how do I allow love to overcome that fear I want you to really be on that protection don't worry about picking up messages or anything just breathe that divine energy through you at all times to download that video it only takes a couple minutes to watch it and to go through it again try to go through it every day and just stay in that phase and you feel protected by now and that energy you're just not having anything to fear thanks thank you very much thanks for calling in Deanna thank you bye bye take care have a great evening you know what Deanna did for her uncle was huge I saw that space between the world, the grey world because I've seen it so many times in helping spirits pass on or cross over it's a very frightening place for those spirits and they can be trapped there for hundreds of years if they don't get to move and the longer they're there the harder it is to get them across do some actually hang out there because they like it there and they want to have this connection to the third dimensional reality at first because that's connected to the body and they're connected to the people but after a while then it becomes very fearful they can relive their death over and over again in a loop that I call them sentinels that go after their energy and feed off of their energy and it's terrifying if you've ever watched the movie Go it shows dark beings going and pulling something down to what they do there for verbal health that's what I've seen those dark beings and they go and they chase spirits so that's what I do in spirit rescue when I do spirit rescue right in there for the sentinels don't see me in full amount this is also why I'm closed and this is why the pyramid is closed because what happens to us is as light workers we go in there shining our light so bright to battle evil or whatever either the grey world or just in this light and we attract also to darkness when we have light of that nature so that's why I'm now closed and then we have the ability under the radar to do our work it's interesting because one thing I've been told is that these nefarious entities will hang out above the doorway of a bar room and leaving as you're coming or going to a bar room and they'll attach themselves to you because you're susceptible absolutely that's a good point I do a lot of spirit relief up on people when they come to me either for healing I do it over the phone, over Skype as well either in receding I'll see if it's on them and then it gets released in the sessions but yeah most people and it's usually the kindest people that have the most nasty things attached to them because they're like oh look shiny pretty luckily let's go grab their energy yeah kind of like narcissistic people do in this world we're going to move on to our next caller we have area code 917 you're on N5D radio can I get your name please 917 hello hi welcome to N5D radio can I get your name please hi Patty do you have a question for our guest yes I do but first I want to say you know hosting this show and everything because you're reaching out to a lot of people I think you're awesome aww thank you Patty you're awesome too thanks for being part of the N5D family and my question is I'm just wondering if you can sense what my life's purpose is because I've been like a legal assistant in law firm for like over 20 years now and I just feel like it's not what I'm meant to do here but I'm like unsure and I'm just wondering if maybe you know or sense anything okay what I get here Patty is I mean you have a good point we will come in and we'll do things for a little while and then it's for the next thing so you be a legal assistant for the 20 years absolutely what you were supposed to do is that but it is stepping up stone to something else um they're talking about a victim's advocate um and I'm getting something it's like a given two choices here you can either go that direction or you can get some more training and go into the health field and they're showing me like X-ray attack okay I took that three classes of Reiki like I'm not Reiki master but I was just wondering if maybe that was something I could go into I don't know you took three classes of Reiki and you didn't get Reiki master no okay so you're level two Reiki yes well there was another class ART advanced Reiki training but that's right below the Reiki master okay I guess everybody does it different I'm much more simple I do with level one two and three it's master level so this is when I see the X-ray technician I see that that's a medical field but they could correlate into doing Reiki making living doing the healing work if you have somebody else that is supporting you then then I'll system go and go for that what I tell people that are looking at doing spiritual work to make money is you've got to be out of place where you either do this or you don't take another breath you have to have that much of a passion for what you do to be able to push through any challenges in doing this kind of work that makes sense Sherry I'm sure you can understand that I mean it's Greg knows my issues I totally have a problem taking money for doing this I really really do I didn't for my entire life until finally my children really got tired of seeing notes from the landlord on the door every month and I said I have to I just have to because I have to I have to care so much about them I care about everybody but I really have to put my kids first in this but I still do have some issues with my my perceptions of money I know this energy money is an energy and you have to honor the gift because like like Patty we're talking if you're to make a living out of this you have to honor that it is a gift but you're going to take time and energy and you're going to pay to get training so I guess in a nutshell here is yes move ahead definitely move ahead I feel like more right through now this planet is a better thing whether it's something you do time or not and just go for it okay alright follow your heart to diet well thanks for calling in Patty thank you take care now bye I just did my advanced level like arts program with my students couple weeks ago and I was very far with them that they need to be charging even if it's a donation because you do not honor something if you do not expend some sort of the energy exchange in it the ones that I have given stuff away I'm a really big person to give things away but if I totally give them like a master at the same time the person never did anything with it they didn't honor the gift so it is something you have to do that makes sense I've always tried to have a date I call it have a day job almost like an actor but I don't like the day job I don't enjoy it I love doing this so if I could do this and support my children then I'm thrilled because it's it's helping everybody when you take the time and the energy to do the day job that's time and energy away from the work that you could do in spiritually helping others so if you're charging then you can always do that and you're going to help many more people so that's another way to look at it Sherry I am I'm getting there I'm just I have to think that I had to have been some type of monk in a former life because my attachment to money and what's so funny is that I work as an accountant so I'm attached to everybody else's money for them but my own I'm terrible I just have no desire for it I try to undercharge my clients they're like no and they're like you're the worst business woman ever and I said oh I'm just I'm in this for a feeling I'm in this for a feeling I like to help people I'm in transition myself with this yeah I understand that it's funny I get the same thing I just give, give, give and then some people just want more and you can only give so much I mean gosh and it's hard to keep up with things I mean for me on even on Facebook I'm pretty active on there but I will get sometimes 20 messages, private messages from people that are just wanting to talk or something that's not that I don't want to talk I just don't have time to do it all so you have to kind of compartmentalize and do do what is honoring yourself and honoring the gifts and give when you can and I'm not giving too much away because that's enabling and here's the ugly side of it I had to come to terms with this and do shadow work where it feeds your ego when you are somebody that gives away oh I just want to help people well you know what I saw this within myself and I'm always looking at this and doing it for that reason because it's not about me not because I want to help people that's ego that's true that's true I guess the proactive way would be envisioning that the world is already helped and to create time to do whatever it is that you want to do with your life that's good we're going to move on to area code 815 you're on N5D radio can I get your name hi my name is Deborah hi Deborah welcome to N5D radio well thank you it's an honor to be here tonight I came in kind of late but I'm happy I was able to get a call in and hello Morgana I'm honored to speak with you this evening oh thank you for calling honey how can I help you well I'm kind of halfway through this life here and I'm really trying to figure out a lot of things and I live through a lot of terror in my life and I've had crushing experiences with key people along my life and sometimes I feel kind of numb but I know that's really not true because I can see and feel really deeply and I've always thought after God the more I learn about what they're making available to us just leaves out so much of the spiritual world and I'm really always seeking after truth and I'm really seeking an extremely deep spiritual life and feel like ministry just is in my heart but I have no idea what that's supposed to look like or feel like right now for my life as a result of a lot of these heart aches one after the other I've kind of experienced a bit of I don't know I guess you could call it hostage I don't know if I keep myself here or I just have a lot of chaos on the outside of my little family here and through the last 20 or probably 25 years I've gained a great deal of weight and in the last 8 months I promised myself that I have a lot to live for I want to get this under control and I went ahead from size 24 down to a 16 and instead of feeling comfortable and awesome and confident and ready to continue to lose and feel good for the rest of the world all of a sudden it felt like I had stepped into this beautiful body and this beautiful face and it didn't feel like me and it scared me and I didn't know how to walk in that body so all of a sudden I got scared and I started going backwards and I don't understand it and I want to very badly yeah honey the best thing that I can tell you that you went into this and saw what was happening because that's the first step I have you had a specific meditation on my website called The Divine Temple and it takes you back into time to the time from the past life that you felt the need to add layers of fluffiness to your body that's what we do as healers and in-caps we will protect our energy field work with a mouth symbol and you can work with it very simply by just drawing it in the air over your heart and over your stomach like a circle make a cross in the circle and then make an X that's the eight points and then we go around and make the wings push that in I have a client that began to do that over her food and it does energetically shift the vibrations of your food she lost 12 pounds in two months by doing nothing other than that but for you it goes really deep because there is an emotional past life component why you are layering yourself and protecting yourself and so that feels needs to take place okay learning to go with the flow and honoring yourself is very important for some reason and it doesn't seem to make sense to me that maybe it will to you they told me to share with you the book the dow of poo it's proven like poo bear it's a very it's written like poo bear but it explains Taoism there's something that you're supposed to gain from that on a spiritual level that will help you go with the flow as you take ownership which you already have and then you began to release the extra fluffiness that you no longer have need for in your body and you're ready to walk in to that divine temple of your being then that change, that transformation they told me you are supposed to journal this because your journey will end up being a book to help others and that means not just the journey from here on but the journey from before from when you started doing this and then you realized that this wasn't me but it is you right so understanding it from now on refers to the physical body as your temple and that's the divinity that the flying lives within the temple of your being that's what you have and start honoring yourself as the goddess that you are with the curves that you have now that will make it easier to accept it because you will bring help to your body everything is about health and fueling your temple you don't go eat you're going to fuel in your temple does that help you a little bit? yes it certainly did and it made a lot of sense when you spoke about journaling because even though I don't see it now I did have a book on my heart and I had no idea what that was supposed to look like but that rang a bell it's really going to help a lot of people and it's going to be more than just a book it's going to be a platform you're going to have it's a manual self-help and you will too how exciting I agree I see it as well that's what Morgana is saying I see it too that's so cool good for you to go through this because you've gone through a lot and it's the ones that go through that proverbial hell and come out to heaven on the other side that you can pave the way you're one of the front runners you're riding the waves ahead so it will make the path smooth for the ones behind I honor you for that we have to move on I hope Morgana answered your call for you hang in there because you have some really exciting days ahead of you thank you thank you so much have a nice evening bye now and it's really important to remember that the body is just a shell but everyone has that beautiful divine spark to them we're all beautiful souls but you should definitely worship that divine temple that you have look at yourself as the gods and goddesses that you are we're going to try to bring out one more caller this is a caller from the chat room that goes by the name precious11 area code 631 can I get your name please hi this is Suzanne I just wanted a reading I guess love life or work which one would you like me to address honey love life love life you're saying that this will come together when you start honoring yourself for some reason immediately they took me to bubble bath candle list you've got to take some time for you don't look for it outside of you and then it's going to appear these actually about a three month timeline for you Suzanne so it's not like way out in the future but somebody will walk in but you've got to be in their habit of putting yourself first otherwise you could get too caught up in the relationship and lose yourself again does that help okay so like soon or you don't know three months they said three months and how about a job I feel really heavy it feels like something's blocked they're talking about your resume is not the way that it should be for what the job that you're looking for I'm looking for a summer job and I'm looking for a different one for September okay go in to recheck your resume to make sure that it is up to date and then there's a right way to get the job that you want and then that will shift it because right now they said something's blocking it and they took it to your resume and blocked hmm okay so check that out and then it should well produce alright honey thank you thank you thank you for calling in alright well we're going to start wrapping things up here I know that you have a book coming out this August so you touched on it before would you like to tell our listeners a little a little about it I'm really excited about it Angel's Legacy it is a story of a journalist looking for the truth about Angel and she is led to an old woman an ancient woman who tells her stories that have been passed down through generations in her family and it goes back to a time more medieval time where a couple or so are shapeshifters they're either angels or humans misunderstood many times persecuted at times and how they're able to walk in unconditional love brings about how they raise a regent or raise a prince in secret to protect him from the evil regent so it goes from action and adventure to some moral in the story to it's just an exciting story it was channeled channeled information that came through very quickly and like I said the prequel actually to this is being written now and that's channeled into so the spiritual people will understand the truth in the story the others will get the moral and it's pretty exciting story I'll be putting a link to this in the youtube video as well as on N5D2 where you can actually pre-order for the book now it sounds as though you may have channeled some of your books from a previous life aha what are you being all psychic on me Greg that's what I'm feeling yeah I used to when I was writing that book I would say oh I gotta go read my book I mean write my book I was reading this as I wrote it and living it now not all the characters could I live and those I had to call in their energies to come and give me that information so it's pretty exciting there's the female angel Kahara in there is a powerful angel that come in more of a meek, gentle human form so and then we've got the angel of war in there too so we've got a strong male energy as the angel of war sounds like it would be a great movie too absolutely that's the plan yeah now I see you're also starting an online psychic development class can you tell our listeners a little about that I'll be launching that probably in the next week or so I'm technical challenged so but I will be doing it for Google TV and so it'll be a fun class very interactive and learn how to use it channeled through the angel awesome can you tell our listeners how to find you on the internet my name is morganastar.com morgana with one anon and you will find me and I've got a Facebook professional page and then my regular page love to have you come and join me in my world awesome thank you so much for making our guests on N5G radio morgana thank you guys and sherry I appreciate it you guys thank you so much and I know our listeners got as much out of this as sherry and me so once again thank you thank you alright well that's going to wrap our show up for tonight so on behalf of my co-host sherry alise this is greg prescott from N5G.com namaste everyone
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David Scott - HP Discover Barcelona 2013 - theCUBE - #HPDiscover
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David Scott, HP Storage, at HP Discover Barcelona 2013 with John Furrier and Dave Vellante
As senior vice president and general manager of HP Storage, David Scott is at the forefront of industry change, with a finger firmly on the pulse of enterprise demand. In his latest appearance on SiliconANGLE's theCUBE, the executive went in-depth on the storage trends he will be focusing on in 2014 and beyond with hosts John Furrier and Dave Vellante.
Formerly the general manager of Hewlett-Packard's XP business, Scott rejoined the company after the 2010 acquisition of 3PAR, where he served as CEO. He reports that the firm's technology has helped HP offset declining demand for its traditional systems, with positive overall growth in the last quarter hinting of light at the end of the tunnel. Pressured to show progress, CEO Meg Whitman is making the most out of 3PAR's technology, delivering what Scott calls polymorphic simplicity through a multi-purpose architecture that is just as well equipped for use by mid-sized companies as it is by large enterprises.
"One of the key elements of a polymorphic architecture is that it actually has to start at the high-end. It's gonna be a multiple-controller architecture, because then you can bring it down, and if you're forensic enough about the process, [then] as you bring it down scale you manage to lose none of the critical functionality but you are able to reach price points or different performance points that can add specific value to different customers," Scott explains.
Polymorphism is what sets HP apart from the pack, he continues, notably EMC, which addresses different use cases with separate architectures. This makes it more difficult for customers to manage their infrastructure and adds unnecessary overhead across the board, according to Scott. The unified approach of 3PAR has helped the company grow from $190 million in annual revenue at the time of the acquisition to over a billion today. Furthermore, the massive demand from partners and customers is providing HP with the momentum it needs to refocus on emerging opportunities like software-led infrastructure, which has also drawn the attention of rivals. Scott believes that his company has the lead thanks to its immensely popular ProLiant server line and the complementary StoreVirtual VSA platform.
"The difference with software-defined data center is [that] now you're able to hand control to the application, or some kind of API, so you now have potential admin control, user control and application control. And we feel that we're in a very very strong position as an infrastructure supplier in this evolution," Scott says. "Why? Because to have control dynamically, you have to be able to monitor the infrastructure ... you need to have the control of the core converged infrastructure itself. And that is what HP has."
While not central to HP's vision for the software-defined data center, 3PAR constitutes a core pillar of the hardware giant's flash strategy. Originally designed in the early 2000s to reduce latency in spinning disk environments, the firm's unique storage architecture addresses the performance, durability and efficiency requirements all-flash arrays have to meet, Scott says.
@thecube
#hpdiscover
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] | 2013-12-11T07:28:34 | 2024-02-05T08:44:35 | 1,903 |
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Everybody, this is SiliconANGLE and Wikibon's the Cube, our flagship program. We go out to the events, extract the silly from the noise. We're live here in Barcelona, Spain with exclusive coverage of HP Discover 2013. And we're back fourth year now. I'm John Furrier, the founder of SiliconANGLE. I'm joined by co-host Dave Vellante, co-founder of wikibon.org. Our next guest is David Scott, SVP and general manager of HP Storage. Previously the CEO of 3PAR, one of my, that was about two years ago. Three. Three, three. David, welcome back to the Cube. It's great to be back. Cube alumni, it was our, our start with HP was three years ago in Barcelona. Amazing. The Cube started in the hotel with that little setup. You, we were there and now look at us. Look, look at us. And now we have a big party. So congratulations on your success. You just gave the keynote up on stage with Meg Whitman. Congratulations. 3PAR has been mentioned. The 3PAR component has been mentioned in the earnings call. Guys are, again, as Dave says, the gift that keeps on giving in terms of financial performance and traction. So give us a quick update. What's happening with the business? And then we'll go into all of it and analyze all why all the success. So give the folks an update of, of the recent business update and all the success. We've been going through a transformation in HP Storage moving from our more traditional platforms to what we call converged storage, which is based on modern architectures, our own IP, 3PAR StoreServe, StoreOnce, our store virtual software defined storage, all part of that. And we're on a tear. Converged storage grew about 47% year over year in our last fiscal quarter that we reported. And that shows tremendous uptake by customers for these modern storage architectures. And overall, we're managing to now handle the transition as some of our older architectures declined. We actually showed a 1% year over year growth. So we're really pleased. We're starting to see the light at the end of the tunnel. So a lot of people say to me, John, this first conversation that they bump into me at the holiday parties is 3PAR a one-trick pony. And I say, no, I think 3PAR is continuing to evolve and more importantly within HP. So that seems to be a question we want to ask. Also the success of 3PAR is obviously well-documented and then the acquisition and the continued success. But what is that enablement? Why are you guys doing so well? Explain some of the dynamics going on around how you guys came in and just created such gravity around the momentum of around you around HP. Well, first I think HP did a fantastic job of the integration of 3PAR. It really made sure that it protected the value that it had acquired. It didn't do anything stupid. It made sure it took the best of 3PAR and actually integrated into HP. So I think we managed to protect a huge percentage of our people, so we kept our core engineering talent. And that has allowed us to, with additional resources, really accelerate our investment decisions. And that has resulted in us taking advantage of this modern 3PAR architecture and delivering it as a polymorphic entity. One that can not just have its traditional high-end implementation, but the new mid-range 7,000 series we introduced a year ago, which is on an absolute tear, and then evolve it into a flash-optimized storage array with a 7450. And people like simplicity and that's what the 3PAR architecture's delivering. You know, I've always been, always jokingly about polymorphic, always joking about it, but you know, so where you created, we found that out last year when you rolled that out. But in a way, it is significant. So let's, I want to unpack that a little bit for the folks out there. Polymorphic is a term that you coined, you know, meaning, you know, single architecture, admit storage. It's right, polymorphic simplicity was the phrase. Well that was the vision, but it was based on a polymorphic architecture. But you didn't invent the word polymorphic, it's all the same. No, well relative to storage. Yeah. It's a well-known biology term. But applying it, from trying to simplify the messaging around what you're doing. So talk about how that scales up and down in functionality because storage is, you guys know the high end. Yeah. So how do you move up and down the performance curve with this polymorphic? Explain to the significance of that, of the movement up and down the performance curve and the interface into that for the customer. Well I think one of the key elements of a polymorphic architecture is that it actually has to start at the high end. It's got to be a multiple controller architecture because then you can bring that down. And if you're forensic enough about the process, as you bring it down scale, you manage to lose none of the critical functionality, but you are able to reach price points or different performance points that can add specific value to different customers. And that's what we've been able to do, not just with 3PAR by the way, but with our store once backup architecture, which we've just refreshed as well. Another polymorphic architecture that can be deployed in many different shapes and sizes to meet different customer needs. So to do that price performance, moving up and down that curve, compared contrast, the alternative. To buy, customers have to buy different, they're with a competitor, different solution points, different interfaces. When you say simplicity, do you mean interface, do you mean? Well if you just take a major competitor EMC for example. Okay, we'll say EMC. Why shouldn't I? Yeah, just say EMC. If you want a tier one architecture from EMC, they'll sell you a VMAX. If you want a mid-range platform, they'll sell you a VNX2. If you want an entry level platform, they'll sell you a VNXE, a different architecture. If you want to go to all flash optimized, they'll now sell you an extreme IO platform. And of course they have to have other architectures like V-Plax and RecoverPoint to make them all work together. Five, six, seven architectures, just for primary storage. What does that mean for the customer? Explain, what kind of pain point does that mean? Well think about five, six, seven architectures, different approaches to training, different approaches to manageability, different approaches to interoperability, replication. It's just more complex, it's harder, it costs more money to operate those environments. So back in the day where there was one app per server, that kind of made sense. And I like interviewing you because you've got an interesting career. You've got a technical background, you've done a lot of stuff in servers. A lot of people might not know this about you. At one point, you were in charge of the monolithic product within HP, the one that you guys resold from. The XP platform. The XP, right. Which at the time, back in the day, having this circle best of breed for each of those opportunities made a lot of sense. And then you left HP and joined 3PAR and so this utility storage thing emerged. You picked that. There were a lot of companies trying to do just that, the whole tier 1.5 thing, a lot of block based stuff. So I want to go back, so what was it that you saw back then that led you to 3PAR and allured you to? And then what's happening now? How would you summarize the big tectonic shifts now and how is HP taking advantage of them? Well I think first of all, back then in the late 90s when I moved into the storage business of HP and we brought out the XP platform, it really was the world-class platform for the type of IT that was being deployed at that time. What we now call a traditional IT approach. But even at that time, you can remember the first generation of application service providers. They called them ASPs. You had some of the storage as a service providers if you remember people like storage networks, et cetera. And it was clear to me that delivering storage and IT in general as a utility service was inexorably going to become the direction that the IT industry as a whole would move in. And so when the opportunity with 3PAR came along, I could clearly see that it was an architecture that could be optimized for this new IT as a service world. And that's why I effectively left HP to go become 3PAR CEO. Roll forward 10 years and that view of the world actually came true. You had the emergence of not utility players, they're actually called club at cloud players, public cloud, some of them are the managed hostess that allow you to deliver a virtualized enterprise applications in a public cloud environment. Some are others are the public cloud providers where you're building a new platform as a service offering people like Amazon, HP Cloud, Rackspace, et cetera. And there was a gap too. Guys like storage networks went out of business before it was a big... Well, the reason why storage networks went out of business is that they tried to have this new utility model using platforms that were designed, platforms like VMAX or really the Symmetric Starter or Starling Apple, just too expensive, inflexible, not agile enough. And that's why we built the 3PAR architecture. It was to be a tier one mission critical platform for the delivery of IT as a service. Now, rolling through our first customers were those people who were in that public cloud, managed hosting service provider marketplace. But we could also see that the enterprise would have to respond to the emergence of the public cloud by building out their own private cloud services to provide the equivalent agility to their lines of business. Otherwise they'd be relegated to less and less relevance. And that's where the synergy with HP came back in because there's a major supplier to large scale enterprises who would want to deploy private clouds. HP then wanted the same technology that these managed hosters were using in the public cloud to deploy to enterprises. And that's why the synergy of the 3PAR acquisition made such great sense to HP. And you've really seen it translate. We went from $190 million worth of product related revenue at time of acquisition to last year we completed over a billion dollars in revenue just from a product perspective, not including services. So it's been a really successful transition for HP. Yeah, and there's no way you would have, I don't think anyway, as an independent company got into a billion nearly this fast. We couldn't do it as fast. I mean, the great thing about HP is it's amazing customer coverage and it's fantastic channel partner network. And we knew that to really blow out the 3PAR architecture on a wide scale, having that marriage would make an awful lot of sense. So let's fast forward because you noticed the sort of service provider trends, whether it was ASP or a storage service provider and obviously that morphed into cloud service. And it seems like they're a harbinger of major trends and forces in the industry. So you see what Google and Amazon and Facebook and Twitter and guys like that are doing. It's not block-based storage. I mean, they have block-based storage, but it's predominantly, initially it was this commodity-based storage, kind of interesting to hear Amazon say they're going to more customized storage. They're like, oh, that'll make David Scott happy, ASICs aren't going to die. But what do you see now? What are you learning from those large internet players and how do you apply that to your business? Yeah, well, you know, the, what I call the public scale out cloud vendors, if you think of the typical, the Amazons, the Azures, et cetera. For them, at the scale that they're operating, it makes real sense for them to use industry standard technology for pretty much everything that they can do within a computing environment. And one of the advantages of being HP is as that evolution takes place between virtualized enterprise hosters on the one hand, people like the services of the world and the kind of public scale out providers, if you like the Amazons of the world. We have great technology for the first with platforms like the three-part store serve, but for the second type of provider, our own ProLiant scale out server technology is a platform that they can use too. So for HP, we win either way, it's just with a different product line. For our competitors, people like EMC and NetApp, they will try and position their solutions for the traditional virtualized enterprise hosters, but they have absolutely no play in the public cloud. And that's an exposure that they have that HP doesn't. Well, they would say their play is the software-defined play as that evolves. And you know, they're smart people and they see the industry trends too. So let's talk a little bit about software-defined. So again, the big public cloud guys have always done that software-defined thing, sort of programmable infrastructure. And maybe you didn't catch my new one. So I should have been a little bit more clear. At AWS re-invent, I was learned in talking to some of the Amazon architects that they've done a 180 on infrastructure. It's not just commodity-based infrastructure anymore. They're pushing suppliers to do very much highly integrated, customized hardware, which is, I think, I'm not surprised, frankly. We've heard that the hardware for the last 25 years, maybe more, and it just, value keeps coming at the hardware, but nonetheless what has changed is the ability to do software-defined without sacrificing performance. So what do you see in terms of that software-defined meme and how does that affect HP? Well, I think in the area of software-defined data sensors as a whole, HP has an incredibly strong position. We have software-defined networking with controllers that Bethany Mayer, my colleague, has deployed. But we've also had a leadership capability in what is called software-defined storage in the form of being able to run virtual storage appliances on industry-standard hardware and being able to convert that into shared resilient storage infrastructure by clustering those industry-standard servers together. So we have that platform delivering already today. And in fact, it's been successfully delivered since our left-hand acquisition as our store virtual PSAs for almost five years now and have 175,000 of them deployed already worldwide. So we're the clear leader, very rich functionality. Now for any second or third tier service provider that wants to build a scale-out architecture on industry-standard servers, and they don't have 50 or 200 PhDs to be able to write their own software layers, this is a really excellent alternative. But by the way, it's also a great alternative for a small, medium-sized business or remote offices and branch offices as well. But turning back kind of the scale-out world, we fundamentally have this leadership technology. We've now extended it into the backup space. We brought out at Last Discovery in Las Vegas to store once VSA. And so we think we have real product that is battle-hardened proven that we can deploy to a wide class of service providers as well as these small, medium-sized businesses and remote offices with software-defined storage. So we're not scared of vendors like EMC or VMware coming into this market. And we also have the huge strength, Dave, of our own industry-standard server business. What you may not have caught is that about four weeks ago, we announced a program that on every eligible ProLiant server and even our blades, we will ship a free one-terabyte virtual storage appliance license, store virtual. That means that a customer can take three ProLiants, cluster them together, run the VSAs on each of the three servers and have a three-terabyte resilient shared storage platform and then run their application side-by-side on the same physical infrastructure. 60% lower cost, much easier to operate, no skill sets needed. And we think that technology is going to be also applicable in many of the service providers, tier two, tier three service providers as well. Set against that, what does EMC have? Viper. Viper, it's a management layer. It's not really software-defined storage. They actually went out and bought Scale.io as a platform, still not GA, some point in the future, an unproven technology will be brought to market like Extreme.io. VMware, they have their VSAN technology, which they're planning to launch, they've announced, but it's still not GA. So we have this leadership position and we feel very good about it and we're now able to leverage this massive, we sell millions of units of ProLiants every year. Each one of those represents a potential upgrade opportunity for more store virtual VSA licenses as we allow these customers just to easily upgrade their existing infrastructure. The moonshot for cloud service providers is kind of interesting as well. We'll see what the uptake there looks like, but, and I agree with you Viper, it's very early days, I'm not even sure exactly what it is yet. Well it's another incarnation of storage management software as I can see. Yeah, so there's another layer there, but the concept, forget Viper for a second, but the concept of having a restful API whereby you can make a call and manage your storage, whether it's block or file or object is alluring. Do you see that day coming and also function, like for example, function that the secret sauce inside the three par ASIC, do you ever see that going into software defined and maybe being replaced by some other secret sauce function, what's your outlook there? So first of all, let me outline the broad view of how software defined connects to cloud and connects to virtualized infrastructure because if you look at virtualized infrastructure, our converged infrastructure strategy at HP, it's really all about the administrator having control. If you look at the cloud, the cloud is all about the end user having control through self-service portals. Or the developer. Or the developer. The difference with software defined data center is now you're able to hand control to the application or some kind of restful web services API. So you now have the potential admin control, user control and application control. And we feel that we're in a very, very strong position as an infrastructure supplier in this evolution that includes the software defined data center. Why? Because to have control dynamically, you have to be able to monitor the infrastructure. You have to take information about the infrastructure, how well is my application performing and then translate that into dynamic policy change of service levels and changing the configurations of the infrastructure that is servicing that application. You need to have the control of the core converged infrastructure itself and that is what HP has in service storage and networking and really uniquely positions us to be able to provide huge differentiation in the software defined data center space. Now as far as kind of taking platforms like 3PAR and moving it into software defined storage, I'm actually a great believer in horses for courses as we say in England. The right racehorse for the right course. And fundamentally 3PAR has always been built around an ASIC structure. If we change 3PAR to kind of use a different approach without an ASIC, it would make it far easier to deploy that technology as a software defined storage kind of implementation. But I have no interest in doing so, certainly in the short to medium term, given that I have the world's leading software defined storage platform with StoreVirtual and our VSA technology. And so our intention is to leverage StoreVirtual where it's really designed and then integrate it really tightly with 3PAR StoreServe that may be working in customers and enterprise data centers whilst they communicate out with their remote office. Well, yeah, that's why you're getting unique advantage for your customers and relative to your competitors with the 3PAR architecture. So until that change or it appears it going to change, there's no reason to mess with that. I understand. Just want to see how we're doing on time because I could go a long time with you. Before we get into, if we have time, I would like to talk about what you're seeing in trends and flash, but I want to get a quick business update from you. Since the 3PAR acquisition, 3PAR has been for a couple of years anyway, was growing at triple digit growth. I think it's now moderated to very high double digit growth. I wonder if we could share what's going on there, the converged storage figures and momentum. Maybe talk about some of the growth parts of your business. Yeah, I think IDC just released their calendar Q3, worldwide external disk quarterly tracker figures. And one of the things that we were really pleased to see in the mid-range fiber channel segment, the largest market, is that by product family, they reported that the 3PAR platform had grown 261% year over year, just an astonishing growth rate. And this is really in response to us creating a revolution in the market a year ago. By bringing out the 7000 series, we brought tier one mission critical functionality down to mid-range price points and affordability. And that has been taken up. Our channel partners love the platform. We're not only replacing EVAs, but also going out and taking out EMC, install base, NetApp install base, and many other papers. So we feel really encouraged by that momentum. In the summer, we went into the all flash optimized array. We brought out the 7450, 550,000 IOPS at less than 0.7 milliseconds. I'm really excited personally that just six months later, we announced, have announced with a pure software upgrade, a 60% improvement in performance, up to 900,000 IOPS at less than 0.7 milliseconds with a very scalable platform. You can support 220 terabytes of all flash in a 7450 now. And that platform matches up with the specs of pretty much any all flash startup that has started from the ground up. But the difference is, Dave, it has full mission critical capability, all of the service, it has the stack. And so it's an unbeatable value proposition. And so we think we're going to see really strong momentum in that market, especially as we added new MLC solid state support that has halved our cost per terabyte. So it's made it very much more cost competitive as well. So, okay, so while we're on flash, let me get your take on what's happening in the flash market. You got hybrids, you got all flash arrays. You chose not to go out and buy a flash company. Others have, I mean, IBM, EMC in particular, why didn't you feel the need to do that? And what gives you confidence that you can compete going forward? Well, it's very simple. When you're looking at optimizing for all flash, you're worried about three things. Performance, endurance, and efficiency. And so when we scan the three power architecture, we realized because it was a modern architecture that was originally designed, if you think about it, for performance, efficiency. And as a byproduct of the way we approached efficiency with system-wide striping and system-wide sparing, it happened to align itself really well to endurance, characteristics of an all-flash array. We didn't have to buy a new architecture. Instead, we could just take the three power architecture, make very simple engineering changes to it, to optimize it for the all-flash world. And so the benefit of having a robust proven tier one architecture apply to all-flash optimized is obviously of significant advantage. And if we can match the performance and efficiency specs without having to go to a new architecture, that is a great investment protection message for our customers because it means that they can turn around and keep their three power investment and then just move forward to the all-flash optimized world with three power. So I wonder if you could clarify something for me because the perception is, of course, it's probably a fact, that a lot of the stuff that the three power engineers were doing in the early 2000s was designed to minimize the latencies of mechanical disk. But you're saying the architecture applies very well from an endurance standpoint to flash. Can you just add a little color to that and explain that a little bit? Well, what we did with our architecture is develop system-wide striping in combination with chunklets. And effectively, that meant that any single volume that we provisioned on a system would be spread over every drive on that system. The advantage of that at the time was tremendous performance, but it was also combined then with a paralyzed clustered architecture of up to eight controllers so you could have multiple access through controllers to system-wide striped systems for great performance, but it also provided with the chunklet architecture system-wide sparing. So the system-wide striping and the system-wide sparing reduce the level of impact on the drive technology. Now, if that drive technology moves from hard disk drives to flash-based, you have a perfect situation for flash because you're minimizing the wear and tear on each individual flash drive. Now, we've actually extended that because we went with our flash drive vendors and looked at it and said, inside a flash drive, you typically have a whole load of capacity that the vendors reserve to spare out themselves in the failed regions of memory. And what we said is, look, we already have a, if you like, a chunklet-based sparing mechanism. Why don't we create something called adaptive sparing where we'll take over that responsibility and then you can release more capacity so our customers get better value. They get more capacity out of a single drive than they do with other vendors operating system implementations. Ironically, it was fundamental, you're saying, to the flash architecture, not just the spinning disk architecture. Okay, let's talk about some of the other products that you guys announced this week. What's exciting you? I mean, we saw your keynote, we've talked about the three-power-all flash stuff, but you've got StoreOnce, Refresh, and StoreAll, Refresh. Maybe talk about those briefly. Yeah, I think with StoreOnce, we really are blowing away the first-generation deduplication-based backup system architectures like EMC Data Domain. They're all unicontroller architectures, two years after we introduced our high-end B6200 with high availability, EMC has still been unable to respond, providing high availability for their backup solution. And what we're doing is steadily extending our speed and differentiation with the latest high-end 6500. We back up 40% faster and we doubled our recovery speed, but competitively, that means that we back up four times faster than EMC's flagship Data Domain 990 and recover an astonishing 10 times faster than they do. Literally, we can recover as much in a single day as it would take them 10 days. Now, there was some research done a while ago with the National Archives that if companies go beyond 10 days in terms of backup, half of them go out of business within a few quarters after that. So it really matters, especially as the amount of data that these companies are storing is exploding. So we have a modern second generation Store 1's architecture, which is really adapted to this explosion in human information, structured information, machine-generated information that customers are experiencing today. So we feel really good about that. And by the way, the Store 1's product line in the fourth quarter of last fiscal year grew 70% year over year. So it's on a tear as well. And then finally, Store All was our information retention platform. Again, just like with Store Once, we revamped and refreshed the whole product line with Store All, the new 8,000 series. It could be deployed as a gateway in front of 3PAR or with very cheap and deep storage capacity in its own right. Low-cost economic storage for you to use as an information retention platform or an archive platform, differentiated by its amazingly fast search speed. When you're on scale of, you know, 500 million files or objects, it can search at 100,000 times faster. And what we've done is simplified the searching. You can now search on multiple attributes. In the next generation of storage, we've Store All, we have increased the density by 150%, 40 terabytes per single U of rack space. And the final thing we did with Store All, which excites me as part of our hybrid cloud strategy, is that we added this open stack interface to it for Swift and Keystone, their object and identity service offerings. And that capability means that now customers can develop in the HP cloud or at rack space, you know, or anyone using open stack, and then deploy safely within their own enterprises if they're hesitant about, for security reasons, about deploying out in the public cloud. And get that Store All integration out of the box. Absolutely. All right, good, we get to the hook, but tomorrow you have a deep dive breakout session for people who want more information from your keynote today. That's 9 a.m. 9 a.m., Hall 8, Romeo 02, I think, A02. Well, David, always a pleasure. Great place to start off the day. Yeah, why not? All right. Thank you, Dave. Thank you very much. John and Sharon, your insight says always, keep it right there, buddy. Like, we'll be right back. John, Ferry and I, with our next guest right after this. This is theCUBE.
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UC_TneqvSfh-KsIyZMlJjVsQ
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"Mən də Qafarova kimi Primakova inşa yazdırsam, mənə də vəzifə verərlər"-İlqar Atabəyli
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[
"xeberler en son xeberler",
"xeberler 2020",
"son xeber",
"xeberler bugun",
"xəbərlər",
"son xəbər",
"xəbərlər 2020",
"aksiya",
"mitinq",
"kanal13",
"kanal13 xeber",
"yeni xeber",
"tecili xeberler",
"en son xeberler",
"bugun xeber",
"xeberler 2021",
"ən son xəbərlər",
"son xəbərlər",
"son xeberler",
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"günün son xəbərləri",
"günün xəbərləri",
"günün xeberleri",
"etiraz aksiyası",
"bakıda aksiya",
"mitinq aksiya"
] | 2022-06-25T13:30:10 | 2024-02-14T18:43:40 | 137 |
zQybTWur0Gw
|
Ramiz mehtəyəri çimi idi və s. və da uzun illə saxlayan Rusya və yaftı Azərbaycanınla milli məclisə sədir qoylan qanım Qafarovu, Pirmakova ilşay yazdırılırdı. Mən də Pirmakova ilşay yazdırsa, yadın ki, mə də və səvirilir. Yəni, mən bunu vəzimə çıxışdırıb, yazdırsa, yürə də və səviricəyilərdə, çünki bu, gələdik. Mən ona görə deyirəm ki, Azərbaycanın böyük problemi milli dövlətin olmamasıdır. Yəni, hüçmət milli şəxslərdən formolaşmalıdır. Bu sözləri kanalı onca müsahibəsində şahib, publicist, ilgələtə belirli deyik, daha ətaflı müsahib bir dinləyək. Yəni, bu günləri biz çuşanı aldıq, qarabaqın məyəm bir isəsin aldıq. İndi bayaq problemlər qalsada, bu cəhətdən biz hüçmətlə, dövlətlə bir yeri dolduq. Yəni, milli məsələlərdə müxalifak mövqiyi olabilməz. Yəni, mən bunu qəbul eləmirəm. 32-ci də biz mən bunu yaşamışam, görmüşəm. Ehtibar mən mədəl bunu eləmədi, süvrət Feinov qiyam qaldırdı. Yəni, o vaxtı biz 62 faiz, Azərbaycan ordusu torpaqların azə beləmişdir. Lakin daxizdə olan o sapqın müxalifak imşan vermədi. Onu biz akraç çatdırabilək. Rusya, qoşuranlar doldu, Rusya'nın dediyin eləyənler doldu. İçin ki, o daqır insanların çoxu da təfəktürcə komünist təfəktür idi. Azərbaycanında usulağın, cəmi sahninin 100.000 nəfə olduğunu bildəyən ilga atəbəli, Ruslinin ölkəmizdə geniş yəlmasına ehtiraz edib. Amma Azərbaycanında, ortam məktəblərin 33-34 faizi təhsil olan Ruslininə təhsilar. Öldürəyəxin, Ruslinin də ortam məktəblərin. Mənə deyip usuf al quyadəm ki, dünyanın hansu ölçəsində bir şey baş verə bilər. Azərbaycan dövlət idi, Azərbaycan delidi. Və ət dövlət bu dildə oxuyan uşaqların maliyələşdirəm əldə olarsın ortam məktəblə. Ruslinin də ya qeyri xarici dildə oxmağısı yəni kedi öz kılınan və saiti ilə oxuya bilər. Niye dövlət Azərbaycan dövlət Ruslinin də məktəbləri maliyələşdirir?
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UCDHao9FxNRHw1VyLuGXI_rA
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The Fifth Elephant - Big data panel
|
Govind Kanshi moderates a panel discussion on big data at The Fifth Elephant 2012 with Anand S (Gramener), Joydeep Sen Sarma (Qubole), Kalpana Krishnaswami (Metaome), Prithvijit Roy (Bridge i2i), Rohit Chattar (Yahoo!) and Navjot Sidhu (PayPal).
The Fifth Elephant is a conference on the big data ecosystem by HasGeek. http://fifthelephant.in/2012 and http://hasgeek.com.
|
[
"hasgeek",
"fifthelephant",
"the5el",
"5el",
"bigdata",
"big data"
] | 2012-07-27T18:33:27 | 2024-02-05T07:43:48 | 3,753 |
zQ9IBmz67H4
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So, thanks everybody, I know that we are the seven people between you and your dinner. So, we will try to make sure that we utilize the time in the best possible way. So, thanks to the panel first of all for agreeing to be on the panel at the end of the day after a grilling for some of the speakers a very, very grilling day basically. So, the idea of this panel is basically twofold one is that we do not want to get too technical unless there are people and who want to get down to brass tacks. But we want people to leave with when and how to use big data techniques and what are the tools and what are the pitfalls end of the day which we should be aware of. So, having said that, so I will just go very briefly over the panel members, sorry. So, we have Kalpana who is founder of MetaOm here and she is kindly agreed to be here in spite of her injury. So, thanks again and she is from the biosciences for it basically and she has a chemistry background. So, we will get a completely different view from her side. We have Rohit, Rohit Chhattar from Yahoo and he is basically part of the team which is modeling the SAR model on the grid which is growing pretty much up to the one petabyte very soon. We have Prithvirjeet who has distinguished background in analytics in terms of his work at HP in terms of his work at Genpact. So, we are hoping that he will provide a business angle to lot of thinking that we basically discussed today. We also have, I am sure many of you attended Anand stock today, so who brings in a different perspective on lot of things and he has a background again in analytics and you can look up most of his work on his blog basically sran.net at this point of time. Then we have Naajot Siddhu who from PayPal who has basically who is responsible for the big data platform discussion or platform decisions at PayPal and he has experience in various other things also and we are hoping for some of the what one would call as straight talk from him as he actually mentioned in his session also is there one answer to everything so I think that is. Then we have Joydeep, Joydeep same Sharma who is presently heading Q-Bowl India. He is a ex-facebook ex-hive creator amidst us, so we are hoping that he can provide the inputs in terms of the size of the data that people have to handle at when they say large data or big data and he can also point out the challenges in terms of handling that data. So having said that we have set of four questions that we are going to ask and we are hoping once we finish those questions if there are questions from the audiences we will basically take them up. We have time limit of about 45 minutes, so let us go ahead with the first question and first question is directed to all the members. So please I think there is a mic is working. So the first question is very simple to the panel members. So what is the problem that you guys are trying to solve which involve usage of the large data? Very open ended question and since we have a varied panel member we are hoping that we can get all the different varied use cases so that people can walk back saying these are the places possibly I can look at. So yeah go ahead. So Kalpana can start and then we can go ahead on. Yeah sure can you guys hear me? So what we basically are doing at Metaomas we are actually helping biologists make sense of all the data that is coming out in life sciences these days and when I say biologists we are talking about people here who don't really ever want to write a line of code or do any kind of scripting so that is the audience that we are sort of addressing. So when you look at data itself it's a pretty boring thing to look at I mean it doesn't tell you much what really becomes interesting is when you start mining the relationships in this data and that is really what we are attempting to do and that is where we find a lot of challenges so that two kinds of relationships you have you know things that are explicitly stated like you know your name is such and such and then you have implicit relationships inherent relationships which are not so explicitly stated for the example if I said that somebody was you know Mary was Sue's daughter and Barbara was Mary's mother then you know you have a granddaughter grandmother relationship which was never explicitly stated is the same way in biology so it is mining that which is really interesting in the life sciences and it is there where people start seeing new patterns new uses for you know drugs chemicals compounds and there's a whole lot of new insights and hypothesis that comes up so what are our challenges I mean there are there are a lot of challenges here biological data is very very complex inherently you know because it is scientific data that is coming out and the second big thing is this data actually sits in silos so if you look at each silo of data that is coming out the data actually has a different context and by different context I mean if you look at a planet say Neptune it means one thing to the astrophysicist and something else to the astronomer biological data is like that it means something to the physician something else to the molecular biologist so when this data sits in silos you might be talking about the same thing but how do you make this data interoperable and connected that is the second sort of big issue the third issue complication is data is actually completely unnecessary but created by the scientists itself every guy who works with a gene gives it a new name every guy who works with a protein gives it a new name they say that like biologists will share that toothbrush but they won't share their gene names these are the sort of issues that we deal with just connecting the data and making sense of it these are all the issues that come up with it but once you've connected it and once you sort of you know put in some level of reasoning and are able to deduce implicit relationships how do you serve it out and that is a big issue you know these are guys who don't want to write code and even I wouldn't want to write those huge queries that you know would need to be written right so how then do you visualize graph data as a query and how do you serve it out so that you can explore it and explore that nature of that graph these are two issues that I think you know we have struggled with solved to some extent gone back to the user and found that you know there are a lot of other issues so these are the big things that we've looked at thank you so PayPal is as you all might know is a payments processing company right but some of the things that were being said about the complexity of the data the variance in the data they just sound very familiar to me too right but our problems are also multifaceted right parts of it is real-time decisioning so and not sort of analytics which can be done offline and in sort of even near real-time but decisioning that actually drives the business transaction during the actual users transaction right other parts of a problem are command and control for the site right there we have as I mentioned billions hundreds of billions of messages coming through and these are what determine you know if something on the site is working or not working and which part is working which part is not working how it can actually be put into a state that can be working so our problems even though some of the underlying similarities exist are perhaps a little more towards running the business in real-time versus trying to find these relationships later we also have problems in finding the relationships later in terms of if a failure happens for example what was the real cause of the failure so tracing a business transaction all the way from its entrance into PayPal to the time it actually entered into a failed state that's very important to us so problems are multifaceted and they're just aggravated by the scale we run out in a nutshell I think that's that's what we struggle with so what we do at Brigid we actually try to solve business problems based on data so we try to go and talk to businesses and many times it's almost a very latent thing that business realizes they have a problem in say their marketing or supply chain of finance what they don't realize that it can be solved based on data and analytics so we try to kind of solve those business problems and challenges of primarily using trying to see what data is available being able to augment that data with different forms may not be just from what's coming from the core systems maybe in some times trying to see what are the unstructured data is available try to marry that then trying to think about driving the right level of visualization even of the current form because that in many times you would not believe the business probably doesn't have that also so telling them what's happening is also a big aspect in many cases and then probably trying to tie back and solve that problem in terms of what they should be doing in future that's where a lot of data mining predictive modeling optimization kind of techniques comes into play and that's where the techniques become very important for us to understand what techniques will work because the scenarios might be very different in some cases you might be trying to find out say a patient behavior some cases it might be a customer behavior some cases it might be a resource optimization say managing how many beds should be there in a hospital I'm just kind of making it up but there are different kind of scenarios in which analytics can play a role really figuring out how to solve a problem what kind of techniques will play is another part and then it comes into implementation to make it real for the business to see real value out of it where certain context again some cases might be easy like it might be fully offline you give them a strategy they kind of implement it when it becomes more real-time implementation that's even more challenging in many cases because you have to in a split of a second you have your algorithm run and make decisions there say many of the online say fraud detection those kind of ideas again so so the challenge rise probably across the board in terms of data in terms of what data to use what kind of visualization should come into play how do you probably what techniques should you be using and how what's the layer that you show it to the business how do you implement it so a variety of those comes into more where we get involved in a project form another thing which we are trying to do are still baby steps we are taking we are trying to build on something what we call our analytics apps which are really prepackage solutions in a very specific areas where the business has a solution which they can probably where they don't have to worry about what techniques was tools sitting behind it but it solves their problem again so so it's really that's where machine is to play a lot of work in terms of say there's no data scientists available there but you have to have the technology take a decision in many of those cases and the business has to get almost a idiot proof tool to kind of play with because the business managers are also getting more analytics savvy so that's a little bit of a different thing because that's where you're marrying technology to quite a bit of extend so those are really at a very very high level the kind of work we do the kind of challenges we face in our day-to-day kind of work. Hi I'm Rohit from Yahoo. Most of the people know that Yahoo is the biggest publisher and has a wide variety of content and with that we come with a problem of multi-billion like 30 billion plus events and around 20 terabyte a day 20 to 30 terabyte a day which kind of presents us with a challenge for close to 600 plus million users we use the technology to solve the business problems like identifying the user value generating the user digital genome so we call it as digital genome by doing that we are able to tell user what story they like and what would interest them and kind of you know engage them on Yahoo network and based on their past history we create our digital signature for that person and you know then we know what category is like if it's a sports fan or is it like you know shopping maniac and stuff like that based on that we are able to actually predict or suggest articles and stories also the same thing can be used for advertiser you know trying to advertise their own product to those users who are more you know looking for something so since we have searched and they displayed it all put together the same user actually we have a strong information about the user saying that he also searched for some digital camera and he also browsed through you know some of the sites on the Yahoo itself clicked on some of this display as that actually gives us huge huge not only a business challenge to solve but also a good opportunity for us to serve the users where another thing is also identifying unique users which is most of the people will agree on the digital world as to how to identify a different level like geo level or you know or different kind of interest category level because a person can have multiple interests and stuff like that which can actually if you tell advertisers that you can reach out to say 100 million unique user for sports category that's like an advertiser is just thrilled and if he can target it properly you know they get it so we try to connect the publisher advertiser and the content with the user which brings in the whole thing there are other things like scoring algorithm for publisher whether it's for the ad quality score that we create for a user we also we create like a user value so all this thing is put together has a multi-dimensional problem to be solved and to an extent Yahoo has solved the problem to a great extent so I am Anand from Granda the problem we are trying to solve is that of helping people understand the results of analysis or data humans are great at language we're not so we're born wired for it we're not so good at reading tables of numbers what we are trying to do is tell picture stories out of that to give you an example the back of my t-shirt is a chart that shows the days on which people were born in India at least according to official records and you'll see that practically nobody's born in August the reason for it schools open in June and you know most birthdays are adjusted accordingly now it's one thing to show that as a table of numbers another thing to say okay I've got a full row of August it's completely blank what's that doing so we just tell picture stories we also do analytics of the non-traditional kind think of it as bringing free economics to corporates so for example we observe that students born in June who just make it into class tend to score consistently lower than students who are born in August who score about 10 percentage points higher we find that said those are cells extremely well with coffee and tea in fact to the point that all they're never ever bought without the other turns out that when you're buying children's clothing the sales of every product moves with every other product with one exception needs jackets that's somehow a very separate category things like this which are interesting that the business might not know these are kinds of things that we're trying to extract and most most importantly present it in a way that people get the answer instantly I think so I'll talk about my Facebook experience very little to add beyond what Rohit said so Yahoo and Facebook are very similar companies and so I was trying to try and see if I could answer this question differently and I was thinking in my mind why did we hold on to so much data I mean yeah there's a lot of data coming in and you can do stuff with it that sort of like you know just count stuff show how many page views you got figure out how much advertisers should get billed all the you know standard kind of stuff I think the more interesting question is you know how the hell why the hell where we actually holding on to like 50 petabytes of data or whatever so and I think the most interesting things that I can think of are the most interesting use cases are often the ones that you don't know about in in advance right so somebody will ask a question that you don't know the answer to and you've got to go back and like analyze the year's worth of data to actually you know figure out right so some kind of cohort analysis or hey you know we adopted the strategy last August you know how did that fair out how did the group of users acquired last August behave over time what was their pattern you know relative to users acquired we other means so to me the most interesting applications are the ones that you don't know about yeah maybe I should stop here so thanks the next set of question is basically it's more interesting isn't it in terms of today we have got various I think a lot of you are how many of you already using how to ecosystem for doing big data how many of you are actually using a non-loop ecosystem for being big data of you guys here also and I think that's the intent of basically finding out if you are using Hadoop or using a non-loop or using a relational database or an MPP how do you make that decision end of the day and if you can go further and especially in case of Rohitha and as well as Jyadip is basically if if you have the details and even Navjoth if you have the details in terms of what percentage of your analytics and everything would be at a high level say high pig versus something else at a high level versus very custom jobs or do you encourage that also what would you encourage at what point of time so basically ideas how do you choose that technology I can go first I guess just like any other technology decision right the first criteria as always the solution has to fit the problem right the first requirement as always it must work before anything else right so so even as you go through the solutions you have to look back and keep make sure you understand your problem correctly and you do have to do that continuously with respect to sort of applicability in the problems we have in the big data space right we have a whole slew of technologies we have and it's this is not to sort of say we have a lot of processing on Hadoop but we have about a 300 node Hadoop cluster but 5% of analytics actually run on that right a lot of analytics do run off of terror data itself right the traditional way sourced from an OLTP system which is for which a relational database is the best fit you have structured data you want to run analytics unstructured data yes it's massive volumes of it yes it's five petabytes of it but it's structured and there's certain solutions traditional solutions that work perfectly fine where we deal with unstructured data again like I was going through the talk today even as we evaluated Hadoop right so Hadoop does offer certain advantages for us in terms of being able to leverage cheaper storage you know more distributed storage rather than you know paying for slightly more expensive disks but when you sort of do the trade-off between how much custom development we would have to do and how we would actually have to invest in even utilizing that 300 node cluster for some of our semi-structured data that decision and the fit for it first of all right and the sort of fit for the problem meaning if it takes me 30 45 seconds to get that response back then that's not a path I'm willing to follow right but there's certainly AB testing sort of multivariate testing use cases that that's perfect for because that analytics can run after two or three days and that in many cases also is semi-structured data right there's external sort of sources we mine for impressions of PayPal right so what are people saying outside on Facebook on perhaps other blogs other sites on Twitter what are they saying about us right where it's completely unstructured where it's mining taxed right but Hadoop does fit well where it makes sense to actually make that investment right and we have made that investment but really what you have to look to is does this solution solve my problem right and you have to continually keep continuously keep evaluating that as you go through the evaluation of technologies and there's multitudes of things out there from you know like I talked earlier today you know columnar data sources writing your own custom things you know there's all kinds of options outside of Hadoop and of course on top of Hadoop you have all the tool sets like I like you know any of the other like pig other things that make it our value add services on top of it right but I'll go back and finish by saying that the first and foremost criteria for me is does it solve my problem does it work and beyond that you know technology choices are like any other technology choice you make so it's a very good question that how do you choose the technology platform if you have like now just said if you have an article need which can be modeled in a way where it's relational in nature then you have better off technology available and tools available to visualize cd data and the way you want to do the data but most of the people will agree on the digital world the requirements for the anartics and probably even a paper is changing so fast that introduction of new dimension and I'm sorry I'm talking about the modeling part but introduction of new dimension or a metric that changes the way you compute or look at the data presents you with the challenge that you know even for that matter even if terror or any other oracle or whatever you take has its own limitation now for the known analytics that you're going to generate and it's going to be finite in nature which they call it as KPIs because it's not going to change much like for example for the web page views clicks revenue and all these things are going to not change no matter what you do page use will be us so things that are known and are not going to change our bread and butter to just like when you go on analytics dashboard you should be able to say I'm doing okay for those kind of things you know our relational system helps but the moment you go dig deeper and you try to find out and try to create a correlation say something in on the revenue system share some fraud happening or some robotic thing happening and you want to try to dig deeper and try to see that the variables are related or not when you do that the way you look at the data changes is no more a record it's it's a it's it becomes a logical record and you have to actually go through either you know using a statistical modeling predictive modeling and stuff like that for example quality score the quality score for an ad cannot be just measured based on the click it has to be measured across geo it has to be measured across publisher it has to measure a different type of users and stuff now when you bring all these things together it becomes a problem of a large data when you see that your existing system has a boundary defined in a way where it cannot be totally parallel and I cannot be divided into subsets and each of them does it paralleling and gets back to you that's when you realize that okay you know how dope is your is your framework that you need to embark on right to their custom map reduce or you write a pick program or you know if it can be modeled it is high even stuff once you know that your existing system is having a boundary that's when for example a lot of people say that you know I have like a two-petabyte of Oracle system running are you really actually scanning all the two-petabyte that's the question right if you are then probably Oracle will die or even on the terror at our side if you go with two-petabyte it will because if a person takes two-petabyte and there are ten people concurrency it just kills the system right so the question is how much of the data that is online on your rdbms is really being used if out of two-petabyte you're using only say ten terabyte then you know go with the rdbms but when you know that most of the time we have to scan the large amount of data like at yahoo to do a user behavior analysis to see the pattern how the cluster is moving what is becoming hard or which keyword is becoming popular and we have to tell advertiser okay start bidding on this or certain things like that you know you you have to scan if you have to analyze marketplace you know if you had to see how California is reacting to certain news versus how New York is reacting now you you enter into a space which is very different right and you have to have multiple channel to look at it so that's when you realize that your existing system are not able to scale and they won't scale because they are not designed for it that's when you want a system like either Hadoop and if you want a real real-time lookup and some processing yet you can go to H-Pace, Cassandra but thing is you need to like he said right you need to see that the solution that the problem that you have fits the bill with the solution that you want to come up cheap I don't know whether Hadoop is cheap or not it again depends on the skill set that you have the problem that you're trying to solve because there are many people who have tried to solve a problem for which Hadoop is not made up of you know if you don't if you cannot think of your data as a key value pair probably you know you should think differently so that's that's what I'm saying let me see if I can try and add something here so I think one part of the question has not been answered as to high level versus low level so maybe I can actually try and add to that one thing I've seen is that it's always best to capture problems at the highest level of abstraction and sometimes that might be a C++ function sometimes that might be a SQL fragment and sometimes it might be something even much higher than that so one of my favorite examples is in almost all the companies here you know somebody out there in your company must be doing a 30-day average of something right and that guy is writing the same thing that you know 100 other people have written and I can give it in writing that many of them will get it wrong and they will cause a lot of burden on the system so that's one principle I like to follow is try and think at the highest level of abstraction how to you know capture what you're trying to do and capture that somewhere because tomorrow when you come and revisit your backend you want to rework something you know that's the thing that you want to re-implement the other thing I would say is that unfortunately I mean some of us sitting here are from very big companies and I guess a lot of people on the other side are also from very small companies and I don't think the same parameters can apply to large company and big small company so for example when I was working at a very large company I knew I had an army behind me so my job was to make the best technological decisions and I was confident that whatever decisions I made the army would execute on it it will you know fix the problems as long as the design was right we could always implement it right but if you're a small startup in which is my current role you know you are aggressively trying to find something that works so you know I think for most of us actually the answer is well let's just try everything aggressively and find what works and keep it and of course you know ask around and like get references I think I mean my experience has been that most of the stuff doesn't work you know it's it's marketing it just sort of like people talk about like cool stuff and things like that but you know a lot of stuff doesn't work so that's the only way you find out the other principle that I've sort of seen articulated and I like is that try and choose small things because if you choose small components well even if the break then you can replace them with something else but if you choose like big honking systems that you know sort of absorb and everything you know within themselves then well you know your your odds of sort of fixing it later are get harder and harder so those are the things I can add yeah so I think it's all covered mostly I think the only point which I would add on is it primarily gets down still I think 90% of the work we do relational database and using analytics on top of that really solves the problem so that's again I think going back to his point I think for my analytics package standpoint and analytics tool standpoint I think it depends so when obviously I was in HP we would kind of pick up things like SAS SPS and others which would be probably a standard thing now being a startup again we would rely on a lot more on open source or be it R be it Python which really kind of things which we are trying to adopt and they work beautifully well and and the thing is where it works and they have to make the choice in a different form also like going back to certain things which are more real time or near real time that's where the non-traditional database concepts kind of become very important or even there are choices there also even are you doing the learning of the algorithm real time if not maybe certain traditional methods will probably work very well then the things like probably certain techniques especially when you're using techniques on unstructured data that's where probably a big way you to think about non-traditional databases but in general I think most of the things are kind of covered but using open source as far as possible in terms of what techniques are and others are the standard ones which you use for example do you want to add because your field is completely different from most of them yeah and I'll kind of keep this a little short we decided to go with a graph database simply because we are looking at a very sort of open world system where we're looking at data across several different contexts and very diverse data sources but again as a startup you know a lot of your technology decisions are made based on the problem that you need to solve on hand and your resources so we went with a virtual source stack one big reason it's open source we have a partnership with them so it it worked out that way so that's basically but for you know for traditional things like housekeeping we use you know regular you know my sequel databases or for you know when we do our auto-suggest on our UI we would use like an in-memory database or a tree so we you know we've been using a mixture of technologies using what best solves that problem at the risk of actually repeating and duplicating our data to some extent we've sort of tried to find the most economical way to solve this problem and you want to add you want to add yeah just a few things so on the analyst analytics stack here's what I'd suggest and if you've got it just start with Excel and if you need to go deeper go there on if you want to move to the programming side python seems to be emerging as a de facto standard mainly because of the power of its libraries numpy and nltk being on the forefront on the front end if you want to show it on the browser svg seems to be the de facto standard again mostly because it's vector as opposed to raster and you can zoom it d3.js seems to be the most powerful tool that's emerging today. Thank you very much I think hopefully that was useful for many of us so the next question is the most I think the most open which is not really discussed unless you are working in a large company or you're working in a startup facing everyday challenges so this very specific question I think which Naajot can answer in some way Rohit and Anand if you can also Jyadip I'm surely looking at you in terms of how do you basically when things break down if you are let us assume that majority of the people are using Hadoop stack of some kind whether pig or the hive or the customer in your case it would be something else no no no Jyot I think in your case if it is something else yeah the data cleansing or data basically because it involves the data flow data ingestion data processing and then data output so there is so it is not like a one one tool which does everything I think it's very open-ended questions but I think that that is a fairly open-ended question because part of the reasons why we built some of the tools that we built is to actually do exactly that right so now if the question becomes how do you debug and fix those tools then you do the exact same thing that you built those for right eat your own dog food but I think the basic answer always boils down to you know it's it's going to be an intelligence that you have to actually build into the system right not no no piece of software that you write right be it you know anything you write on top of a do be it anything right pig is going to be you know any easier to debug or fix than anything you wrote you know perhaps in Java two years ago or perhaps you're writing in Python or anything till you actually build some intelligence into it to spit out what those errors are right in terms of specifically how do you debug a Hadoop cluster I'm not going to venture into that here right I let the experts probably say take that because I might might get a few things wrong myself right but as far as sort of debugging or like so in paper is there like a flip card today I think they were mentioning they have a huge or they are building a framework where all events go from whenever things move within their system so do you have something yeah so we add that and that's the thing one of the things that was the biggest sort of there's event streams it gets over a hundred billion events a day is for monitoring that is intended to monitor the whole site right so now if and what we do is we we base it completely on custom instrumentation right we try to drive all of that into all of the sort of common instrumentation in a small set of libraries right but again it's based on instrumentation your applications have to tell you what's wrong before you'll know before that event stream the event stream itself isn't going to interpret that your application did something wrong or went into unsafe state till there's actually an event in that event stream right so part of the system that that I was talking about earlier today for command and control is to give us the capability across the site to sort of help us monitor debug solve problems in the site trace a transaction through the entire site correlate events as they happen across different layers that sort of make up an application right so so that is one of the systems we built and it's all based on custom instrumentation with primarily the common libraries infrastructure components driving most of that instrumentation but again there's I don't think there's a magic bullet if you're talking about just debugging applications right you either have to instrument them or you know you have to use if you're using Java for example perhaps you can use bytecode instrumentation which again you know you figure out at your scale if it will cause you a problem or not but there's there's only a finite set of techniques so yeah five minutes so sure I'll keep it short so on the hardwood side how do itself provides the if the mapper fails it you know allows you automatically does the you know relocation for the mappers but I agree with no just saying that you know the application has to be smart enough so if your application code is divided into components which is what Jati was also mentioning and each component can you know restart itself from this point where it not necessarily where it failed but you know from its starting point so you can maintain the consistency so if you design your application or the workflow or the jobs that you're going to either through uzi or whatever mechanism you have if you break it down in a way where if it fails say if there are a b c d d stage four stages if the stage B fails the stage B should be able to start itself from point where it actually picked up after a left that way you can allow you know that you know you don't have to run the monolithic job to start from point a to point d and there's no restart ability so I think in a design restart ability is the biggest thing because the Hadoop provides a lot of kind of a failure restart thing but not necessarily it always works great so and since now a lot of community are coming together and enhancing it but if you design your system in a way where it's restartable I think most of the problems will be solved and only small pieces will be restarted out in one monolithic because if you are reading a petabyte of there you don't want to keep reading again and again where you know that after one petabyte you generated a hundred terabyte and you're only going to work on a hundred terabyte plus one on the restart ability that's pretty key the other thing is to fail visibly in the sense let's say you've got a new product category that's been added you don't have the metadata reference data for that fine don't ignore it show it as an unknown category it's fine to handle all failures but it's also important equally to show that there has been a failure so that people can take action based on that it's only thing I died yeah I think the things that come to my mind it's humans who debug problems and human beings need logs so just log everything like log the heck out of everything I mean that's one thing I appreciated during my work life don't worry like there's enough space and and give people a way to retrieve logs I mean that's the number one thing that people uses internally used to ask for you know just don't build stuff just give me like whatever you've run a hundred tasks just give me a give me all the logs I mean I've got eyes I'm gonna figure out what went wrong I found the same thing on my assistant like all the Hadoop's assignments and stuff it's like give us a way to get get access to all the logs you know to figure out the problems the other thing that comes to mind is that I can add more you know in addition to what has already been said is that a lot of the problems are actually also caused by human beings it's not actually machine errors or chip failures or whatever thermals that are actually causing most of the problems most of the problems happen because people do stupid things so make your systems idiot proof right that's the other sort of cardinal rule of thumb prevent people from deleting your entire system prevent them from writing jobs that are going to not finish in like you know whatever like a few days don't let them log so much data that they don't allow any other data to come in and everything gets thrown out so what would they say trust but verify right something like that so like no don't trust anybody like just like you know when somebody is a user of a system put quotas on them make sure they don't exceed their quotas put those defenses up because if you don't then a bad user will you know impact everybody I think that's the key learning I think to put the quotas and implementing those quotas from the beginning itself I am sure it is across all the system so so while we are at it right so I just wanted to sort of counter one thing I think I agree with everything so we tell and a couple of my guys are here so they'll testify we tell people not to log everything I said like please don't log everything and don't log everything to everywhere right because that itself you know given the volume we run at given sort of the things we have to deal with that itself can cause problems and I think you recognized at the end I mean agreement I think like we've got exercise judgment here right but everything having like critical log like what Anand said right I mean if you if you're seeing something bad you know log it right I think but the problem actually I wanted to like follow up on what Anand said like I mean part of the issue is that okay so here's what happens right you hire a smart guy he like develop stuff he logs everything he follows advice and then he moves on right he moves to the another project another company and then nobody's looking at those logs right so so the very common error pattern is yeah we knew this was happening like we were not joining because we didn't have the joint here whatever like half the data was missing but like nobody was looking at the damn logs right so I really don't have like an a good answer to that I mean like the problem is you want to set up alerting but like false positives are like one of the biggest problems with any alerting system and like I haven't seen a good solution so yeah there are some unsolved problems so yeah it's a sticky point but I'll just take a half a minute I actually am a believer of that log as much as you can but filter it when you really want to process it filtering is cheaper on how to but if you miss the bus you cannot get that click back of the user click so I think according to me in digital space if you didn't log you missed an opportunity probably which is a high cost could be thanks so then we have come to the last question which I hope I can first address and if we have time that is just I guess we just out of the time should we stop just so I think the question is very straightforward it's basically when a business analyst at end of the day is trying to make a decision there is some kind of representation either it could be interactive representation or it is a static representation it could be derived from lot of data or it could be derived from lot of interaction of data itself so what has been your experience and I'm sure it varies across various places but since Anand is there and we are running out of the time we'll just request Anand to basically take up this one if there's one piece of advice I'd suggest when you are creating visualizations it's copy copy blatantly there are enough good visualizations out there just do a scan search for data visualizations you'll find enough examples that's more than enough if there's a second piece of advice that I'd offer then it is read Edward Tuft that's called TUFTE the person who sort of started data visualization as a revolution and sorry for those who couldn't hear the spelling is TUFTE Tuft his books are an amazing source beyond that just remember that the medium that you use to a good extent constraints the work that you do if you create your visualizations mock up in PowerPoint you're likely to be constrained by PowerPoint shapes if you create them Photoshop you're likely to be constrained by Photoshop styles paper and pen works just just fine so you may just want to do a design on paper and pen and see where that takes you one of the things sorry one of the things I would like to tell people is and you know and I agree with you as people think of an article and the tools is the more the charts the better it looks the dashboard loaded with pie and pie chart and the trend line and some heat map yeah yes it's it's beautiful it's beautiful does it tell you the story does it lead you to the question the answer that you're looking for I think if your dashboard or visualization does not tell you the story like you know the back of your t-shirt tells you the story then I think I don't know whether the visualization makes any sense so my question is pretty basic basically is there a best practice for storing data somewhat neatly in Hadoop for example say if a large log file that basically contains unstructured data but I can easily identify that there are ten different sets of unstructured data unstructured data of ten types so is it a good practice to like run that log file through a parser and then store it in ten different directories in Hadoop or should I all just dump that big file in a Hadoop directory and let Hadoop handle that I think your answer will ultimately depend I mean that the cardinal rule of the thumb is that if you are going to divide the data then like look at how fine-grained data you are creating right so I mean let's take the sort of the trivial or rather one extreme of the case okay there's a record per user am I supposed to store one like one file per user and obviously the answer is not right so there is always a you know it's a fine line right so you've got to look at how fine-grained your data sets you're producing if it's really really fine-grained go for a you know system that indexes like HBase or one of those kind of systems if they are still relatively coarse-grained then you know yeah split into directories make sure your directories are big enough so if because you're talking specific about logs right I assume that logs are not directly storable and queryable because that's that's not how you log so you have to think about how you're going to use your data going forward because if you store it in a certain way and you're going to use it in a different way and every time you land up reading all the data but and then filtering out some of the data then definitely didn't store it right if you can come up that most of the use cases that you have for using the data can be suffice with a particular design then that that is the right way to there's no thumb rule saying that store it like this like I said if you need look up kind of a thing that you got the log and you just need to show as a real-time analytics you just take it you know use whatever stream processing is and dump it in Edgebus and show it but definitely there's more so the performance difference like I said you know if you're getting every day say 50 terabyte of data right and you're storing it in a way where you'll only read say 100 gigabyte of it for whatever I say you are doing a geo analysis and most of your use cases is only geo analysis because you are a company which mostly talks about the geo part then you should store it you know from a geographic way of it because then you can produce independent analytics but if you are going to do a real-time analysis like okay you know how many clicks happen now tell me in five minutes what happened you know did this advertiser get this user and stuff like that and that you do a stream processing and store it in Edgepace right so it purely depends on what use cases you have otherwise it's all blob you know like someone was mentioning I think the data is boring to look at unless it tells a story this is not a question this is a classification as we understand you know there is a difference in the way we are looking the structural data and unstructured data in the industry now the question is that how what is the industry trend in terms of processing the unstructured data to the structured data could you repeat the question please the last part the what is the industry in terms of you know processing the unstructured data to structure data because the kind of unstructured data the volume is almost two times than of the structured data right so so unstructured data is used to derive some information which is human readable which has to be structured data so almost every data that you process when the output comes has to be structured so structured data is always there hundred percent of the time unstructured data is used to make sense so that you can look at like for example if you are getting messages like a facebook right they're unstructured but when you do the text analytics of it and you do a geography analysis and then you can make out that okay in california this particular theme is really popular right that's structured information right because then you can represent it but the thing is to you have to if you have unstructured data you have to process it and eventually a structured information has to come out of it one of the interesting things that's happening as a result of needing to process unstructured data is a conference between science and technology the kinds of unstructured data that we are processing are text video audio images and so on now sound engineers have been processing sound in various ways over the years and there are startups today for instance that take this spectrum audio spectrogram of songs and try and see if they can predict similar songs people are doing that for images using visual recognition techniques we're taking the techniques of linguistics which is as far removed from technology as one could imagine and applying that to I don't know extract structured data so what are these side effects or perhaps the drivers of structuring unstructured data is also this confluence or bringing in new insights from science from fairly diverse fields just a footnote hi I'm bringing you to NoSQL so in rdbms we had the I mean paradigm of normalization and entity relationship modeling do we have any such paradigm in NoSQL I mean how do we model our data in NoSQL I guess we'll have to take that question you want to take that question now or yeah please so I think in my profile I have mentioned that you know we have implemented star model on grid so what we did is the files that you have on grid you can call it as a table the information that you have within the file whether it's structured or you can write a udf to identify the columns so you call it as a column and then define the relationship between the two feeds if you have a one feed of a user another feed of an advertiser and for whatever reason you want to say find out whether this cookie clicked on this ad then you know that the link is a cookie between an advertiser and the and the user right so if you represent this as a meta information maybe it in your MySQL or anything you then do star modeling use any tool or you can write your own custom tool where you allow people to think in a dimension and metric form drag and drop in your UI internally it will know the which feeds and which columns it's talking about and how they need to be joined if it's a small file you do map side join or if it's a you know big file is on the reduce side so stuff like that then you can implement it but it's a hack it's not still like an sql fired and got the data it will still be a batch thing unless you implement something like a q1 hbis then then you can actually play with the java apis of the hbis can we take last two questions yeah so i'm basically trying to collect some open problems so but uh so what are some problems that are well solved in the batch processing or offline mode space for example like a typical hadoop kind of a scenario and would make sense in an online and a real-time scenario but are difficult to solve or you guys are basically grappling with things that you know problems that would really add value if solved in a real-time scenario but are hard to solve and maybe they are solved already in the batch processing space so yeah it's on so any any real-time analytics capability right i think it's it's uh early to say that real-time analytics of a very large data sets is solved right i think for example the problems like in the life sciences right in biology things like that finding those implicit relationships in real time i don't believe it you can call them solved yet like especially as as the data sets increase as the volume increases as sort of the dynamic nature of it increases right so i i want to keep adding more events while you're doing your processing and i want you to keep in keep revising the answer you give me right i don't believe that's solved yet and i think that's a common problem that everybody here here has that's sitting up here and i think most of you will have if you're sitting out there so one of the things i would like to actually ask question when when you know even in yahoo when people say i want real-time analytics i said what will you do with it and they say you know what it will help me to tell advertiser that you can bid here more i said how long does your system take to make that change and push it to the serving say it takes two hours i said you're not qualifying for real-time analytics the real-time analytics usually can help in more like a machine learning where for example if i'm generating a user value or you know constantly tracking how the user behavior is changing and for example suddenly i see some news broke out and interest started happening that is when if i have a real-time analytics and i can feed into the system which automatically can make sense out of it and pushes out more content to that user that is real-time analytics a human consuming real-time even if the numbers suddenly became 20 million 40 million users good deal big thing so what you know if you can't answer this question that you can take action on it and anand can watch more of it if analytics has no action related to it it's an information term it's it's core dump for program maybe i i think this is getting a little bit back online so i so okay so i was in rates camp i'm no longer there the reason is that when people pay for stuff they ask for stuff and whether it makes sense or not you have to give it to them right so when you're when you know when your advertisers come and they're paying you money for like because you show adgin tip clicks they say yeah google analytics does real-time analytics why aren't you doing it right what are you gonna say like take your money to google so we gotta do what customers say i've seen that even from like very small you know i remember talking to this online helped us company and they're serving mom and pop shops and their mom and pop shops are asking them for real-time analytics on their customer logs or whatever right i mean like yeah what are they going to do with it but you know they are paying customers you've got to give them what they want right the what was the second part so it's actually your question was open unsolved problems right so i i you know i think there's so much stuff going on in the world that it's very hard to claim that you know you actually know what's going on and that you know what's unsolved and not but the one thing that i you know if you develop this you know i would be a happy customer would be there are real-time systems that do very good job of processing low latency you know high number of like transactions per second kind of data and there are these bad systems that obviously you know can go chunking on six months worth of data i haven't seen a good abstraction or you know a layer that says um yeah you can define these real-time counters and if you tell me to actually back populate them six months i'm going to just do it for you you don't have to worry about it right so if somebody in the audience actually knows a classic system that does that i'll be very happy to know but where i've seen systems break down is the real the guys who build real-time systems they focus on the real-time part the guys who do the bad system they focus on the batch part and nobody tries to span like from the end users point of view i don't care right i just want my real-time analytics starting now and going back six months and please give it to me so that i mean that might be something interesting for you um some of you are suppliers of data analytics even though i'm from a different field i'm an educational researcher one of my toughest issues has actually been to get people to use data so as suppliers how do you generate a demand for your product i completely agree with you first of all i i i still think i think that's the fundamental problem that we face in a lot of businesses still where people really have a problem but cannot relate it back to data or analytics and how it can be solved so i think there's a huge education process at least as a startup most of the cases where we go and work i think we have to educate businesses saying you know if we do this this is the value that you can generate this is probably the final revenue enhancement or cost take out that coming by the way what goes in it is analytics so and this is the solution that we try to provide you so so it's an education process it can be easier if you can have some prototypes if you can visualize the whole thing and show it if you have some real case studies where you have done it makes it more real but uh going back to that whole thing i think even before you start a project many of the times you have to build in a visualization which explains to the client that how they can get value out of what they are trying to do and it probably also needs a change in mindset you're not getting them to consume data you want them to consume stories that's what's more interesting and that's therefore also a change in mindset for the people that are pushing this out don't push out data push out stories and that therefore means training on the part of the data analysts to learn how to tell stories the story could be numbers it could be a simple statement could be in pictures it could be even a table of numbers at the end of the day but let's just recognize that at the end of the day you don't want to say the chi-square value of this is 7.3 you want to say jack engel went up the hill something of that kind or down the hill i think we're done great thank you so much uh moving thanks for the panel that was excellent i'll see you guys tomorrow
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About Highway 10 - Israel's Border Road With Egypt (About)
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About Highway 10 / Kvish 10 - Israel's border road along that runs parallel to the Israel-Egypt border. Access to civilians is possible only at specific dates or by advance coordination with the Israel Defence Forces (IDF).
For more info:
https://www.google.com/search?q=%D7%9B%D7%91%D7%99%D7%A9+10&oq=%D7%9B%D7%91%D7%99%D7%A9+10&aqs=chrome.0.69i59l2j69i60l3.1226j0j7&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8
https://www.negevtour.co.il/harnegev/road10-2/
https://www.laderech.com/%D7%A8%D7%95%D7%90%D7%93-%D7%98%D7%A8%D7%99%D7%A4-%D7%91%D7%9B%D7%91%D7%99%D7%A9-10/
--
By: Daniel Rosehill
== Contact Information ===
For latest contact information:
https://www.youtube.com/c/DanielRosehillVideo/about
Social media and more:
https://www.danielrosehill.com
== Licensing / syndication / reproduction ==
Unless otherwise indicated, all videos I distribute through YouTube are licensed under the following Creative Commons license: Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0).
For the full license, see: https://bit.ly/ncnd4bycc.
| null | 2022-08-22T09:31:16 | 2024-04-24T00:17:11 | 506 |
ZQ8mE4KSFx4
|
Hey guys, welcome back to my YouTube channel. This is Daniel Rosal here. I've done a few videos on this channel today about my various border spotting escapades here in Israel. I've kind of had a fascination with borders ever since I was a kid. I went to Nicosia in Cyprus, which has a big and very prominent border running through it. And since then borders have kind of been of interest to me. They're also a good way to explore the kind of peripheral parts of Israel that folks often otherwise don't visit. If you are by any chance also interested in borders, check out my videos on Hunan Castle in the north of Israel, which is a really good place to see the Lebanese border, just about as close as you can get as a civilian, because that's considered a very, very tense hostile border. So the army for very good reasons doesn't let you go too close to the actual border, but you can see it. And you can also see it from Matullah, the northernmost town in Israel. You can get really, really up close to the fence there. So closely, you can see houses, cars and even his full of flags on the Lebanese side of the border. So it really makes an impression about how small this part of the world is. The one border I haven't done much exploration of is Israel's border with Egypt, which is, of course, Israel's southern border. It's a border that was fortified by a big fence. A number of years ago, and it's probably best known in Israel as, unfortunately, being the border through which there is a lot of human trafficking and drug trafficking less so since they built a big fence on it. But that is the border. It's located along the desert, literally. So it's a desert border with desert on both sides of it. And I heard from friends there is a road you can drive on during special occasions, let's say, when the army allows civilian traffic. And that is called Route 10 in Hebrew Kvish Esser. And I wanted to just do the short video for those who are thinking of doing this just to give a little bit of info in English, because there are lots of videos in Hebrew, mostly a few in English, driving on the border. But I wanted to just point folks in the right direction if you're interested in this sort of thing for an expedition. So the resources I found are really mostly in Hebrew. So you should, if you are interested in doing this and knowing when it's accessible, type into Google Kvish Esser and you will get a number of informational resources like this one from Negev Tours. This is a this is a crazy video. And this is showing what it is. It's basically a narrow road, typically used. It's every border in Israel, whether it's the Lebanese border or the Jordanian border has a road or the Gaza border or the de facto border with the West Bank typically has an army only road right next to the border. Typically, you can't go there as a civilian. There's signs saying army only. So Kvish Esser is one of those roads. You can see it's a little narrow track right by the border friends. But unlike the other borders of Israel, they army, I guess, because it's a relatively calm border, given that there is a peace treaty with Egypt. They do let civilians drive on it on specific dates. So there is lots of quite a decent amount of info about it here in Hebrew. They do warn that there aren't like gas stations for and is quite a long stretch of road through the desert. So you want to make sure you have a full tank of gas before going there. And you also need to check the dates. It's open in advance. So by searching for Kvish Esser, you should find these dates. These are the dates that the border road is open for, I believe, yeah, twenty twenty two and they give you a little elevation guide as well, as well as a phone number to call for the army department. So the deal is that you can drive on it during the dates. But if it's not in the dates, you either can't go or you have to ask specific permission for the army. I've no idea whether they give out these like exceptions easily. But there is a phone number there that you can contact. And they do actually answer the phone. I've called them and they'll even confirm the open dates with you as well. So they're pretty helpful. Here is another blog with some cool photos of the border road Kvish Esser. You can see an Egyptian army post on the Egyptian side of the border there. They're pretty distinctive looking as opposed to the IDF post. They have like different coloring and all that. And you can see it's just a little narrow road there with the border fence right in front of it. What else? Now the route of Kvish Esser, just for those curious, I'm going to do a little bit of a Google touring here. And just just to see, show you where it goes, because they don't always open the whole road at one time. So sometimes it's sectioned, so it's useful to know the geography. So this is a last in the south of Israel. This is Tabba border, land border crossing going into Sinai, which is an interesting experience to cross there. And coming up northbound from Elat, you have Route 12. You actually have to kind of zoom in to see where Route 10 starts, right? It's this little white road here and there's a junction here. I'm sure it has a name. I'm not quite sure what the name is, but you can see 12 forks off to 10. And 10 you really have to zoom in to be able to even see the road because it's just a little dirt track, essentially. 10 then begins to hug the border heading westward. Now, if you turn on a navigation layer, we might be able, it might be a little bit easier to see and you can see that it's a desert. And then it continues all the way north, north, north, north, north. You can see Route 10 here and I'm going to zoom out a bit so this doesn't take forever. The only really town there's a monument here. The first town you're going to hit is Nitsana, which should be coming into view. And there's a road on the Egyptian side of the border as well. You can see the Taba Rafa Road. Rafa is in the Gaza Strip. So it comes a little bit away from the border. There's a little bit of kind of skirting and then we're right back to the border itself. Nitsana, I believe there is a land border there, a land border crossing, but it's not in regular use. So Taba is for commercial goods. Taba these days is the only land border crossing between Israel and Gaza. Here we go. And here is Nitsana. So that's the only really sort of notable town on the Israeli side. I don't think there's really much on the Egyptian side. And then if we can continue further west, north, yeah, northwest, just for a little bit longer, you'll eventually hit the fence with the Gaza Strip. This is the Gaza Strip and Keren Hashalom. And at this point, 10 ends and it turns into right two, three, two going north along the Gaza border. And this is a checkpoint here. So you can continue past this past this junction. So that is a return for those interested in a bit of less typical off the beaten track exploration in Israel. If you are interested in doing this, you should I use your Hebrew and put in 10 into Google and then make sure that you check the dates. That it's open. If you want to double check, you can call the army. Or if you're looking for permission to go in during during something else, check the army and pay attention to all those notifications regarding the fuel, because probably the last thing you want to happen is to run out of petrol or gas while you're on a tiny army patrol road in the middle of the desert, in the middle of the summer. That does not sound like fun to me. If you're thinking about doing this expedition, I hope this was useful. I am doing this expedition again at a unspecified point in the future. And I will be posting some videos from the little trip. Thank you guys for watching more videos for me on the usual miscellany of subjects coming soon to this YouTube channel.
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Town Meeting - April 30, 2014 (Part 1)
|
This video was created in coordination with Arlington Community Media, Inc. in Arlington, MA. ACMi is dedicated to providing an electronic forum for the free exchange of information and ideas which reflect the talents, skills, interests, concerns, and diversity of the Arlington, Massachusetts community.
To find out more visit: https://www.acmi.tv
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/acmitv/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/acmitv
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/arlingtoncommunitymedia/
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"Arlington",
"ACMI",
"ACMi News",
"Arlington Public News",
"Arlington Community Media",
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"APN",
"local news",
"massachusetts",
"middlesex county",
"public access television",
"hyperlocal news",
"community television",
"citizen journalism",
"journalism"
] | 2019-08-22T00:46:35 | 2024-02-05T15:55:13 | 5,514 |
ZqpAFXxfOW0
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You see the light, what so proudly we hailed, At the twilight's last gleaming, Whose broad stripes and bright stars, through the poor the ramparts we watched, Were so gallantly streaming, And the rocket's red bursting in air, O say does that star-spangled banner yet wave. Raise your right hand. I will participate fairly and will fully evaluate all matters before town meeting. And vote in the best interests of the town. I support free speech and will treat others with mutual respect and will conduct myself in a civil manner that is becoming of an elected town meeting member. I do solemnly swear that I will faithfully and partially perform the duties incumbent upon me as a town meeting member of the town of Arlington. In accordance with the bylaws of town manager act and the general laws of the Commonwealth, so help me God. Thank you very much, Mr. Byrne. Thank you, Mr. Moderator. It is requested that members of the board of selectmen and elected officials of the town, town manager, department heads of the town and staff, superintendent of schools and staff, committees, commissions and boards of the town, county man regional vocational technical school district committee and superintendent. Members of the electronic voting committee and staff, members of the general court representing Arlington. And also any consultants who have been retained to work for the town relative to articles to be acted on by this meeting. Representatives of interested parties of article one and representatives of news media be permitted to sit within the special town meeting enclosure. All in favor? Aye. We're doing this because we're now in the special town meeting. We're not going to do it every night just to wonder what we're doing. Constable's return. Madam clerk, do you have reason to believe that this was appropriately called by the board of selectmen and that the constable made a return of the service on the warrant in accordance with the laws? Yes, she does. Mr. Byrne. Thank you, Mr. Moderator. It is moved that if all the business of the meeting as set forth in the warrant for special town meeting is not disposed of at this session when the meeting adjourns, it adjourns to Monday, May 5th, 2014, at 8pm. All in favor? Aye. Okay. I have an announcement or two. Any precincts that we're supposed to organize at 745 that have not please try and organize at the break. We have precincts one and two outside the clerk's office, three and four, the corridor next to the parking lot, five, the corridor next to the town garden, six, the lobby outside the front auditorium, and seven in the corridor next to the town garden. So if you guys get together and organize that, it'd be appreciated. Turn your sheets into this Luccarelli when you're done. Remember on Monday night, Mr. Dice got to rise up with a point of order saying that his clicker wasn't working, it wasn't showing a yes or no vote. It's true. We didn't capture any data on his clicker. We think the problem was, was that he voted too soon. So what'll happen is when I confirm with Mr. Flynn that the voting computer's ready, some people were starting to vote at that point. Now what happens when I, when I press the clock, he actually starts the computer and that erases any votes that were pressed on the clicker before I called for the vote and started the clock. So I don't know if that was actually Mr. Dice's problem or not. Yeah. Yeah. Did it have the data? Yeah, it didn't show a vote. It was a blank data box. So if you go back and look, on Mr. Dier's amendment, you had no data. So we didn't capture it. So we think we, by voting too soon, your vote gets lost. It just gets zeroed out. So wait till I call for the vote, start the clock, just like, you know, just like the game of Simon says, wait till Simon says go. The vote, me saying vote now or vote or something of that nature is the go to go ahead and start voting. We don't want to lose anybody's vote by that happenstance again. So let's kind of, we're going to work this out. We're getting it down well. Yes, sir? No, no, only the votes that are early. You could, I can say Mr. Flynn is the computer ready. He says yes. And I say, okay, we're ready. Now I didn't say vote yet and I haven't pressed the clock, but you could be jumping the gun and pressing one. And then not press it again. When he hits the button, it's going to zero out all the boxes and your vote will not be counted. You have to only vote after I say go and hit the clock. So at 20 second voting, we go. Vote early and often. Not early, just vote often. Yes, sir. I'm going to refine the way we're going to work it. I'm going to go a little slower. I may have been too fast. Sometimes I do go fast. I'm going to slow down a little and explain how we're voting and then make sure everybody gets it. So we have the smooth. Community Preservation Act folks put something on the back table. They wanted to put it on your chairs. I said, no, that's for motions only, but they wanted me to point out there. There are information back there and don't forget to go pick them up. And we had a 99.5% return rate on our clickers last week, last Monday. The person brought it home. We tracked her down and she brought it tonight. So everybody remember to throw it into the box. Turn your phone off. And let's get going. Article one. Are there any reports of committees? Any announcements or resolutions? Reports of committees. Yes, sir. Ms. Howard has a resolution or announcement. Thank you, Mr. Moderator. Jane Howard from Precinct 10 and a member of Vision 2020's public art committee. On Sunday, there is a program at Monotomy Rocks Park right in the front field that you enter from Jason Street called Art Rocks Monotomy. Sunday will be the opening reception for this sculpture and installation. And it will be from three to five and we'd like you all to come. There will be music and goodies as well as the artists who have made the installations and will walk about with you to explain their work. It will be up until the 26th of May. So it starts on Sunday with a reception from three to five and it will be open every day. Another public art project that will have its third year is cheerful as you sit. One takes and repurposes a chair and we try to sell it. And this year it will occur in only one place. It will be on the Jefferson Cutter Green. It will be from Friday, July 18th to Sunday, July 20th, just three days. And we hope you will all come and consider repurposing a chair. Last year we had 76 and it creates money for the public art committee. Thank you very much. Thank you, Howard. Not yet, Mr. Byrne. Announcement? Well, three people have announcements. Okay. Yes. I just want to remind you. Name, address. Sorry. Annie LaCorte, 48 Chatham Street, Arlington, Mass. Precinct 15. I just want to remind you about the event that I put all the flyers on your chairs about on Monday night, which is the tech initiative showcase at the high school this coming Monday from 6 to 8 p.m. It is an event sponsored jointly by the Arlington Public Schools and the Arlington Education Foundation to showcase all the exciting things happening in the schools, both in terms of students learning things like programming and how to use technology and also teachers using technology effectively for pedagogical efforts in order to enhance the kids learning in the schools. And there will be a lot of demonstrations of how new technologies are being used by teachers and of the kinds of technology the kids are learning. The Arlington Education Foundation is specifically started an initiative to raise money to support these efforts in the schools. We raised $50,000 for a lab at the high school so that programming could be offered for the first time in a long time. And we're now working on $50,000 for similar efforts to put tools into the Odyssey Middle School. So I'd love you all to come if you can and get excited and hopefully consider contributing to the effort. Thank you. Thank you. Pam. Yep. White shirt. Yep. Thank you, Mr. Moderator. Sherry Barron, Precinct 7 and a member of the Human Rights Commission. We passed out a pink flyer on Monday night and there's some in the back tonight. And we want to invite you to the Wintermoor-Robbins House on Sunday where we're going to be celebrating the 10th anniversary of marriage equality in Massachusetts. The reception is from two to four. We're going to show a brief clip of a film that Glenn Koenig took 10 years ago and on the steps and inside of Town Hall. And we're going to have two speakers, both of whom got their licenses that day and subsequently married. And a question and answer period and light refreshments. So we hope you can all make it. Thank you. Thank you, Ms. Barron. Sir. Good evening. Christian Klein, Precinct 10 and a board member of the Friends of Robbins Farm Park. This Saturday, the May 3rd at 9 a.m., we are having a park clean. We do this every spring and every fall to go around the park, repair things that need repair, tidy things up. We encourage everyone to bring what I refer to as an article of an aquarium revolt, a fork or a rake or a shovel or something. And come out and help us clean. We'll have refreshments. And as a bonus in the spring, any family that comes out and helps clean, we will give a free kite. And Saturday afternoon, we have a kite day at the park. So if you can't make the clean for some reason, come out and fly a kite in the afternoon. Thank you. Thank you, sir. Any other nonsense resolutions? Mr. Tosti. I just want to make an announcement about Minuteman. As you are aware, the superintendent of Minuteman has to reach 16 different towns and their town meetings. So we've scheduled next Wednesday, May 7th. We will be taking both Minuteman, the Minuteman article on the amendments and the Minuteman budget up next Wednesday. And we will emphasize that he needs to have his report out to us next Monday for us to review. Thank you. Thank you, sir. Mr. O'Connor. Although the moderator, James O'Connor, precinct 19, your assistant moderator, Mr. Leone did speak on Monday night about the email listserv. There seems to still be some confusion. Even the moderator tried to send through some links today. They went through tonight because some people have more than one address that is connected to the email listserv. The way to go about getting on the listserv is to go to the town website, go to the town meeting section. There's a section that says add yourself to the list. You can then include yourself. You list your precinct number and your name. And then once I check it on the list, because that gives you then the privilege of being able to post to the list. I then moderate the item and submit it through. There have been some posts that have not been on your chairs yet. There was some very good information last fall when the manager submitted some requests to post about the town plan. There was this spring some information from the principal's office, the high school about tours that was before town meetings started. And already there has been information provided by Karen Cove about the position reclassification. That article will come up later at town meeting, but in order to be able to review it ahead of time, pursue any questions you might have an increase, it gives you a chance. It also gives you a chance, as those of you that have seen, Mr. Harrington produced on Friday some very healthy information for us about the FINCOM report. In addition to that, there was some substitution article motions. So that please add yourself to the list. To date we have about 165 members. It's very simple. It's not for debate. There was an item that I did reject earlier this week because it suggested that we might want to have three minutes to vote rather than the 20 seconds. Because that would come up in article 11 during the meeting itself that was not posted. But anything that is short and sweet to the point about emotion, that's what the purpose is so that we're all aware ahead of time of what's going on. Thank you for your consideration. Mr. Hanner? Mr. Helmuth, did you have an announcement or resolution? Eric Helmuth, precinct 12 and chair of the electronic voting study committee. Just a quick addition to the moderator's admonishment about voting early. If you do accidentally vote early and jump the gun, once the moderator says vote, you can vote after that. So you can press your handset. You're not locked out from voting. Early and often. Just not early. Okay, any other announcements or resolutions? Okay, have any reports or committees? Mr. Byrne? I move that the board of second support be received. Okay, thank you. Mr. Tosti? I move that the report of the finance committee, which was in your original orange booklet, be received. Second, okay. Any other reports? Al, you're supposed to move that the recommended votes contained in respective reports and boards before the meeting without further motion. Do you make that motion? Move that the recommended votes contained in the respective reports of the finance committee and the board of selectmen be before the meeting without further motion. All in favor, please say yes. Opposed? Yes. It is so these reports are now before us. Move that article three be laid upon the table. All we have to article three. Article one reports and boards. Article one be laid upon the table. Okay, that brings us to article two. Homeland legislation request for license of all alcohol licenses. Mr. Byrne? Thank you, Mr. Moderator. Steve Byrne, voter selectmen. So tonight we are requesting that you support this warrant. Currently the board has 15 all alcohol licenses and we have given all of them out. So we are requesting five more. As many of you know, Arlington's restaurants have really flourished over the past several years. And I think that allowing us to give out five more will really help their continued success as well as the success of all of the other businesses in our business district. If this warrant does pass, it will then go to the legislature as home rule legislation. And then we'll replace upon the ballot for the residents to vote on. Thank you. And I hope you will join us in supporting it. Mr. Leonard? Thank you, Mr. Moderator. John Leonard, precinct 17. Mr. Moderator, at this time, I want to be possible to ask Chief Ryan to join me up here, so I might be able to ask him for some comments and get to a question, please. Well, you asked the question and I asked who I want to answer. Love clock. So you got a few minutes extra free seconds from. Go ahead, ask your question. The question I have, Mr. Moderator, is lately we have seen in certain situations that I'll just come right out and say it, when an individual has been stopped from drinking alcohol and driving, that individual, I guess, can be brought back or questioned in regards to where was the last place you were at as if to keep further the investigation. I guess what I'm curious about is, is this something within the state and I wanted to have the Chief elaborate on it for a couple of minutes in regards to, is this something we might face in the town of Allenton? Is it in place all across the state? How does this mechanism work? And basically to inform town meeting that with the granting of these licenses over and over again, it's something that we might face later on down the road that these establishments might be called upon to answer questions in regards to the individual who just left you. Okay, Chief Ryan, can you address the authority of the police to question a suspected drunk driver where they got intoxicated? Yes, thank you. Good evening, Mr. Moderator. Good evening, town meeting. That happens upon conviction. The judge who's overseeing the disposition of a criminal conviction for drunk driving will ask the offender where they consumed their last drink of alcohol, whether it was at a private residence or a licensed establishment. If, in fact, it was a licensed establishment, it causes the court to notify the licensing authority, which in Allenton, as you know, is the board of selectmen. And then the selectmen, along with the police department, can then watch to see if there are any trends with any licensed establishments and if there are, take some preventative measures. I'm happy to report thus far we've not seen any trends with our licensed establishments. Thank you, Chief. Thank you. That ends your question, sir. Thank you, Mr. Moderator. Mr. Steve Harrington. Stephen Harrington, Precinct 13. I just have a question on the, I've seen in the treasuries report before, the amount of money that we collect from, I guess, a meals tax. And the reason to get five new licenses is to expand the restaurant business in town. And I'm wondering if anyone, Mr. Moderator, could answer whether or not we've seen an increase in the tax revenue over some time period from opening all these restaurants. At some point, we'll probably just be taking business away from different restaurants, but I'm just curious if we're actually seeing some economic activity from all these licenses that we're doing. Mr. Gilligan, can you answer that question? Thank you, Mr. Moderator. Stephen Gilligan, Town Treasurer. The specific answer to Mr. Harrington's question is yes. We have seen an increase in both meals and lodgings tax in the town. The meals tax does include the consumption of alcohol. The Town Manager's Fiscal Year 2014 report has that information in it. I actually, in trying to be prepared for certain questions, brought copies of certain pages. That was not one of the pages I brought this evening. My apologies. But yes, we have seen an increase every single year since cities and towns have been getting those taxes turned into local communities. Thank you very much. Thank you, Mr. Moderator. Yes, sir. Mr. Fisher. Andrew. Yes. Mr. Fitzgerald, did you have a position point? Tom Fitzgerald, precinct 11. I'm just curious. It wasn't that long ago that we didn't have restaurants with liquor in them. And the other night, we're wondering whether we're going to put in marijuana dispensaries. When's enough enough? I mean, it seems to me 15 restaurants in the town, Allington-Size, with full liquor permits is enough. But I'm curious to know, Mr. Moderator, how many alcohol-related incidents we've had in the past year and how many marijuana-related incidents we've had? Could anybody give me an answer to that? Chief Ryan, can you come up with a quick answer on that? Frederick Ryan, Chief of Police, good evening, Fitz. I don't have that data exact. I can tell you from reading all of the police reports and sort of my anecdotal sense of the situation is it has not been problematic. Most of the restaurants are serving the people dining and having a fine meal, and we have not had any hot spot problems at any of our licensed liquor establishments. And part of that goes to our Health and Human Services and the Police Department work to train and be preventative with the alcohol service. Thank you, Chief. Thank you, sir. Mr. Carmen. Mr. Berger. No, Mr. Helmuth. Sorry. Eric Helmuth, Precinct 12. My question relates to alcohol outlet density, which is a public health principle. And my question is, does the local or state public health authority have a recommendation for the number of alcohol outlets that is, well, for lack of a better word, healthy for a population of the size of a ton of Arlington? And if so, would the proposed increase fall within that recommended limit? Would you know that, Ms. Planning Director? Carol, would you know that answer? No. OK. Eric? Christine? Where's Christine? She's hiding. Christine, do you have that answer? No. I don't know if anyone actually knows. No, no. I just wanted to know. Well, I don't know. Steve, can we give that a shot? I apologize. This is a good example of a question you should ask in advance and to give them some time to prepare. The chairman has a question. By the ABCC, I believe it is 61 for Arlington's density. 61 would be the maximum cap? Yes. For outlets, and this would bring us to? This will bring us to 20. Plus the stores, which is? This is just for all alcohol restaurant licenses. Thank you very much. Ms. Mahan? Diane Mahan, town meeting member, precinct 14, also a member of the Board of Select. And just for my colleagues here on town meeting certification, I just want to let you know that one of the motivating factors for this was in the beginning of 2014, I want to say in January, the Board received a piece of correspondence from an Arlington resident. I can see his name, but I don't want to say it in case I am not remembering correctly. But he's an Arlington resident. He is a chef currently in Somerville in Boston, who inquired that he was looking at a property in Arlington that he would like to open a restaurant. That was sort of, as I said before, the motivating factor that we discussed. Is this something we could allow? That's when we realized we're maxed out at 15. Going with ABCC practices, which I worked for years ago with the Mayor's Office of Consumer Affairs in Boston and ABCC, we usually go in increments of five. The Chairman previously stated by density how many were allowed. So besides the fact that we have no more to give out at 15, and we're going for an additional five, we do have a request from an Arlington resident who is a chef that would like to have this as an adjunct to a future possible business here in Arlington. Thank you so much. Thank you, Mayor. Mr. Wagner? Thank you, Mr. Moderator. Carl Wagner, Precinct 11. I came to this meeting tonight from the wonderful Teriah Restaurant, where I had a large sake, which was great. And I had it with my dinner, which also was great. And since I grew up in this town, it was a dry town then. I think one of the reasons restaurants succeed here now is that many of them have liquor licenses. However, I'm concerned that I don't go back to my college days of just having bars in Arlington. So Mr. Moderator, is there anybody who can say, does Arlington now allow the opening of bars? Would this sort of thing we're expanding upon or are we still basically keeping to restaurants with liquor? Well, I've got three people raising their hands. Doug, can you answer that? Doug Heim, Town Council. I hope everybody can hear me tonight. The answer is that this is a very limited expansion. It doesn't affect that in any way, shape or form. It's only limited not only to all alcohol licenses at restaurants but all the other regulations still exist that you have to have a convic in order to serve this type of alcohol in that type of setting. Mr. Moderator, might I ask to the appropriate person, could I open a bar tomorrow in Arlington with appropriate licensing if I wanted to? No. No. Doug, you have to speak right into the mic. You're tall. No. Thank you. Thank you. I guess I support the idea that restaurants that serve dinners or lunches in Arlington should have the right to have alcohol on their tables. Thank you. Thank you. Sean, have anything? Sean? Sean Arlington, precinct 15. From what I'm reading, to make sure I have this correct, Mr. Moderator, this isn't about us saying that we want five more restaurants to be able to have liquor. We don't want to be able to have a discussion on it or be able to have the residents decide for themselves. So we're not actually choosing to, let's go ahead with it right now. We're basically furthering the debate, am I correct? We're not granting them tonight. We're just going to put it on the ballot for the folks to vote on. So basically right now with the concerns some people have, I would say right now all we're doing is furthering the debate. We're making sure that we can have a discussion on it. I know that some of my neighbors were concerned about this. So being concerned, I said, you know, it allows for us to talk about it as a town and see whether or not we want to go ahead with this. I mean, to quote 1776, I've never heard of something so controversial it couldn't be talked about. So I'd say if you do have concerns about it, that's great. Let's vote on the ballot for this. Let's have all the residents have a say on it. It's worth the discussion and it'll be a healthy one. Thank you. Thank you, sir. John Warden. Thank you, Mr. Moderator. John Warden, precinct 8. Well, as a couple previous speakers have referenced, those have been around for a while. Remember a time when you couldn't get a drink in Arlington unless you got invited to the Legion or the Knights of Columbus or somewhere like that where you could. But some very enterprising members of our community, one of whom Ms. Barron spoke earlier this evening was Roger Barnaby, had the idea of promoting licenses for wine and beer and that was the alternative. Under the state law, you can have one such facility for every thousand people so that would have been, you know, we could have 40 places in Arlington which would be a few too many. But they had this idea of the wine and beer licenses and that worked very well. That is what brought the restaurant industry to Arlington is we had all these restaurants opened up. They could serve wine and beer which, frankly, I think is all you need with a meal. And then they liberalized the law, or this meeting did, so that you didn't have to have 50 seats. You could have, you know, wine and beer at the three table restaurant theoretically. So that's really what got the restaurant thing going. Then somebody said, well, we got to have the hard stuff too. And so we started with five. And then we got 10. And now we got 15. And so, you know, and now they're asking for 20. You know, that's half as many as we have if we had just adopted the state law which we used to have to vote on every year in the ballot and we always turned it down. So I suggest that maybe enough already. We have, you know, the gentleman early asked the question, could I open a bar room? And the answer was legally no. Well, I was in a restaurant, one of Arlington's many fine restaurants, 15 fine restaurants that have all alcohol licenses, I might say. And I won't say which one the other night. And there's only a couple of us at tables because it was late. But there were quite a jolly crowd sitting around the bar. Now, I don't know that they were all having a late dinner. It seemed to me it was a pretty liquid meal. But be that as it may, I would say, you know, if you could, if they would promise this chef this nice fella from Somerville wants to open a restaurant, I mean, he could, this Arlington resident who wants to open a restaurant. I mean, he could serve wine and beer and it seems to me that would get him going. But if somebody would undertake to open one that had, you know, maybe reasonable prices and enough lights he could read the menu and a noise level that was somewhat below a leaf blower at 10 feet, then maybe I could be persuaded. But otherwise, I think, you know, let's sort of stop at this point. And the other point is these 15 people who have set up these restaurants and are serving this alcohol with meals, of course, you know, should, is it fair to them to bring in more competition? You know, they've set up here, they've invested a lot of money building their facilities and, you know, they're trying to, they're trying to make living. Suddenly you're going to, you're going to increase the competition by 30%. That doesn't seem entirely fair to me. So I would suggest that we don't take this additional step. Thank you. Mr. Deist. John. John Deist, precinct 13. I, my wife and family were here and I were here when there was no liquor or beer in any restaurant in the town. The town was like a desert. It was truly sad. And when Ms. Baron and Roger Barnaby finally were able to prevail in town meetings so that we did have wine and liquor in the town, this enormous business flourished here. We are known now for our restaurants. Now, the previous speaker spoke of competition. There's nothing better than a competition to make for good restaurants in the town. Look at New York City. There's gigantic competition in New York City. I think myself that the selectmen have done an excellent job so far of managing this process. And I think we should put it before the voters and let the voters look at what's happened to the town and I'd be willing to bet that it's a prevailing yes. Thank you very much. Thank you, sir, Mr. Corbett. Right there in the back, too, from the back. Isn't that you? Yep, you just turned your head. You had your hand up. Hey, dude, do you want to speak? Yeah. Yep. Did you have your hand up? Yeah. Yeah, you're up. Mike McCabe. I'm sorry, Mike. Michael McCabe, precinct 2. I stand to terminate all debate on article 2 and all matters before it. Okay, we have a motion to terminate debate on article 2 and all matters before it. All in favor, please say yes. Really, let's try this again. All in favor, please say yes. Yes. Opposed, say no. No. My opinion is a two-thirds vote. We have now the force to recommend a vote of the board of selectmen on article 2 and a special town meeting. All in favor, please say yes. Yes. Opposed? No. Mike? No. You want to use the click? We have four people vote. What's that? Okay. Doug wants to get a recommended vote. All right. So, Mr. Flynn, are you ready with your machine? Now, again, we're recommended vote of the board of selectmen. Once I say vote, you can vote. Number one is yes. Number two is no. Three is abstained. I just got into old habits voting yes and no. Okay. So, vote. Vote. Okay. Here we go. Lock it down. 187 in the affirmative. 22 in the negative. The article passes. That's a positive vote. And I so declare it. That brings us to article 3. Recommended vote of finance. Amendments of 2014 budgets. We have a recommended vote of the finance committee for $15,000 for AYCC. $43,000 for the Edburn arena. Anyone want to address this? Or anyone have any questions about this article? Okay. Now, since no one does, let's just take a voice vote. All in favor, please say yes. Yes. Opposed? It's unanimous vote. And I so declare it. That closes article 4. It brings us to article 3. It brings us to article 4. Appropriation 2014 collective bargaining. A recommended vote of the finance committee for 2.75% general wage increase $89,000. Mr. Carmen. Thank you, Mr. Moderator. Dean Carmen precinct 20. A few questions. So the article says it's a 2.75% general wage increase for the patrolmen. And then in the comment it says with this wage action, all unions are now under contract due to June 30, 2015. So what's the increase for just 2.75 one year, two years, 2.75 each year? Mr. Chapter Lane as the bargaining official. Adam chapter Lane town manager. So the vote tonight is for the FY 14 piece of the contract. This contract though extends the patrolmen to be uniform with all the other units that were voted on last year. So it does represent a 2.75% increase as of July 1, 2013, as well as a 2.75% increase as of July 1, 2014. And then the contract will expire on June 30, 2015. And then just as a refresher, when we say all unions are now under contract, I think we voted on a lot of these last year. Correct. So what was the general wage approval last year? Do you remember like the range of settlements? They were all that figure. 2.75. Okay. And then when you say all unions this includes the school? It does not. It does not. In terms of that figure. Well, no, when you say all unions are now under contract, does the school under contract? The school is under contract through the same duration. Okay. Ladies and gentlemen, if you just indulge me for one second, I asked those questions because and I'm going to try to stay within the scope of the article, but I will wonder slightly on this one. It was a small bit of what I'm going to call a setup question. Later on tonight and later on this in town meeting, we are going to vote on the FY 2015 budget. If you go to your FY 2015 budget, we are going to be entering the year after the three-year plan. So year four after the plan. If you go to your budgets and you go down to the second solid line, you go two lines up, you'll see the word personnel. Oh, I'm so sorry. Page D1. D1? D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. D1. 4%, you're doing something else besides bringing back all the people. But that is a discussion that we're going to have later on in this meeting. But I wanted to point it out tonight, because one of the things I think becomes very difficult is we have all of these numbers and all of these articles, and they're flowing back and forth, and it's very difficult to keep your head wrapped around what's going on. So I just wanted to point out that when we get to that later on, I'm probably going to reference that. I just wanted to, in a few nights, lay it at my basis. Thank you. Mr. Jamison. Thank you, Mr. moderator. Gordon Jamison, precinct 12, while we're on that subject, the 2.75, am I correct, that does not include reclassifications, steps, and longevity? Mr. Chaplain. Adam Chaplain, town manager, that is correct. Okay. So that's part of the difference. The second part of the difference is I happen to go through the budget before coming to the meeting tonight, because we are going to get to it pretty soon, and I, as long-term members know, I pay attention to these things like Mr. Karman. There are a few places where modest staffed increases have been made, and I found that most of those to be very appropriate for the services we're being provided. That's all. Bye. Thank you very much, Mr. Deist. John Deist, precinct 13, and a member of the Finance Committee. I'm here to support Dean Karman and what he said just a moment ago, and on, again, on page D1, you go far off to the right column, which is called FY 2020. You see at the bottom there, $12,834,792 in parentheses. That's a negative number. That's what we're going to have to go for in terms of an override at about that time. So along with Dean and a number of, and probably most of the rest of the Finance Committee, we are fretting about the fact that we are consistently going well beyond the 2.5% that is allowed by law year after year after year. I don't know what the answer is, but we're going to have to address it somehow. Thank you very much. Mr. Tosti. I agree with the comments that both of my colleagues on the Finance Committee made, and this goes up to 2015. I just want to remind you that at that last five years of contracts, two of them had 0%. So if you average them out over a period of time, they're, I think, a fairly modest increase. But starting next year, especially with the low inflation, the manager and the superintendent and school committee are going to have to bargain very tough on that to maintain reasonable personnel costs. But I just want you to look at the whole last five years as opposed to just one year. Thank you, sir. Mr. Harrington, Stephen? Stephen Harrington, Precinct 13. I didn't know this was going to come up tonight, so, but I'm glad it did. Because if you look down at the same page, D1, you look at items C and D, pensions and insurance, that's pensions and healthcare. So those are the benefits. So we just heard about salaries, but now look at the benefits line, 5.92%, 4.5%. When you look at the costs of employees, and you see these are costs that are what I call forever costs. And so when you see an increase in a forever cost, you really have to pay attention. So the cost of our employees isn't just the personnel costs at 4%, 40% more of the costs of those employees are in their pension and healthcare costs. And you're seeing not 4% increases, you're seeing almost 6% increases. Thank you, Mr. Moderator. Thank you, sir. Mr. Wagner? Thank you, Mr. Moderator. Carl Wagner, Precinct 11. I move the question and all associated matters. We have a motion to debate on the article and all matters underneath it. For our two-third vote, all in favor, please say yes. Yes. Opposed? No. In my opinion, it is a two-third vote. Well, everybody seems to like the clicker, so we're going to use it again. Mr. Flynn? Ready? Okay. Go ahead and vote. We already terminated the debate. We already voted that. We were voting on the article. Did you all not understand that? You got three seconds left to vote. Quickly vote on the article. Time's up. Did you all understand we were voting on the article? Yes. Okay. Okay. I thought since I terminated the debate, but I'll do that next time. We have 194 in the positive, 17 in the negative. It's a positive vote on the article, and I so declare it, that's article 4. Now we're moving on to article 5. Mr. Tosti? We had originally recommended no action on this article because we were going to take care of this in the capital budget and the annual town meeting. However, because of a number of factors with the sub-bids coming in, we might have to take action on this, but we won't know about it until May 8th when the final bids come in on the contract. Therefore, in order to have the most flexibility, I'm going to recommend to you that we table this article, and then when we get to the end of the special town meeting, I'm going to ask that we adjourn the special town meeting rather than dissolve it, adjourn it to May 12th when we will have the final numbers on the bids, and we can determine whether we're going to vote no action on this or we're going to have an amount of money in this. So at this point, I make a motion to table this article 5. I have a motion to table. In favor, please say yes. Yes. Opposed? Okay. The motion, it is tabled. That would bring us to article 6, appropriation of peer school elementary school repair. The finance committee recommend to vote for $25,863 as stated. So seeing if anyone up front wants to address it. No, Mr. Leonard, you have Mr. Leonard, you are recognized. Thank you, Mr. moderator, John Leonard, precinct 17. Mr. moderator, I wonder, my first question would be for the benefit of the town meeting, could we have the nuts and bolts of an explanation of what the actual municipal building insurance fund is and does? We have insurance on our buildings, but we have a deductible. I believe it's $100,000 deductible. So the building insurance fund is for us to cover all the deductibles if they take place. So in this case, the $25,863 falls below that deductible. It's our responsibility. So we're asking to transfer the money from the building insurance fund to fund these repairs. Is there any kind of legislation or hearing or movement going on as of right now as to an investigation of the cause and action to be taken in regards to the pipes and the damage done to the school? Is it under any kind of discussion, legislation wise? Adam, you still want anybody? Adam chapter lane town manager. So the cause of the problem was a faulty drive on the heating system and that faulty drive and the connection to the larger HVAC system. It's since been repaired. The problem was identified, repaired. There was no one we could go after and there was no warranty that we could go after, but we did identify the source of the problem and repair it. According to an article in the advocate dated the 16th of January this year, a comment was made that, and I quote, we're looking at it now to see why it failed, but it's in the software system. Is that a contradiction to what you just might have said, Adam, or this article dated in January's edition is claiming it was in the software? Adam chapter lane town manager. I'm not positive that it was in the software, but it could have been the software connected to the drive that failed. But it was, if it was the software, the software caused the drive to fail and cause the damage. Could I ask whatever kind of guarantees if at all not being computer literate that we have for software in the system, especially in other parts of the schools? Is there any guarantees of software failing? We have any kind of maintenance, any coverage, anything at all? I'm unclear. Guarantees in regards to just ongoing performance of the software? Well, as I say, the article states that the software was in question. The software was there when the school was built. So I guess that the present person handling the software is saying you can't blame us. So I'm just wondering was there any possibility of just to be blunt blaming the original person who put the software at any kind of guarantees? We're basically saying software fails. That's it. You can't do anything about it. I don't think we could go back to the original installer of the software. I suppose if anybody was to blame, it could be the current, it could be the maintenance of the software and making sure that it was working properly. But I don't think there's anybody we can go back after in terms of a guarantee from the software company. So my last question would be then that as we're taking this $25,000 out of the insurance fund due to the fact that there's no litigation going on, there's no reimbursement coming down the road to put it back into the insurance fund for this. We just eat the $25,000. That would be the case, correct? Thank you. Thank you, Mr. Moderator. You're welcome. Anyone else wish to address this article? Sir. William Burke, precinct 17. We seem to be running into this situation all the time. We just rebuilt the school and then we find that the software doesn't work or we have a freeze-up because of something. Now this reflects back to our beautiful place department building. And look at the mess that is. Millions and millions of dollars to correct it. There's something wrong with how we're letting out our bids. There's something wrong with how we're building things. Here you got a school that is nearly 100 years old, the old Russell Elementary School, and it's still in fine shape because it was built better. And yet we knocked down schools that are 40 years old and oh, we'll start all over and build a new one. Oh, we've got so doggone much money we can do this all the time. There should be a way that we can go back after the contractor, the architect, or someone who is responsible for this system. And I think we're a bunch of done fools if we don't. This is getting out of hand. We're going to have to rebuild the high school and then we've got the Minuteman and we've got another elementary school that we've got to work on and we've got to really look at how we're putting out the bids. Mr. Burke, want to reel it into the scope of the article a little bit there, 25 grand? Yeah. Okay. I think that we should investigate this very, very hard and see if we can't find someone who's responsible for this $25,000 worth of damage. Thank you. Thank you. We are not the English Parliament. Anyone else wish to address this article? Sir? Mr. Fuller. Hello, Mr. James. Peter Fuller, precinct 20, just a footnote to this whole issue. As I understand it, a lot of the water damage came from a burst pipe above the school library, ruined a lot of their books, and a bunch of fifth graders at Pierce stepped up and did some fundraising and got a bunch of donations and basically restocked the whole place at no cost to the town. So I think they deserve our thanks for stepping up and doing a shining example of community service. Thank you. Mr. Jamison. Thank you, Mr. Moderator. Gordon Jamison, precinct 12, another footnote. One of the brightest moments every year at town meeting is getting the report from the Permanent Town Building Committee, who routinely year after year brings projects in on time and under budget. Thank you. Thank you, sir. Anyone else wish to address this article? Seeing none. All right. We're going to take a recommended vote on this article. Mr. Flynn. We're ready. Oh, darn it. See, that's the problem. It's a simple majority. All in favor, please say yes. Opposed? Okay. It is a positive vote and I so declared it's an anonymous vote. Sorry, Steve. That brings us to article seven, which is a two-thirds vote transfer fund stabilization fund. The, I'm going to play with this for a second, because they recommended $500,000 appropriating and transferred to special education stabilization fund. Does anyone want to address this article? Because this is a two-thirds vote, we are going to use our machines. What's that? Oh, Mr. Fuller, I'm sorry. Peter Fuller from Precinct 20. I couldn't find it in the reports. I just wondered what is the present balance of this special education stabilization fund before we make this transfer? Mr. Tosti. $500,000. So once we empty it, is it still going to be on the books and can money go back into it in the future at some point? Leave those decisions up to the controller. What happened? Just a little background. This fund was created last year and it was from a transfer from the school budget at the end of last year into this fund to help in cases of sharp increases in special education costs. And I think as the superintendent and school committee has mentioned many times, often these special education costs go up and down very drastically without warning. And unfortunately, this is one of the year the special education costs went up fairly drastically. So they're requesting this transfer, which last year came from their own budget. So it will wipe out the account. Thank you. That's clear. Vote yes. Thank you. Anyone else wish to address the article? Okay. We're going to vote on the recommended vote of the finance committee. Mr. Flynn. See someone? Okay. We're ready to go. Everybody can go ahead and vote. Okay. It is 209 in the positive, one, two in the negative. The vote is a positive vote and I sort of clear it. That brings us back to article 5, which was tabled. So we want to postpone the rest of the meeting. As I mentioned to you before, on the reason for this, I ask that the special town meeting be adjourned to Monday, May 12th. We have a motion to adjourn to special town meeting to Monday, May 12th. We have a second. All in favor? Yes, sir. Oh, a motion. All in favor, please say yes. Yes. Opposed? It is adjourned. It's a reconsideration on the special town meeting. Seeing none. Okay. That brings us back to the regular town meeting, article 12. We are in the middle of it. As you recall, article 12 was Mr. Harrington's substitute motion. We're basically, we're seeking to establish parking fines for inside the Mount Pleasant Cemetery. Okay, Mr. Deist, I got you. $25.50 and some other dollar amount thereafter. We're not talking about the condition of the roads. We're not talking about people cutting through. We're talking about giving the police the authority to issue $25 fines. None of those other things, we kind of go off topic the other night. So let's kind of keep it in that realm, in that scope. The first on the list from the other night was Mr. John Maher. Got you, Andy. Thank you, Mr. Maher. John Maher, precinct 14. Mr. Jameson, you will be getting a report from the Perman Town Building Committee from our esteemed chair. And we take great pride in our projects coming on time under budget. Unfortunately, one project that has not been on time as a community safety building repair. And I think that has exacerbated the parking issue over by Mount Pleasant Cemetery. That project is coming to a close. And I fully expect that the parking of cars there by various contractors will be abated very soon. So that's my comment. I do have a question, though. Fred Ryan's office is the corner office at community safety building. He has a very direct view. He is our chief enforcement officer. And I would like to ask him most respectfully for his perspective and whether or not he has any suggestions as the solution does to the problem of parking at Mount Pleasant. Thank you, Mr. moderator. Thank you, Mr. Maher. I apologize if I created any confusion the other night or I didn't clearly answer the question. Please accept my apology. I think this warrant article is a blunt instrument to try to address an alleged parking problem of about 100 or 150 feet in a very large cemetery in Arlington. The photos that were put up here the other night were intentionally inflammatory and taken at sort of extreme moments during construction or other events going on around the building. What's important to us is that we get back to some sense of normalcy around the community safety building, get the construction of the building done, get National Grid to complete their utility work on Mystic Street, and then study the problem to see what exactly is the problem. What Tom Meading is being asked to do here pursuant to this article is to fix a problem that we haven't clearly identified yet. And I think the cart is before the horse. Furthermore, to my knowledge and I may stand corrected, I don't know of any instance where we've legislated parking policy and I don't know of any municipality that legislates parking policy. And I think it's a dangerous precedent for this time meeting in their wisdom to begin to legislate each and every parking issue within the town of Arlington because our warrant is going to fill next year with parking requests for legislative action to fix special interest parking problems around town. We have a community room in the community safety building. It's widely used by Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts and other little league and other children's groups. I don't see me directing Arlington police officers to say to Mav or to the cemetery to issue parking tickets to our nonprofit groups that use that community safety building and sometimes have to rely on that parking. And lastly, I'll just say that I question the enforceability if you were to pass this. That's a very large cemetery. I've happened upon artists who were taking artist renderings of the foliage and they would be subject to fine under this foreign article. So again, I asked Tom eating and you wisdom not the legislative parking policy to allow us to get back to some sense of normalcy. We'll evaluate the parking situation and take corrective action as needed. The infrastructure issues that Mr. Chapter Lane mentioned the other night are going to move forward. There will be no parking on graves because the infrastructure simply won't allow it. Thank you for listening. I strongly urge you to vote no on this article. Thank you. Thank you, Ms. Monterita. Leanne Fitzgerald, Precinct 21. I'm standing in support of this article. My mother is buried at Mount Pleasant. I'm a frequent visitor and I happen to be down there today and noticed several Winchester policemen parked on that street doing a detail. So with all due respect, Chief Lyon, I feel like this is a way to have town staff not penalized. So if you could speak to that, I would appreciate it. Chief, can you answer her question? Thank you, Mr. Monterita, Frederick Ryan, Chief of Police. I'm sorry, could you repeat the question? Well, I noticed a lot of Winchester policemen parked there today doing details on Mystic Street. And my sense is that you don't want this to be legislated because the people that would be most affected by it would be actual town personnel or civic, civil personnel. Well, again, well, that's not true. The folks that live at the corner of Sageham and Mystic Street also park along there and their guest park along there. So that's not entirely true. But again, there was a major detour today with that national with that national grid project, and it consumes all of our on-street parking. And so to try to identify the scope of a problem during a major utility construction project, excuse the results. I don't know what the problem is until we get all that construction complete, get the construction complete at the Community Safety Building, and then try to evaluate what, if any, problem there is. Thank you. Thank you, Chief. I disagree that this can't be rectified sooner. I'm very upset about the state of the cemetery. I feel completely disrespected whenever I go down there. And I'm just asking for the support on this article. Thank you. John Dunn, did you have your hand up the other day? No. Did someone next to you? No. No, it wasn't you, Peter. I'll have you later. Mr. Ruderman. Thank you, Mr. Moderator. Michael Ruderman, Precinct 9. We've heard our chief of police tell us on a number of occasions when questions have been referred to him in his official capacity and expertise. How would you go about enforcing this? How will your officers handle a particular change in the bylaws or the enforcement of something that's been proposed? And he has invariably come back to us with an argument for reason and discretion. That he and his officers are trained to exercise reason and discretion in all things. And that we needn't fear the unreasonable and rampant enforcement to the nth degree of something that might be technically in violation and yet really isn't harming anyone. So I'm sure this question of what would fall into the scope of parking for cemetery purposes would be handled with that same reason and discretion that if someone were there to admire the nature artistically, if someone were there to meditate contemplatively, if someone were there simply to visit the statuary and the sculptures, I'm sure that he and his officers would recognize that someone parked for those cemetery purposes was in legitimate use and exercise reason and discretion. So I don't believe a word of anyone saying that this is the beginning of some sort of slippery slope into legislating parking in special instances all over town. I would say that this is not about any one particular front, although it certainly brings it to the attention of the membership here, and that's a good thing. I think we pulled the membership, most of us, nearly all of us would raise our hands and saying that there was something that really upset us at first and caused us to run for town meeting to have a say about something. We all got angry about something at some point and decided that we wanted to do something about it. So here we are. The Cemetery Commission has been saying in their own comments and notes and minutes and meetings for at least as far back as seven years and probably more than that, they can't get a handle on what they perceive as a problem. Shall we defer to their expertise? They are entrusted by us through their appointments by the select bin to be the custodians. And they say there's a problem. And they say they haven't been able to get a handle on it. And I think having something intermediate between ignoring what's happening now, which includes not just parking during a temporary construction situation, but commuter parking and resident parking and cut through parking and all manner of parking by anyone who has the nerve to know that that no parking sign really doesn't mean no parking because all they really can do is tow the car and nobody's going to really tow the car, are they? Well, we need something intermediate between ignoring the fact that there's a problem and towing the car. It's a ticket. It really sounds simple to me. It's simple to you. Please vote in favor. About the substitute motion. Thank you. Thank you. Peter, now it's your turn. Peter Fiori. Peter Fiori, precinct two. It seems to me it's a parking problem. Everything I've heard may be resolved if there was a time limit. And I'm not prepared to introduce a substitute motion or amend this, but I don't know why anybody would be on any kind of business in the cemetery more than a couple of hours. If they have to park there, nobody should be parking there 24 hours. So I don't know how I'm not going to try to amend it, but it seems to me that's the solution rather than something really heavy-handed and that penalizes artists and everybody else, but there ought to be time limits. I've got you, man. You're on the list. Yep. Carl Wagner was next. Oh, do you want to get on there? Thank you, Mr. Moderator. Carl Wagner, precinct 11. I move to terminate debate on the question. We have a motion to terminate debate on the question and all matters before it. Let's do this one by clicker. Mr. Flynn. Okay, it's a two-thirds vote to terminate. Yes, we're going to turn. This is a two-thirds vote to terminate debate. We're just waiting on our wonderful machine. Okay, go ahead and start voting to terminate debate. One is yes, two is no. Okay, time's up. Let's see what our count is. 127 to 87. The debate is not terminated. 82. It's not a two-thirds vote. It's failed. Next on the list is Mr. Chappett. Thank you, Mr. Moderator. Roland Chappett, precinct 12. I rise to ask that you defeat the substitute motion. Give me a couple of reasons why. The cemetery is open all the time. There were no gates on there. And, quote honestly, I've used the cemetery as a birder. Somebody who goes out there and looks and watches for seagulls and hawks and ravens and writing. I'm sure there are other members in town meeting that have done the same thing. In fact, one day I watched a mink catching fish in the brook. Fascinating. But I was essentially not there for burial purposes, obviously. So I'd like to make a couple of suggestions. Number one, vote the substitute motion down. Number two, commend Mr. Harrington for bringing up this issue. It is a serious problem and it needs to be resolved. And so, personally, you don't have to do this on your... Well, do it on your own, of course. But I can tell him that you appreciate the fact that he brought up this issue and it needs to be reviewed and some action taken on it. And thirdly, ask the town manager to have some new signs put up and the new signs would say, okay, to use the cemetery for non-burial purposes for two hours. Just two hours. I never spend two hours watching birds down there and I'm sure the other folks who are wandering around or walking in the cemetery probably would be able to make it within two hours. So, give it some thought. Thank you. Thank you, sir. Mr. Smith? Pass. Mr. Hainer? Bill Hainer, precinct two. Ellington has a need for parking. No question about that. The largest parking lot we have is 100, 200 yards down the road. This is a town that prides itself on being healthy. Take a little walk. That's all I'm suggesting. And as far as the construction vehicles and police details and stuff like that, the town has the authority to quadrant off a piece of that parking lot for those people and walk back up the street. It's not that far. Thank you. New guy, right in front. Right there, looking at his machine. Yep, you. Carefully waiting my turn. Christopher Moore from precinct 14. Playing with your thing. You're not supposed too bad. Name the precinct. Christopher Moore, precinct 14. We are a legislative body here and we have an enforcement problem. But it's not enforced for some reason or other. I'm concerned that we are adding a regulation that may also not be enforced. So I'm wondering if I could ask through the moderator who might enforce this regulation and if they're willing to do it. The police enforce it. Are they willing to? Well, they have to enforce all the bylaws of the town. I don't think they have a choice. But Mr. Doug is Mr. Heim wants to address that. I think he had your hand up there. Oh, okay, fine. And is anyone willing or able to answer the question of how we might improve enforcement of the existing regulation if we do not adopt this. Chief. Thank you, Mr. moderator Frederick Ryan. Chief, please. Good evening. So the existing condition. I noticed some confusion on that the other night. I hope I can bring some clarity to that. Under the existing condition. The Board of Selectment has not through the traffic rules and orders made this a no parking zone which they have the authority to do. Which is why we typically don't legislate parking issues. The Cemetery Commission has determined it to be a no parking area. So under article seven of the town bylaws as well as a handful of chapter 90 mass general law for motor vehicle law we could tow violators or site them for motor vehicle trespass which is obviously a drastic measure and something that we would use rarely and we try to get the vehicle moved before we tow anybody and cause all that expense. But, you know, to that point and further than Mr. Ruderman's point you know, if we enact this even if we choose not to enforce it for the bird watcher or the artist or whoever it gives a police officer the authority to stop and detain and further investigate and perhaps impose in somebody's freedom temporarily and is that something you know we want going on in our cemetery. Again the foot section of a huge cemetery I think that through the good work of the manager and the DPW director we fix the infrastructure issues and the curbing issues to prevent damage to any of the cemeteries nobody agrees that they should be damaged and then we evaluate the problem and all the construction is gone. Thank you. Did I answer your question? Generally yes. Thank you sir. So it sounds that the Board of Selectmen would be responsible typically for creating and regulating this as a no parking zone. Is that correct? Yes sir. It's correct. And in the Board of Selectmen's report they say quote this article proposes to codify parking regulations in Mount Pleasant Cemetery into the bylaws but they argue then that this is not really necessary because it's kind of already done but I think what we've heard tonight and last night was that it's not really quite done it seems that either we have to do it or the Board of Selectmen has to do it and I'm not entirely sure which is the right way to do it we've heard some arguments on both sides so I'm not sure what I'm doing on this one but anyway thank you. Thank you sir. Joe Curran it's your turn finally even though your arm keeps going like that Joe Curran, precinct 13 and I'd like to thank Town Meeting for listening to me tonight and I also want to remind everybody today's National Honesty Day so I'm sure everybody up here is telling the truth This subject is near and dear to a lot of people but I just want to make it simple it's a sacred ground burial grounds it's wherever you go throughout the country the condition of that cemetery isn't what it should be I know I'm trying to stay on scope here but my feeling is that I just went through this when you have elderly parents you have to pay for cemetery plots and so on and so forth and you pay for something called perpetual care perpetual care means that property is going to be maintained for your loved one for the rest of eternity supposedly and there's funds for that and for all the veterans and all the people that paid them sacrificed their lives for us and for us not to acknowledge that and take care of sacred territory like that it kind of hurts me in a separate way plus I have loved ones that are in there years ago when I was a kid they used to close the gates to the cemetery on one side and on the Sajim Street side there was a chain where the cemetery began if that chain went up and only authorized people that have to access and work in the cemetery had access to that that would relieve a lot of the parking there wouldn't have to be an enforcement because people couldn't get in that way I don't think it creates a public safety issue unless we have to have police cars and fire apparatus rip through those small streets to get somewhere fast so I think it's kind of just segregates it in such a way that it can be maintained by the town by town workers it can be accessed at appropriate times and we're not infringing upon anybody's rights we're not infringing upon the neighbors and it's pretty simple if it's for cemetery business it should be for cemetery business go in pay homage to your loved ones respected us in their own way and maintain it properly that's all I have to say about that it's pretty simple you go in there to pay your respects you take good care of it you turn around you go out and if we could put the gates and stop the gates at 7 o'clock or 8 whatever they deem responsible there is an issue it can be resolved this way if people want to put their heads together you put a chain up done and there's no there's no real wiggle room then and you can go in and do your business and take care of who you have to take care of and hopefully that I hope people could take a look at that as a resolution thank you for listening to me Mr. O'Connor is going to be the next speaker on the list do you want to take your break now or after Mr. O'Connor now okay we come back Mr. O'Connor has the list we're going to go for a 7 minute break we'll see you in 7 minutes another 10 minutes
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Confronting Pro-Israel Senators Ahead of Israel Funding Vote
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This is what millions from AIPAC buys in the Senate.
Today, we confronted several Senators ahead of the expected vote on $118 billion dollars for sending weapons to Israel, Ukraine, and Taiwan, as well as militarizing the border.
Even though there's major support for sending weapons to all these places in both parties, the Democrats and Republicans were unable to reach an agreement to move forward with the bill.
Still, funding for all these wars is expected to come to a vote soon, and it is vital that we apply as much pressure as possible to stop it.
While homelessness in the U.S. is at a record high, while most of the country lives paycheck to paycheck, while mega corporations pollute our communities, these Senators have pledged allegiance to Israel's gen•c¡de in Gaza before all else.
Call Congress: 202-224-3121
Email Congress: codepink.org/nomoremilitaryaid
---------
SUBSCRIBE: https://www.youtube.com/codepinkaction
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ABOUT CODEPINK
CODEPINK is a feminist grassroots organization working to end U.S. warfare and imperialism and redirect our tax dollars into healthcare, education, green jobs and other life-affirming programs. Join us!
https://www.codepink.org
|
[
"antiwar",
"feminist",
"peace movement",
"anti-imperialism"
] | 2024-02-08T00:39:38 | 2024-04-18T18:05:09 | 151 |
ZQq5QigDG8A
|
What about the folks dying in Gaza? Do you have anything to say about that? I hope we will find that is a key piece of the wedge I am also fighting against Israel. The war does not make Jews safer. So why are you not troubled with Hamas terrorists? I am, but the war doesn't... Killing Hamas makes Israel safer. Killing 30,000 civilians doesn't make anyone safe. Killing 30,000 civilians, 10,000 children. My baby said my life. I have a little baby. Don't die right now in Gaza. Senator, please, we have a baby dying in Gaza. Please, please, folks, no. Yeah, Hamas is responsible for killing all those children. But the civilians aren't. I know. The civilians are not. Hamas kills children. Hamas is an evil organization. I hope Israel destroys Hamas. That's what I hope. And I want to help Israel destroy Hamas. What about the civilians? But what about the children? The blood is on your hand. Millions of... I don't even know where they're going. They're about to kill you. Stay on me. Can you vote no for more money than Israel? Do you vote no? Do you vote no for one of the highest poverty states in the whole country? I'm going to vote no. You're going to never get it. What do you call a little girl who's dying right now? Hamas said, just like you're keeping the money for Ukraine here at home, where it's needed, we all agree with you. Why do you not do the same for Israel? We need that money in America. We need that money for education, for social security. I believe in the right of Israel to defend itself. And I believe in the right of the Jewish people to be safe. And how about the people of Missouri needing their money? Senator Holi, people like Missouri need that money. I know, but they... What's up? Can I say something? Why does Israel need to defend itself by killing people? Can I tell you something? Hamas said the Israeli soldiers laugh about...
|
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UCq6ysZYeu-HwhBEV7TuO8wg
|
Hamlet, Harry Potter, & Statistics Part 3
|
Hamlet, Harry Potter, & Statistics Part 3
join our Accounting Instruction Free Month Membership here:
https://mailchi.mp/162b76dee17d/3vb67kuoou
|
[
"Financial",
"Accounting",
"Managerial"
] | 2023-08-10T05:39:43 | 2024-02-05T07:48:29 | 589 |
ZQ9kM9ly-dE
|
Do you need it to add other items within it? If I click on this, I just want to point out, if I click off of this table, we only, our tabs up top stop at, well, I have a quick book, you might not have this last tab over here, but you might stop and help, you might not have developer either. But the point is that if I click on this table, we get these two other tabs up top, the chart design and the formatting tab. So if I go into the chart design tab, you've got the add chart elements. So if I hit the dropdown, access, access title, chart title, data labels, we've got the quick layout information, you can change the color scheme fairly quickly up top. So this is the default blue, it's like the default color scheme. So anytime you want to look a little bit more unique, you might want to change it from the default. If you hit the dropdown here, you've got your other kind of custom designs within this area, so you can get the same basic chart. If you wanted to switch the row and columns easily, you can do that here. Here's the data set. So if I go into the data set, now you can see this is the word count and the information on the data set on the left. If I wanted to edit this, that shows us that this is the word count, the series and the series values being shown here. So if I wanted to change these, I could go into here and change where they're coming from, which we might do in future presentations. So I'm gonna close that, but we had it pull in by default correctly because we organized the columns properly with the words on the left and the numbers on the right so it can give us the word count on the X and the numbers on the Y as basically the default. Change chart type. So if we wanted to change the chart type, we don't have to delete it and do it again, which is what I normally do. You could just go here and change the chart type from here and move the chart. If we wanted to move the chart to a new sheet, notice I could say instead of putting it in the same sheet, maybe I want the chart in its own sheet and I can put it here and name the new sheet and then I'll make a new sheet down here so we can have it on its own if we so choose. And then if I go to the format tab, we've got some more the current section chart area. We've got the insert of the shapes, the shape styles, the shape fill on the colors and whatnot that we can put more information or more fancy stuff into the word styles and accessibility, arrange and the size. Now note you can go into a lot of those too by clicking on the elements in the chart. So if I click on the element, I could delete the title if I want or I can right click on the element and pull some options that way. If I wanted to do something with this sidebar, I can click on the sidebar and if I double click on it, it'll give me the information related to it on the right. If I wanted to do something with these bars, if I double click on it, it'll go to the format tab up top and I can change the color and whatnot. And I also have the information on the right which will open up here. If I wanted to do something to the format down below, I can double click on it here. So there's multiple ways to get into the same stuff. Also on the right hand side, if I hit the plus button, you've got some again, multiple ways to get into the same stuff a lot of the time. So we've got the axis, we've got the axis titles. So if I want to put a title, you can see on the axes, I can click on this and then I can click on say this title. And as I type in it, I can call this word count. Now it doesn't show up here, but I can see it up top. So it is doing it even though it's a little weird. I can say word count and then when I hit enter, it'll populate. And if I click down here and do the same thing, this is just gonna be the words and enter. So now we've got our names that we have in there. I can hit that if I say this is the chart title, the data labels, which are often useful to have. I can add the data labels if I want. So there's the data labels. I can double click on the data labels and get more information that we can, how we're gonna populate the labels on the right hand side if we so choose. And data table down below. We've got the error bars. So we could add a little bit more information on the error bars, the grid lines. You could turn them on and off. A legend. We don't need a legend because we only have one thing, but if we had multiple things on the bar and then a trend line, if we wanted to add the trend line. So there's just a basic overview of the standard kind of chart. So now that we've done this one time, let's do it a little bit more quickly with a similar thing for Harry Potter. So I'm gonna do this quickly on Harry Potter. I'm gonna go to the Harry Potter tab and we've got our data. So this is the most frequently used words in the series. So let's do this a little, I'm scrolling up, I'm holding down control, I'm scrolling up. I'm gonna pick my information. So I'm gonna pick this information. I like to make it into a table. So I'm gonna go into the home, to the insert and make it into a table. And then I like to format the data by highest to lowest. It's already formatted that way, but let's do it again. Hit the dropdown Z to A. And then if I wanna insert a table on this data, I can select the entire data set and it's as easy as going to insert and then charts. I could do the recommended ones and see some of these a little bit more unique or it's not a little bit different style of a table, but I'm gonna go to the make my own standard one like this way. So there's our table. And you might, let's do a sideways one. So here's the same kind of concept in the side format. So we just changed the axes. And then again, I can double click on the item up top and say this is Harry. I keep on saying Harry like Harry instead of the name Harry. I don't know if that's a Harry word count. And so there we have this one. And then we could make changes to some of these items if we want. If like this legend down here, if we wanted to change that, notice it's picking the minimum number and then the maximum. And it's going up by units of 1,000. So maybe we can change the look and feel of this a lot by saying, what if I wanted these units to not go up by 1,000, but 500 or something like that. Then it's gonna change, we could change the look of it. So let's put it back to 1,000 for now. We'll see that a little bit more when we get to the histogram or I can reset it to auto. Here's the auto set. It's at 10,000 and I put 500. So that changes a lot. But we'll talk more about that later. So this we'll just keep with this. So if I did the same thing down here, we have two frequencies. These are the most frequently used words in Harry Potter. And then they have, these are displayed frequency of nonstop words, meaning they're not like the and two, which are gonna be used more often. So these might be more relevant words in some cases because they've removed the most common words that might not be as much of interest. So let's do the same thing. I'll just insert a table and then okay, I'll sort it from Z to A and then we'll insert our table here, insert charts and I'll make another sideways bar chart to match the one above. And we'll say this is Harry word. Notice I'm looking up here because that's where it's typing word, frequency with this is for nonquote stop words. Quote and quote, nonstop word, there shouldn't be a quote here, nonstop words, okay. And this one, Harry word count, we'll just keep it with that. All right, you get the gist of it. You don't need to be all specific on it. And so we can kind of format these and that's the general idea. So now we'll move next time and see what if this was like numerical data over here or something, right? And then we might need to use a histogram which is similar to this and we can actually combine the data to still make use of bar charts. So we'll talk about that in future presentations.
|
{
"url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZQ9kM9ly-dE",
"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
}
|
UCN2A9Iahwnk16Zj-7aKnrfg
|
Chainsaw - Chain Break
|
[
"chainsaw",
"chain break",
"chain",
"demonstration",
"how to",
"logging",
"trees",
"tree",
"forest",
"forestry",
"Alabama Cooperative Extension System",
"safety"
] | 2018-10-12T21:27:45 | 2024-02-05T16:46:17 | 59 |
zqDpfqQaTuc
|
Chain saws are equipped with a safety feature known as the chain brake. The chain brake should always be engaged when taking more than two steps when working with the chain saw. It's always a good idea to always keep two hands on the saw. So to properly engage the chain brake, we have a couple techniques that you can use. The first is called the wrist roll, where you simply roll your wrist forward and engage the chain brake. Now when you're disengaging the chain brake, you do not want to remove a hand and pull it back. Instead, wrap the thumb around the top handle, extend four fingers forward, and pull the chain brake back. You have both hands still on the saw. Another technique to engage the chain brake is known as the leg roll. You simply keep your wrist in this position and roll the saw back.
|
{
"url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zqDpfqQaTuc",
"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
}
|
|
UCkY5L8JYwx7BT0cOXYZX_dw
|
Primary Health: Group Creates Awareness On Nutrition And Youth-Friendly Services For Adolescents
|
A-Women friendly Initiative WFI in collaboration with Focused parenting and Youth Initiative for Development FoPaYID have now taken to streets of Benue to create awareness on the Local Government Budget lines created for the implementation of Nutrition, Adolescents and youth friendly programs in the state.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Watch More: https://bit.ly/2KLQxbI
Watch PlusTV Africa Lifestyle: https://cutt.ly/tbdOHzQ
Watch via our Website: https://plustvafrica.com/live-tv
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PlusTVAfrika/
Follow us on Instagram:
https://www.instagram.com/plustvafrica/
Tweet us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/PlusTVAfrica
Comment on Whatsapp: http://ow.ly/d4kQ50pT4Bt
#PlusTVAfrica #News #NewsOnPlusTvAfrica
|
[
"News",
"Politics",
"Nigeria",
"Africa",
"Plus TV Africa",
"Plus TV",
"Plus",
"Plus TV Nigeria",
"Plus Television",
"Plus TV News",
"Top News",
"news",
"trending",
"trending news",
"today's news",
"current news",
"entertainment",
"sports",
"business"
] | 2023-07-31T09:01:07 | 2024-02-05T06:24:22 | 130 |
zqKPkGCPzIM
|
A Women-Friendly Initiative in collaboration with Focus Parenting and Youth Initiative for Development have now taken to the streets of Benway to create awareness on the Lirku government's partner lines created for the implementation of nutrition, adolescent and youth-friendly programmes in the state. The road shows took place in communities of Agatou and Gwair West Lirku government areas of Benway aimed at creating awareness for the masses to be aware of nutrition and youth-friendly services at the primary health centres in their communities and ensure the proper release of funds by the Lirku Council. The budget line has already been created through our advocacy engagement with the stakeholders and now we are carrying out this rally to make sure that the masses are now aware that there are nutrition services at the PSS within their communities and for government to also release funds that have been allocated for nutrition services as what we are here as can be seen on the banner. We are currently here to implement a project which is a cost scale project. So this case stands for strengthening civic engagements for local advocacy and we are working in a cluster of six organisations. So we have our project costs across six states. We have Nassarawa, we have Benway and then we have Eboni and then we have Plattu and then we have Quara State. Since morning when we came around carrying out this rally which is part of our activity so we've enjoyed a warm reception from the people. So we've been going around town this morning and then you can see a lot of persons coming out you know applauding these projects that were implemented. Hello hope you enjoyed the news please do subscribe to our YouTube channel and don't forget to hit the notification button so you get notified about fresh news updates.
|
{
"url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zqKPkGCPzIM",
"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
}
|
UCkY5L8JYwx7BT0cOXYZX_dw
|
Buhari’s Comments On Open Grazing Unfortunate - Wole Soyinka | NEWS
|
Nobel Laureate, Professor Wole Soyinka, has condemned President Muhammadu Buhari’s directive to the Attorney General of the Federation and Justice Minister, Abubakar Malami, to provide lands to serve as grazing routes for herdsmen.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Watch More: https://bit.ly/2KLQxbI
Watch PlusTV Africa Lifestyle: https://cutt.ly/tbdOHzQ
Watch via our Website: https://plustvafrica.com/live-tv
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PlusTVAfrika/
Follow us on Instagram:
https://www.instagram.com/plustvafrica/
Tweet us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/PlusTVAfrica
Comment on Whatsapp: http://ow.ly/d4kQ50pT4Bt
#PlusTVAfrica #NewsOnPlusTvAfrica
|
[
"News",
"Politics",
"Nigeria",
"Africa",
"Plus TV Africa",
"Plus TV",
"Plus",
"Plus TV Nigeria",
"Plus Television",
"Plus TV News",
"Justin Akadonye",
"Aneta Felix",
"Osarogie Ogbonmwan",
"Top News",
"channels",
"tvc",
"bbc",
"cnn",
"arise news",
"arise tv",
"al jazeera",
"news central",
"AIT",
"Silverbird",
"Buhari",
"osinbajo"
] | 2021-06-15T14:04:49 | 2024-02-05T06:27:13 | 48 |
Zq6QHR8Kykk
|
Nobel laureates, Professor Wally Schoenke, has condemned President Mohammad Buhari's directive to the attorney general of the Federation and Justice Minister Awabaka Malami to provide lands to serve as grazing roots for herdsmen. Schoenke described Buhari's comments as unfortunate. He added that the federal government has shown that it is not ready to listen to the people because of the manner it handles agitations across Nigeria. He stated that sensitive leaders would understand and respond to the reasons behind those agitations, not to threaten, bully or intimidate people.
|
{
"url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zq6QHR8Kykk",
"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
}
|
UCu3Ri8DI1RQLdVtU12uIp1Q
|
Simon Watkins & Tim Heit - HP Discover 2015 - theCUBE - #HPDiscover
|
Simon Watkins, HP Storage & Tim Heit, Barrett-Jackson, at HP Discover Las Vegas 2015 with Dave Vellante
@theCUBE
#HPDiscover
#HPEDiscover
|
[
"#theCUBE",
"#HPDiscover",
"HP Discover 2015",
"John Furrier",
"Dave Vellante",
"HP Storage",
"Barrett-Jackson",
"Simon Watkins",
"Tim Heit"
] | 2015-06-03T20:39:26 | 2024-02-05T08:44:15 | 1,172 |
ZqEvQQvxnHg
|
Live from the Sands Convention Center, Las Vegas, Nevada, extracting the signal from the noise. It's theCUBE, covering HP Discover 2015, brought to you by HP. And now your hosts, Dave Vellante and Jeff Frick. Simon Watkins is here as the worldwide product marketing manager for HP Storage, joined by Tim Pite. Gentlemen, welcome to theCUBE. Thank you. Thank you. I was talking about one of my favorite subjects in the world is London. Yeah. It's a great city of London where you live. Born and bred. Born and bred. Awesome. So soccer fan, I presume? We call it football, but yeah, it's soccer. Yeah. And of course, HP Bristol, renowned for taping, we're going to talk about taping a little prop here. Absolutely. Hold that up, actually. Yeah, there you go. How much capacity? 6.25 terabytes on a single cartridge, LTO6. That's compressed, but a lot of data. So let me ask you a question about that, 6.25 terabytes. How long does it take to scan a 6.25 terabyte cartridge? So the transfer rate for an LTO6 drive is about 1.4 terabytes an hour. So you can work it out. That's the transfer rate of an LTO6 drive. Okay. So do the math on that. And then as that capacity doubles, which it will do, the time it takes to scan that tape won't change, will it? No. No. It's kind of forgotten. Let me ask you a question. What's the maximum capacity of a disk drive today? Was it 8 terabytes? 6 terabytes? Yeah, around that. How long does it take to rebuild an 8 terabyte disk drive? Quite a while. How long is it going to take to rebuild a 30 terabyte disk drive? Quite a while. A month? Two months? Three months? No. The point we're getting to here, folks, is tape is alive and well. Everybody says tape is dead. It's not dead. Absolutely. For reasons that I've implied in my little soliloquy there. But so anyway, we'll talk about some of that. So Tim, tell us about Barrett Jackson. We saw a little side of your car there. Hey, yeah. It's Barrett Jackson. We were a car auction. In 1971 in Arizona. And we have grown over the past, coming up on our 45th anniversary in January. And we have grown to become a much larger than just a car auction. We're an event. We're a lifestyle. Media sensation. Yeah, media. We're live television coverage. Which really is one of the main reasons why I had to look at the tape solution was for the television side of things. I have 18 years of historical footage. All HD, where do I put that? Having it sitting on online storage or spinning disc, it just didn't make a lot of sense. So we looked at the tape solution. So add some more color to that. So specifically, what are you doing with that? What are you storing on that tape? So we have our broadcast that we broadcast. We've been broadcasting for the last 18 years, like I was saying, on Fox. Now we're on the Discovery and Velocity channel. And that hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of hours that we have of footage going back historically, we digitized it. It used to be on tapes. We had it on many, many, many, many formats, you know. Beta cam, three quarter and DVC pro, all that. So we went through and digitized all that. And then it was a matter of where do we, where can we centrally put all of this information and we can access it as we need it. And we needed a large storage array of some sort. We looked at spinning discs. We looked at building a home system, a home brew system, just a bunch of discs, things like that. And then it came down to reliability. We wanted it to last. I mean, this is 18 years of footage. And we went through all this trouble to digitize it. Where we put it that we know it's going to be safe. And looking even further is having more than one copy. And the more reason I say looking forward is because now that I've digitized it to 18 years, now it's time to go back and meditate it and start going and slicing, dicing it up and making clips and making it searchable. So that, let's say we want to do a special on 65 Mustangs or 69 Camaros or pre-war classics, whatever it is, that we can make edit decisions very quickly by knowing that we have that footage. If we search it and realize we don't have it, let's do a different segment. So just being able to retrieve it if we need it and when we need it was really the big thing we're looking at. So this is your digital transformation, right? Essentially it's a metadata problem, metadata management challenge. Okay, and then I can see a lot of ways in which you could use that footage. Do you make that available to your community? And that's really, I think, the next phase. We need to delay the foundation first. It's been that process because we have an auction every four times a year. So what we do when we do an auction is we pack everything up, we move our data center to the event, set it all up. So when we have these opportunities for these projects, it's hit it hard, take a break, hit it hard, take a break. So now we're in that process of, okay, we've finally digitized everything. Now the next phase is cataloging it. So Simon, we've seen the repositioning of tape as the primary backup medium to now one of long-term retention. It's a superior long-term retention. We've written about this on Wikibon for years. It's the superb long-term retention because, as you were pointing out, it lasts longer than spinning media. It's far, far less expensive. The issue has always been performance, the perceived performance, but we can even put forth a case. We'll talk about that where tape is actually higher performance. But so give us the update, if you would, Simon, on tape, from HP's perspective, the technology, the market, the strategy. Yeah, so tape is obviously, it's a very mature technology. It's been around more than 60 years now. But we think that just because the technology is mature, it doesn't mean there aren't any opportunities and it certainly doesn't mean that there isn't any innovation. So in terms of the opportunity, the market was worth over $2 billion last year worldwide for tape. And also, secondly, more data is being stored on tape than ever before. So we're seeing more capacity shipped on tape. It's a double-digit growth, we're seeing, in terms of capacity shipping on tape. I think the reason for that, the reason why adoption of tape is remaining very strong, is as you said, tapes kind of blend of low-cost, high-capacity, removable, reliable storage, is allowing it to evolve from its traditional role as a backup medium to, as you said, more of a kind of long-term retention archive use case. Now, when it comes to what we call cold archive, tapes low-cost, less than 1 cent a gigabyte, the energy benefits of tape, it's a green technology, you store it off-site, it doesn't consume any energy. The reliability benefits of tape are very important. The drawbacks of tape when it comes to archive was it was traditionally not a good solution for active archives because getting to data on tape, you'd need to use an ISV application to write that data, and it was often written proprietary formats, so 10 years down the track, if you want to get that tape data back, you'd need the ISV application. That all changed with the introduction of LTFS, right? And that's an open-format specification with a store of content on tape. It makes tape self-describing, just like a USB disk, so that accessibility problem goes away, and also because you're storing content in an open format, you're not tied into any ISV application. LTFS is a real game chamber for active archives, and one of the really powerful implementations of LTFS is what we call Tapers NAS, and what that does is it virtualizes a tape library behind a disk cache, it could be flash, it could be spinning disk, and what that means is that applications can now access tape directly via that cache, and if you use flash, as opposed to spinning disk, you get the performance benefits of flash with the long-term cost and reliability benefits of tape. So that's kind of the value proposition, and that's exactly what Barry Jackson is using. Yeah, so there's been a big marketing push in the industry from a number of vendors that say, tape is dead, tape, S-U-S-C-K-S, blah, blah, blah. But the reality is for most practitioners out there is it's got a role, whether it's the backup of last resort, you know, the stuff in an iron mountain somewhere, or in specific use cases like Tim is seeing. So I want to explore this a little bit. I went pretty fast at the beginning, but people watching are probably thinking, how can Dave say that tape could actually be higher performance? So let's talk about that a little bit. So there are only, I don't know how many disk drive vendors are left, it's a handful, two, three, four. But nobody's investing in, I mean, high performance disk is an oxymoron. You can't spin it any faster, and you can't put more track, more data on the track because the heads aren't evolving. They're hermetically sealed, nobody's investing in heads anymore. And so as a result, getting data out of a disk is like sucking data out of a thin straw. You don't have that problem with tape, right? Because LTFS gives you advantages, but the tape, the heads in theory, I guess you could stagger them. And so that's why I said earlier, the time it takes to scan or whatever it is, a six terabyte cartridge today, is going to be the same today as it is 10 years from now. Five years from now, whatever, when that capacity doubles or triples, the effective capacity, the bandwidth rate of a disk drive is going to go into hell in a handbasket. So now it starts to open up all these new opportunities to use tape in new different ways. So I want to explore this with you, Tim. So you've got all this archive footage and you're starting to metatag it now, right? Where are you at in that process? So what we're at in this process is it's really kind of a, it's almost like a three-step approach. The first was digitized, we've got it digitized. We now are ingesting it into a media asset management system. What that simply does is just kind of start creating the database, file names, size, things like that. The next phase is going to be... Excuse me, that's a piece of ISV software. Is that right or is that something you guys wrote? No, no, it's a, if you don't want me sharing it, it's a company called Squarebox and CatDB is the name of it. I want to know because we have the same problem here. Cube has a lot of video. Yeah, and I do our live stream too, so I'm going to be using this system for that as well. And so what we're doing now that we've ingested it and I'm doing it kind of in phases. I don't want to jump in and throw 90 terabytes at it because that's basically what I have to ingest right now. I'm kind of doing it slowly and learning and really trying to know everything about it. So now I'm in the process of creating a proxy version. I've got 1080i footage. Some of those files are 400, 500 gig. Well, with CatDB, what it allows me to do is allows me to make a browser-based searching functionality. So if I have an editor in New York that needs a footage for let's say a charity vehicle that sold the last auction, I can have them log in, search the file, and then send me edit choices, which then sends me an XML file. I then put that into our edit system and it will then retrieve the high res version. Whether it's sitting on tape, whether it's sitting on the disk cache that we were talking about earlier. And that's an automated process? It is an automated process in the sense of once you have the metatagging done and you export a very simple XML file. I bring that into Final Cut. CatDB talks with Final Cut and knows that well, here's where the footage is. The Q-Star manages which tape it's on to Q-Star, it sees everything that I throw at it. So whether it's on tape only or whether it's also already in the cache. So Q-Star indexes everything and then goes and gets it when you need it. Right, so let's say I have something that my cache is 10 terabytes, by the way. So let's say I have something that was 50 terabytes ago and I go to search it, it pulls it up, it shows that the file exists. It's going to take, you know, 15, 16 minutes to pull that off the tape and load it into the cache. But what that allows us to do is still make edit choices. At the end of the night you run all your XML by the time you come in, it's sitting on disk cache. So hopefully by the time overnight it was able to go and pull all those files that you need on the high resolution side. So the metadata about what files live where historically it would sit on the tape, cartridge itself, correct? As far as the file management portion is concerned, is it for the tape library? And it still sits there, in your case. And then we also have another layer of metadata which is the video content itself. So could you elevate that file level metadata to a cache, a flash, let's say? That's technology that's in development. That's the flight you guys have written about, right? David Floyer, my colleague, who's also from England, coined that term. But the concept being elevate that metadata, file metadata to a flash layer. And then write algorithms that, because it's all, time to first byte is going to be faster on disk. But time to last byte is going to be faster on tape. If in fact you can write algorithms and say, okay, I need this data and I'm going to pass the fifth secret request, I'll grab that on the way, reorder it at the back end. They're not like rocket science algorithms. Smart people can write them. And that blows away the performance of disk for large object file retrieval. Like video. Like video. Or even shorter files that you're storing for long-term attention that you can concatenate. So we think the tape has this wonderful future because it's way, way, way less expensive. And it's, believe me, in this scenario, it's higher performance. So it's a real winner. So that two billion, we think, is going to be flat to up even potentially. And because also there's a lot of runway for the aerial density for tape. So we think that cost per gigabyte is going to go down, right? So the cost advantage of tape, I think will only get better. So disk in this scenario kind of gets squeezed, the spinning disk. It's not the high performance. It may not be the best bit bucket long-term as technology vendors work on these. So is HB actually actively working on that type of technology? Yeah, that's good because there's only a few tape vendors out who have the capability to do it. You're one of them. And we're one of them. But we're the market leader actually in the mid-range space. We're still investing a lot in tape. We've got L7 coming out soon. So we've got a good roadmap moving forward. So yeah, it's a good business product. So what's your reaction to this conversation, Tim? Presumably you'd like to see the industry sort of move in this direction. I do. In the sense of, so I've talked about this 90 terabytes that we've digitized. That's a scratch of the surface of what I have. I've only digitized. I was going to say 90 terabytes must be nothing. Oh, no. Because all I've done was digitize the broadcast. We still have every single camera. I mean, I see here you have a four-camera setup. Yeah, right. If I so choose chosen, I could then do premium archive footage that's never been shown on television. So the possibilities are endless. With the tape system that we went with, it's modular. So I can keep growing this thing. I don't know you tell me indefinitely. Yeah. I mean, that's the thing is by the time I outgrow what I have and my need is, you know, he's already made the decision. So how do you automate, you automate the categorization of all this data, right? And that's what Q-Star or CatDV does? It's more the CatDV side. So I was explaining to Simon earlier about that, was I know everything about the vehicle that was selling, you know, from the year that make the model, the engine size. I know all that information. That's on our internal system that runs the auction company. We are looking at a couple of different options there, both moving forward for future recordings and historical recordings. Right now, XML, it seems to be the most viable option for historical. But then we're also looking at return on investment. So in other words, let's see what the need is and how much we actually really need to go and meditate every single vehicle. Do we need to make this publicly accessible or so? Then absolutely we do. But again, going back to where we're more than just a car option or an entertainment brand. So we have some segments where the talent on air talent will be talking about a vehicle and speaking with the owner and the historical family significance of it. Is that interesting to put out there in the world and make it searchable? Or is it all about the cars? Well, it's just a really interesting use case. I mean, this is a great example. If you've got content, that content is an asset. Can you monetize that? Maybe, maybe not. Can you create value for your community? Can you launch new businesses? I mean, I'm sure these are the discussions you're having internally. Like every company should be having. And so, but that's a, you know, you kind of fall into it as technology evolves. You've got this corpus of data. What do you do with that? And it's not an easy thing to attack, but the technology's there to do it. And the ideas are floating, which I'm sure they are. HP's enabling those ideas we heard and the idea economy. So that's fantastic. Well, we're out of time. We've got to leave it there. But I'll give you the last word, Tim. Sort of advice for practitioners, peers trying to sort of struggle with this challenge. What would you do differently if you had to do it over again? Yeah, no, specifically to my case. Really, I guess the only thing that I would do differently, which I luckily have enabled myself to go about it differently, is a larger cache. You know, because I'm dealing with such very large files, more cache is definitely better. You know, if you're using it for more of a user level, you know, document smaller files, you know, you don't really need as much of a big cache. But when you're dealing with 500 gig files, one after another, you chew that cache up very quickly. You know, and that's really, I think, just to your research. And I think if you really look at the cost per gig and growth, you will start really seriously, because I was anti. I'll be honest. Yeah, no doubt. A lot of naysayers. This isn't going to work. And eventually performance. Mark my words. Cache is king where you heard it here, you know, for the millionth time. But Tim and Simon, thanks very much for coming on theCUBE. Great segment. Appreciate it. All right, keep it right there, everybody. We'll be back with our next guest right after this. This is theCUBE, we're live from HP Discover. We're right back.
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"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
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ABA & BAB Design
|
[
"ABA",
"BAB",
"experiment",
"design",
"psychcore",
"behavior beast",
"applied behavior analysis"
] | 2018-07-15T17:00:02 | 2024-02-05T06:35:36 | 261 |
ZQEN5koGnfM
|
I think we'll start this out with the demo. We got a hell of a chain as you're going to have eight hands. Under my mouth! Wow! You grabbed by the function. Fuller. Yeah. We might be wrong. We're funny. It's not always a challenge. We're nervous. Versus Bab. Right? So this is an Alba design and a Bab design. Sounds like some weird martial art. So I don't know why I call them that just because it's kind of fun, right? And ABA, of course, is just we're passionate about it because our field is ABA so it seems a little self-serving. But let's see, what's the difference between them two? You just flip the A's and the B's and that's the difference. That's it, right? That's all I got. No, there's more than that. So an ABA design is the core design that you use to establish functional relation in our field. Not as good as a withdrawal design or as an ABAB design. So it's not quite as good as that because you don't get the replication piece built in with the ABAB part or the ABAB and BAB, you get my point. But anyway, it's there. It's at its core. You need practitioners, though, in the field, probably not so useful. Why? Because you have problem behavior. You make a change to problem behavior, you increase, you increase, why would you increase the problem behavior? So you decrease the problem behavior and then you put it back to baseline and then you walk away and be like, yep, my establish functional control over that behavior. Yes. Well done. And then what? You just ask people for more money so you can fix the problem? I mean, what do you know? You don't do that. Fix the problem right from the beginning or at least help the client, I guess. This is probably a nicer way to say things is. But my point is that ABAB designs, while they might show up in an experiment now and again or in a laboratory now and again, they have of limited value in the field because they leave you on baseline. They do establish functional relations pretty well. I mean, there's some limitations there, but I'm just not going to go too in-depth on that right now. As opposed to a BAB design, which is where you have what you start out with your intervention phase and you return to a baseline, not return, you go to baseline, just don't return to it. Anyway, and then you put the intervention phase back in. Great design type, especially functional in the real world, because you're starting with the intervention, you're making your comparison back to a baseline just like you always would. Go back to your intervention so you're getting those phase changes that are associated with the beginning and the end of the intervention, which is smart and you leave the client on the intervention phase, which is ideally what you want to do, or the dog or whatever, I use the term client loosely. So let's see. What else? The problem with the BAB design is that you don't see the pre-intervention effects, right? You can't control for the pre-intervention effects, the pre-intervention levels, and the interventions effects on those pre-intervention levels, you just don't know, right? So when in doubt, do an ABAB design. You don't need to do a BAB design, but of course there's an ethical issue that pops up all the time with regard to an ABAB design. As compared to a BAB design, why? Because you have to get that extra baseline during the ABAB design, which then probably might be unethical if you have an intervention that can control something like self-injurious behavior, right? So there are a lot of layers here. It is not as good, like I said, it's not as good as establishing functional relations. It is weaker than an ABA design, but it's very functional. It's a very applied sort of thing, and if you're trying to solve problems in the real world, probably not a bad design to use, especially if you want to establish some functional control, or some functional relations, functional control. Whatever. Too many words. They're all just kind of mingling together. I'm trying to think what else. I probably forgot something. I suppose you can tell me in the comments, and I might agree with you. So anyway, I think that's about it for those two. Thank you. Did that video make sense? Probably not. I've watched enough of my videos, and I know that they don't completely make sense. Hell, I don't make sense when I make sense. So maybe you should ask a question. We'll turn it into a bear's beauty if we ever get time. How do you get time? How do you get us time? You like. You subscribe. You share. You donate. You do those things, and maybe we'll make more videos. But seriously, go back. Ask a question or two. It's helpful. You can ask them down there. We tend to reply.
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"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
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UCSIUpXeC1QEjNm54X7KylkQ
|
AHS18 Dave Feldman - An Entirely Different Paradigm for Cholesterol
|
If you value these open access videos, please consider supporting our ability to provide them free of charge, for the public good. Even a modest donation helps us continue to realize our mission to educate the public about the field of ancestral health.
Make a small recurring donation at www.ancestralhealth.org/donate
---------------------------------------------------
Nearly three years of research has brought new and compelling data that is completely rewriting our understanding of serum cholesterol and how it is influenced in the body. Extraordinary patterns have been revealed without use of medication, supplements, or surgery.
All three phases of the research will be summarized and presented along with extraordinary new evidence of just how much lipid markers are impacted by dietary fat and the energy status of the body alone.
|
[
"AHS18"
] | 2018-10-15T17:09:24 | 2024-04-22T18:41:19 | 2,236 |
zqKQeTS5npQ
|
I'm a little more Mike in hand kind of guy. So, yes, this sounds a little bit like hyperbole, an entirely different paradigm for cholesterol, but I'm gonna kind of take you through it. First, of course, my conflicts of interest. I usually get to say none, but because some people have been actually contributing as individuals to a business entity, we've had to accept that through my wife's company, Iron Ninja Technologies, and that makes for some funny bedtime conversation because she'll say, well, you'll need to clean up your nightstander. You won't get funding for next quarter. This is also gonna sound like hyperbole, but I actually record every single thing I ingest, every single thing. In fact, I have a standing rule for every single conference that if you can catch me ingesting something that I didn't take a picture of with my phone first, I'll give you $100. And since my wife hasn't collected on that yet, I gotta say the odds aren't looking good for you. And just this last Tuesday, I hit my 100th blood test in the last 32 months. That also sounds crazy, but no, since November 2015, I've actually had a number of different blood tests. And I'm doing this to really emphasize just how serious I am about the data I'm collecting because what I'm gonna show you next is also going to sound quite outrageous. So I just wanted to show this real quick. This also was a first two days ago. I had to get stuck five times in order to get the A vials. It's almost as if my blood was on strike. So now I'm gonna introduce something that I call the inversion pattern. And you'll know why in a second because when I went on a ketogenic diet, I went low carb, high fat, my cholesterol shot through the roof. And after that happened, I became very obsessed about learning everything I could about cholesterol homeostasis. And sure enough, as a software engineer, I kept seeing a familiar pattern. I kept seeing what looked to me like a distributed object network. Now you don't need to know what that is, but I will tell you this much. It's about different objects talking to each other. And I stand by that original hypothesis all the way to this day, almost three years later. Now what you're seeing is a graph. It's a very special graph that has the first eight data points that I got going all the way back to November 2015 up until a conference called low carb veil. And those eight data points I got over three months time. And they said at that time that that's just way too frequent of testing. Like I'm not gonna get my cholesterol to change. It takes like three months to change your cholesterol. But I'm saying no, no, no, no. It is like a network. It actually changes relatively quickly. And these first eight data points illustrate exactly why. And guess what? We see on that left axis a three day average of dietary fat. But on the right axis in the blue, we see the resulting LDL cholesterol collected the day after those three days. So after that conference, after I presented, I told them in advance, I said now I'm gonna do something pretty outlandish. I'm gonna do one weeks testing where I actually take my blood every single day. And I'm gonna eat to a food plan to try to induce the curves. So that's what I did. You see in the dotted line what I did. I brought down my dietary fat and then I brought it back up again. And so what happened to my LDLC? My LDLC went the other direction. Further moved the inversion. Now of course as an engineer, once you've learned something like this, your next step is to, well go ahead and step on the gas. So at that point I ate a huge amount of fat. What happened to my LDLC? My LDLC dropped to the lowest that I had done since I started my research. Now I'm gonna go ahead and fill in the rest. There's quite a few fun stories past this point. But as you can see, there is quite definitely an inverse pattern. And I'm gonna actually flip that axis on the right side so that you can actually see the inversion very closely. You ready? Now let me go ahead and throw up the Pearson and the regression. And you can see just how tight this relationship is between each other. There's no question. While there are a few outliers that you can see in three different spots. One at the first third and one that's about halfway through and one that's over there for the most part. They don't deviate that far from the mean. So this is what I mean by dietary fat inversion. Basically, right now this is happening on a Thursday morning. If I took my blood this morning, what I would do is I would look back yesterday, Wednesday, the day before that, Tuesday and the day before that, Monday. And from that, I would know what the greatest influence was on my dietary cholesterol, on a ketogenic diet. Well, that's what this graph is. Each of those couplings are the three days before and the resulting LDLC. Let me kind of really drive this home and put this another way. There isn't anything in this graph that represents days four and before. It's only that three day window. So now we look at this in a scatterplot. You can actually see the regression line. You can see for yourself just how tight this relationship is. Now I thought that maybe LDL particle count would go by the same equation. It actually doesn't. And it was that week long experiment that I found this out. It does still have a three day window, but interestingly, it has a two day gap. And I've talked to a number of people about this. I don't have enough time in this presentation to explain what my estimations are, but if you ignore the two day gap and you look only at those three days before that, so like using the same example of this Thursday morning, we'd be looking at Monday, Sunday, and Saturday of the days before, we would get a graph that looks like this. And this is the same 29 data points I showed you from earlier. Only this time, the dotted orange line represents that three, those three days with the two day gap. And the purple line now represents LDLP. And I'm gonna flip that axes again so you can see just how tight that relationship is. And get this, the regression is even a little bit better. On the LDLP. So the particle count is surprisingly also following by the same level of an inversion pattern. All right, so where am I going with this? Well, basically that network that I saw early on, I hypothesized and thus far, I seem to have lots and lots of accumulating evidence. Ultimately comes down to the fact that cholesterol is just following an energy distribution system. That's what it really comes down to. And to unpack this, I'm gonna have to take this back a little bit to the three channels of energy you're already used to hearing about all the time. You're used to hearing about carbs and protein being converted potentially to glucose. And you hear of course all the time about fat being converted to ketones, hence the ketogenic diet. And you can be forgiven if you've thought this whole time that all fat gets converted to ketones in order for you to be fueled by it. But actually no, there's this whole other world by which you get direct fatty acid delivery to your cells. And in particular, I wanna focus on one channel, the channel of triglycerides being loaded up onto these two lipid-carrying proteins known as lipoproteins, the chylomicrons and the VLDLs. Let's break it down just a little bit further. Think of them kind of like boats. It's not really how they look, by the way. But the triglycerides get loaded up in a chylomicron in your gut and effectively end up going into your bloodstream and very quickly drop off those triglycerides to your tissues, lots and lots of energy delivery and very quickly come to chylomicron remnants. And this happens within minutes to hours at the most before it then eventually gets reabsorbed by the liver. Now, here's this other line, this other form of boats that ultimately comes from the liver. From fatty acids you have primarily from storage, from your fat cells, typically from lipolysis. These guys are counterbalancing the brown line, the chylomicrons. That's where ultimately this inversion pattern comes from is if I'm eating lots of fat, there's less of a need on the part of the body to up-regulate as many of the VLDLs. And this is really the story of energy delivery right here at least in terms of lipid-carrying proteins. Now, that's not the only thing that lipoproteins do. There's also this other lipoprotein you've probably heard of HDL, right? HDL is the good cholesterol. Well actually, technically it's the cholesterol found on the lipoprotein for HDL. But there's this other lipoprotein that HDL actually works closely with the more you learn about the lipid system. The bad LDL, right? And when they say LDL cholesterol, what they mean is the cholesterol found on that lipoprotein. Well, when we put this all together because this is the support side of the fence, we're gonna go ahead and draw a dotted line. We see energy deliver is on one side and we see supports on the other side. So, watch closely. Energy delivery, support, energy delivery, support. But now you should have noticed there's only one lipoprotein, one lipoprotein that is doing double duty. The first one, the top line, the chylomocrons, they're mainly just delivering energy. That's their main job. Clearly, HDL, its main job is support. Only VLDLs to IDLs to LDLs are running the gambit of both delivering energy and also ultimately playing a support role. And the reason this matters a lot is I'll show you in the next slide because you probably hear all the time, VLDLs and triglycerides, especially at a high level, tend to be associated with disease, right? Well, they are when they're found lingering in the bloodstream. In fact, it isn't the VLDL and the triglycerides use that is the problem. It is their lack of use. And this is commonly associated with insulin resistance and exceeding one's personal fat threshold. This inability to park the triglycerides necessarily means VLDLs will remain longer in the bloodstream, which is a clear sign of trouble. And I can kind of illustrate this pretty well when you start to realize what the life cycle is for this APOB 100. This VLDL to LDL life cycle. How long does anyone know here right now how long does a VLDL last? Does anyone know before remodels, anybody? All right, it's about three to 60 minutes. How long does an IDL, the intermediate lipoprotein last, anybody? 30 minutes or less. How long does an LDL last? Two days? Two to four days. Let me put that a different way. For 98 to 99% of the life cycle of an LDL, or I should say of an APOB 100 containing lipoprotein, it will be an LDL particle if it's not absorbed by the liver. So with that in mind, here is an example of a high healthy lipid energy trafficking system. High VLDL secretion, trafficking and use, leaving little VLDLs and more of their successor LDLs. So these boats, they've got plenty of places to park, they're triglycerides. These are of course adipocytes, right? They're just anxiously pulling it off. It's all right, the docks are empty, no problem. Let's flip it to a different system. How about instead we have an unhealthy energy trafficking system. Adipocytes are full, there's not a lot of places to park it. So even in low VLDL secretion, if use is lower due to poor uptake, it can result in abnormally long VLDL residence time. So you've got a lot of VLDLs. You've got a lot of triglycerides, they're cargo. You've got a lot of remnant cholesterol, the cholesterol found on VLDLs and IDLs, which are closely associated with disease. So I want you to put your engineer hats on with me here. And let me ask you this very interesting question. What's the key similarity between an adipocyte and a very low density lipoprotein? Similarity is each is primarily staging triglycerides. As fat-based energy to make available two cells on demand. So what's the key difference between these two? Well, an adipocyte is stationary and a VLDL is mobile. So an easy way to think of this as an engineer is a VLDL is effectively an adipocyte on the go. Simple. Now, with all of this in mind, I want to introduce you to lean mass hyper responders. Let's take a step back. If you're going on a paleo diet, if you're going on Mediterranean, if you're going on any diet for that matter, that's low carb and tends to be higher fat, you're gonna find a small percentage end up having high levels of LDL cholesterol, some fraction thereof, right? And we tend to call those, it's not, I'm not sure if it's actually a literature term at this point, but a lot of people would call these hyper responders. This predates me coming into the field. But about a year ago, I identified that there's actually a very specific pattern of people that I call lean mass hyper responders. And I wrote this article on my blog, cholesterolcode.com, and when I did, this was the graphic, which is now kind of a famous graphic. Basically, I was saying, look, you got a low carb diet, lower glycogen stores, right? Lower adipose tissue, therefore lower body fat. And yet you have higher energy demands and there seems to be a tight association with people who therefore have a high LDL of 200 or higher. 200 or higher, by the way, is beyond that which is typically considered those who have familiar hypercholesterolemia. That's just super high, right? But then they also would have an HDL of like 80 milligrams per deciliter or higher. Yet they would have triglycerides of 70 or lower, shows a very, very efficient fat use system. And no surprise, more and more people when they send me their profiles at cholesterolcode.com. I would see these numbers and I would be able to then start guessing. I'd be like, are you lean and or fit? They'd be like, oh yeah, yeah, actually, how would you know that? I only sent you my lipid numbers. It's because lean mass hyper responders, I asked on Twitter for a bunch of people to send me, who are lean mass hyper responders? I asked them to send me their pictures that I could post in the presentation. This is what they look like. I know what you're thinking. You're thinking these guys must be on death's door, right? Yeah, this, by the way, was my favorite one that got sent by Prescott. And sure enough, sure enough, his LDL is 218. I guarantee a lot of practitioners right now would just ignore the HDL and the triglycerides. They go, you need to be on two medications right now. You need to take care of this. By the way, whatever you're doing that's getting you all of these cross country miles, doesn't matter. It's not helping you, right? Okay, so let's cut to the chase. Are lean mass hyper responders at high risk for cardiovascular disease? And really, this is just kind of the overall question. Are you at high risk of cardiovascular disease if you go low carb, high fat? Well, let me show you a special little graphic I made about five months ago. This I call the low carb cholesterol challenge. And I made it fun and friendly. And I really pinged a lot of pro-lippid lowering experts, including like the National Lipid Association and many of the different peoples that are luminaries in the field. And I said, look, look, look. You're telling me that low carb, high fat diets are overly comforted, people are overly comforted on this if they have low triglycerides and high HDL, even if they have high LDL. Well, okay, then submit the best study you can find that shows normal, non-treated, that is no gene, no drug studies, right? Normal non-treated people who have high HDL, low triglycerides and high LDL, who have high rates of cardiovascular disease? Now I'm gonna give you a multiple choice answer. Did I get five studies, 50 studies, or 500 studies in response to this? Anyone wanna guess? Zero, zero, yes, correct. That was a trick question, there's. I did not get a single study that met this criteria. And a lot of people who said, well, come on, all the data is in drug and gene studies, right? No, no, actually, I don't know if you've heard of Framingham. But the Framingham offspring study, this study was just fantastic. They grabbed about 4,000 people who didn't have a history of cardiovascular disease and weren't on lipid lowering therapy, so no drugs, right? And then this is what they found. They found when they stratified by low HDL and high HDL, if you did get triglycerides below 100 and LDL below 100, you got what you expected. The best score on there is 0.6, that's the odds ratio. Looks fantastic. So we would expect if we were to flip this and go for above 100 LDL, then the odds ratio would probably be 1.5 to 2.0, right? No, it's 0.7, the second lowest risk ratio, specifically for cardiovascular disease. Okay, okay, well maybe though, this includes a lot of people who had an LDL of like 102 and 105. Fortunately, they had another risk stratification for people who had an LDL of 130 or above, also 0.7. And then we got another study that I even liked a little bit more. This is low triglycerides and high HDL and they just stratified between those two, right? Observational cohort study with our favorite high risk group men. And age 53 to 74 for that matter. And free of ischemic heart disease. This is now my new favorite graph. I want you to look closely because what's happening is there's stratifying between people who have super high levels of LDL, 170 or below and those who have above 170 over here on this side. If you see the dark bar on the left and the dark bar on the right, they're both HDL above 57 and triglycerides below 97. And they're nearly identical. Even better, you could go to the other side of the strat. And if you see that if your HDL is below 46 and your triglycerides are above 142, it doesn't matter if you get your LDL below 170. It doesn't matter if your LDL is above 170. What matters is your HDL and your triglycerides. The reason I love this study so much is forget even LDL. Let's look at some of the other very clear risk markers. Such as smoking. Which of these groups would you rather be in? In the lower, the high triglyceride versus HDL. How about physical activity level? You actually had people in the low physical activity level with a lower risk of ischemic heart disease. With a lower risk of ischemic heart disease. So long as their HDL was above 57, their triglycerides below 97. Even hypertension. Hypertension is nearly identical. I would rather be a male who's smoking, who's hypertensive and who's sedentary. So long as my triglycerides are low and my HDL is high. So I want to fit this in real quick because I know a lot of you guys particularly are interested on the athletic side. What's really neat is the first nine months of my data. I was in primarily a sedentary lifestyle on purpose because I anticipated probably affect my lipids. Well now that you've seen that I've mapped my inversion pattern. We can actually see a differential when I actually had running that was applied after those nine months and for five months following. So you recognize the inversion pattern from earlier but now we have a whole bunch of new data points that are on the right side and I kind of made them glow for you. We're gonna flip that axes and I'm gonna kind of highlight them so that you can see the high exercise period. And now you see a gap. Against what the original inversion pattern was. And that gap to me is no mystery. You see LDL particles also get endocytost. That's basically another way of saying your cells engulf them to make use of their free cholesterol, their phospholipids, their fat soluble vitamins. They're like a care package basically. And so more of them get removed from the bloodstream in the case of where you have to have more muscle repair and growth. And therefore less LDL particles, less LDLC. Voila, my cold open, which I shouldn't have done by the way. You're supposed to like, if you're working up to a half marathon you should train for three months. I trained for six weeks. So my first week I had a seven mile run cold and it really sucked. And I was really sore. I was really sore and so I wasn't surprised when 48 hours later when I got a blood draw I had very low LDLC. What's that last massive gap? That was following a 5K half marathon and full marathon week. 24 hours after the full marathon. You also see the same thing with the LDLP. And while triglycerides are a lot noisier to track, you know that I've already talked about triglycerides as a source of energy. You're actually depleting the triglycerides on a per particle basis. So what I expect would happen with triglycerides in the bloodstream after I've ran a full marathon? I would expect them to go down, right? Well, so let's flip this inversion pattern so we can see them clearly. And sure enough, the three lowest triglyceride scores in my blood that I've ever had were 24 hours after a half marathon, a half marathon and a full marathon. Not surprising to me at all. I have some breaking news. So when I say breaking, I mean, quite literally, this got handed to me just a few days ago. The first paper for the Lipid Energy Model is actually in development right now. I'm quite excited about this. It will be focusing on the first phase of my data, the inversion pattern. And it will also feature the 10 day Feldman protocol which you can find on the website if you're curious, performed by Craig Moffat and Silvio Furrow as well. And it's being prepared by the Magnificent Tommy Wood. Could you give him a round of applause, by the way? I appreciate all the work he's put into it thus far. I'm paying him the same amount I'm getting paid, by the way. Just so you know. This is what the Feldman protocol is, is that basically you spend a couple days eating low calorie but on a ketogenic diet and then you spend a couple days on high calorie and a high calorie ketogenic diet. And we can see Silvio Furrow's in the first line. We could see mine stratified over here. You saw this from a little bit earlier. And we can also see Craig Moffat's. You can see all of our scatter plots compared to one another. The relationships are quite striking. In fact, they hit it out of the park a little bit better than I did. And these are actually the Tommy-approved bullet points, by the way. And I don't want to run too low on time. So I'm just gonna say that this is something you'll be able to read a lot more here pretty soon because we'll actually have it in a formal paper. But I did want to also fit in real quick because this happened last year, the KetoFest experiment. This won't make it into paper because it was a little more loose. But we basically did the same protocol, just basically what I just now mentioned. Low calorie ketogenic where everybody stayed that way. And then at the beginning of KetoFest, on the morning of Friday, we all took a blood test. And then everybody gorged on fat for three days and took a second blood test. And I posted the hypothesis for this in advance of the experiment, predicting that most people would see their LDL cholesterol drop. And I'm thankful for the folks at PTS Diagnostics who basically covered it. And we got people like this guy, I was one of the two Keto dudes, Richard Morris. And by the way, Amber O'Hearn, who's also here by the way for the conference. And this is the axes. And color coded here, I have everybody's lines. As you can see, almost all of them head downward. It didn't matter where you started. High or low in your total LDLC, you usually saw a decline, 19 of the 22 had a decrease of five to 38% in their LDLC in three days. Whereas just three had an increase and three increases only one to 2%. In fact, this last table, you can really see it. All of those that are in blue, they saw a decline. Everybody else, everybody that's in the orange actually saw a slight increase. So across the board, averaging them all together, it was a drop of 25.7 milligrams per deciliter for the entire group. Now I just wanna finish real quick by thanking my patrons. I am actually only accepting money pretty much directly from individuals. And in doing so, I'm impressed that I've been able to basically be crowd of funded through this research. So I wanted to thank them. And then finally, I wanted to thank you for coming and spending this time with me. Thank you so much. Do we have any questions for Dave? And Dave, if you can repeat the questions so they can pick it up on that. Kate, do you like it? Love it, love it. Here, I'll just give this to you. I've done a lot of research on the effect of visceral fat on LDL small particles. And all this research is done in Japan. And because I have inherited problem with visceral fat, I got interested in it. And they found that visceral fat produces a inflammatory cytokine. IL-6, IL-6 reduces HDL particles. And they found that if you could get rid or reduce your IL-6, HDL-2 particles, HDL-3 particles go up. And they found that those are the two sets of particles that cleans out LDL. And so consequently, their big push in Japan is to reduce your visceral fat to reduce heart disease. Well, I definitely agree with reducing visceral fat. Just real quick, Pearl, what you're talking about, cytokines are a signaling molecule, of course, that's basically a cry for help. And it's true, at a certain threshold of cytokines, the liver actually up regulates LDL particles. And there's my colleague at cholesterolcode.com, Siobhan Huggins, actually gets into this quite a bit. She's even doing a talk this weekend on it. And so for sure, one of the things that I definitely recommend is the reduction of visceral fat, visceral fat being the fat that collects underneath the muscle. And it's actually much more concerning because it can intertwine with the organs and so forth. Bottom line is adipose sites, your adipose tissue is really your best friend for staging and providing energy. It's when the fat is getting accumulated. And that's why I showed that slide from earlier where there's like an accumulation of fat in your adipose tissue where you've like reached your personal fat threshold and you can't find a lot of other places to store it that it has to then get stored in other places. And the reason your body does that is because there is a worse place for it to be stored in, which is in the bloodstream. You shouldn't have a lot of fat in the bloodstream. That's why triglycerides are such a powerful indicator of problems ahead. Do you want us to have any questions? Yeah. Ah. And I noticed because of that, because I've tracked my HDL on the computer, I, the study that came out last year of the University of Copenhagen to the IHDL associated with, I guess, possibly the president. And in your data that you've got on the lean mass hypereresponders, were you able to look at the blood levels or see if there was a wall? Yes. So to repeat what you're saying, you're saying you're a lean mass hypereresponder, you've also seen very high levels of HDL, which is typical of lean. I often see, by the way, HDL and lean mass hypereresponders exceeding 100 all the time. That's right. Yep, and that's actually surprisingly common in this profile. You should, by the way, check out our Facebook group. We actually just opened it last month for lean mass hypereresponders. So, per what you're talking about, and it's kind of ironic because Tommy actually did a podcast, which is sort of how we started up some great conversations, in that there is insurance data that showcases higher, and it's all-cause mortality. Yeah, higher all-cause mortality for those people who have like higher HDL. The problem is is they don't, I don't think they stratify for alcoholism, right? And of course, the other downside is you can't always count on surveys to be honest about the level of alcoholism of the participants necessarily. The problem is is that in order to disentangle the potential alcoholic impact on HDL cholesterol, you have to actually be able to determine that toxicity. And per what you're talking about with inflammation, that typically comes with the inflammation. But there's also something else that's exciting about it. Typically, you find in those people who have very high levels of HDL, who are alcoholic, high levels of triglycerides. And so usually you'll tend to find that there already is some dysregulation that's going on within the lipid system. And that's why you always couple the two. If your HDL is high and your triglycerides are low, it's very likely you are a very efficient fat burner in particular. And you actually don't have a lot, you probably don't have a lot of excessive energy parked in your bloodstream. So the other thing I wanna mention is this is a little bit theoretical. But I actually believe that another reason lean mass hyperepondercy, a higher level of HDL, is because there's actually some degree of peripheral energy distribution on the part of HDL particles that is still relatively new. Like it's, I even almost had in my channel, but it's still somewhat theoretical. But because they have, I'm gonna super geek out for a sec guys, I'm sorry. Because they also can carry the Apolyproprotein C2 as well as being bloated with triglycerides after connecting to a cholesterol-listered transfer protein. I'm sorry, I warned you. They actually, there's a legitimate reason as to why there may actually be a part that they play in lipolytic activity. So, sorry, that may have been a little bit more than you asked for, but that's kind of the gist of it. Me personally, I have a very difficult time thinking that the high levels of HDL associated with being a lean mass hypereponder is independently causal of a problem. It could be indicative of a larger problem, but I'm somewhat skeptical. Yes? Are lean mass hypereponders born that way or do lifestyle choices die up and activity can you become one? I believe it's more the latter than the former. So to repeat your question, you're asking if lean mass hypereponders are born that way, is it genetically determined? Or is it lifestyle based? So I'm gonna say something, you guys have heard about apoE4, for example. Before, when I was starting on this journey, I got a lot of information that suggested that apoE4 is the biggest determiner as to whether you're a hypereponder. I would now almost categorically reject that it's the biggest factor. I believe that the biggest factor is how lean and or fit you are while also being very low carb. I believe you got those three things in common. Your chances of having super high levels of LDL cholesterol are substantially higher, but so too is your chances of having high HDL and low triglycerides. And therefore, as of this moment in time, it could be that there's a gene component that's still associated with who ends up being a lean mass hypereponder who doesn't. But given the fact that the association I see like I just showed, like I wasn't cherry picking those body pictures that I was telling you before, I just told a whole bunch of people to send me those. And I knew they would look like that. And I literally just grabbed a bunch of them and just like threw them up. It definitely looks a lot more like a lifestyle situation. And let me tell you, lean mass hypereponders, I mean, they are probably the most powerful living tester of the lipid hypothesis. Because by all accounts, any conventional doctor right now should say that they are at high risk and they're gonna be developing atherosclerosis at a super high rate. And per the data you were asking for before, not just with inflammation, but I also have a lot of them getting CACs and CIMTs, carotid intermediate thickness. I myself running at those super high levels for the first four tests that I had in my research saw regression. I actually had the most regression on my right side, which was, I wanna say, 685 nanometers, regressed down to 531, up until this most recent experiment. And that was running at super high levels of LDL cholesterol and LDL particle counts through most of my research. That's actually a longer story to unpack for a little bit later. But the point is, is the data as it stands right now is looking very encouraging. Yes. I understand why your data and the studies you highlighted provide considerable comfort for the folks who's LDL particle numbers go through the roof. But we do hear that one of the problems with that is that, and you mentioned the lingering issue, that the LDL particles at those high numbers are more likely to stay in the bloodstream and more likely to become damaged with oxidation. Can you say a little about this matter of oxidized LDL particles? Yes, yes. So to your point, you were asking the question on what about the concern of oxidation? Because as I'm sure a lot of you have heard, if you have like let's say 1,000 nanomoles of LDL particles, that's more preferable to having 2,000 because 2,000 are more likely to be oxidized. And the truth of the matter is that from my perspective as it stands right now, I feel, surprisingly, again, it's an engineer following the data. Mechanistically speaking, I think I would rather have more LDL particles to attack the same level of oxidation. It's the oxidation that is ultimately the biggest problem that we're looking for. And if part of the job of LDL particles are to clear oxidation, I mean, it's part of why they have antioxidants on board. It's part of why I believe that they intentionally get their phospholipid shells oxidized is because it's part of their method of clearance. That's still preferable to the naked tissues of your endothelial cells that line your vessel walls, getting oxidized instead, or for that matter, being exposed to free radicals because that can cause a cascading inflammatory effect. I would rather there be a controlled inflammatory burn than one that ultimately has to get addressed too much later. So in a sense, no, and following the data as it stands right now, all things considered, I think I would rather have more LDL particles than less. Again, to meet with the existing demand against the oxidative stress that there already is. This is one of my problems with people taking on a lot more polyunsaturated fatty acids, especially hydrogenated. You can bring down your LDLC and your LDLP, but there's a lot of evidence that suggests it's with more peroxidation of your LDL particles so that basically they're getting cleared by scavengers receptors. I think a better way to lower your LDLP or LDLC is to just have more carbs if that's what you're into. I don't think it's a good idea to find strategies to oxidize it so that you get a better blood test. This is my two cents.
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WAS THE SUPER TOO STRONG!?! Dragonball FighterZ Ranked Matches
|
KAIOKEN- Oh. This time in our high rank dragonball fighterz online matches we are playing our main team of Krillin, yamcha, and Ui goku and are up against two different Teen gohan and base goku players! Will their kaiokens end up beating us?
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If you enjoyed the video make sure to hit the like button and subscribe! Feel free to share the video with anybody else you feel would enjoy it!
High rank dragonball fighterz and high rank dbfz!
#Dragonball #Dbfz
|
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"Dotodoya",
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"character",
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"dbfz season 3",
"season 3 gameplay"
] | 2020-08-27T22:00:08 | 2024-04-22T17:51:36 | 1,273 |
ZqHvs7iDCKw
|
I guess that team go on. Don't TP. Oh, that counts, dude. The unspoken rule. How's it going, everybody? Datotoi here back with some more dragon ball fighters, ranked matches, and we are once again playing our main team of Ultra Instinct Goku, Krillin, and Yamcha. I'm definitely going to be doing some more mixing around some of the teams pretty soon here, as well as just trying to dive deeper into some other characters that maybe I haven't given a more in-depth look at, but whoa, that assist from God was wild. Also, please notice how hits 2M was slower than my 6M. That was very sad for Hit. But yeah, I want to just look at more characters, and that was so sick. Oh my goodness, the reason we're playing the main team, by the way, is because it's still pretty early in the morning, so a lot of good players are on, so just want to be running that team. Also, the last video we did with this team was amazing. Won't spoil it in case you haven't watched, at this point, I think it's yesterday's video, but really sick stuff. It might have been a great double Sunday combo. Team Gohan has us now in the corner, though. Wow, the level three seemed a little unneeded there. I guess he had to get the knockdown somehow. I'm going to spark here. Yes, the sparking already working out in a big way. Let go who take the reins on this. Can we kill here? Can we kill? Am I going to go for this? I don't think we can kill here. I'm going to try, though. I'm just going to do a level three, and maybe it's enough damage with sparking. Come on. Yes, it was. Wow, I count that so wrong. I think that was the last bit of damage we had. All right, sparking was worth. No matter what happens now, sparking was absolutely worth it. Give me that. Stay on the ground. Yes, we go for the afterimage mix and stay low. Let me check those knee pads. Let me see if they're actually that effective. All right. And now we go low again. Fake the afterimage, make him want to reflect. And now all that's left is the comeback character incarnate, base Goku with sparking attached. How do you block that? Rob? There it is. I could see it coming, but I definitely could not react to it. EX elbow just for the old time's sake. No, we really needed that, dude. Oh, nice. Never mind, we pick up a beam, so that kind of makes up for it. With the amount of time we can eat away here. Do we go in a level one with the other? You know what? Oh, no, mess it up. No blocks? Oh, oh, damage, damage, damage. So much damage. And he's got rounds. Are we dead for that? No, we live, but man, let me break Goku is a, the elbow was so smart. I didn't think he'd go for it. I got the reflect and I was like, nice. Let me move up. All right. Let me see that. I saw you over there using your full auto combo. All right, next time. Time to go out in the Yamcha just purely for the mix in the corner. I think we have to start off with two M and if he blocks it, we go behind. No blocks, so we're just gonna go out into a two H and take the game. Game one is coming home with us. Woo, that was intense, dude. The early Sparky was definitely the way to go. If you early Spark and get like a character down from that or save a character and then get some hits in, it's pretty worth it. It's pretty worth it immediately. Oh man, I played that terribly. Now he has both assists to do whatever he wants with. Is he gonna use it all for the, oh, yeah, okay. C-sist is a beam. I'll take that too. That was not bad at all. Did not expect to get him into the corner so soon. All right, let's see. How do you like to play down tech? Okay, okay. Walk him, sock him. Let me see him. I'm gonna guard cancel there. Oh, nice guard. That was bad for us. Hopefully he drops it. Otherwise this is going to be a lot of damage. We're looking like 50%. Woo, 2H. We're back in business. I'm not close enough to kill him. Oh man, are you kidding? What the, that looked weird. That looked off. Okay, so we weren't able to block and punish, which is a huge deal now. He has to use Spark this again. Hey, this is where I use Spark. This is almost exactly where I used Spark last time. Out in the opposite corner. Like I wouldn't 2H at you, come on. Give me that. No way. I didn't think he'd be that patient with me. I guess he didn't have any assist, so he wouldn't over extend. Yeah, that was probably my bad. Misread the situation. Oh, come on. Hey, I should have been able to punish going for that. C assist is going to make that real easy for him. Unless he drops it right here. Nope, no drops. Now we just have two characters left to depend on. Man, I thought we had him there. I was like, oh, he got me. Is that going to count? Stop auto-comboing, please. It's so scary. Look at that. Look at him swinging, dude. What am I supposed to do? We're going to switch out. Because I want Yamcha assist more than I want a beam assist against a team go on. Don't TP. Oh, that counts, dude. The unspoken rule. I'm expecting a dragon rush pretty soon. If he doesn't kill me right away. OK, that's not good. This is not good. We don't really have a ton of health. We can still make the comeback, especially since Gohan and hit are pretty much one hit. Oh, one hit for a normal combo. Oh, not the EX legs. You can't do this to me. Look at the damage off of him. All he needs to do is vanish. Man, Team Gohan is wild. We checked. Let's go. We're still in the game. He should have taken me out when he had the chance. That should have been the kill combo. But now the game's over. Score one to me. OK, hold on. Hold on. I was joking. I was joking. Dragon rush. Let's go. A level one kills here, right? I'm not mistaken. No, I'm not mistaken. We're in it, baby. We're still in the game. Don't count me out just yet. It wasn't my turn. I thought I'd risk it, though. Oh, man. Oh, that was so sick, though. The potential for a comeback was definitely in there. Good game. All right. So now it's 1-1. We're tied up. Now we've got to go into game three with a purpose. There we go. That's my purpose. Love to see it, dude. OK, OK. Don't drop it. Don't drop it. Don't drop it. OK. I thought I was going to drop that. It's not that difficult of a combo, but I really thought I was going to drop it. All right, Team Gohan, what are you going to do? Probably start off with a Key Blast. Nice. In the corner. I'm just going to go for a level three. Why not, right? Last time, he didn't block low and got punished for it. So do we go for the jab-jab overhead? He tried the DP. We're making all the right reads. All right, time to switch out. The only reason we wanted Yabcha in was for that mix, and we got the mix, so let's just get out of there. Beautiful. Give me that. No, I shouldn't have gone with the auto combo. It was too slow. Well, he did tech down eventually, but unfortunately, he only hit Yabcha. All right, nice. That was sick. Yabcha, making sure he doesn't hit me while I'm doing the accidental 2H in the air. Love to see it. Oh, he hit me. Where do you think I'm going? I am out here dodging stuff. Oh, no, no, no, what a drop. I got too full of myself. I was feeling it. I shouldn't have UI-tucked there. That was pretty dumb. Kaio-ken? No Kaio-ken? Can you not kill here? That was a flex. All of this is a flex. Wait a minute. You know what? I'm going to do a kaio- What? Whoa, what? All right, well, that was weird and unfortunate, but we're back with another match against a God of Destruction. So now there's even more ranked points on the line. So I guess we're going to make this a first to two, or I don't know what the protocol is for this. It is another Team Gohan player, though. Hopefully Team Gohan doesn't carry over, because last time we got hit with an EX legs. I think that's how we lost. It's actually been, like I said in the video, it's very early in the morning, so it's been a long time. I've been searching for a match for a little bit now. I'm going to start with a counter, dude. I'm that confident. Nice. I cannot believe Yamcha actually hit there. I thought I was asking for a little much going for that much from a distance. Nice, air to air. Didn't have my second jump. Oh no, that's a C-assist. Man, man, C-assist's beams are punishing to get hit by. In my head, I was like, decent. We only got hit by a beam, so we're out. Ooh, that was a mean air to air, ran up on me and everything. All right, let's up-tech out of here. Never mind. We got to sit here and take this. Beating up by Team Gohan in the corner, is he going to use a level three here? Or just a level one? Nope, level three. Saved it for the spirit bomb. Shading on Goku Day colors. It's a bad day to be Krillin, but a perfect day to be my sparking blast. We're out. Oh, I thought he was going to 2-H me for sure. I thought I'd definitely re- I flinched in real life. I was like, I'm dead. All right, you know what? Let's get rid of some of this bar. Well, we already lost our sparking, so we got plenty of time to do stuff like this. Take a long level three break, maybe go for a 2M. That doesn't hit behind the back. Yup, yup. Got to go behind the back. If it doesn't connect, I just got to, I got to take it back. That was sick. That was so sick. Clean. We definitely made a mistake and it shouldn't have happened that way, but if it was, if a mistake was going to happen, that was not a bad way to clean it up. We're out of there. Okay, okay, not bad. Let's get Krillin back in here. This might be a mistake purely based off how low Krillin is. So you know what? Let's get back out of there. Last time we 2M that he blocked, so this time I think we're just gonna go for the dragon rush. Yup. Feels good to make a correct decision every once in a while in my life. I know I don't wanna talk about how many times have I made that joke in the past week? All right, T-Go-On comes in with sparking. He's definitely a threat. What a super dash. Made it right through. We gotta force him into a situation to use that sparking. If he takes down a character or two and still has it, we're in a really bad way. Nice. We made a mistake right there. We made a mistake. Even two mistakes, even. Fine time. It applies right now, dude. I'm having a genuine... Oh, that was such a bad guard cancel. The reason I did most of that stuff right there, by the way, was I was trying to buy time. But there was definitely a few situations where he got hit and I didn't expect him to. So I just Wolf-fang fist again. Yeah, one bar kills us there. But we're in a much better spot now. It's unfortunate that Yamcha comes out. I would much rather have the Yamcha assist, but... No, oh, we still... Half a bar, EX moves, they're buff. If that was season two, we wouldn't have been able to kill. But because it's season three, we can. That was clean. Okay, okay. I liked it. We made a lot of right decisions in that game. And then unfortunately, we kind of fumbled it around for a little while once T-Go-On came back out. But we were able to get the job done just fine. So I'll take that. I'm at a two-H. Yes, I do regret that decision. Yes, for those wondering, I regretted that pretty quickly. Nice. Oh, if you would have just gone all the way with that, that would have been bad for me. No, we're not gonna be able to buy enough time for Krillin to come back out. So I guess we're just staying in then? That's so bad. That's so bad. Please don't let him kill us. Please don't let him be able to kill. Can he kill here with just base Goku assist? No, right? No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. Oh, just a DP though. Why do I keep thinking the beam will cover me in that situation? All right, so we've gotten hit on that situation like two or three times now, so definitely gotta clean that up if we're gonna win. Oh, oh no. Yeah, I deserve that. Okay, you, I, Goku's dead. Really bad, bad super dash for me. Level one doesn't tag out, so he's comfortable with Kid Buu being in. I'm not, to be honest, I was hoping he'd tag out. No, we gotta be faster on the draw. Nice. Oh, that one for a long time. Nice, there we go. That's what I'm talking about, being faster on the draw. Okay, level three. I think we're going for two M again by the way. Or do we two, do we five H? Oh, he dropped it. Oh, but we super dashed anyway. The button still came out. Nice. Really? Really? Oh, we gotta tag out. What, base Goku's assist is monstrous. Did you see that hitbox? All right, we gotta spark with Krillin. Other, the other, every character is too low now, so we're just gonna do it right now. Yep, okay, I'll take that. Not bad. Uh, there was probably a way to kill for less meter. Not like this, dude. No, not like that, not a drop. Oh, how did he side switch? What? Wait, are my eyes deceiving me? Did we get two H in the corner? I might be dumb. I don't know. How did he side switch? Was I not blocking? All right, I might be seeing things. Hold on, I don't think my eyes are working correctly. That was actually pretty good. Seven bars, dude. Can I get a Dragon Ball check? Can I get a Dragon Ball check real quick? Okay, game, game, all right, we're tied up. Last game, final game of the set coming up. That one was really bad for me. I feel like halfway through my eyes checked out. My eyes checked out and my hands were like, just, hello, something? Just some stimulus? Oh, that was risky. I'm gonna go for a Dragon Rush here. Nice! Dragon Rush, we actually haven't been Dragon rushing him much this set, so I'm not surprised that one went through. All right, this time we just play it easy. Yup, play it nice and easy. Don't go for anything too crazy. Beautiful. Hopefully I don't drop this. Not a hard combo. Done it a lot. There we go, okay. Not a tough combo, but I'm always afraid in the clutch. Damn, we got a first kill pretty quickly there. I'm gonna go for it. You got it, you got it, bro. I'll take that as well. You know what? Give me the level three. I'm gonna try to keep this same level of pressure. I think that sounds like a plan. Yes, dude. Love to see it. All right, is UI assist going to be up by the time we need it? No, so I'm going for this one. Ah, the two H was so close to working. Please kill? No, it didn't. Nice! Two EX after images in a row, both overhead. I wouldn't have even expected it. And I hit the buttons. Beautiful. Dude, is game two gonna go this well for us? Cause I'm down. Nice 2M, dude. Oh, and you got the, do you got routes? You got routes? You got those? No, you don't got those. You almost had those though. You had more of it than I ever did. Okay, block that. Where's the command grab? You might not go for a command grab. Dragon rush. Yeah, I guess it doesn't make sense to go for a command grab in sparking. I don't know how much damage you can get off of it. So that might have been the reason he didn't want to try it. Okay. I don't know why I changed sides there either. It hit me through my own beat. I gotta stop relying on those beams. Don't you hit me with that spear bomb, young man. Don't do it. In the back. Oh, nice beam. That was clutch. Ah, it takes me out without any bar. Yo, that was so sick. All right, can I flip through a spear bomb? EX flip didn't come out. Oh, that was so good. That was so good. Are we alive? That was so good. I didn't even, my brain didn't piece together that he would go for that there. Dude, we can't lose this. We can't lose this. All right, focus up, focus up. Dude, let me take the win, man. Let me take the win, man. He's fighting. He's fighting for it. Let me get that win. Oh no, I'm slouching, dude. I'm playing so lazy. All right, brain on, brain on, brain's back on. Let's go. We actually are at a disadvantage now. We've been playing, we were trying to play it too easy. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go round the side, back to back. We got it. That is game two, and we are gonna get out of here now. Hopefully you guys enjoyed this longer video. I think it's a longer video. To be fair, some of this recording time might be, you know, the long wait period. But hopefully you enjoyed it. If you did, let me know down below in the comment section what your favorite moment was. And while you're down there, make sure to like button and subscribe to the channel to stay up to date on all the videos we put out here. Speaking of videos, you can check out some more. That should be on your screen if they catch your eye. That's another way to support the channel. I have been Dr. Doyle once again though. Thank you for watching this one to the end, and I will see you in the next one.
|
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Shakespeare Monologues Collection vol. 06 | William Shakespeare | Plays, Short Stories | Audiobook
|
https://gobalex.info/The-Art-Thief-Kindle-Edition https://bit.ly/AIFN https://bit.ly/m/LSUNIQADENTAL https://bit.ly/ABOOK Audiobooks have many benefits for listeners and audiobook lovers. Here are some of them:
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"audiobook",
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"Аудиокнига",
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"Аудіокнига",
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"persuasion audiobook"
] | 2020-02-12T22:34:49 | 2024-04-23T22:47:02 | 2,786 |
zQT8grIANc8
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Can you love the gentleman from Romeo and Juliet act one scene three by William Shakespeare? Recorded for the box.org by shirt to go What say you can you love the gentleman this night? You should behold him at our feast Read over the volume of young Paris face and find a light bit there with beauty's pen Examine every married lennament and see how one another lends content and what obscured in this fair volume lies Find written in the margin of his eyes this precious book of love his unbound lover to beautify him only lacks a cover The fish lives in the sea and his much pride for fair without the fair within the hide That book in many's eyes does share the glory that in gold class locks in the golden story So shall you share all that he doth possess by having him making yourself no less End of can you love the gentleman from act one scene three of Romeo and Juliet this recording is in the public domain for more information on a volunteer Please visit LibriVox.org Bolingbroke's monologue bring forth these men from richard the second act three scene one by William Shakespeare This is a LibriVox recording For more information or to volunteer, please visit LibriVox.org Bring forth these men Bushy and green I Will not vex your souls Since presently your souls must part your bodies With too much urging your pernicious lives for twerner charity Yet to wash your blood from off my hands Here in the view of men I Will unfold some causes of your deaths You have misled a prince a royal king a Happy gentleman in blood and liniments By you unhappy and disfigured clean you have in manner with your sinful hours made a divorce Betwixt his queen and him broke the possession of a royal bed And stained the beauty of a fair queen's cheeks With tears drawn from her eyes by your foul wrongs Myself a prince by fortune of my birth near to the king in blood and near in love Till you did make him misinterpret me have stooped my neck under your injuries and sighed my English breath in foreign clouds eating the bitter bread of banishment Whilst you have fared upon my sinuris Disparked my parks and felled my forest woods From my own windows torn my household coat Raised out my impress leaving me no sign Save men's opinions and my living blood To show the world I am a gentleman This and much more Much more than twice all this condemns you to the death See them delivered over to execution and the hand of death End of Bolingbroke's monologue bring forth these men From Richard the second act three seen one This recording is in the public domain Recording by Rod Lloyd Melbourne, Australia Romeo and Juliet act 4 scene 3 line 15 by William Shakespeare This is a LibriVox recording for more information or to volunteer Please visit LibriVox.org. I have a faint cold fear thrills through my veins that almost freezes up the heat of life I'll call them back again to comfort me nurse What should she do here my dismal scene I needs must act alone come vile What if this mixture does not work at all shall I be married then tomorrow morning? No, no this shall forbid it lie thou there What if it be a poison which the friar subtly hath ministered to have me dead Lest in this marriage. He should be dishonored because he married me before to Romeo I fear it is and yet me thinks it should not For he hath still been tried a holy man How if when I am laid into the tomb I wake before the time that Romeo come to redeem me There's a fearful point Shall I not then be stifled in the vault to whose foul mouth no health some air breathes in and There die strangled air my Romeo comes or if I live is it not very like the horrible conceit of death and night Together with the terror of the place as in a vault an ancient receptacle We're for these many hundred years the bones of all my buried ancestors are packed We're bloody tibbled yet, but green and earth lies festering in his shroud where as they say at some hours in the night spirits resort a Lack a lack is it not that I so early waking with that loathsome smells and shrieks like mandrakes torn out of the earth That living mortals hearing them run mad. Oh if I awake Shall I not be distraught and vironed with all these hideous fears and madly play with my forefathers joints and plucked and mangled Tibbled from his shroud and in this rage with some great kinsman's bone as with a club dash out my desperate brains Oh, look me thinks I see my cousin's ghost seeking out Romeo that did spit his body upon a rapier's point Stay tibbled stay Romeo. I come this do I drink to thee End of Romeo and Juliet from Romeo and Juliet Act 4 scene 3 line 15. This recording is in the public domain Gaunt's monologue Me thinks I am a prophet new inspired From Richard the second act to scene one by William Shakespeare This is a LibriVox recording For more information or to volunteer Please visit LibriVox.org Me thinks I am a prophet new inspired and thus expiring do foretell of him His rash fierce blaze of riot cannot last For violent fires soon burn out themselves Small showers last long But sudden storms are short He tires betimes that spurs too fast betimes With eager feeding food does choke the feeder Light vanity Insatiate common Consuming means Soon praise upon itself this royal throne of kings this sceptred isle This earth of majesty this seat of Mars this other Eden Dammy paradise This fortress built by nature for herself Against infection and the hand of war This happy breed of men this little world this precious stone Set in the silver sea Which serves it in the office of a wall or as a moat defensive to a house Against the envy of less happier lands This blessed plot this earth this realm This England this nurse This teeming womb of royal kings Feared by their breed and famous by their birth Renowned for their deeds as far from home for Christian service and true chivalry As is the sepulchre in stubborn jury of the world's Ransom Blessed Mary's son This land of such dear souls This dear dear land dear for her reputation through the world is Now least out. I die pronouncing it like to a tenement or pelting farm England bound in with the triumphant sea Whose rocky shore beats back the envious siege of watery Neptune Is now bound in with shame with inky blots and rotten parchment bonds That England that was want to conquer others have made a shameful conquest of itself Would the scandal vanish with my life How happy then Were my ensuing death End of Gaunt's monologue Me thinks I am a prophet new inspired From Richard the second act to scene one This recording is in the public domain Recording by Rod Lloyd Melbourne, Australia The more my wrong From the teeming of the shrew Act for scene three by William Shakespeare This is a Libra Vox recording for more information or to volunteer. Please visit Libra Vox.org Recording by Melissa The more my wrong the more his spite appears What did he marry me to famish me? Beggars that come into my father's door upon untreaty have a present alms if not Elsewhere they meet with charity But I who never knew how to entreat Nor never needed that I should entreat Imstarved for meat Giddy for lack of sleep with oath kept waking and with brawling fey And that which spites me more than all these ones He does it under name of perfect love as who should say if I should sleep or eat Toward deadly sickness or else present death I'd pretty go and get me summer past. I care not what so it beholds some food end of The more my wrong From the teeming of the shrew act for scene three This recording is in the public domain Oh, then I see Queen Mab had been with you from Romeo and Juliet act one scene four by William Shakespeare. This is a LibriVox recording for more information or to volunteer. Please visit LibriVox.org Recording by Vin Riley Oh, then I see Queen Mab have been with you She is the fairies midwife and she comes in shape no bigger than an agate stone on the forefinger of an alderman Drawn with a team of little atomies a thwart men's noses as they lie asleep Her wagon spokes made of long spinners legs the cover of the wings of grasshoppers Her traces of the smallest spider's web her colors of the moonshine's watery beams Her whip of cricket's bone the lash of film her wagon a small gray coated nut Not half so big as a round little worm print from the lazy finger of a maid Her chariot is an empty hazelnut made by the joiner squirrel or old grub Time out of mind the fairies coach makers and in this state She gallops night by night through lovers brains and then they dream of love or Courtier's knees that dream on curtsies straight or lawyers fingers who straight dream on fees Or ladies lips who straight on kisses dream which off the angry Mab with blisters plagues Because their breaths with sweet meats tainted are Sometimes she gallops or a courtier's nose and then dreams he of smelling out a suit and Sometimes comes she with a tithe pig's tail tickling a parson's nose as a lies asleep Then dreams he of another benefits Sometimes she'd drive it or a soldier's neck and then dreams he of cutting foreign throats of Breaches, ambuscados, Spanish blades of health's five fathom deep and then a non drums in his ear At which he starts and wakes and being thus frighted swears a prayer or two and sleeps again This is that very Mab that plaits the mains of horses in the night and bakes the elf locks and foul Slutish hairs which once untangled much misfortune bodes This is the hag when maids lie on their backs that presses them and learns them first to bear Making them women of good carriage. This is she End of all then I see Queen Mab had been with you from Romeo and Juliet act one scene four This recording is in the public domain Phi Phi a knit that threatening unkind brow From the taming of the shrew Act five scene two by William Shakespeare This is a LibriVox recording for more information or to volunteer. Please visit LibriVox.org Phi Phi a knit that threatening unkind brow and dart not squampful glances from those eyes To wound thy lord thy king thy governor it plots thy beauty as frost to bite the meads confounds thy fame as whirlwinds shake fair buds and in no sense as meat or amnable a Woman moved is like a fountain troubled Muddy ill-seeming thick bereft of beauty and while it is so none so dry or thirsty Will dine to sip or touch one drop of it Thy husband is thy lord thy life thy keeper thy head thy sovereign One that cares for thee and for thy maintenance commits his body to painful labor both by sea and land To watch the night and storms the day and cold whilst thou liest warm at home secure and safe and craves no other tribute at thy hands, but love Fair looks and true obedience Too little payment for so great a debt Such duty as the subject owes the prince even such a woman oath to her husband And when she is froward peevish Solon sour and not obedient to his honest will What is she but a foul contending rebel and graceless traitor to her loving lord? I am ashamed that women are so simple to offer war where they should kneel for peace or seek for rule Supremacy and sway when they are bound to serve love and obey Why are our bodies soft and weak and smooth? Unapted toil and trouble in the world But that our soft conditions and our hearts should well agree with our external parts Come come you froward and unable worms my mind hath been as big as one of yours My heart is great my reason happily more to bandy word for word and frown for frown But now I see our lances are but straws our strength is weak our weakness past compare The seeming to be most which we indeed least are Then veil your stomachs for it is no boot and place your hands below your husband's foot In token of which duty if he please my hand is ready made to him ease End of 5 5 unknit that threatening unkind brow From the taming of the shrew act 5 scene 2. This recording is in the public domain Hamlet's monologue to be or not to be from Hamlet act 3 scene 1 by William Shakespeare This is a LibriVox recording For more information or to volunteer Please visit LibriVox.org To be or not to be That is the question Whether it is nobler in the mind to suffer the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune Or to take arms against the sea of troubles and by opposing end them To die to sleep no more And by a sleep to say we end the heartache and the thousand natural shocks that flesh is heir to It is a consummation Devoutly to be wished To die to sleep To sleep the chance to dream I there's the rub For in that sleep of death what dreams may come when we have shuffled off this mortal coil Must give us pause There's the respect that makes calamity of so long life For who would bear the whips and scorns of time The oppressors wrong The proud man's contumely The pangs of despised love The laws delay the insolence of office and the spurns that patient merit of the unworthy takes When he himself might his quietest make with a bare bodkin Who would faddle's bear to grunt and sweat under a weary life But that the dread of something after death The undiscovered country from whose born no traveler returns Puzzles the will and makes us rather bear those ills we have Than fly to others that we know not of Thus conscience does make cowards of us all and Thus the native hue of resolution is sickled all with the pale cast of thought and Enterprises of great pith and moment with this regard their currents turn awry and lose the name of action soft you now The fair Ophelia Nymph in thy horizons be all my sins remembered End of Hamlet's monologue To be or not to be From Hamlet act three scene one This recording is in the public domain Recording by Rod Lloyd Melbourne Australia If we shadows have offended midsummer's night dreams act five scene two by William Shakespeare This is a LibriVox recording for more information or to volunteer. Please visit LibriVox.org If we shadows have offended think about this and all is mended that you have but slumbered here while these visions did appear And this weak and idle theme No more yielding but a dream Gentles do not reprehend if you pardon we will mend And as I am an honest puck if we have unearned luck Now to escape the serpent's tongue. We will make a men's air long Else the puck a liar call So good night until you all Give me our hands if we be friends and robin show restore a mens End of if we shadows have offended from a midsummer's night's dream Act five scene two This recording is in the public domain This is a LibriVox recording all LibriVox recordings are in the public domain For more information or to volunteer. Please visit LibriVox.org A sleep my love from a midsummer night's dream act five scene one line three twenty four by William Shakespeare Read for LibriVox by James Neal Joaquin, Illinois March 27th 2008 I sleep my love must cover thy sweet eyes These my lips This cherry nose These yellow cow slip cheeks Are gone as were green those sisters three Come come to me with hands as pale as them in gore Have shore with shears his thread of silk Tongue de-swored Come Of a sleep my love from a midsummer's night's dream act five scene one This recording is in the public domain Recorded by James Neal Joaquin, Illinois What light through yonder window breaks from roman juliet act two scene two by William Shakespeare Recorded for LibriVox at org pressure to go But soft what light through yonder window breaks It is the east and Juliet is the sun Arise for a sun and kill the envious moon who is already sick and pale with grief That thou her maid art far more fair than she be not her maid than she is envious Her vestal livery is but sick and green and none but fools do wear it cast it off It is my lady. Oh, it is my love Oh that she knew she were she speaks Yet she says nothing What a fact Her eye discourses I will answer it I am too bold It is not to me she speaks Two of the fairest stars in all the heaven having some business do and treat her eyes to twinkle in their spheres till they return But if her eyes were there they in her head The brightness of her cheek would shame those stars as daylight dot the lamp Her eyes in heaven would through the airy region stream so bright that birds would sing and think it were not night See how she leans her cheek upon her hand Oh that I wore a glove upon that hand that I might touch that cheek End of recording. This recording is in public domain. For more information on a volunteer, please visit Libervox.org Hermione from The Winter's Tale act 3 scene 2 by William Shakespeare This is a Libervox recording for more information or to volunteer. Please visit libervox.org Recording by Heather Sir Spare your threats The bug which you would fright me with I seek To me can life be no commodity The crown and comfort of my life your favor I do give lost For I do feel it gone, but no not how it went My second joy and first fruit of my body from his presence. I am barred like one infectious My third comfort start most unluckily This from my breast The innocent milk in its most innocent mouth hailed out her murder Myself on every post proclaimed a strumpet With the modest hatred the child bed privilege denied which belongs to women of all fashion Lastly Hurryed here to this place in the open air before I have got strength of limit Now my leech tell me what blessings I have here alive that I should fear to die Therefore proceed But yet hear this Stake me not No life I price it not a straw But for my honor which I would free if I shall be condemned upon surmises all proof sleeping else But what do your jealousies awake? I tell you Tis rigor and not law Your honor's all I do refer me to the oracle Apollo be my judge End of her money from the winter's tale act 3 scene 2. This recording is in the public domain Recording by Heather Chan Calgary Alberta Canada How happy some or others some can be From a mid-summer night's dream act 1 scene 1 by William Shakespeare This is a LibriVox recording for more information or to volunteer. Please visit LibriVox.org Recording by Heather How happy some or others some can be through Athens. I am thought as fair as she But what of that Demetrius thinks not so He will not know what all but he do know And as he errs doting on Hermia's eyes So I admiring of his qualities Things base and vile folding no quantity Love can transpose to form and dignity Love looks not with the eyes but with the mind and therefore his winged cupid painted blind Nor hath love's mind of any judgment taste Wings no eyes figure unheedy haste And therefore his love said to be a child because in choice he is so oft to be gild As waggish boys in game themselves foreswear so the boy love is perjured everywhere For Erdemetrius looked on Hermia's eye and he hailed down oaths that he was only mine And when this hail some heat from Hermia felt So he dissolved And showers of oaths did not I will go tell him a fair Hermia's flight Then to the woods will he tomorrow night Pursue her and for this intelligence if I have thanks It is a dear expense But herein mean I to enrich my pain To have his sight thither And back again End of how happy some or others some can be From a midsummer night's dream act one scene one This recording is in the public domain Recording by Heather Chan calgary alberta canada The player queen From hamlet act three scene two by william shakespeare This is a libravox recording for more information or to volunteer. Please visit libravox.org Recording by heather So many journeys may the sun and moon make us again count or and love be done But woe is me you are so sick of late So far from cheer and from your former state that I distrust you Yet though I distrust discomfort to you my lord It nothing must for women's fear and love holds quantity In either ought or in extremity Now what my love is proof hath made you know and as my love is sized my fear is so Where love is great the littlest doubts are fear Where little fear grows great great love grows there End of player queen From hamlet act three scene two This recording is in the public domain Recording by heather chan calgary alberta canada To be or not to be Hamlet act three scene one by william shakespeare This is a libravox recording for more information or to volunteer. Please visit libravox.org Recording by elouisa oizan to be or not to be That is the question Whether it is nobler in the mind to suffer the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune Or to take arms against the sea of troubles and by opposing and them to die To sleep no more And by sleep to say we end the heartache and the thousand natural shocks That flesh is heir to It is a consummation devoutly to be wished To die To sleep To sleep perchance to dream Aye, there's the rub For in that sleep of death What dreams may come when we have shuffled off this mortal coil must give us pause There's the respect that makes calamity of so long life For who would bear the whips and scorns of time? The oppressors wrong the proud man's quantumly The pangs of despised love the laws delay The insolence of office and the spurns that patient merit of the unworthy takes When he himself might his quietest make with a bear botkin Who would fardels bear to grunt and sweat under a weary life? But that the dread of something after death The undiscovered country from whose born no traveler returns Puzzles the will and makes us rather bear those ills we have Than fly to others that we know not of Thus conscience does make cowards of us all And thus the native hue of resolution Is sicklead or with the pale cast of thought And enterprises of great pith and moment with this regard their current turns awry And lose the name of action End of to be or not to be Hamlet act three scene one This recording is in the public domain Recording by Eloise Oison Rochester, New York U.S. If we shadows have offended Amidst summer nights dream Act five scene two by William Shakespeare This is a LibriVox recording for more information or to volunteer Please visit LibriVox.org Recording by Eloise Oison If we shadows have offended Think but this and all is mended That you have but slumbered here whilst these visions did appear And this weak and idle theme no more yielding but a dream GENTLES do not reprehend If you pardon we will mend and as I am an honest puck If we have unearned luck now to scape the serpent's tongue We will make amends ere long Else the puck a liar call So good night unto you all Give me your hands if we be friends And Robin shall restore amends And if we shadows have offended Amidst summer nights dream Act five scene two This recording is in the public domain Recording by Eloise Oison Rochester, New York U.S. The raven himself is hoarse From Macbeth Act one scene five by William Shakespeare This is a LibriVox recording For more information or to volunteer Please visit LibriVox.org The raven himself is hoarse That croaks the final entrance of Duncan under my battlements Come, you spirits That tend on mortal thoughts Unsex me here And fill me from the crown to the toe Top full of dire's cruelty Make thick my blood Stop the access and passage to remorse That no compunctious visitings of nature Shake my fel purpose Nor to keep peace between the effect and it Come to my woman's breast And take milk for gall You murdering ministers Wherever in your sightless substances You wait on natures, Miss Jif Come, thick night And paw thee in the dunnest smoke of hell That my keen knife see not the wound it makes Nor heaven peep through the blanket of the dark to cry hold End of The raven himself is hoarse Macbeth Act one scene five This recording is in the public domain Recording by Eloise Oizon Rochester, New York U.S. Prologue from Henry V by William Shakespeare This is a LibriVox recording. For more information or to volunteer, please visit LibriVox.org Recording by Sheldon Greaves O, for a muse of fire That would ascend the brightest heaven of invention A kingdom for a stage, princes to act And monarchs to behold the swelling scene Then should the warlike Harry Like himself assume the port of Mars And at his heels leashed in like hounds Should famine, sword, and fire Crouched for employment But pardon, gentles all The flat, upraised spirits That hath dared on this unworthy scaffold To bring forth so great an object Can this cockpit hold the vasty fields of France? Or may we cram within this wooden O The very casks that did affright the air at Agincourt? O, pardon Since a crooked figure may attest In little place a million And let us ciphers to this great account On your imaginary forces' work Suppose within the girdle of these walls Are now confined two mighty monarchies Whose high upriarid and abutting fronts The perilous narrow ocean parts asunder Peace out our imperfections with your thoughts Into a thousand parts divide one man And make imaginary puasance Think when we talk of horses that you see them Printing their proud hooves of the receiving earth For it is your thoughts that now must echo our kings Carry them here and there, jumping o'er times Turning the accomplishment of many years Into an hourglass For the which supply permit me chorus to this history Who prologue like your humble patience pray Gently to hear, kindly to judge, our play End of Prologue from Henry V by William Shakespeare This recording is in the public domain But I do think it is their husband's faults From Othello Act IV Scene III by William Shakespeare This is a LibriVox recording For more information or to volunteer Please visit LibriVox.org Recording by Carolyn Francis But I do think it is their husband's faults If wives do fall Say that they slack their duties And pour our treasures into foreign laps Or else break out in peevish jealousies Throwing restraint upon us Or say they strike us Or scant our former having in despite Why, we have galls And though we have some grace Yet have we some revenge Let husbands know their wives have sense like them They see and smell and have their palates Both for sweet and sour, as husbands have What is it that they do when they change us for others? Is it sport? I think it is And doth affection breed it? I think it doth Is frailty that thus airs? It is so too And have not we affections, desires for sport And frailty as men have? Then let them use us well Else let them know The ills we do Their ills instruct us so End of But I do think it is their husbands faults From Othello Act 4, Scene 3 This recording is in the public domain All the world's a stage From as you like it Act 2, Scene 7 By William Shakespeare Read for LibriVox.org By Shirtigal All the world's a stage And all the men and women merely players They have their exits and their entrances And one man in his time plays many parts His acts being seven ages At first the infant mulling and puking the nurse's arms And then the whining schoolboy With his satchel and shining morning face Creeping like snail unwillingly to school And then the lover sighing like furnace With a woeful ballad Made to his mistress eyebrow Then a soldier, full of strange oaths And bearded like the pard Jealous and honor, sudden and quick and quarrel Seeking the bubble reputation Even in the cannon's mouth And then the justice In fair round belly with good cap in line With eyes severe and beard a formal cut Full of wise saws and modern instances And so he plays his part The sixth age shifts into the lean and slippered pantaloon With spectacles on nose and pouch on side His youthful hose well-saved, a world too wide For his shrunk shank and his big manly voice Turning again toward childish treble Pipes and whistles in his sound Last scene of all that ends this strange eventful history His second childishness and mere oblivion Sans teeth, sans eyes, sans taste, sans everything End of All The World's A Stage From As You Like It, Act Two, Scene Seven
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UClbN077lfAToY6Cr5P4JmLg
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NJroute22 VLOG ep 34 Cheap WIne Reviews Introduction
|
Our introduction to the upcoming NJroute22.com Cheap Wine Reviews vlog. We'll tell you what you can expect in this new feature.
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[
"NJ",
"Route 22",
"Blog",
"Vlog",
"Lifestyle",
"New Jersey",
"Product Reviews",
"Central NJ",
"Roads",
"Highways",
"Life",
"Wine Reviews",
"Cheap Wine Reviews",
"Honest Wine Reviews",
"Truth about Wine",
"Expensive Wine",
"cheap wine",
"cheap red wine",
"red wine",
"honest reviews",
"tasting notes",
"boxed wine",
"taste test"
] | 2018-07-25T02:25:19 | 2024-04-23T14:35:32 | 528 |
zqQCU9Svtas
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Greetings! NJRoot22.com here with a new kind of vlog today. We're gonna start talking about wines that you can pick up in the area here. This is called Cheap Wine Reviews and before we get started, let me just get rid of my my little promotional flyer here, before we get started I want to talk a little bit about what I think about the wine industry in general. I find it fascinating because I think a lot of what goes into wine is into the marketing of a wine, in the same way like for instance like there's reviews and all this fancy wording on every bottle of wine and they talk about the notes and the finish and what it pairs with. It kind of reminds me of like the art industry, you know, you know how like some artists over time build a reputation and you know they were struggling artists and their their works went for 20 bucks and then they they schmooze and they kiss butt and then they work their way around, they hobnob and and eventually they kiss ass long enough in the industry that they and they pat enough people's pockets along the way that that their art all the sudden becomes worth more. I guess it's just this weird framework in how how stuff like like art works and I think wine is the sort of the same thing how certain wineries and and they they've been in the industry for so long and certain families and so on and they they build this reputation up where like people who buy the wine don't really think about anymore they just they just are programmed in their head that oh this is a better wine but keep in mind that wine is subjective okay and the purpose here for this this new wine series I don't know how if I'm gonna do it maybe once a week I'm gonna talk about a particular brand of cheap wine we're gonna talk about how how it makes us feel like for instance you know like the marketing I want to get back to the marketing the marketing of stuff like let's say Red Bull it's they had this whole marketing thing associated with it gives you energy and this and that and people buy this stuff up it's just addictive chemicals and it doesn't it's not even good for you I don't even know what the taurine comes from like some sort of animal part I don't know but what I want to talk about is how how we rate wines it's not about the taste because that everything is subjective you may think one thing because you read the bottle or just some friend of yours some wine snob told you about this great wine wine is an individual experience and for us it's much less about the actual taste because I don't think food has to be complicated wine for us is about the effects it has on our body I like to get a nice buzz from the wine it makes me feel good okay now the flavor has a minor role in it obviously if the wine tastes like crap I'm not gonna continue buying it and or drinking it for that matter and secondly we we'd like to drink a fairly substantial amount of wine so we we judge a quality of wine the quality of a wine based on how we feel the next day and what's important here on lastly the cost I don't want to spend $30 or $50 on a bottle of wine I don't think the experience is proportional to how much you pay for it so that said we have three simple criteria it's like does it taste acceptable I mean I yes some wine has a little bit more depth so to say I mean I don't even know if I would even say that if I didn't know that type of terminology existed I wouldn't say oh wow this wine has it starts this way it lingers on my tongue that the yes when you think about anything has link lingering flavors like from fruit to to me to vegetables I don't know I mean can you really apply that same taste they're just taste buds in the end you can't really apply that that philosophy to everything I mean I don't know then it seems kind of invalid if that's not true either way red wine has a general taste I'm not gonna say oh it tastes like plum it tastes like like cinnamon it tastes like nutmeg I mean I don't don't really care you know everybody has their own personal preference so the taste is as long as it doesn't taste like crap I mean you could tell there's there's a line in the sand where you can say wow this this really has a weird taste like turpentine or it's too liquidy or you know I don't know juicy again personal preference and how we feel the next day and of course the cost I don't like spending more than ten dollars a 750 milliliter bottle ever the closer to five dollars a bottle the better for us I mean it's just that's the way it is it's an economic factor but how you we're coming up with a baseline here and I'm a big guy and and my baseline is two two bottles is my baseline because I know I've drank many two-bottle sessions or two bottle drinking nights where you know I feel fine the next day and then there's other two bottle depending on the wine I'll feel pretty pretty shoddy so the two-bottle limit is my my line in the same because you can drink one bottle or I can drink one bottle of any wine and feel perfect the next day doesn't matter how cheap or expensive it is but if I drank three bottles of any wine I guarantee you I'm not gonna feel well the next day so two bottles is my is my my my barometer your barometer may be different if you're a hundred pound woman it might be three-quarters of a bottle or four glasses of wine depending on how you pour up and third lastly I don't drink wine the way most people do and this is gonna make some people so upset I water it down and I put ice in it so because I feel hydration is important I get at least the amount of water I drink so if I drink 1.5 bottle then I'm gonna drink 1.5 or more of water sometimes it's double the amount so I'll drink three liters of water to the 1.5 liters of wine that's that's a lot of a lot of wine for sure but so you have to come up with your own personal baseline to truly be able to review which wines are good for you and these I mean I'm gonna be reviewing these two wines in the upcoming weeks as well as stuff like this this is a bottle I think was like $5.99 that that those are criteria your criteria may be different but I guarantee you that it's all that fluff and all that marketing is really just a psychological trick to get you to spend more money on a fancier bottle of wine it's it's I don't I don't buy it for one second there are some things to be considered though however I mean I'm gonna try and get to the bottom of it but some of the cheaper wines may have some added additives to them color and or flavor or both and and that that's something I'm a little concerned with I mean I'd rather have a pure wine I mean that's that's a purest mindset but I like Spanish wines as Spanish wines are Portuguese South America that type of stuff but you keep it keep an eye I'm gonna give some real real just fundamental you know pragmatic wine reviews there's gonna be no fancy oh yeah this is this way this is that way that's not true it's I think I don't buy into it for one bit so hopefully you know we're gonna talk about the differences between box wine and bottled wine and screw tops I mean I don't think I think we've been fooled long enough with all these fancy wine reviewers and bloggers that talk about wine when it's really comes down to is it a piece of crap I'm not gonna feel like crap and was it affordable so that's it so hopefully you'll enjoy this new series about wine and affordable cheap wines have a nice week ahead
|
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"url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zqQCU9Svtas",
"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
}
|
UC_TneqvSfh-KsIyZMlJjVsQ
|
Ukraine is strengthening Bakhmut’s defence - "Wagner" group is facing difficult times
|
#Kanal13 #likekanal13 #subscribekanal13 #warinukraine
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Tags: Ukriane, Russia, Putin, Putler, Russian invasion of Ukraine, Zelenski, Kiev, Kyiv, Kadirov army, Kadirov, Kherson, Bucha, Kharkiv, Ukrainian pilots, vagners, Russian tanks, NATO, drones, Moscow, Kreml, war victims Ukraina,
|
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"mitinq",
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"kanal13 xeber",
"tecili xeberler",
"en son xeberler",
"ən son xəbərlər",
"son xəbərlər",
"son xeberler",
"günün son xəbərləri",
"günün xəbərləri",
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"Russia",
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"Russian invasion of Ukraine",
"Zelenski",
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"Kharkiv",
"Ukrainian pilots",
"vagners",
"Russian tanks",
"NATO",
"drones",
"Moscow",
"Kreml",
"war victims Ukraina"
] | 2023-03-06T23:00:08 | 2024-02-14T18:42:41 | 111 |
ZQb4GA307b8
|
Ukraine strengthens defences of Bakhmut. Wagner Group is dissatisfied. President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky held a meeting of the General Staff. Zelensky asked Commander-in-Chief Valery Zalozhnyi and the head of the operational strategic troop group Alexander Sirsky about future activities in the direction of Bakhmut. Both men expressed their support for the continuation of the defense operation and the further strengthening of Ukraine's positions in Bakhmut. At the meeting a decision was made to strengthen the defense of Bakhmut. At this time the head of Russia's Wagner mercenary force warned that Russia's position around the eastern Ukrainian city of Bakhmut was in peril unless his troops got ammunition. Prigozin said Russia's front lines near Bakhmut would or could collapse if his forces did not receive the ammunition promised by Moscow in February. For now we are trying to figure out the reason. Is it just ordinary bureaucracy or a betrayal? Prigozin referring to the absence of ammunition said in his press service telegram channel. The mercenary chief regularly criticizes Russia's defense chiefs and top generals. Last month he accused Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu and others of treason for withholding supplies of munitions to his men. In a nearly four minute video published on the Wagner Orchestra telegram channel on Saturday Prigozin said his troops were worried that the government wanted to set them up as possible scapegoats if Russia lost the war. If Wagner retreats from Bakhmut now the whole front will collapse. Prigozin said the situation will not be sweet for all military formations protecting Russian interests.
|
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|
UCKuSaHewQKWjR2wFuqfkMEA
|
USS Freedom Conducts Compliant Boarding Exercise; Truman Strike Group Set to Deploy
|
Headlines for Friday, July 19, 2013: USS Freedom Conducts Compliant Boarding Exercise; Truman Strike Group Set to Deploy
|
[
"U.S. Navy",
"Military",
"Force",
"CARAT",
"USS Freedom",
"Truman",
"Deploy",
"Exercise"
] | 2013-07-19T14:50:40 | 2024-02-05T09:03:00 | 60 |
zqR4LV2hCxA
|
Welcome all, a hands-up date. I'm Petty Officer Mara Timberlake with your headlines from around the fleet. USS Freedom's Visit Board Search and Seizure team conducted a compliant boarding exercise with Singapore's Police Coast Guard July 17th as part of cooperation of Float Readiness and Training, or CARAT 2013. CARAT is a series of training exercises between the US Navy and Southeast Asian partners that focuses on exchanging knowledge and techniques between the services. The Harry S. Truman Carrier Strike Group is scheduled to deploy July 22nd. Truman's service members have continued training and achieved all required operational certifications to maintain combat readiness following the delay of their deployment in February. The strike group will operate with Allied and partner maritime forces in the Mediterranean and Middle East. You can read more about these stories at Navy.mil. From all hands-up date, thanks for watching.
|
{
"url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zqR4LV2hCxA",
"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
}
|
UCSmheuqpa0deotgNSlVtzNw
|
My Car Got Broken Into
|
Original Video:
THANKS FOR KICKIN IT WITH ME. BE SURE TO SUBSCRIBE AND HIT THE LIKE BUTTON. ALSO TURN ON POST NOTIFICATIONS.
FOLLOW ME ON INSTAGRAM:
https://www.instagram.com/rossthechosenone/
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https://twitter.com/What_Now_Ross
|
[
"intheclutchent",
"freevideo",
"video",
"laughs",
"jokes",
"clutchsquad",
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"intheclutch",
"someone broke into my car",
"break in",
"stolen",
"car break in",
"vlogs",
"car tint",
"honda",
"honda accord",
"1998 honda accord"
] | 2020-07-08T21:37:44 | 2024-02-07T17:00:49 | 348 |
zQetM6nMAOA
|
What's good Josh will Ross back again with another video. So I gotta show y'all a new upgrade I made to my 1998 Honda Accord. I've been having this car since 2016 I got it as a graduation present for my grandmother actually and you know, it's it's been my pride and joy You know, it's been giving me the point a to point B. You know, it's been in I believe two accidents Still running this car is older than some of you guys, you know I remember riding in this car when I was a kid when my grandma used to pick me up from school And she never really drove it. You know when I originally got this car. I got it 70,000 miles on it remember some 1998 on the court now It's at like I think 170,000 miles not too bad for a car that's almost 20 years old or close to it So but I got to show you guys this new upgrade. So Over the years, I've been adding little stuff to the to the will I've added Lights under the dash when I'm under the dash under the passenger seat and under the Driver's seat. I've added a new radio system bluetooth capable and you know, I've also added just you know Different stuff to you know modernized the car, but I got to show y'all this This is one of the best features right here. You see this Look at this. Look at this boom. Oh my god. Look at this. Yo Look at this. I don't ever have to worry about locking Like my keys in the car cuz I can just do this. I can just look just pull this out I can reach in like that's amazing, man There's a lot of glass everywhere, but you know you you can vacuum that up You feel me like that's amazing. Look at this new feature. Let me show y'all again I want to show y'all again kind of right out here. Look at this. Look at this boom. It's locked, right? Oh, no, I can't get in my car. What am I to do? I can't get in my car. Oh my god. Oh My god, oh My goodness. Look at the amazing this now all jokes aside is how damn every time I slam it It just glass goes everywhere all just aside My car got broken into last night. I was chilling at a chick crib And I've been over to this person's place Several times actually nothing's ever happened and then finally this morning I go out there to leave and I noticed the person that was parked next to me their window was busted open so I'm like, yo, that's that's messed up. I don't think they know and then I Checked my car my my passenger side was busted open Like I was looking on the driver's side Everything was fine because I'm you know, I just wanted to check make sure and my passenger side was busted open And that's when I found out they broke into my car. They checked the glove compartment Nothing, they couldn't find anything there. They checked the the center console and that's where they found all my change I'm more upset that my change has been taken. I've been saving up this change since like late 2018 I do this like every year once a year. I will just you know Like get like a bag in any change that I get I save it up I fill it up I don't care if it's from the gas station from orders whatever I just put all the change in there And then once a year, I just cash all the change out. That's what I was gonna do later on this year I had a lot of change and they stole it them fucking bastards stole all my change, man They take nothing else because there was nothing else for them to take pro tip Doesn't matter what car you in old or new don't have anything valuable in your whip Make sure you keep everything valuable at home Don't have anything valuable in your whip And if you do have something valuable in your whip put it in a trunk out of sight Because this is proof that it doesn't matter how old your car is They will you know, people will rob you the person that was next to me That car was a little bit newer they robbed them and then they robbed me so you know This is one of those things I'm not really too upset because at the end of the day I'm just gonna get it replaced and it gives me a reason to get some new tint on the whip So I'm not even tripping, but it's just one of those things where it's like hey You know it happens. So to that individual that stole My change broke my window at the drive home with glass flying everywhere. I just hope You understand karma will get you and I hope at some point in life I don't know how this will happen that you get choked slam through a flaming table wrapped in barbed wire I don't want you to die. I just want you to feel pain And I think that would be adequate enough pain to get choking through a flaming table wrapped in barbed wire Comment down below Which I think this thief should get what type of punishment should this thief have to go through Comment down below the best punishment and I will definitely probably end up pinning it But I love you guys man. Once again, just know that you know I'm saying things like this happen That's why you always got to make sure you always prepare it and you know have some money saved up So when stuff like this does happen, you're able to take care of it But I love you guys so much appreciate y'all kicking it with me and I see y'all next week. Peace
|
{
"url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zQetM6nMAOA",
"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
}
|
UCKBNaxsFV4hpGVc8QOUmsFg
|
U.S. Marines with 2d Battalion, Fuji Viper 21.4 Live-Fire Range
|
Checkout for more Latest Defense & Technology News Updates.
www.defenseflashnews.com
Fuji Viper 21.4 Live-Fire Range
CAMP FUJI, JAPAN
06.14.2021
U.S. Marines with 2d Battalion, 2d Marines, conduct a live-fire range during Fuji Viper 21.4 at Combined Arms Training Center, Camp Fuji, Japan, June 14-15, 2021. During this exercise Marines sharpened critical combined arms skills, ensuring they are ready and capable to execute a wide range of missions anywhere in the world. 2/2 is forward-deployed in the Indo-Pacific under 4th Marines, 3d Marine Division. (U.S. Marine Corps video by Lance Cpl. Kincayd Jackson)
Film Credits: Video by Lance Cpl. Kincayd Jackson
3rd Marine Division
Range
2/2
Infantry
Readiness
Training
2d Marines
live-fire range
3DMARDIV
Fuji Viper
3D Marine Division
2d Battalion
Indo-Pacific
2d Battalion 2d Marines
COMMSTRAT
Fight Now
--------------------------------------------------
The appearance of U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) visual information does not imply or constitute DoD endorsement.
Video created under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
----------------------------------------------------
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COPYRIGHT:
Copyright disclaimer under section 107 of the copyright act 1976, allowance is made for 'fair use' for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statue that might otherwise be infriging. Nonprofit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.
|
[
"defense flash news",
"defense news updates",
"military news",
"corona virus",
"military exercise",
"military training",
"army national guard",
"air national guard",
"us army",
"us marines",
"us military",
"coast guard",
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"NASA",
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] | 2021-06-22T19:15:13 | 2024-04-22T17:56:56 | 330 |
zQxRUkO_cgQ
|
Six, seven, eight, nine, ten, one, two, ten.
|
{
"url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zQxRUkO_cgQ",
"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
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|
UCv_Uf8fDZXJS8MWF5WWK09Q
|
How to Update Drivers on Windows 11 (2022)
|
Are you facing issues with the display, mouse, keyboard, and other devices after updating or reinstalling Windows 11? It might be due to missing or outdated drivers on your Windows PC. Though modern Windows OS such as Windows 10 and Windows 11 automatically update drivers through OS updates, there is no harm in checking if you are running outdated drivers that need an update.
In this video we will show you how to update drivers on Windows 11 so you can quickly fix any issues you may face.
Download Advanced driver updater :- https://bit.ly/3FOYg4s
#Windows11 #DriverUpdate #howtoupdatedriversonpc
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Like this video? Find tons of other interesting videos like this and more by subscribing to our channel Systweak Software
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|
[
"yt:cc=on",
"systweak software",
"Keep Watching at systweak software",
"windows 11",
"how to install windows 11",
"windows 11 drivers",
"windows 11 drivers download",
"download windows 11 drivers",
"how to install drivers on windows 11",
"how to install windows 11 drivers",
"windows 11 driver install",
"windows 11 driver installation",
"windows 11 install",
"drivers",
"drivers for windows 11",
"update windows 11 drivers"
] | 2022-01-22T15:00:31 | 2024-02-05T16:41:15 | 151 |
ZQkgdl7vzmM
|
Are you facing issues with the display, mouse, keyboard and other devices after updating or reinstalling Windows 11? It might be due to missing or outdated drivers on your Windows PC. Though modern Windows OS such as Windows 10 and Windows 11 automatically update drivers through OS updates, there is no harm in checking if you are running outdated drivers that need an update. In this video we will show you how to update drivers on Windows 11 so you can quickly fix any issues you may face. Updating drivers via device manager in Windows 11 To update Windows 11 drivers through device manager, right click on the start button and select device manager from the context menu. The device manager window will open where you can see all the installed drivers. Here right click on the driver you wish to update and select update driver from the list. On the next window, select the search automatically for drivers option if you do not have the latest drivers installer on your PC. If you want to update the drivers manually, go to the manufacturer's website and download the latest version. Save the downloaded drivers on your system hard disk. Select browse my computer for drivers to update the driver manually. Restart the system. Update drivers for Windows 11 using advanced driver updater. If you find manually checking and updating the drivers challenging and time consuming, try advanced driver updater. It automatically collects device and OS related information that helps find the correct and compatible driver without any manual interruption, compatible with Windows 11 and older versions. To use this tool, download and install advanced driver updater. You can also use the link given in the description below. Launch advanced driver updater. Click on the start scan now button. Wait for the scanning process to complete. Now it will show you a list of all the outdated drivers. Click the update driver next to the driver you wish to update. If you are a registered user, you can update all outdated drivers at once by clicking the update all button. Reboot the system after updating the driver. That's it. Using these simple methods, you can update drivers on Windows 11. Hope you found this video helpful. If yes, don't forget to like, share and subscribe.
|
{
"url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZQkgdl7vzmM",
"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
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|
UC2RbTnQ9sr6r1FgbFKf-fOA
|
Police Body Cameras Are A Big Deal In Cass County
|
[
"Lakeland Public Television",
"LPTV",
"PBS",
"Bemidji",
"Minnesota",
"MN"
] | 2016-11-05T04:19:43 | 2024-02-05T16:25:32 | 150 |
Zq3GBerqOsQ
|
There is no such thing as perfection in technology, especially when it comes to police and body cameras. The view isn't what the officer sees, but what the camera is positioned at. And residents in Cass County had a lot to say about it. Our Haiti Clotter has more on the story. At a public meeting to address police and body cameras, you would expect to hear from residents, but no one showed up. Policy 450 addresses the use of personal body cameras on police officers while on duty. I believe now the sheriff will be implementing the policy. He didn't indicate to us that there would be any changes. We don't have any changes to recommend to him. The cameras can be used as evidence in court and also offer protection to the officer. It creates an accurate event of what's going on as well as it allows us to review some of these instances where there could have been a complaint or something, or we need to address training with officers. Sheriff Burch also says there hasn't been any negative feedback from the community about the body cameras because it doesn't affect them. They're really used as a tool for the police. It all starts with community involvement, community trust. That's one of the reasons we sought input from the community on the policy. Brenda Smith has lived in Cass County all of her life, and although she says she doesn't have the best relationship with the police, she believes the cameras are a good thing. There's a lot of violence going on these days, so I think it would be best. I think it's good. Sheriff Burch says the main issue with the cameras is the equipment failure, which can and has occurred. But residents like Wesley Brooks appreciate the job these officers have. People who are willing to put themselves in harm's way so that I can live a safe and secure life without being afraid for my security. Officers are encouraged to be a part of the community. We need to help the eyes and ears from our folks that live in our communities to help us do our job. Sheriff Burch also says the department is transparent and is willing to let the public see what's happening as long as it doesn't jeopardize an investigation. In Cass County, Hady Clotter, Lakeland News. Video captured by the cameras is available for the public once the investigation is closed. If you've enjoyed this segment of Lakeland News, please consider making a tax-deductible contribution to Lakeland Public Television.
|
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UCwBK7Cdk0wq8rCjxcvaoHzg
|
Rok Thok LIVE | ପୁଣି ମମିତା ଝଡ | 26 Feb 2024 | Argus News
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Rok Thok LIVE | ପୁଣି ମମିତା ଝଡ | 26 Feb 2024 | Argus News
#argusnews #rokthok #mamitameher #justiceformamita #odisha
Argus News is Odisha's fastest-growing news channel having its presence on satellite TV and various web platforms. Watch the latest news updates LIVE on matters related to education & employment, health & wellness, politics, sports, business, entertainment, and more. Argus News is setting new standards for journalism through its differentiated programming, philosophy, and tagline 'Satyara Sandhana'.
To stay updated on-the-go,
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You Can WhatsApp Us Your News On- 8480612900
|
[
"Argus News 24X7 Live Odia News",
"Live Odisha News",
"odisha news today",
"No.1 Odia News Channel",
"Argus News Live TV",
"odia news live",
"Live National News",
"Argus News Odisha",
"Orissa News",
"Argus live stream",
"Oriya News Live",
"ଓଡ଼ିଆ news",
"odisha news live",
"odia news live today",
"Dharmendra Pradhan",
"VK Pandian",
"Bobby Das",
"BJP News",
"BJD News",
"Political news",
"odia film news",
"Naveen patnaik",
"Aparajita Sarnagi"
] | 2024-02-26T15:06:34 | 2024-04-23T23:22:08 | 1,735 |
zqv1t5S22HI
|
ಈ dentro ātāṁ ṬīdhāĪ ṯāy me lī pa rūči ki jattabādā main Ṭīāy mahāguchu. Ṣe Ṣa Ṭīdhā Ṭīdhā Ṭīdhā Ṭīdhā Ṭīdhā Ṭīdhā Ṭīdhā Ṭīdhā Ṭīdhā ṭājī ṱādhā ṉāda. చారంపిదామారారార్న్నానిమిలినినాకినినిని. కార్నినిలినార్నానినికినినారా. हुlly ڈी ڈी ڈी ڈी ڈी ڈी ڈी ڈी ڈी ڈी ڈी ڈी ڈी ڈ professionals take the bar where the dress is getting completed. � Ship said, he can not get off. भी तो तो Off the boat? आप आद भी दोजना भीरोदी का जंक्ये फ्रुम को लें। आप उई प्रखादिए ईना जंगे रोगे नु हो। जंगे वादा जंगे! igns哦 os colour igns o color drugs hm ... ... shiv ஜ Джred b
|
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"url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zqv1t5S22HI",
"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
}
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UCkJEpR7JmS36tajD34Gp4VA
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7 Habits Of Highly Intelligent People
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Highly intelligent people practice healthy habits and build a routine that maximizes their efficiency when doing productive things. And of course, what better way to improve yourself than to learn these habits from intelligent people. Do you identify and share these same habits?
We also made another video on the signs you're secretly intelligent: https://youtu.be/4YYLtvfMzJI
Writer: Xinyi
Script Editor: Rida Batool
Script Manager: Kelly Soong
VO: Mithrilda
Animator: Chantal Van Rensburg
YouTube Manager: Cindy Cheong
References
Health. (2020). The Basics: Health Benefits. Retrieved 19 December 2020, from www.health.gov/myhealthfinder/topics/everyday-healthy-living/mental-health-and-relationships/get-enough-sleep
Jones, M. (2017). 10 Daily Rituals of the Most Intelligent People. Retrieved 19 December 2020, from www.inc.com/matthew-jones/10-daily-habits-of-the-most-intelligent-people.html
Kuper, S. (2019). The 8 habits of highly intelligent people, and what you can learn from them. Retrieved 19 December 2020, from www.cnaluxury.channelnewsasia.com/experiences/habits-of-highly-intelligent-people-what-you-can-learn-12081896
MedlinePlus. (2020). Benefits of Exercise. Retrieved 19 December 2020, from www.medlineplus.gov/benefitsofexercise.html#:~:text=Exercise%20strengthens%20your%20heart%20and,blood%20pressure%20and%20triglyceride%20levels.
Wildfire, J. (2020). 15 Habits of Genuinely Intelligent People. Retrieved 19 December 2020, from www.psiloveyou.xyz/15-habits-of-genuinely-intelligent-people-fd01c0ab52fb
|
[
"7 habits of highly effective people",
"habits of highly intelligent person",
"highly intelligent person",
"highly intelligent people",
"small people",
"smart person",
"intelligent people",
"intelligent person",
"intelligence",
"intelligent habits",
"habits of intelligent people",
"intelligent people habits",
"psych2go",
"psych 2 go",
"psych to go",
"psychtogo"
] | 2021-10-14T16:38:44 | 2024-02-05T06:44:07 | 293 |
zquPnwjrdi4
|
Hi Psych2Goers, and welcome back to another video. How do you define intelligence? Why do you refer to some as highly intelligent? Ever wondered what they do that sets them apart? They often seem to be shrouded in mystery, as no one can pinpoint the secret ingredient in their cauldron of intelligence. Most of the time, being highly successful is linked to being highly intelligent. However, there's more to it than just that. To help you learn from the masters themselves, here are seven habits that highly intelligent people practice. 1. You treat every situation as a learning experience. Do you feel like you could learn something new from every situation you face? Highly intelligent people let no opportunity for learning go to waste. They are constantly on the lookout for things that might add to their knowledge. If you are a highly intelligent person, then you will value any and every situation that you come across as valuable information. Even when you talk with someone who is not very intelligent, instead of trying to show your superiority with information that you have already learned over time, you try to absorb everything they tell you. 2. You try to figure things out by yourself. Do you usually try to solve things first before asking for help from others? As a highly intelligent person, you have the habit of trying to figure things out by yourself before asking for help. You find value in struggling first because of the lessons that you can learn from tackling problems on your own. You know that letting other people help you without trying first will result in a high degree of dependency. 3. You ask a lot of questions. Is the question mark a common occurrence at the end of your sentences? If you are constantly asking questions and digging deeper than the usual person, then you most likely are highly intelligent. This allows you to have a better perspective of how the world works and even learn things that you never imagined you would learn. 4. You learn best by imitation. How would you rate your observation skills? Do you feel like you can learn things better when you see someone do them first? This is a habit that highly intelligent people have. Everyone has a different way of learning, but you feel like the best way for you is to watch someone who knows do it first. You study the existing methods first, and then you let your ideas and creativity take over, making slight modifications to a verified method coming up with innovative thoughts. 5. You exercise daily. Do you prioritize physical exercise in your daily routine? How often do you work out? Similar to how intelligent people prioritize good sleep in their routine, developing the habit of exercising daily is important as well. You are aware of the health benefits that daily exercise can bring to you. Exercising reduces your risk of heart disease, controls your weight, regulates your body's blood sugar and insulin levels, etc. Being both physically and mentally healthy is an important aspect of being productive, and can really affect how you develop your creative thoughts on a daily basis. 6. You simplify your routine as much as possible. Do you strive to cut down every trivial task from your daily routine? Is the bulk of your to-do list checked already? Highly intelligent people are known to have very simplistic schedules. You have the habit of eliminating unnecessary complexity from your life, since simplicity allows you to be as productive and efficient as possible. Only focusing your time and effort on the things that you consider most important will surely allow you to reach the highest potential of your intelligence. 7. You make everyone around you feel smart. Do you tend to praise other people's intelligence? This is a habit that highly intelligent people have. If you tend to praise other people's intelligence instead of looking down on people just because you already knew what they discovered, then you have a habit that most highly intelligent people have. You know that praising them will have many more benefits than just underestimating or belittling them. To conclude, if you share any of the habits of highly intelligent people, you are most likely one step closer to success. And even if you don't, having the mindset of trying to learn will surely result in room for improvement. We hope we were able to give you insight into some effective habits of intelligent people. Do any of these describe your experience with them, or did any of these points describe you? Leave a comment down below about your encounters with them if you'd like. Please feel free to share any thoughts you have as well. If you find this video helpful, be sure to hit the like button and share it with those out there wondering what it is they do differently. Don't forget to subscribe to Psych2Go and hit the notification bell for more new videos. Thanks for watching! See you in our next video! Bye! Bye!
|
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UCtvilhINC4WP6q9pvqt5Ulw
|
The N-Ray Debacle: How Expectations Can Cloud Your Judgment
|
The N-Ray Debacle: How Expectations Can Cloud Your Judgment
Have you ever expected something to happen? Of course, you have. Like if someone raises their first to punch you and you flinch or you think it will rain so you bring an umbrella.
In real life, expectations are built on years of experience and help you prepare for what you think will happen next. But in science, expectations can be dangerous.
Scientists will tell you how important a hypothesis is in science, but sometimes these expectations can cloud your judgment.
Today we'll be talking about one of the most prominent examples of expectations getting the best of people: The Great N-Ray Debacle.
When scientists all across the world thought the discovered a new form of energy (the N-ray) just like the recent discovery of the x-ray.
Subscribe to stay up to date on the latest stories from the scientific world! https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCtvilhINC4WP6q9pvqt5Ulw?sub_confirmation=1
|
[
"n rays",
"n-rays",
"n ray discovery",
"n-ray discovery",
"Great N-Ray debacle",
"what are n-rays",
"what are n rays",
"are n rays real",
"are n-rays real",
"what is an n ray",
"do n rays exist",
"rene prosper blondlot",
"rené prosper blondlot",
"what is an n-ray",
"do n-rays exist",
"n ray invention",
"n-ray invention"
] | 2019-10-31T20:00:07 | 2024-02-07T17:17:20 | 322 |
Zq07Wen8SXA
|
The end of the 19th century was a great time to be physicist. In 1893, Victor Schumann discovered vacuum ultraviolet radiation. In 1895, Wilhelm Röntgen discovered x-rays. In 1896, Henry Bacarell discovered radioactivity. And in 1897, J.J. Thompson discovered electrons, showing that they were the main constituents of cathode rays. Four major new phenomena were discovered within a decade, and this created the expectation that more were just around the corner. Then comes Professor of Physics at the University of Nancy in France, Prosper René Blondlot. Professor Blondlot, like many of the physicists of his day, was studying electromagnetic radiation. Blondlot was a well-respected member of the scientific community. He was one of the eight physicists who were corresponding members of the French Academy of Sciences, and was awarded the Academy's highest prize, the Gaston-Planter Prize in 1893 and the La Casse Prize in 1899 for his work on electromagnetism. His attempts to study the speed of electromagnetic radiation were commended by Nobel Lords J.J. Thompson and Henry Poncar, who had been nominated and astounding 54 times for the Nobel Prize between 1904 and 1912, since he could be nominated multiple times in the same year. In essence, Blondlot was a highly respected physicist at the forefront of his field. After the discovery of x-rays in 1895, Blondlot began investigating whether those x-rays behaved more like particles or as electromagnetic waves. This was still three decades before Einstein's wave particle duality theory became widely accepted among scientists. In 1903, while trying to polarize x-rays, Blondlot discovered a new form of electromagnetic radiation. He had received changes in the brightness of an electric spark placed in an x-ray beam, which he photographed, and he later attributed this change in brightness to a novel form of radiation, naming it N-rays for the University of Nancy. Blondlot was not alone in his discovery. After publication of his findings, more than 120 other scientists and more than 300 publications reported the ability to detect N-rays emanating from most substances, even the human body. Most researchers of the subject at this time detected the change in light by staring at a dim phosphorescent surface. A phosphorescent surface is one that emits visible light after being struck by radiation. Two other prominent scientists, with names I'm not going to try to pronounce, even claim the discovery as their own, forcing the French Academy of Sciences to step in and decide who truly discovered it first. The only problem? N-rays weren't and aren't real. The discovery excited international interests and many physicists tried to recreate the results. However, the notable physicists Lord Kelvin, William Crookes, Otto Lumer, and Henrik Rubens all failed to do so. After failing to reproduce the experiment, Robert W. Wood, an American physicist who was a pioneer in the field of infrared and ultraviolet photography and had gained a reputation as a popular debunker of nonsense during the period, was invited by the British journal Nature to travel to Blondlot's laboratory in France to investigate further. So Woods traveled to Nancy, France to observe the experiment in action. Being familiar with the workings of the experiment and wanting to test its validity, Woods secretly removed an essential prism from the experimental apparatus. Without it, the experiment should have failed, but curiously enough it didn't, and Blondlot and his team still said they observed N-rays. Further testing his theory, Woods replaced the metal plate that was supposed to be giving off N-rays with an inert piece of wood, yet the N-rays were still detected. Upon his return to America, Woods published his findings in the journal Nature, suggesting that N-rays weren't real, and that the scientists involved were recording data that matched their expectations. There's reason to believe that Blondlot in particular was misled by his laboratory assistant, who personally confirmed all of his observations. Kind of like a yes-man. No blind experiments had ever been conducted, and Blondlot's team only ever tried to prove the existence of N-rays rather than disprove their existence like Woods had done and like all scientists should do. Within a year, no one outside of Nancy believed in N-rays, although it's reported that Blondlot so believed in them in 1926 shortly before his death. It turns out, nearly identical properties of an equally unknown form of radiation were reported more than 50 years prior by multiple physicists. In fact, some of the scientists on Blondlot's team were even aware of those previous findings, although it's not clear whether Blondlot himself was personally aware of it. Today, the N-ray debacle is used as a cautionary tale among scientists on the dangers of errors introduced by experimenter bias. Not knowingly lying, sometimes expecting to see something can trick your mind into actually seeing it, especially when you're relying on qualitative analysis rather than quantitative data. I hope you enjoyed this episode of Everything Science, and if you made it this far in the video, you probably did. If you did, make sure to like and subscribe so you stay up to date on all our future episodes, and if you have an idea for something you want us to cover in the future, be sure to leave that in the comment section down below. And remember, there's always more to learn.
|
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UCKBNaxsFV4hpGVc8QOUmsFg
|
U.S. Marines and Sailors with 1st Combat Engineering Battalion (1st CEB), 1st Marine Division
|
#Combat Engineers #Marines #CASEVAC #1st MARDIV #Valkyrie #Blood Transfusion
Checkout for more Latest Defense & Technology News Updates.
www.defenseflashnews.com
1st CEB Field Exercise: Casualty Care (B-Roll)
CO, UNITED STATES
11.02.2021
U.S. Marines and Sailors with 1st Combat Engineering Battalion (1st CEB), 1st Marine Division, provide prolonged casualty care to a simulated casualty during a 1st CEB field exercise (FEX) at Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton, California, Nov. 2, 2021. As part of the 1st CEB FEX, corpsmen were evaluated on their abilities to perform an emergency fresh whole-blood transfusion and to keep casualties alive in the field for up to 72 hours. (U.S. Marine Corps video by Lance Cpl. Skyler Harris)
Film Credits: Video by Lance Cpl. Skyler Harris
1st Marine Division
--------------------------------------------------
The appearance of U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) visual information does not imply or constitute DoD endorsement.
Video created under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
----------------------------------------------------
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Copyright disclaimer under section 107 of the copyright act 1976, allowance is made for 'fair use' for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statue that might otherwise be infriging. Nonprofit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.
|
[
"military exercise",
"marine Corps",
"Military videos",
"infantry regiment",
"infantry combat vehicles",
"fire fighters",
"wildfire",
"combat footage",
"usmc",
"special forces",
"Aviation",
"NASA",
"NATO",
"force recon",
"marsocs",
"United States",
"Air National Guard",
"Army National Guard",
"U.S. Air Fore",
"Army",
"Marines",
"Navy",
"Coast Guard",
"Space Force",
"Military Defense",
"Technologies",
"Special operation forces",
"International armed forces",
"War Conflicts",
"International Military drills",
"Weapons",
"Aircraft",
"Ships",
"Vehicles"
] | 2021-11-14T15:16:03 | 2024-04-22T17:56:22 | 182 |
ZQXWUIqJDaU
|
One is one hundred and fifty nine on the top. They're about to go down. Oh, that's nice. You might be able to get out. You guys are at three explosions! Here's the other marine that was involved in a blast injury that's by a lot of lower leg extremities for suspected to be lower amputation. Massive imaging. Possibly the one in the shot. No legs. No legs. Three is that's a tourniquet. Put your blood type. Oh, positive. Psyc pain. Dominal pain. It's going to get worse. SPO2, I have ninety six. Temperature is ninety eight point one. And now he's alert. Patient's locked. All right. Since Gibbon. Turn the branch in the book. It was scraping my face. We have piles. I'm sorry. Neuro exam. Motor, sensory. And circulation are all normal. Heart has normal rate and rhythm. Lungs are clear. Bilaterally.
|
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"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
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UC_TneqvSfh-KsIyZMlJjVsQ
|
Indian minister's home set ablaze in violence-hit Manipur state
|
#Kanal13 #likekanal13 #subscribekanal13 #warinukraine
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Tags: Ukriane, Russia, Putin, Putler, Russian invasion of Ukraine, Zelenski, Kiev, Kyiv, Kadirov army, Kadirov, Kherson, Bucha, Kharkiv, Ukrainian pilots, vagners, Russian tanks, NATO, drones, Moscow, Kreml, war victims Ukraina,
|
[
"xeberler en son xeberler",
"son xeber",
"xəbərlər",
"son xəbər",
"aksiya",
"mitinq",
"kanal13",
"kanal13 xeber",
"tecili xeberler",
"en son xeberler",
"ən son xəbərlər",
"son xəbərlər",
"son xeberler",
"günün son xəbərləri",
"günün xəbərləri",
"günün xeberleri",
"etiraz aksiyası",
"mitinq aksiya",
"Ukriane",
"Russia",
"Putin",
"Putler",
"Russian invasion of Ukraine",
"Zelenski",
"Kiev",
"Kyiv",
"Kadirov army",
"Kadirov",
"Kherson",
"Bucha",
"Kharkiv",
"Ukrainian pilots",
"vagners",
"Russian tanks",
"NATO",
"drones",
"Moscow",
"Kreml",
"war victims Ukraina"
] | 2023-06-16T12:40:19 | 2024-02-14T18:42:08 | 166 |
zqk0n8glH1I
|
A federal Indian minister's house was set on fire by a mob in the remote northeastern state of Manipur, which has been hit by clashes between members of rival ethnic groups for over a month, officials said on June 16. Firefighters and security personnel rushed to the scene after junior foreign minister Ardikeya Ranjan Singh's house in the Manipur capital imphole was set ablaze on Thursday night. Singh's office confirmed that a mob vandalized and started the fire, while confirming that no one was injured in the attack. Singh is a federal minister and prime minister Narendra Modi's government, whose ruling party also governs the state of Manipur. The attack comes after weeks of violent clashes between members of the Kuki ethnic group, who mostly live in the hills and may taste the dominant community in the lowlands of the state. Clashes between the two communities erupted on May 3 sparked by resentment over economic benefits and quotas for easy access to government jobs and education reserved for the Kukis. At my own sweat with prayer I construct the house, but if someone is trying to vandalize at demolish, I will shock it. And I never expect such kind of attitudes and activities from my fellow citizens of the state. The low and order condition in the state of Manipur is totally failure. The existing government could not maintain this, despite the central government has sent a lot of the protectionists and rapid action force.
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Jason Newton, HPE - Day 3 Wrap Up - #HPEDiscover #theCUBE
|
01. Jason Newton, HPE Day 3 Wrap Up #theCUBE!. (00:17)
02. The HPE Split and the Spin Merge, M&A Next?. (01:37)
03. The HPE Perspective on What's Happening Now. (03:20)
04. Pre-Show Messaging at HPE. (04:04)
05. Taking the Focus off of "Speeds and Feeds". (06:39)
06. The Developer Ecosystem is an Absolute Growth Opportunity. (08:07)
07. HPE is a New Company. (10:51)
08. Dave's Favorite Parts of HPE Discover 2016. (12:40)
09. Jason's Favorite Parts of HPE Discover 2016. (14:06)
10. John's Favorite Parts of HPE Discover 2016. (15:01)
Track List created with http://www.vinjavideo.com.
--- ---
Jason Newton, Senior Director of Marketing at HPE wraps up Day 3 coverage at HPE Discover 2016 in Las Vegas, Nevada with John Furrier and Dave Vellante
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Live from Las Vegas, it's theCUBE. Covering Discover 2016 Las Vegas. Brought to you by Hewlett Packard Enterprise. Now, here are your hosts, John Furrier and Dave Vellante. Okay, welcome back everyone. We are here live in Las Vegas for exclusive coverage of HP Enterprise, HPE Discover 2016. This is our wrap-up segment, SiliconANGLE, Home Media's theCUBE, our flagship program. We go out to the events to extract the simple noise. I'm John Furrier. My co-host, Dave Vellante, and we have a special host analyst here from HPE, Jason Newton, senior director of marketing at HPE. Welcome in as a guest host. I'm the last guy here, right? First time we've ever had a guest host. Welcome, welcome. Welcome, honored. We chatted last year, so let's summarize. Dave, stock's up. It's on a 52 week high as of yesterday. Looking good. The trainees left the station. The new station for CSC, Spin Merge. We had Chris Xu on the chief operating officer this morning, really laying out in great detail on that Spin Merge. Spin out, merge new capital structure. Still the synergies of HP still in place. Gives them some autonomy to do some M&A, some organic, a little debt. Money coming in on a dividend. Little financial engineering, a little focus. Really a good deal. Combined also with some great product announcements. The product leadership of Converge, kind of fruit on the tree blossoming. Composable, great messaging. IoT, not bad, what do you think? Well, as you know, John, I've been saying for many, many quarters now, years even, that HP's got a shrink to grow. That's exactly what happened with the split, which was great because they were able to restructure the balance sheet. And then, just recently, the Spin Merge created another tailwind, I think personally, a great financial move for the company. Took down more debt, created cash, and it's been forming 1.5 billion. I mean, so the street loves that story. Why is that important? Because to me, it positions HP for the growth company that Meg said it was supposed to be with the split. People were skeptical about that. That's exactly what we have now. A focused company with a much stronger balance sheet in a position to do M&A with a product portfolio and an R&D pipeline that's starting to hit and driving new revenue opportunities with a TAM expansion that we heard about this week into IoT with the GE deal. And the TAM is pretty significant because the analog data is significant, but there's still one shoe left to drop. M&A activity and stuff coming out of the R&D pipeline. Well, I think the- Thoughts on that, and we're seeing Chris kind of posturing saying, look it, we're strong. We're going to get stronger. And Meg says publicly that they wouldn't do any mega-acquisitions outside their core focus until they were stronger. They're looking pretty good right now. I think Aruba is a good, good proof point, right? I mean, you should go back to- And their core business. I think the important work's investment, the Hexalite investment, little tuck-in investments here and there. I think the other shoe that has to drop is software. We talk about this a lot. We had Robert Young-John's on, he was frank. He said, hey, I had to clean up some stuff. We delevered some things. So that's the real area of great opportunity for HPE, in my opinion. Jason, our guest host, HPE's perspective. Feeling stronger, what's the take? I mean, what's the analysis from your standpoint? Yeah, I mean, I think you guys are nailing it. I mean, everything is really coming into focus. Who we are as a company is becoming really clear to customers that the story's resonating. They understand the need to digitally transform. They understand that we're building these companies to be partners and part of that process. And then they see it all coming together here. They see it in real life. They see all the technologies. You mentioned IoT. I mean, that has been the hot thing this week. It's been trending everywhere on all the hashtags, Twitter, the buzz on the floor, all the sessions. Just so much opportunity. And you can see all of the different things that we bring to the table to make that real for customers and the ecosystem of partners. It's really tremendous. Yeah, and the innovation strategy behind that is coming into focus. Again, sticking to the knitting of HPE. They're staying on focus. Okay, the cloud, again, not a lot of game-changing shifting, but still on focus to be that integration hub. How is that coming together, Jason? Share some color on pre-show preparation, messaging, and he's always going through the orchestration, kind of trying to get the maximum pop on the message and the story so it's clear and coherent. Two now, looking back at the as the event winds down. What's your analysis of pre-messaging set up on giving all the stuff that's been launched and discussed here to now as a show end? What's your summary? Well, I think our message has been really consistent since maybe the last two or three discovers that we've been together. We came, I think it was almost a year ago today. We came out and introduced the focus of the New Hewlett Packard Enterprise and it was focused on four key areas of transformation. That message has really resonated with the marketplace. We've gotten a lot of feedback, we've learned, and we've, I think, further honed that this week. I mean, Meg was tremendous out there. Who are we as a company? We're a digital transformation company, right? That's what we're all about. The four transformation areas, that represents a model that we've rinsed and repeated, picked the right mix within that and enabled all kinds, and you saw story after story, retail with Home Depot, manufacturing with Boeing, born in the cloud drop box, right? We're helping all of these customers continue to drive digital transformation and she nailed it, right? I mean, she nailed that message consistently and I think one of the interesting points that we really wanted to make to people is that, why do you need a partner like a systems vendor, if you will, a technology innovator, like a Hewlett Packard Enterprise for something like digital transformation? You know, at the end of the day, you're not going to do this once. You're not just going to, hey, I did a digital transformation project and I'm done. You're going to do hundreds of these dozens, you know, thousands over the next several years. You're going to do it in your customer experience. You're going to do it in, you know, your new product development, you're creating new stuff, your core operations. I mean, the stuff that the flow serve guys were talking about it blew my mind. I mean, I'm like, there's trillions of dollars that are going to be spent on those types of industrial applications. And so you need to build a foundation. I think she used the line, yes, I'm glad she used one of our lines, the digital transformation factory, right? That industrialized foundation is what companies need to build. Because they can't just go, these can't be one-off projects. It's a great metaphor with the whole IOT meme. She also said digital transformation is a competitive necessity. The other thing that you've done, I think props to you guys, is you took the speeds and feeds off the main stage. I mean, a little bit with a cutaway, hey, let's go to Manish for a couple of bit. But, you know, I had to say three or four, discovers ago too much speeds and feeds on the main stage. Now it was all about digital transformation, new opportunities, proof points, bringing in partners, bringing in customers. So it's good. It's about customers. I mean, it's about business outcomes. That's why we're all, that's why we're spending all the money on the technology. We don't do it for technology's sake. And John, why? Go ahead, please. I mean, there's a lot of big problems that everyone now sees this tremendous opportunity to solve these problems that have been unsolvable for a long time and it's all coming together. So a huge amount of optimism and one of my jobs is to share that exciting stuff that's happening and inspire others to say, hey, we can help you do amazing things too, right? And John, one of the other things you've been talking about a lot this week is the whole developer angle. With IOT and the extension into the industrial IOT, that becomes much more important, right? Yeah, I mean, Dave, this is, you know, I'm all over the DevOps and we've been on DevOps in the big data since the beginning of this. Now, what HP is demonstrating is that it's absolutely mainstream and a real disruptive enabler for this transformation acceleration. So we're in an acceleration phase now of people actually putting it into motion beyond POCs, but really into transformative architecture. So to me, the developer ecosystem is going to be an absolute growth opportunity because it's not just like the pure play developers. Oh, they're software developers, they program on this platform. It's the merging of the vendors platforms, multi-cloud, we call it inter-clouding, like internet working. So having an enabling platform like a composed architecture allows for programmable infrastructure, which means that is the benefit of what the cloud is. Elastic pools of resources that are freely available, it's a developer dream, right? So for your developer, and you're not an infrastructure geek, you want that. If you're an infrastructure geek who wants simplicity and you don't want to manage the hell out of it and get a beep or a text at the middle of the night when you're watching the Warriors game to go in and go provision infrastructure. So that's one. Two, the ecosystem of the marketplace, the economic opportunity out there with developers is challenging. And I think what Chris Hsu pointed out that's kind of the hidden gem in all this is the funding of the ecosystem through the Pathfinder program and they're priming the pump with some of the funding. This is important because the consumer software market is softening and some say bursting. Yeah, there's some big unicorn winners but for the general purpose, there's a ton of $10 million to $100 million business opportunities, white spaces out there available today. And that's not going to be a venture-back company. That's going to be either some cash investment and or organic growth companies. And those companies need ecosystems. They need to thrive in an environment. They need scale, they need sales motions, they need distribution. This is going to be a great opportunity for SAPs of the world, for HP, for Microsoft. And it's going to be interesting because it's not a winner-take-all. It's a win, it's because of the partnering model. So I think the enterprise developer is going to be huge. Well, yeah, you're putting a developer and then back to messaging. It was no accident that Dropbox was on stage. You know, a born in the cloud unicorn to some extent was on the main stage. We had Docker in the big announcement with Docker. We had a 20-year-old developer from Harvard telling his story. That was cool. I mean, this was probably the coolest main stage keynote presentation that we've ever done. And we're a cool company, and we wanted to show it. So one of the challenges that you now have, you got all the split behind you, the spin. OK, great. You've got this June to December cadence now. You've got product coming out of that pipe and we just did the discovers. Sure. Now you've got to top this. So when do you start working on that? Have you started working on it already? Walking around talking about it. This works. That didn't. This could be better. I mean, yeah, no. Yeah, yesterday. We started working on it yesterday. Absolutely. We did our fair share of pumping cube gems out there. If you go to Twitter and search on the hashtag cube gems, you'll see all the great highlights. Of course, go to youtube.com slash SiliconANGLE or SiliconANGLE.tv. And I think what's really interesting, too. I want to point out, Dave, you and I were talking about this last night, is that there's a cultural clear difference this year around discover, HPE Discover. And that is, I call it the unshackled HPE. It felt like during the split time, pre-split, and then during the split, it felt like the employees wanted to bust out and just take names and kick butt, right? So now that's over, you're seeing now we're in our second year, it's a new company. It feels like a small company. But you feel like a big company. I heard a story, I don't know if it's true, but Meg said yesterday, kind of after, she said to a friend of mine, it's like, you can feel it. And this was important. You can feel it. Yeah, you can feel it. Well, the accessibility. So I mean, people are working, and they're like, they're just moving faster. I've had, we've had multiple conversations around the cube, and like, hey, let's do this next year. People are actually like really putting stuff together creatively. Doesn't feel like a big company. It's interesting. I think that might have a great cultural opportunity for you guys. Yeah, I mean, just again, that the focus, the energy that Meg's brought back, the exciting innovation, the way that we've, I think, made labs much more integrated into our culture. Used to be labs was very isolated and separate. And I think under Martin Fink's leadership and Meg's, that we've really brought that into the fold. And you're seeing that stuff fall into our products. You're seeing the composable infrastructure stuff, including some of the machine technology already. You know, a lot of smart people work at HPE, right? They like to do cool stuff. Final question for all of us here to wrap up the show, lightning round, hottest, coolest things of the show. Top three or top one, Dave, we'll start with you. Well, to me, the whole TAM expansion I called it, and the lever of Aruba, and of course, the great opportunity to bring that analog data, that's the most interesting thing that I take away from HPE Discover 2016, John, is HPE is a unique position from edge, everything in between, to core, to handle that sort of challenge, that business challenge. A lot of people talk about, you know, edge to cloud. I heard a data point this week, the IDC said that 40% of the data is going to, the data is going to stay at the edge. That number is much, much higher. I think it's going to be 70, 80, 90% of that data is going to stay at the edge for so many reasons, and HPE is in a very unique position to be able to handle that challenge from edge to core. So, that to me is a trillion dollar opportunity. GE partnership is interesting. GE didn't really, in my opinion, want to partner with IBM, didn't want to partner with the likes of Atachi, because it's a little too competitive. HPE was perceived by GE, this is my assessment, as a safe partner that can add value to the business that's complementary. So to me, that's a dangerous combination. Jason, highlights for you on the show. Gosh, so many, but I think you're kind of hitting on that IoT sweet spot. I just want to call out the ecosystem that to your point is kind of glomming on and adding value around what we're doing. Certainly the GE stuff, things that we're doing with national instruments, incredible demos out on the show floor with them. Docker, really going to be key to extending what we believe infrastructure is code really ultimately should be, and the synergies between that and synergy is just really tremendous. So, seeing those partners understanding, hey, we can all do this together, we can be that digital transformation partner for our customers. I think that if there's one thing, that's where I'm really excited. And the light bulbs are coming on for customers saying, hey, I need to industrialize all this capability, this edge to core, that's exactly what I need. I need the analytics. I need the applications. I need the cultural change. I need the financial support to drive that transformation. This is a partner that can do that. Yeah, my big thing is the composable is the real deal. That's grown out of a couple years of investment in the converged infrastructure, now hyperconverged and all that stuff coming together. That's real meat on the bone right there that customers can use today. I think that's, and plus composable is a word that can be used up and down the stack. That's not just for the plumbing of storage and other things, it can go up to the apps. So that's one of my favorites. The IoT with Dr. Tom Bradich, what he talked about, the edge line stuff, is to me, game changing. And I was using the analogy of the iPhone was a computer that had software to make phone calls. That was a game changer. It wasn't a phone that could do text messages and by the way, email. It was the complete reverse. And I think what HP, if this plays out, this could be a very similar dynamic in the sense that they're moving a data center to the edge of the network that happens to run an IoT device. So this is how, to me, Steve Jobs like. The size of a shoebox. You believe that's a new product category? You buy that? I buy that's new product category. And I think at the end of the day, it's all about making the data center smaller, right? And having all the apps run in wherever the hell that is. I mean, think about a telephone closet and remote office. That could be now a full on data center that used to be 20,000 square feet in a telephone closet. So that's the kind of thing I think that's game changing. The other thing that I liked that I think is going to be a real challenge for HP is the developer ecosystem. I think they have a great opportunity to win the enterprise developer, this new category, but with Haven and some of the big data stuff, they really got to move faster on that stuff. I think Robert Young-John's got a brilliant vision and I think he's got a great playbook. That's going to be something I'm going to watch. Very closely. But industrial IoT is the hook there, right? I mean, that. Well, the big data analytics makes the apps, the composable, the apps, they got to move fast with the analytics into the developer ecosystem, not try to make it a pure played big data kind of thing. I think they got to integrate that in fast. So that was my main takeaways. And of course, I agree that the TS organization, keeping that in-house was smart. Oh, yeah. No question. Okay. Guys, thanks so much. Jason, thanks for coming on. Appreciate it. Thank you. For your HP perspective. Dave, as always, great job. Thank you. Guys, great job here. The crew here and the folks back at the ranch, blogging, Kristen Nicole and the whole live blogging team. Great work. We have a zillion blog posts. Go to crowdchat.net slash HPE discover for the conversation. You can go to siliconangle.com. Check out all the blog posts. Go to siliconangle.tv. All the videos we did, I can't even count over 50 interviews on youtube.com slash siliconangle. And of course, go to wikibon.com for some great research. And of course, go to CubeGems on Twitter, natively inserted hashtag CubeGems for all the highlights from these interviews. Great job, everybody. Great job. That's a wrap here from HP Discover. This is theCUBE. Thanks for watching. I'm John Furrier with Dave Vellante, signing off from Las Vegas. Thanks for watching. We'll see you next week.
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Textile Industry Has the Capacity To Create Millions Of Jobs - Prof. Utomi | NEWS
|
Worried by the slow growth of the textile industry, political economist, Professor Pat Utomi has underscored the need for government to take a holistic approach to reviving the sector.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Worried by the slow growth of the textile industry, political economist Professor Pat Utomi has underscored the need for government to take a holistic approach to reviving the sector. Utomi spoke on the sidelines of the annual lecture of the Manufacturer's Association of Nigeria. He lamented that the sector is almost marraband due to bad government policies. The world's next great party, Irene Sun, has studied this. I wonder if you know that NTL broke Yibun in one month in 1960, and that the first six months production of NTL in Keduna in 1960 were exported. They went and sold them all out in Manchester. So why did that enormous industry, but Kakuuri used to be a boss, I grew up in that area, why did that industry die? Because wrong trade policies were being made and there wasn't the force of pressure to get government to do the right thing, and the government people were not willing to have a weekend next.
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Shot Put and Discus Throws: Learn Technique Video Analysis ( Part 1)
|
Shot put and Discus throws video's analyzed from Australia, India, Germany, China, UK, & USA (Part 1.)
Today, in the Rotational Shot put and the discus throw, we compared common throws training mistakes that occur during the early years learning to throw.
The goal of our throws video analysis- submitted by you, our Arete Throws Nation TV followers, is to help throws coaches & throwers see common problems other athletes experience that you can relate to, or see in your own throw.
Hey coaches! This is a GREAT way to learn
👉 how to SEE each throw from a variety of levels of athletes,
👉 how to identify technical mistakes in a throw &
👉 most importantly, how to use the TCR system to pick out KEY THROWING DRILL to fix it 💪
Want to get selected for an upcoming video analysis?
DM us your video: https://www.instagram.com/aretethrowsnation.official/
There’s a better way than trying to PIECE TOGETHER INFORMATION on how to throw the Shot Put and the Discus.
Get the TCR system NOW! and start throwing farther tomorrow!
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| null | 2020-09-05T20:48:47 | 2024-04-23T03:32:32 | 512 |
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Four discus, four shot comparisons from around the world. Check it out. Hey everybody, it's Coach Johnson from Airtate Thrust Nation. Today's video, we are going to break down our videos. This is our weekly submissions. We're getting way too many videos to obviously cover. So some of the people I picked today actually submitted last week, so I selected them. Again, shoot the right camera angle for our gliders. Really get that side angle for our discus doors. This tends to be a good angle because you can see a lot of things. Side angle, you can see a lot of good things as well. But for the sake of comparison, is it try to shoot your videos, turn your camera horizontally, right? And we're probably going to be requesting you guys send these videos via email because the compression on the DM kind of makes the video sometimes a little grainy. All right guys, so today is all about, we're going to do kind of comparison we got, throwers from around the world. Again, everybody's trying to develop that perfect throwing technique, whether that's your discus, rotational shot, or your glide. We're going to have some stuff in the future, the javelin, the hammer, so stay tuned for that. But we're going to do a little comparison this time, kind of run through our six pillars and see what people do throughout the throw. Now real quick, before I dive in, one of the key things I want to make sure of is everybody at this time of the year that's submitting video is clearly dedicated and driven. Great job to you guys. For you guys that do have coaches, again, what we want to do here is I'm just going to give you things that we see, kind of compare. Maybe you've already worked on these things. Maybe it's just a fresh perspective, but the idea is we want to respect the fact that some of you guys that have coaches, we're just giving you what we see are the good things and things that are kind of standing out to us. All right, so first up, we have Jacko, Jackson Miller from Australia, and I have Aaron from India. And we synced up these guys at their throw. So the first thing we want to look at is their pillar ones are pretty good. So where they start and wind up, how they move, but right here is where we're starting to see this. So what I like is Jackson here does a nice job of staying pretty long. Aaron gets a little bit of a squat on the legs that's not necessarily a bad thing. So as he comes around, he's going to kind of cut his sweep a little short and the left arm kinds of comes around. I'm going to see Jackson here, kind of takes a nicer, longer path with that left arm, but we're under rotating this left foot and that's going to cause, even though he's getting a sprint, he's a younger athlete using lighter weight implement and then when you get to the heavier implement, it's really more difficult to get away with those things. So as we go through and we get our sweep, both guys do a pretty good job. So now as we create this sweep, you're going to see that Aaron's left arm kind of comes around a little bit. Sweep position and sprint position is pretty good. Now here's what he does well. I like the way he pulls this knee. He's pulling it in behind so he's going to accelerate rotation. It's going to help him get this foot down and it's going to help him stay on the ball of the foot. Whereas you see with Jackson right here, this is the key, he is kind of backing in. You see that right there? That's really key, kind of backs in. So you see the right side turning more than the left and you need the hips and both knees and everything turning as a unit. So what that does is that causes Jackson to create a little bit of a shift. Whereas you're going to see Aaron's going to stay up on the ball of the foot a little bit better. Both guys are shifting and you're going to see how, again, they're forward so they're not going to be working around as well as they could. So with Jackson, he's going to need to be working on getting around his block. He's doing a nice job of setting the block. So is Aaron, but Aaron does a nicer job of blocking the left shoulder. So that's going to get him out and around a bit. But he's going to come off. He has a little bit of a shift as well. You see that right there? We'll go back. There's your pillar five. You see how the knees not pushing ahead and then out and around. And you really see that over here with Jackson that when he came in, because he had that back in that foot goes flat, he reaches and he shifts. And then he pulls this left shoulder back. So that is going to cause a problem. So where does this all begin? Again, when we look at our throw and the way what we teach with the throwing chain reaction we're looking at, we just broke it down from pillar two through six. You can see that as we go back through here, the entry, it's that pillar two three is going to be the big focus here. And then the transition, right? So he's going to have to learn this. This is kind of looks like the squeezing of the knees. We always suggest you squeeze the knee behind. That's going to make a bigger difference. Okay, so let's check out the next video. All right, so now we have Hattie and Jacob. Again, one of the things we're going to look at now Hattie has been to some aerotake camps down in Australia and he had converted over to the spin. Now, here's the thing we're going to look at and then we have Jacob Jacobs from Germany. He's trying to convert to the spin and we're going to cover a couple of key things. First off, what we're going to look at again, we always look at the start pillar one and that's kind of how we're setting up our throw. And so you're going to notice how we have Hattie moving kind of from this position. So he's going to take it long. Now he has a little bit of a bend at the arm and that doesn't seem like much, but we want to rotate and wind that left side. And then here you're going to look at Jacob. He's got the arm straight. So this is going to affect how the shoulder enters into the ring. So with Hattie, you're going to see this here. We're going to go as he turns. He's got to have that left arm opening a little bit more in the foot. He's also on the outside of the foot and you're going to notice here, Jacob, he's got that arm folded across. So he's going to go down. He comes up, he goes down, then he comes up and then he opens up that arm. So he's opening the arm late. So he's got too much of this kind of up-down motion. That's what we would recommend. We would recommend a more twisting, tension-creating wind. So you come around a little taller. You don't have to be super tall, but you want to come around and drop. You're going to see the difference here where Hattie comes in. So his pillar two to three, he comes in here. He's under-rotated on the left and you're going to see Jacob gets this around. Pretty nice position here. He winds up, it kind of reminds me of kind of what Jack O'Gill used to do, but Jack O'Gill had a very different left arm path and you didn't see that big up-down motion. So now as he comes here, he rewraps. So we're going to see our pillar three is our sweep. This should still be out in opening. In our opinion, should open up to about three o'clock. And so this way it's going to create this type of a motion in his throw. Hattie's going to come across. He's opening the arm kind of like one of the things we've taught him to focus on, but he under-rotates here. So he kind of is going to get more of that motion. And so that transition, what we call is our pillar four into the middle. He's going to be wrapping around here pretty well. You notice the knee kind of moving behind, which is going to create that nice rotation. And he's got a pretty good motion here and he gets pretty good lift and pretty good extension. But we want to clean up the start a little bit. Whereas we have here with Jacob, you're going to see that as he comes around, he's rewrapping too much. Does that help him create speed? Yes, it does, but he's kind of bending over. That's going to cause his hips to shift into the direction of the throw just a little bit. He gets a nice side rotation in a good block, but you're going to notice on the delivery side, he's kind of got that, looks to me like the elbow is dropping a little bit, but really his big problems again, kind of come at this point here. He's got the upper body to open. And again, that up-down action is going to create the wrong type of rhythm. So at this point, looking at the two, you can see similar again where we have issues that back here in the start, this affects the chain reaction. And this is what is going to help both of these guys clean up and add a lot more distance real fast. If you guys would like more information at this time, this is the off-season, we're going to be gearing up for 2020. If you guys would like to know more about how to put together your programs, learn your technique and all that, check out the Throwing Chain Reaction System. Link is in the description. Be sure to hit that subscribe button, like, comment, share this bad boy, and thanks so much and we'll see you on the next video.
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We Packed an INSANE Limited! Pack N' Play Ep. #6
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papa meags decides to start the brand new pack n play squad out with a BANG... by pulling maybe the best limited card in the game. LFG BABY!
wow, you stud - thanks for clicking this video. quite simply, i cant help but notice how handsome you look right now - great job sport. keep up the nice work!
#mmg
Social Medias -
https://twitter.com/papameagzz
https://www.instagram.com/matthewmeagher
Show love to my AMAZING editors below!
Ty - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMoI_Mjgnw45coKZL3v5QUQ
Caz - https://www.youtube.com/Cazeaux
Severe - https://twitter.com/SevereVFX
Music:
Chuki makes incredible beats that I use all the time. Check him out here - https://www.youtube.com/user/CHUKImusic
|
[
"mmg",
"pack n play",
"mmg pack n play",
"madden pack n play",
"madden 23 pack n play",
"madden 23",
"madden 23 packs"
] | 2023-05-21T00:28:38 | 2024-02-05T06:38:34 | 1,445 |
ZQbjQ17oeT8
|
What's good you guys it's a brand new season so let me run down with the rules rule number one I cannot use the auction house every single player on this team must come from a pack or a set number two every game That I win at seventy five dollars to the bank and every playoff game that I win adds a hundred and the final rule We start with a budget of two hundred dollars to get my team off the ground last season I did three hundred dollars, but my team was honestly way too good on episode one So I'm gonna try and nerf that a little bit, but what's good you guys welcome back last season was really fun But sadly I did lose in the playoff. So we're back to square one We do have a few free cards that will be on the team like Gronk Cam Jordan Shaquille Leonard, but nothing fancy I've already loaded my account with the two hundred dollars worth of Madden cash 23,400 and I thought this is a perfect time to record because there are some absurdly good limits in the game There's limited Orlando pace gold 99 and limited gold 99 Troy Palamalu would have been nice for a while back But it is what it is. There's additionally a new pack that I have never seen in my lifetime This is brand new the pro overtime pack to 89 plus elite players 386 plus and 883 plus It's a really good pack, but I don't think it's worth the coins This will be awesome for pack-and-play to get my team off the ground this seven times pro overtime bundle is gonna have 97 guaranteed elite players a topper with 93 plusses and 391 plus redux So this is a guaranteed almost entire team will that entire team be good probably not But I think this is gonna get us off the ground really well to start so we'll take out 12,000 Madden cash here. Let's go for it, baby The pro overtime bundle and our first player of the brand new pack-and-play squad is Cameron Bynum free safety We've got Marlin Humphrey corner our aka player. Is there McNair? I guess I technically have a quarterback though. I imagine I'll get a better quarterback in time here CJ ham We got an ultimate legend. It's Lydani and Tomlinson another campus zero Tyson Campbell. Oh a ghost of mutt It's gonna be cave-on timid. Oh, that's the low-end but still solid outside linebacker. He gets edge threat there He is slay Lester Hayes Ryan Fitz magic our brand new QB got London Fletcher Fitz magic will be a funny QB Kevin Green and one final aka player is Javon curse while we fill the whole lot of positions But anything under a 94 overall really isn't any good anymore because these teams are so good So I gotta look for like the big boys All right, now it's the top first. This is a guaranteed 93 overall or better. What the fuck? Oh, no I thought that was the big ring of honor animation. It's not this is the small Steven Boyd I will take that'll be a decent user. Holy shit. That scared me like I just pulled a gold 99 ring of honor our next 93 plus Is an ultimate legend? Oh I just literally opened the worst packs ever straight into the best pack possible gold 99 limited Troy P What a star are you kidding me? 98 speed 99 zone 99 hip-heart 99 pursue 96 change direction 9 82 juke 86 catching traffic Oh my god, we got the best drug safety in the game our next 93 plus elite player Mad Max Crosby I'll take that. Oh my god. Let's go. Hey, I got a kicker. That's like the best redux I got a got right there. Honestly, there's like high overall ones. It's not my best quarterback option right now I think that is my best quarterback option right now our third and final is Joey Bosa Mad Max Crosby Joey Bosa. I've got some good linebackers actually now for my next bundle I actually think the best option here is the backyard ballers hero plus bundle gives you 594 plus and 197 or 99 now if you get 397 backyard baller players you can exchange them for 199 and get the 397s back So I'd really like to go for that back here ballers is kind of a goofy promo But has some really good cards our team is very average. I need some stars So hopefully we can get them here our first backyard baller is right tackle aircar instead Not what we're looking for but it is the best right tackle. I have right now So I guess we'll take it. We want a 97 though. I just got a dupe. Are you kidding me? Oh, that's a bummer to start out with our next 94 plus is I forgot that it could be a gold 99 to gold 99s already We got a gold 99 left tackle Quinn and Williams and I mean it's pack-and-play. I can't sell them I don't think I can put them in a set either so that is my end game left tackle right there That was the third 54 plus our fourth 54 plus is How is that possible? I assume there's a set I can put that into so I'll look for it our fifth 94 plus is Outside linebacker cow pits. I guess I'll take it and the final pack here on this bundle to 97 or a 99 I don't know the odds. Let's hope it's a 99. Let's hope it's a 99 That is fucking criminal that is a crime you shouldn't be allowed to give me three Eric Armstead's a to Quinn and Williams no way All right I'll look at the back our baller stuff later But for my remaining Madden cash all that I have left I can get the four times 97 plus ultimate legends players Which is actually crazy for my team right now to get this right here. So guarantee 97 plus is Hilariously the worst case scenario is pulling another Troy Palomar. Our first ultimate legend player is Larry Fitzgerald free safety. Whoa. I got a 97 free safety to start I got a fucking 97 wide receiver Daryl Rivas I think what I'd really like here is a QB or a half back. Can I choose a I will take that full ultimate legend Mel Blunt in the correct position. We're getting all 97 so far the fourth and final 97 plus Charles Tillman my secondary is fucking insane and it's all ultimate legends Larry Fitz have free safety Troy At strong safety Mel Blunt Charles Tillman. Well boys, of course, it's time for the moment of truth I'm gonna generate the best lineup. Let's see what this team looks like I'm gonna guess that it's a 94 overall best team overall. It's a 93 overall Let's see what it's looking like. Okay. So first glaring issue I see is half back quarterback is just not cutting it right now. Daryl Rivas wide receiver and Kwan Bolden step on digs It's kind of mid. They're gonna get clamped in man coverage. My old line is actually pretty dope Quintet Williams is amazing quest and Barry's really good Eric Armstead's really good Glasgow and Rodney are mad So I can acknowledge that Tight ends are dog shit for sure. I do not like the tight ends defense looks a lot better than offense My secondary is insanely good. We've got tie law here at corner three linebackers are solid man I got Kyle Pitts Joey Bosa on the D line I got Cam Jordan max Crosby defense lot better than offense and I've even got Adam Vinitieri I like the team right now but not enough what I definitely need to do is go sell players that I'm not using or have Dupes of so that I can use some of this training on something else So Quinn and Williams can't go into any sets and I can't use the auction house I have to quick-sell them, but I do get 350,000 training from that before I go anywhere else I'm gonna use this 350k training and I'm actually gonna use it on the back our ballers players with the hopes of getting enough 97s to get my own Gold 99 every time I get those 92s though. It's gonna eat a lot of training So we're gonna have to get kind of lucky here out of everything. I just opened. I got 194 294s my final pack was a 94 so we will take that so you need 494s to get your choice of a 97 So we're getting started at least it's also a fantasy pack so I can choose here and there's a lot of options Why receiver Robert Hunt you got to love that my team really needs a quarterback or a halfback So are any of you that middle linebacker Devante Adams is probably actually really good So that's up there on my list corner Josh Allen halfback Aaron Donald tight on Justin Fields There are no quarterbacks if I can only get one I'm getting middle linebacker Devante Adams He's kind of crazy and he gets lurker for free everybody. Here we go I'm gonna quick-sell everything on my bench that I'm not using we'll see how much training we can get another 211,000 training for everything remaining. I gotta get a quarterback. I really don't have a quarterback right now This is tough. I'm just gonna open the NFL draft player pack for the rest of this training I just want to switch it up those back our ballers were trash So I don't know if I want to do that again so reject Sanborn who we cannot use so that's a quick sell But that was a 93 I have enough for one the single training variety pack. Let's see what we got in it Hey, I'll take that that actually gives me a good amount of coins a hundred ten thousand coins to spend Hundred ten thousand coins. What can you get me? It can't give me a pro overtime pack I'll use my a hundred ten thousand coins on an NFL draft fantasy pack here Which gives me brockers or Bobby time. I'm gonna take Tanya, bro. I'm excited to have a half-way decent tight end in there and Eliminate redox mark Andrews on the end of an NFL draft fantasy pack, bro This is 283 plus elites while we pretty much exhausted all our resources at this point So let me hit generate best lineup one more time. We are now a 94 overall Unfortunately, my backfield is still really ugly with work done and Russell Wilson But there's nothing we can do about it till now. I'm gonna have to go win a game get $75 back in the bank and open some more Packs, all right, I'm gonna set abilities on this squad and we'll get to it. All right boys. The abilities are set I've got Quinn and Williams with identifier edge Mark Andrews with red zone and tight end apprentice Daryl Rivas was short in a lead Russell Wilson with set feet lead which cost three APs was very expensive I'm excited to get a new QB and then work done with evasive running back apprentice and grab and smash now off Fences mid, but defense is actually like really really good in my opinion. So let me show you this I got Paula model with pick artists crush your acrobat Devonte Adams with acrobat lurker peanut Tillman with pick artists. Hi, hon What'd you make? Come in. No, so these are the best pancakes. He's ever had in his life. Sir. Williams is a whip and a brick They're they're healthy pink. Is there chocolate chips in there? Yeah, okay. Oh, but it looks good Wow That is the best pancake I've ever had. Are you serious? That is the best pancake I've ever had. Really? Yeah, that's amazing There's the best pancakes I've ever had They're amazing. I love you Literally the shittiest pancakes I've ever had in my entire life. I think I'm gonna go puke. I'm kidding I'm kidding. I'm kidding. Don't send that to L. I'm kidding. They are amazing Mel Blunt has deep out zone KO Larry Fitz has crushed your acrobat mid zone KO Which is fucking insane this Larry Fitzgerald is so good Joey Bosa speedster Cam Jordan with goal line stuff Yeah, I'm happy Vinitary's got abilities. Oh and by the way fun fact the sugar rush program item Which gives plus two speed and was supposed to expire did not expire So you can give your entire team to speed excel change the direction in jumping and I have a feeling I mean It's fucking EA. They're not gonna go in and fix this This will be the case until the end of the year like Devonte Adams I was a little worried he was kind of slow, but then I remembered about that So my Devonte Adams now has 98 speed 97 excel 99 change the direction and lurker and acrobat That's a fucking user man. All right boys weird squad. We're a little defense heavy But I think we can play some good football Mahomes car Michael Fred Warner. I like your team sir our top three Tillman blunt Mark Andrews Hand off up the middle. He gets rocked Brian Robinson. All right. He's gonna pass this football Let's see what Devonte Adams user can do over the middle to the halfback you wouldn't dare Oh, no, he's got a man now. Oh, we had that. All right. Let's set a blitz. Let's set a blitz is third and five We want to get this ball back. I'm covered. I don't know where he was gonna throw, but Joey Bosa gets home It's fourth and nine. Will he go for it from his own 23? Oh, he's definitely going for it I'm gonna send the blitz again. Get there. It's a fumble post four yards because of that I'm gonna start out with a run left side. That's behind Mark Andrews Yeah, I don't really have the all-in or the running backs for that quite yet Now what I do have is an awesome tight end. So maybe we target him. I gotta be careful though He's got that big Carmichael. Oh, Mark Andrews Shit, I should not have highballed that third and nine. I'm gonna go work down over the middle. Oh That was a great push. It's fourth and one. I gotta I gotta go for it fourth and one. There's the snap Bobby Titan Get it in on fourth and one against the man covered do that one pack I got that at two tight ends and it was so clutch. Wow two point conversion. I'm gonna go work done here Oh, I had it. Oh, holy shit. That was a bad ball. I don't have fearless fuck Wow, I just said Justin Simmons and shambles now. He's gonna pick to me that is karma I forgot just how bad that ball comes out if you don't have fearless Second and five Where's he gonna throw this? Oh, he's got nothing third and five Similar play. Yes similar play. He throws it down to quad father. Nice tackle I kind of got lucky there fourth into one. He might just run this up the middle. I'm gonna grab Fitz. Oh It's a fucking QB sneak. I totally thought that would be enough. Nice play. Nice play same formation I can't imagine. It's the same plan but go on Palomalu. I think this is a run It is a run Paloma. Oh damn Palomalu was there quad father We just got to hit him hard hit him hard make him fumble. What ability does he have on him? Persistent. Okay, so he just wants to abuse the quad father play action We were so close, but he doesn't gain any yards. So that's nice first in ten. Oh Yeah, what are you throwing? Let's go Devonte Devonte pick six the pitch Devonte Adams pitch to Kyle Pitts both of them defensive players. That's awesome. See what he goes with here Oh, Mark Andrews had his man I think second and 17 a touchdown be really nice because a field goal doesn't even help me that much Certainly helps, but this is just such a weird. We're just about to be in Daryl Remus. Great catch. Good wheels All right, now we're gonna go with the stretch. I think he expects a pass at this point Good blocks Warwick done on a stretch great blocks. Holy shit I'm gonna go to Revis here on a flat route. Just a just a little sit down. Oh, that's man coverage I gotta go Bobber shit. It's a good switch to man coverage But not getting that two-point doesn't really matter either it's a ten-point game to possession or still in the second quarter So second in five. He's gonna throw under great breakup. All right, we're gonna go coverage. Oh, it's a handoff Fuck the quad father the quad father so good He's taking a shot Good breakup. I think Larry Fitz touched them up second and ten. Let's see if he tries that again Oh bars on accident to shit. Oh good stop. Good stop. All right, try it again. Come on do it again Throw short this time big hit from Larry Fitz. Oh my god. I thought that was a fumble first in ten I hope he tries it again. He'll get picked off. That's it. That's it. Oh I Literally said I hope he tries again. He'll get picked off I thought Larry Fitz had that nice touch down from him good news is we still have a minute to go score So let's try and do that for half first in ten. Let's get a little handoff, baby Damn, they are so warming to the ball right there. I'm gonna go mark Andrew's down a seam I think he's in cover three still. Oh, he is there now the high ball will work. Hey, there we go I got rocked for it But that was the time I needed the high ball right there first in ten I'm gonna take b underneath Bobby Tanya and get to the edge buddy get to the edge. What are you doing kind of angle? Is he taking on that tackle works for me? All right first in ten that is man coverage Jesus Christ You're fucking kidding me. I need better wide receivers, dude He just ran that drag route better than my wide receiver ran it. He's going for that same play again So I got to go stop it. Oh, no, he goes half back. Okay Throws underneath another big hit from Larry Fitz damn I was hoping that one would actually take him out He might just take the field goal now that he has it He's gonna tie the game up here all my stupid two-point conversions aren't coming back to get me drills The field goal ties this ball game up. We need a good half here. Luckily. I do start with the ball Well, I hope he comes out and cover three. I think this is or is this cover for what is this? Whatever it is. It's weird and it works for me because it's gonna leave mass of us I'm gonna go no huddle until he calls the timeout or audibles This will just not this defense will just not work straight up the CV flies over to RB. No that leaves why oh That almost got picked off just insane I can't tell what this is if it's man coverage. I want to be able to hit the half back Oh, look at why just sitting there wide open and great job by my offensive line. What a clean pocket I got a show respect there. It was a three-man rush, but still I'm impressed. All right first in ten It's not man coverage. He's got the drag open underneath a good tackle Second in eight. Let's keep playing smart here. I don't have to take any risks. There's no point. No point Don't take the risk great hit there on Justin Simmons, and I'm gonna go with the handoff here Let's just pick up this yard. Oh Decent blocks work done does get it. Wow. That was a fight, but we got there nice work I'm gonna go right back to flood. He's been struggling with this play. I'll check it down to work done Let's just not get hit hard. Oh, okay work done. I said you got take it man See we can do here. Oh, yeah work done under not the best ball Felt like he led him a little bit too much, but it did say perfect accuracy So it might have been perfect third in two a big play right here. I'm gonna take it his users behind it I'm gonna take it first in ten. This is quite the drive. It's a long one, too. He calls it timeout He doesn't like to know how to that's amazing to get you to burn those timeouts early is really nice Can't tell if this is man or what this is. I'm looking for Mark Andrews though. Oh mark his man Justin Simmons once again. It's getting bullied over there by Mark Andrews. I've learned my lesson I'm gonna take my PAT good and good 19 to 12 10 plays 88 yards three minutes. That's a big drive. All right first in ten Let's see if he tries this again. Oh He was good might have had an interception I think that was an interception if he gets it off Second in ten play action. He gets to that was an interception to damn. I want him to throw the ball. Oh Mel Bunt Mel Blunt can't quite get there and he gets up first down Damn probably a handoff now that quad father's back in I'm gonna go on Fitz for the stretch whatever this is Oh, yeah, there it is. Oh He squeaked his way through but for only four good defense potentially another handoff. I honestly can't tell no So close to that damn we're dangerously close to a turnover. We just got to convert it Go ahead. Paula Malu second in two. I'm gonna switch up my defense He may just run the ball again. Yeah, he does. It's kind of worried about that But very good stop. We're looking at third and one here. He could just do that again I think he is just doing that again. I'm gonna go flood it with Devonta Adams. Oh Get there. Oh, no Unbelievable damn looking dude. We're so close to a turnover, but we have to convert it. This is a run. This is a run play Oh my god, it's not that's bad Oh my god, we got it Mel Blunt I told you Oh my god, Mel Blunt, dude. Yes, dude. I could just feel it. I could feel it. We were so close This was a weird one though break up the pass bobbles around no tip drill Mel Blunt decides to snag that one 26 to 12 and we take the lead Ooh, there was a really nice comeback, but he either missed the pass or the receiver goofed it second and 10 I'm gonna go for the sack here. He's even one. He's going Come on give me some blocks I played that return wrong, but everything else was perfect and and that's pretty much ball game I was kind of hoping he'd rage quit so I could open a pack, but it doesn't look like he's gonna he's gonna stick it out Which I respect I'm gonna run left side. Mm cut this back up Oh Warwick done second and two Mm Third and two we convert this it's ball game. We're already I mean we're in such a good position But I'd like to end it bold in and quant bold and gets his revenge. That's where I had an interception before But he got his revenge first and 10 put mark andrews on a corner route That should be a pretty easy completion. Oh gosh. Yeah. God. He's so good such a strong route 15 for 19 Russell Wilson 91 overall I think I'm most impressed with Russell Wilson Honestly second and two Daryl Revis and another great ball from Russell Wilson I might go for another touchdown doesn't earn me anything, but you know fucking I'll get weird He's gonna leave that same seam like a psycho ball game big time ball game It's been ball game, but it's extra ball game now in a matter of like 35 seconds That game went from such a close scary game to a guaranteed w. All right 19 seconds left in the ball game He's gonna go for a big one here. I'd imagine no Oh, big hit big fucking hit now blunt into There's my big hit came from Tillman nine seconds in the ball game. I'm gonna send a hot one He won't my homes won't know what hit him hot one bossa. I'm up by 20. Who cares? That was a hot one though Year year good broken tackle and that is all she wrote great first game We needed that big time. We need that big time Dude, I'm so impressed Russell Wilson with a 127.3 qbr three touchdowns one interception And the interception was just a bad decision by me wasn't russ's fault Quad father ran all over us, but it didn't matter Daryl Revis Five for 109 in a touchdown bobby tonyan five for 28 in a touchdown mark andrews three for 49 in a touchdown We were slinging them all. All right. So that win adds 75 dollars to the bank and normally I would keep going here And play another game, but I actually want to save our money and the next game because The next time you see a pack and play. I'm pretty sure golden tickets will be out So I want the episode after this to be all about the golden tickets So i'm just gonna leave our team as is what we can look forward to is I have 197 backyard baller Which is davante adams and a few 94s if I can get two more 97s I can turn in the 97s for a gold 99 of my choice So there's some awesome upgrades we can make with that But right now our team isn't anything flashy, but it's certainly got a w Lot of sleeper players played really well like 93 tonyan mark andrews was great Daryl Revis was great russel wilson was great So I hope you guys enjoyed I can't wait for golden tickets to drop for the next one and I'll see you guys then peace
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Google Meet: Cara Gunakan Whiteboard Digital (Whiteboard.fi)
|
Video ini menerangkan cara kita boleh gunakan whiteboard digital (tambahan) untuk pengajaran melalui Google Meet, dengan fungsi kolaborasi.
#GoogleMeet #PanduanMudah #WhiteboardFi
|
[
"Google Meet",
"Whiteboard"
] | 2020-05-08T12:49:08 | 2024-04-18T18:01:27 | 256 |
Zq3wV3ZrBjU
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Salam satu semua perkabar. Seperti mana yang kita tahu dalam Google Meet, kita tidak ada Virtual Whiteboard ataupun Whiteboard Maya yang kita boleh gunakan semasa kita menerangkan sesuatu kepada moyet-moyet kan. Kadang-kadang kita nak melukis, kita nak lukis, kita tak dapat di dalam Google Meet. So salah satu-satunya ialah kita gunakan Whiteboard Fi ini ataupun Whiteboard.fi ini masuk ke Whiteboard.fi yang bagus tentang Whiteboard Fi ini kita tidak perlu daftar ikon atau apa-apa sekalipun kita perlu tambah kelas baru. Contoh saya ada kelas ABC ini. Bila ada kelas, kita akan diberikan dengan code kelah. Contoh di atas ini C2T. So link ialah Whiteboard.fi C2T. So kita boleh bagi link ini kepada pelajar supaya pelajar pun boleh masuk ke dalam Whiteboard kita dan sama-sama menjawab apa yang kita telah lukis di Whiteboard kalau nak lah. Ini melalui link direkt ke Whiteboard.fi kalau tak nak. Bila kita boleh ke Whiteboard macam ini, kita boleh tulis sikit satu sama satu sama dengan berapa contohnya lah. So bila kita dah stand by Whiteboard lagi ni. So bila kita ke Google Meet kita tekan Pizzan Now ni, tekan ke a Chrome tab kalau kita buka dua tab ni. So dia akan dua contoh Meet dengan Whiteboard kita tekan Whiteboard. Tak perlu share audio. Tak perlu share audio. So nampak tak, screen tu tengah, tengah record bahagian ni. Tapi pelajar pun nampak benda yang sama. Kalau anda tak nampak view ni hanya tukar di sini ya. Tekan di atas ni. Kita nampak. Yang ni akan menunjukkan apa yang kita tunjuk contoh. Kalau kita buat sesuatu di sini. Kali lagi dua darat dua sama dengan berapa. So kita akan nampak sini. Yang lecih ni sikit ialah kita kena buka dua tab lah. Tapi lebih baik daripada dalam song. So kita masih boleh gunakan Whiteboard kita tu untuk menerangkan sesuatu. So kita boleh tulis kat sini lepas kita ke tab ni untuk tunjukkan kepada pelajar. Whiteboard.fi ni kalau kita masukkan pelajar pun boleh masuk guna phone. Dia boleh gunakan telefon. Cuma bila untuk kita prezen dalam bentuk ni lebih sesuai kita guna desktop lah. Kita susah sikit kalau nak guna phone. Whiteboard ni fungsi dia sangat simple. Dia tak adalah komputer kita sangat. Tapi cuk memadai untuk kita gunakan semasa memadai untuk kita tunjuk dalam kelas lah. Dalam Google Meet ni. Kalau kita tak nak guna secara Google Meet, kita pun boleh push kepada student maksudnya. Kita push ke student. Dia akan masuk ke my class ni. Student yang masuk ke link ni dia akan nampak Whiteboard ni lah. Contoh kalau saya tekan sekarang. Kalau student yang masuk cuba kalau saya masuk sekarang kan. Student yang perlu tekan kode dia. So kode kita C2T. So kalau saya masuk sekarang kan C2T atas ni kan kode tu ada tab. Kalau dia dah pergi Whiteboard L4 adalah contoh saya letak nama saya Ali. Bila Ali dah masuk contoh ini saya. So tadi saya tanya Ali satu tambah satu berapa. So Ali boleh jawab dalam telefon satu sama satu sama dengan dua. Nampak tak dia keluar sekaligus. Ini dalam telefon saya ya. Boleh. Itu saya tetap Whiteboard L4 ini. Dia harap membantu anda dalam pengenjaran melalui Google Meet lah walaupun dia ringkas. Tapi rasa saya yang ini paling mudah tanpa perlu kita install perisian lain. So lepas kita dah selesai kan hanya stop. Kita akan balik kepada view buatkan kita lah ataupun kita boleh tunggu masa view lain. Itu saja untuk perkongsian kali ini. Semoga berguna. Jika ada apa-apa komen boleh tinggalkan di ruang komen di bawah tu. Dan jangan lupa subscribe. Terima kasih semua.
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{
"url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zq3wV3ZrBjU",
"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
}
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UCywI3C9h_bKiBd6xZWKBL6Q
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Christmas carols....and Yule dogs, cats, and logs!
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No art today...I just wanted to share some of my favorite YT videos to keep you in the holiday spirit - hope you enjoy!
Yule dogs, cats, and logs playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLvwI47YF7kGWOUzR0P0FYni-dbLEnhUmE
Christmas carols playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLvwI47YF7kGVWrVXZC-IF1JvPHSh8jQwF
═╬════════ S O C I A L ════════╬═
B L O G : http://sandyallnock.com
P E R I S C O P E L I V E : http://periscope.tv/sandyallnock
I N S T A G R A M : http://instagram.com/sandyallnock
T W I T T E R : http://twitter.com/sandyallnock
F A C E B O O K: https://www.facebook.com/sandyallnockllc
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[
"cardmaking",
"coloring tutorial",
"crafting",
"papercrafting",
"how to",
"sandy allnock"
] | 2015-12-21T15:09:15 | 2024-04-23T16:49:21 | 98 |
zQZefCmBGj4
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Well, hello everybody and Merry Christmas. My name is Sandy Onok and today I bring you something a little different. It's not an art or craft video, but it is something I hope will help you to get your art on, get your craft on, or get your cooking and baking on and your wrapping because I know everybody's really busy at this very moment. So I wanted to bring you something that will help to entertain you while you're doing those other things. There are amazing people who have put together great Christmas videos here on YouTube and I wanted to put together a couple playlists. One of them is all of the Yule Dog, Yule Log, Yule Cat types of videos that I found that were really fun. They just put a camera on something and turn on Christmas music and it's usually just really relaxing to have that on in the background. Some of them have a crackling fire. Some of them, like mine, have Sierra and her little friend Ellie from a couple years ago in it. Lots of different types of videos that have that same kind of a feel to them. And then there's a playlist of all of my favorite Christmas videos put together by musicians here on YouTube because there's a lot of really great ones. I just put together a whole group of them so you can put a playlist on in the background. Maybe find some new musicians that you might want to follow, but also just have some Christmas music that's not your standard Bing Crosby type of stuff. It's done by contemporary artists. I hope that is something that you guys will enjoy. I just wanted to bring you a little gift for this Christmas while you're doing all of your rapping and your baking and things. Alright, I'll see you guys very soon. Bye bye.
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{
"url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zQZefCmBGj4",
"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
}
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UCOF1iS7lmNRSWVqL8N3L6kQ
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किसानों का ध्यान भटका रही है सरकार
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मोदी सरकार लगातार दोहरा रही है कि नए कृषि कानूनों से किसानों को फायदा होगाI लेकिन जब से ये कानून पारित हुए हैं देश भर के किसान इनके खिलाफ आंदोलनरत हैंI पिछले हफ्ते ये विरोध और भी मज़बूत हुआ जब पड़ोसी राज्यों से किसानों ने दिल्ली की ओर कूच कियाI अगर ये कानून उतने ही फायदेमंद हैं जितना कि प्रधानमंत्री जी बता रहे हैं तो आखिर किसानों के गुस्से की वजह क्या है?
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[
"Farmers Protests",
"New Agri Laws",
"Farm Bills",
"Farmers March",
"Delhi Chalo",
"Punjab Farmers",
"Singhu Border",
"Tikri Border",
"Explainer",
"Why are farmers protesting?",
"Ministry of Agriculture",
"Narendra Modi",
"Narendra Tomar",
"BJP",
"BJP anti farmer",
"AIKSCC",
"AIKS",
"Ravish Kumar",
"Aunindyo Chakravarty",
"NDTV"
] | 2020-12-04T15:00:12 | 2024-04-22T18:35:51 | 736 |
ZQ2gBzmh-4Y
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नुसकार आप देक्रे एकणुन्म का लाको किसान अनिन्दिो चकरवरती आज मैं बाट करुंगा किसान जो हमारे दिलगे बाडर पर खडे वोगे लाको किसान पन्जाप से जाडा तर है, लेके रर्याना से आए आए राजचस्तान से आए आए थुस्रे प्र देशो से लिए असर्यों बूड़े आजार है, अएगा वईगाना एग्साए आप चाहना, तो अझ़ मिझवागे किसना लेकर आएगेगेगेगेगेगेगेगेगेगेगेगेगेगेगेगेगेगे�ेगे�Mac. तो यह जो तीन काले कानून है, इन में चार बडी मांगे किसान लेकर आए हैं, और सब से पहला मांग, मैं यह यह इंपोटन से नहीं के रहूं, सब से पहला मांग क्या है, उनका कैना है कि यह जो रेजिस्टर्ट आपीम्सी के मंडिया ती अप तक जो सरकार चलाती ती जो रेगूलेटिट मंडी आएं जहांपर किसान अपना आनाज लेजा कर भेच ते ते वहाँ पर कुछ तैक्स लगाया जाता ता ता कुछ तैक्स है क अद्तिया है यह त्रेटर हैं जो व्यापारी है तो ख़ीते ते अनाज वो देते ते पन्जाब में जैसे तीन परस्ट्ट का लेवी होता है, जो कि मंडी चलाने के लिए खर्च है, उसके लिए लेवी है, नहीं सि 분들이 सथक सरना यह तेंसार है क्यो स� neuthoni 16 из용 कर में, नहीं की पर अठ्स सलंय कर जाता है। यह जो ख़ी धों लागाया लेकों अगर चीटन्चों लग वो जी आप ऋे हे वहा रहाने न� situa susceptible it. सु अभ्त लो कागर खरी देंगे वहापर ये कर नहीं लगें लीबीों और सर चाज नहीं लगें तेजी बाच से क्या और वी खापारी है उब ये विड़ लो कागर खरी रवे चाए कि चार बाप नाज और गय और में एक एस छनी विड़ कर फाँत यागर कर चागा कग़ा. तो सस्ते में थोड़ा बहुत किसान को भी देखर खुद भी प्रोफिट बड़ा सकता है. इसका मतलब क्या है कि जो हाडतिया है जहांपे किसान जाकर अपना माल रकते हैं उनको मुष्किल होगी आसे मंडियो को और जो प्रावेट मंटी है उनका फाधा. इसलिये किसान कह रहे हैं कि जो apmc का मार्ट मंटी है, जो अभी जो मंटी है सरकारी रेगूलेट मंटी है और जो प्रावेट मंटी है दोनो में यही लेवी और सरचाज लगना चाही है. इसका कारन कहाँ है आढािक अद थो आदती हो का फ़ाइदा है किसान इसकलिए किसान लगने किसान और वयापारी है. किसान के साथ, सब से बहले कया एंस break that money is not that easily gained by the bank or by the market. जुसरा चीज क्या है। किसान जु सारे चीजे क्यों ख्रीतटें अप पीशटे, बीज पीश्टी, कित आश्ष्टाग. इस सारा जो है आर्टीों से ही क्यों से उसपलाी मिलते है। and when a farmer has to settle, तब आ़थिय आपकर रहाथे ख़ेट तब रहाथे हैं अगर किसान को मस्पी मिल रहा है, नून।तम सबोद शमर्ठन मूल्डयो मिल रहा है. तो इस मेभी आच्छ आपकर ख़ेट इसी ले मिल रहा है. ब्यूँ अजागा सु दलाग उगार तो वहां भी आप पल ञीर कली देखां। लेवेल प्लेएिंग फील्ड उपंँई ऑ़ोगा फलज जी लगर ती तु़ए ने ब़ूगाग. तुस्भ़ भी वार पके अभाजाते हैं. तूस्री वाली पोईत क्ढाहे, दूस्री वाली पोईत थे है, जो apmc जो मन्दिएो में आरती होते लेध� 삼ा, एड़ियो वात मेंदी में आरती होते एक जाए दी? नूफित नाज वूड़ाडी हैं chances that the आब नहीं कनूण मे क्या और आप प्राइवे प्राइगे प्लाईं के इसनकी खारिखाउगे हैं। छ़े पैं कार्द किसानो को दर है, कि एक बार अगर वनाज लेकर निकल जाए, तो उनका लोकल औरया में कोई अस्तित तो है नहीं, वो कही पे रजिस्टर नी है, उनको कैसे दूंके निकालेंगे किसान, तो ये भी देखी किस तरीके से आद्टिया और किसान की, जो देली रोज मररा की जिन्� सा प्य अचाई, लेरके वो नब सब णजाए यहच Besainat कैते है, कि सरकाडारी सकूल अच्छे नी है, हम साभ जानते लेगे, वेंको सकुलतो है ना, अगर वो नई हूगग़े, स्कूल नई हूगगे, उसी तरीखे से आद्टिय बी हम जानते हैं, कि आड्तिय किसान से कबी क इस आप पढले क्या हो दिस्ट्ट हो तो आप ऒ्खर्षाएं जाएं नहीं लोकर, ठी स्वो आप यहगी बी आप पर यहगी यहग palabras and inde dialogues and अगर कोई भी जमेला हो दिसपूट हो तो सिवल कोट तक नहीं जासकते है। लोकल जो सब दिटीश्टरिक मेजंस्तेट है इस दीम है उन लिको ने यो अप zdrowेले त्रमिवन वना रहा है. अगई शाह सकती आप दो सinku 맡 कि बुलों ककत्यम. उःव इए डिए dzi ब रवेवांग़ा पर भी और विक चाcount how. सकार का क्या कैना है? सकार कैरे के देखी ये जो तीन point है ना इस पे हम दिरे-दिरे मानने को तगयार है. चली कोई बात नहीं आप कैरें के जो प्रवेवेट मन्दी है वहापर भी सर्चाज लगना चाई रूरल देएलप्मन्त के लिए तीके कोई बात नहीं. अचा हम ने तो इस लिए कहा था की रेजिस्टेशन होने की जोर्रत नहीं है. पैंकार लेकर कोई आजाए ताकी ये पूर्या बाबू तन्त्र है उस से ये पूरा क्रिषी का जो बामल है वो बआज सके ये से किसान कोई फयदा होगा. अगर किसान भाई लोग सोचते है किसे फयदा नहीं है अगर किसान परवार सोचते इसे उलुट सकते तो तीके है हम रेजिस्टेशन करवा देंगे केवाईसी बड़ा देंगे. और आखे रगर सेविल कोड जाना चाट Queensborough किसान अगर बचम लिऔम पना चाचाते है है. हम द्सी आपन है उसलोखाल लिए मामला है, लोकल में मिघ जाटा अगर जाना चाते है। तो थीख ए ख़ोगा। सेविल कोट का भी मामला हम सून लेंगे. इंदीं मुध्दों पर दी़े दीरे स्वांना की इसानो की बाद सुन्ने को तैयार है. लेकिन च्राथा मामला जो है आप देखा ये जो मामले है, तीन मामले तीन दिमान्द किसान के, अगर में एक जो वेंग सकेल है, तराजूपे रखू, तो ये जो तीन मामले वो पाँज परस्टोंगे. तोटल दिमान्त के पाँज परस्टोंगे है. अस्ली जो पच्चानवे प्रतिष्ट दिमान्त है किसान का. जिसके बिना ये पुरा जो मामला है, वो सुलज नहीं सकता. वो एक ही है, और वो है, MSP. यानी की नूनतम समर्ठन मूल्ले. वो ही सब से बड़ा मामला है. और इसी पे सरकार नहीं सुनना चाती. किसान के रहे है, कि आप तो केते हैं भिया, अगर ये जो नहीं कानून है, अगर प्रावेट सेक्टर को आने दिया जाए, बड़े-बड़े कमपनिया आए, तो किसान को अच्टे डाम मिलेंगे. अभी डाम नहीं मिलते है, तो अब अच्टे डाम मिलेंगे. अभी तो सी रव MSP मिलता है, नूनतम समरतन मूले मिलता है, जो सरकार देरी है, और वो भी जाए तर को नहीं मिलता है, तो आप जब बड़े कमपनिया आएंगी, प्रवेट प्लेर आएंगे, खरीट सकेंगे, पुरा मारकेत अच्टी तरे से चलेगा, अगर किसान को और भी पैसा मिलेगा, अगर यही बात है, तो फिर MSP नूनतम समरतन मूले को आप कानून में क्यो निबदल देते, यह किसान मांगरे ना कि कानून बना दीजे, MSP को कानून बना दीजे, कि ता कि इसके नीचे कोई नहीं ख़ीत सकता, अगर ख़ीत ख़ीत किसान से, तो आप को फाईन देना पड़ेगा, जुर्मा नहीं यह आप का जेल भी हो सकता, यह यह के रहीं किसान, कि अगर लाब होने वाला है, यह सारा रीफाम, यह सारा अग्रिकल चल रीफाम आप सून रहे ना, अगर किसान का भलाई होने वाला है, तो आज अगर जो पैसा मिल रहे नहीं, उसको अप मिनिमम फलोर बना दीजे ना, उसके नीचा अप नहीं ले सकते, क्यों नहीं करना चाती है, कि सरकाल को भी पता है, सब को पता है, कि जब बड़ी कमपनी आएंगी, शुरु में तो कुछ पैसे देदेंगे वो, लेकिन बाद में किसान का पुरा मरकेट कबजे में करके, वो कम पैसे में अनाज खरी देंगे, जो कि पुरे दुन्या में हुए है, सिरभ भारत नीज, जहाँपर भी प्रविट सेक्तर आए, यह जहाँपर भी प्रविट सेक्तर आए ख़िया है, करिषी में वहा वहा एसा ही हूए है, और इस के बार में सब को पताए, इस इस लिए कानून में आगा आए, इस इस लिए MSP, नुनतम समरतन मुल कानून में नहीं डाला जाए आए, दिल्ली के बोडर पार से जो ख़बर आरी है, वो यह है कि किसान जो वहापर बेट हुए, वो अपने नेता से के रहे हैं, कि आप समजोदा कर के आएंगे तो आप गाँँ में गुस नहीं पाएंगे, समजोदा मत की जे, हमारा जो हख है, उसको दिल्ला कर रही है, यह तीं काले कानून वापस दिल्ला कर वापस आए, तो आजका आपिस्वोड यही तक.
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UCrvJc8oOqtQf9MEs_UXsBMQ
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RICH TV LIVE
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] | 2024-01-14T12:05:33 | 2024-02-07T17:32:35 | 18 |
ZQtoI4JPznI
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Hey guys, this is Rich from Rich TV Live. The health and wellness sector is on fire right now. If you want access to the next hot pick, all you need to do is join Rich TV Live today by clicking the link down below.
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UC-crZTQNRzZgzyighTKF0nQ
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Cold Store 'ਚ ਹੋਇਆ ਜ਼ਬਰਦਸਤ blast, ਟੁੱਟ ਗਈਆਂ ਸਟੋਰ ਦੀਆਂ ਦੀਵਾਰਾਂ, ਦੇਖੋ ਕਿਵੇਂ ਵਾਪਰਿਆ ਹਾਦਸਾ? |#local18
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ਮੋਗਾ ਦੇ ਜਲਾਲਾਬਾਦ ਕੋਕਰੀ ਰੋਡ 'ਤੇ ਕੋਲਡ ਸਟੋਰ 'ਚ ਧਮਾਕੇ ਤੋਂ ਬਾਅਦ ਹੋਈ ਅਮੋਨੀਆ ਗੈਸ ਦੇ ਲੀਕੇਜ 'ਤੇ ਰਾਤ ਨੂੰ 2 ਵਜੇ ਦੇ ਕਰੀਬ ਫਾਇਰ ਬ੍ਰਿਗੇਡ ਦੇ ਕਰਮਚਾਰੀਆਂ ਨੇ ਕਾਬੂ ਪਾ ਲਿਆ ਪਰ ਕੋਲਡ ਸਟੋਰ ਦੀ ਦੂਜੀ ਕੰਧ ਵੀ ਰਾਤ ਸਮੇਂ ਢਹਿ ਗਈ।
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"today news punjab",
"punjab news today",
"punjab latest news",
"latest news punjab"
] | 2024-03-28T08:25:00 | 2024-04-23T13:26:56 | 361 |
zQ1KmeIDZRA
|
moka de jlalabad kokri rode te ek cold store de vech kal tamaka hon to baad ammonia gas leak hogi jis to baad ithe harkam punch gaya hala ki is jaga te cold store de vech 4-5 lok jade andar maju sirye jade hona ne pachke jaan bachaye us to baad jade hai ammonia gas leak hogi ta fire brigade nu sujna ditige fire brigade ne mahke de paanch ke paniyan diye bachharaan kar ke jade ammonia gas si us te control gita hala ki to si dekshaad doon tasmeeraan cold store diya ki kishtaraan cold store diya dwaran digiya piya is malbe de thale ek gadeevi jade hiya dasi hiya o aayi giya lekin us to baad fire brigade rat do vey tak jada pana kama kar diri lekin rat do vey jade hon pichli jaga te ammonia gas leak hogi si us te spray kar de paise us te paniyan diye bachharaan kar de paise us te vi jade hiya dwar aise trikken aale hi degiya aur kaafi nukshaan hon to baaj gaya ki us tome jaan kar hiya bhi hai ki fire brigade karmi jade siye andar paani maar rei siye lekin us te dwaran jade hiya dwar degi piyo vi to nu tasmeeraan dha kama gaya piya na hon mawke diya tasmeeraan dha kada aase hiya tas majuudan us se jaga te jalalabad kukri rode te us te lo kathe ne hala ki aspaas kar jada nahi hai haspaas reashi lekha nahi hai gade jade kar ke nukshaan to thoda bachharaan lekin ammonia gas laga tar leak ho rahi si aur jade fire brigade karmi hi si o mawke de paunche aur onna volon paani diye bachharaan kar ke kitina kithe gas nu kontrol ki ta gaya hala ki aayi haji saaf nahi ho paaya ki gas kitho leak ho isi lekin haji tak jade hiya hondi stiti hiya gas kontrol de bachharaan lekin haji jade cold store di haalata kade bachki diwaran bhi girsak diya jade ahtyatan torte lo ka nu thoda hiya side te kita gaya aur jada gate a cold store da ovi bandh kitha gaya nukshaan kina ko hiya e haji saaf nahi hai kye pishil niya diwaran jade hiya ovi gyrgi hiya ek dwar hiya agi o kadho vi gursak diya adikari ne the majuudne fire brigade adikari ne onna gal kar le ne ke kadho su chna hi si aur kishtana de halas siye aur ke mein kabo paaya gaya gurmeil ji kishtana de halas siye judon to nu ithe call hiya aur ammonia gas leak ho ri siye aur ke mein kabo paaya aji main gurmeil singh fire officer moga ji hiya te kreepin saate kole satashta banjya de anna 4 seta banjya de su chna mili saan nu te panjik bhaji uthor ban givni saate fire tentati te poori team di te the aayi te apna ammonia leak si ghi te apna ono ithe kodung di thi sade magme ne baaki force bhi si ghi saari ji o kanda kund de de gipi te o judi nga pay pangpo pao itha hunda koolung de na baate store nu o leak lag ho gaya ji is kar ke ammonia leak ho gaya kabo ke mein baaya gaya ji kabo dan ji ek baas se koolungi de na hunda gaya inu to ammonia gas leak ho gaya te hon chriti aayi judi hiye kanda ek da de gipi si ek de gundi tadaar te aayi baaki odang ka traola bhi ammonia gas aayi judi o nahi leak ho gaya rat bhi jankari mili aayi ki doway de kri bhi ek duji diwaar bhi garki asi ghi odu apna fire brigade karmi bhi kama kar rahi ji han ji o doko je hundi thudi bohti fare gas ji do leak hundi si te ono ne koolungi de n desi te o do to ma kawaya diwaar de kipi fare chalo bcha ho gaya karmi apne hundi aayi andari ji ghi aayi o baar saate te koolungi de n desi ghi bachita o bhi baaki kanda ekmentsi na ek ou o aayi gently kwa hai jut dhi si by ca banan pa kama ka hy ek ak du друг bang r র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র র שות ˋἕἍἓἃἕἔἓἉἜἉἕἔἓἋἎἦἍἉἆἋἔἉἔἁἄἕἎ, ˋἍἕἍἄἈἓἉἔἔἎ, ˋἕἈἎἈἄἎἈἕἎἑἍἎἈἈἄἆἓ, ˈἕἎἔἎἋἈἌἈἎἒἔἋ�
|
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"url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zQ1KmeIDZRA",
"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
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UCdMzB6Q1QMvU37dI2zTXWQg
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See Why PACK EXPO Las Vegas 2023 is the Place to Be
|
Prepare to be wowed by game-changing packaging and processing innovation at PACK EXPO Las Vegas 2023—the packaging and processing industry's most exciting event of the year. You can expect to see machinery in motion, robots in action, next-gen sustainable materials and groundbreaking technologies from 2,000 exhibitors on the show's most expansive show floor ever. Pavilions make it easy to find targeted solutions for supply chain logistics, digital printing, food & beverage processing, materials and containers, life sciences industries, confectionery and reusable packaging. Problem-solve with experts who understand your challenges, and gain insight from thought leaders in free sessions on the show floor. Explore actionable ideas for increasing sustainability for your brand in the NEW Sustainability Central. Networking at the show is unmatched, with 30,000 attendees coming from more than 40 vertical industries. PACK EXPO Las Vegas is the place you need to be to discover packaging and processing trends, move projects forward and stay competitive.
Register today at packexpolasvegas.com!
| null | 2023-04-28T11:52:07 | 2024-04-18T18:00:55 | 78 |
zQ4iGSBbwSg
|
What can you expect at Pack Expo Las Vegas? Simply put, it's the most exciting event of the year for packaging and processing for the chance to see game-changing machinery and equipment in action. To experience the latest materials and technology firsthand and talk solutions with experts, Pack Expo Las Vegas is the place to be. We walk around and talk to these people face-to-face so we can find the right equipment for us. And Pack Expo is the place to explore, to get ideas from more than 40 industries for every kind of packaged good and industrial product. In pavilions, you'll find targeted solutions for your specific needs. In sessions, learn about the latest trends, best practices, and actionable tips to thrive in the industry. And networking, it's everywhere, on the show floor, at receptions, and all around town. So to plug into packaging and processing trends, move projects forward, and stay competitive, Pack Expo Las Vegas is the place you need to be.
|
{
"url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zQ4iGSBbwSg",
"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
}
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UCnMGQ8QHMAnVIsI3xJrihhg
|
GitLab Culture Open House: Team Member Resource Groups panel
|
Join this panel of GitLab's Team Member Resource Groups (TMRG) where they will share the importance and impact they make in GitLab's Culture.
|
[
"Product",
"git",
"server",
"version control system",
"CI",
"Continuous integration",
"pipelines",
"git repository",
"Conversational Development",
"collaborate",
"integrate",
"integration",
"software development",
"tutorial",
"open source",
"on-premises git solutions",
"developers",
"programmers",
"code",
"VCS"
] | 2020-09-30T19:13:35 | 2024-02-05T08:57:56 | 1,149 |
zQY6xq7LYjU
|
Okay. Good morning, everyone. Welcome to the TMRG panel. My name is Anthony. I am based in London, working the sales team at GitLab, and I'll be moderating this conversation really soon. So why don't we start with some introductions? We can start off just introducing the panel. Natalia, would you like to go first? Sure. My name is Natalia, and I live in Kyiv, Ukraine, and I work as a staff front and engineer for Create Knowledge Team at GitLab. Liam? So I'm Liam. I've been here for one year and nine months. Majority of the time I've been in the recruiting team, but recently transitioned over to a new role within the people group based in Sydney. Very nice. Sophia? I am software engineer and test currently working for the monitor stage. I'm based in Sydney. And I am based in Vilnius, Lithuania. Sophia? Vilnius. Peter? Oh, I don't think we can hear you, Peter, and not quite. We'll let Peter sort of get his mark and we'll get combat for an introduction there. Why don't we kick off with the first question? So I guess, yeah, it's sort of given an overview. So how was your experience at GitLab been different than your experience at other companies? And I guess we can kick off with Sophia with that one. Hi, Sophia. Can you hear me? Yeah, I can hear you. I think there was just a lot of echo in maybe different tabs somewhere. No worries. So how was your experience at GitLab been different than your experience at other companies? I believe that GitLab has a way of living up to the values, which I have not had the ability to see in my professional experience so far, in the sense that GitLab truly lives up to it. It's a truly open and transparent company. Management does also uphold its values. And the fact that our very clear communication guidelines creates a very safe and open collaboration environment between our colleagues. Love it. And the same for you, Natalia, from your perspective, how is it different from your previous company? So the things that were different here that impressed me the most was flexibility and transparency. By flexibility, I mean how flexible we are in terms of working hours, working days, vacations, parental leave. I'm a working mom and for me it's essential to plan my day in a way I can spend time with my kid, and which might be totally inappropriate if we had more rigid business hours, right? I'm also a conference speaker and I love that Freedom GitLab gives me to take a day off when I need to schedule my talks. I never had this benefit before in any previous company. Speaking about transparency, this feature is truly impressive not only for me, but for anyone who asks me about my work. What processes do you have? What benefits do we offer? What is the compensation level? I can say, oh, it's on our handbook. And I want to add this value in our documentation first approach. Truly inspire people and companies to follow our values even outside GitLab. Yeah, I love that. I'm definitely really aligning with the values of the company, those examples there. And Liam and then Pete, yeah, Liam, we could create to hear from your perspective as well. Sure, I think echoing what Sophia said, I think we're a values driven organization. And a lot of other companies that I've worked in, it's been very much about appearance of values and externally facing. In GitLab, it's very much an internal mantra that we have to follow through on our values. And you see it every day at work. So we help others realize values and conversations in MRs and issues. And we have people not afraid to speak up on that as well. But I also think that we do remote working correctly. I've worked remotely in the past, but I've never felt a real sense of belonging as part of a bigger business. So I really do feel as much of the company as anybody else regardless of my location. Nothing that's been really important. Yeah, absolutely. I definitely agree that GitLab is like a pioneer in remote working for sure, leading the best practice on that. And I guess for Pete, same question to you. So how's your experience at GitLab in different than experience at other companies? Sure, just double checking that you can hear me now. Yeah, loud and clear. Great, so I just do an introduction as well. So I'm Peter Quinn based in Sydney, Australia, and I'm responsible for field marketing in the APJ region. So the biggest difference for me is definitely our company culture, which may sound odd to people because we don't physically sit next to a team member, but there's definitely a strong sense of belonging and a supportive company environment. We might not have any offices and we might be alone when we're working, but we're all alone together. We all had a day one, so we all know how it feels. Also, it's been mentioned a few times now, but our company values our building blocks. We all live there. We all know that every decision that is made within GitLab is based on a values first approach. And as an example of that, transparency is one of our core values. I had someone today send me a message on LinkedIn because I had found one of my field marketing issues just online. And he sent me a message and said, hey, just checking, is this meant to be public? And my response was, yeah, GitLab is a transparent company and everything we do is public by default. Love that. That's powerful. The shock or the surprise for people outside GitLab is so, yeah, sort of not normal. So that's powerful. Love that example. So I guess moving on to the next topic. What sort of ways do you feel that GitLab has made you feel accepted and supported at the company? Natalia, maybe you can kick yourself. Sure. It's just amazing how company cares about our mental health. It's not just words like we are caring. We have mindfulness calls, for example. And when I got the first symptoms of burnout, and it's a big deal in our industry, right? I felt safe to share this with my manager. I was strongly recommended to take time off to recover. And I would also like to mention our family and friends days when every employee in the company takes a day off to spend time with your beloved ones. This is especially valuable right now when we have a lockdown. Yeah. I love that. I love that. And so what would you say, I guess, moving on to Sophia, if you could chime in on that as well. Sure. I also believe that the fact that we are able to work remotely and truly asynchronous enabled me to be... I'm originally from another country. So I'm originally from Portugal, living in Lithuania, where my partner is from. It allows me to actually learn the culture here and being able to go back and see my family as often as possible. And the fact that this is possible to integrate with my work just makes me bring my best self to GitLab every day and truly appreciate the opportunity to be able to reconcile both worlds. Yeah. And that's a big factor, I guess, on people choosing where to work as well and having to make that decision either or. So having that freedom is powerful. Liam, if you finish off a view on that one. Yeah. 100% agree with everything that's been said about myself in Sydney. But I also think that the ability to have really kind of conversations and feel heard and that actions are put in place to remove some of those blockers and stresses that you potentially have at work. And I've had a few managers here at GitLab and I always really feel the servant leadership side and I really feel that is well established here. And I feel that managers truly have a sort of empathetic ear and provide layers of support when needed and when necessary as well. And I haven't had that in previous organizations. Yeah. Yeah, definitely the E-group and leadership management are very accountable for trying to live up to the values. And I guess on that same, you know, how does having a TMRG group sort of help you feel connected at GitLab? What role does that play in terms of your experience at the company? Sofia, maybe you can start. I think that also living in a country right now where the laws for LGBTQ plus are not so advanced, for example, for same-sex marriage or even having a civil partnership. The fact that the environment is not probably the best one for me to thrive in and to live out in the open. This does not happen in GitLab, right? So the fact that it's a company that highly respects the diversity is making me feel accepted and belonged and therefore bringing myself to work. Yeah, definitely. There's loads of different groups that people can get involved in. Liam, I know you're quite involved in groups. What's your perspective on this? Yeah, for me, it just provides a place at work that allows me to represent myself and have other people who have similar or the same lived experience that I have to act as a sounding board of things that I'm experiencing both externally and internally. And it's also a place to be heard and develop actions and to provide some equity for those who are part of the group, again, externally and internally. Some people, as Sofia mentioned, may not be able to live this out in their personal lives, but there is definitely a place for everyone at GitLab. For me, it's been really, really, truly beneficial. Absolutely. Yeah, absolutely. It's actually encouraged. And yeah, I completely agree with you. It provides a better experience, a better environment for working. Pete, how about you? So for me, the resource groups are a platform that allows us to voice our concerns and be heard, but it also allows us to listen to other teammates or team members and what they're experiencing around the world. To me, it's a real privilege to have team members share their experiences, share their stories with me in a safe environment. And together, that's how we build trust and build a connection between team members. Yeah. Thank you for sharing that. I guess maybe coming up towards the end and wrapping up, how does the TMRG specifically work at GitLab? What kind of things are actually helping you feel like you belong at GitLab? Sophia? We have actually two channels, one public channel and one private channel in Slack, where we can voice more sensitive issues. And this enables us to really have private sharing. And since the team is so diverse and so all over the world, there are different contexts about LGBTQ issues around the world. And the fact that we can discuss them with our own experience and context is very valuable. Yeah. And Liam, would you second that? What are your thoughts? 100%. I think it's allowed me to grow even more conscious of the differences, even when you're a part of a community. So sometimes you need to be an ally, even in a group that you've identified with. And it's been able to help me gain new allies and new relations with people who probably I would never have had if I didn't work at GitLab as well and have the different contexts globally for different matters and different things. So it's really allowed me to have that lens to the wider communities that I'm a part of. Yeah. Pete, sort of finishing off with you on that. Do you have anything in addition to kind of comment on sort of specifically how the TMRG group or groups that you may be a part of help you feel like you connected at GitLab? Yeah. So often I'm on team member resource group calls where I find myself not contributing to the conversation because of my lack of knowledge or experience on the matter. One could easily feel that they don't belong in that situation. But in fact, it makes me feel even a stronger sense of belonging because I'm there, I'm listening, I'm learning, and I'm able to take away that knowledge and share it with the community that I'm in or the region in which I live and to spread the word and communicate those messages out. So there is still that belonging factor to it. Yeah. That's true. And sometimes it is. Like you said, it's just about joining the call or joining just to listen and learn. And that's also given the opportunity and transparency being able to do that is a unique as well. Working here. I guess finally, sort of, you know, what, you know, obviously we've got some really positive things. What areas would you say there's still room for improvement at GitLab when talking about sort of, yeah, TMRB and diversity? Natalia, let's start with you. Yeah. I would definitely like to see more diversity in staff plus roles in engineering and to give a quick background for those who are outside GitLab. If you're an engineer at GitLab, you have two different paths in terms of your career growing. You can go to management, which is more of a classical way becoming a manager, director, and so on. But you also have an individual contributor path where after senior we have staffs, then we have distinguished and engineering fellows. And while we have certain goals for leadership in terms of diversity, we still don't have these goals in the senior engineering individual contributor path and it would be really nice to see some initiatives in this area. Yeah. And Sofia, what are your thoughts on that with Paris for improvement? I think GitLab is on a very good path because the fact that actually there is time allocated to do diversity inclusion and belonging initiatives, it's very important that this is being prioritized by the company. Although I think that it's also important to consider the intersectionality of these groups and where we can actually join and speak stronger instead of perhaps dividing certain groups. So perhaps having a conversation is necessary between the groups more often. Yeah. And sort of finishing off here with Liam, what are your thoughts on improvement? For sure. I think representation is key and I think being more purposeful on the highs that we make, particularly inside leadership. I think often companies get bogged down in big names and previous experience at big companies and big organizations where historically and systematically underrepresented groups haven't had the opportunity to work at those big organizations, particularly inside leadership. So if we don't help break that glass ceiling and provide those opportunities, we may become part of the issue. So having more conversations around how we can attract more people from underrepresented groups into leadership positions particularly I think would be a great next step. Yeah. There seems to be a theme, I guess, across all the sort of thoughts around sort of leadership and being more, I guess, intentional in sort of management and leadership position. So interesting. We have a few minutes left just before the end. I don't see any questions in the Google Docs. I'm wondering if Pete, if you had any thoughts on that particular area as well, just I guess putting you on the spot, any areas that you think that we could improve on that? I agree with Liam. I think leadership definitely plays a big role in how we kind of improve or amplify people in the business to take on those leadership type positions and I guess share the diversity, inclusion, belonging mantra across the leadership level, at the leadership level. Cool. Thank you for sharing that. So I guess let me just have a look. I don't see any questions here. Are there any sort of, given the last sort of three or four minutes, any final comments any of you would like to make or anything that comes to mind in addition to the comments you've shared so far? Sure. I'm happy to just mention that we have our TMRGs, but they're not full and final. So if you do join GitLab and you don't see yourself represented in one of the TMRGs that are already here, you have the ability to create a new one and get support and guidance on that. So don't think that just because it isn't already created you're not welcome and you're not represented here. I'm 100% more than happy to start those groups off. Perfect. I love that. I think that's a great way to end. So yeah, thank you very much everyone. It was great to hear your thoughts and have this conversation and hopefully it's helped people who attended today. Have a good day. Thanks everyone. Bye-bye.
|
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"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
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UChF7Zl4VNfZFm-IUdtX6B_A
|
City of Santa Rosa Board of Public Utilities October 5, 2023
| null | 2023-10-06T09:49:29 | 2024-02-05T07:02:38 | 4,245 |
ZqveHbSjf90
|
All right, I'd like to call to order this October 5th, 2023 meeting of the Board of Public Utilities and ask for a roll call, please. Thank you. Board Member Wright. Here. Board Member Walsh. Here. Board Member Berthelot. Here. Board Member Batenfort. Vice Chair Noni. I'm here. Chair Galvin. Let the record reflect that all Board Members are present with the exception of Board Member Batenfort and Chair Galvin. Very well. Well, it's my distinct pleasure to start this meeting off with recognition of a retiring Board Member. It's my pleasure to recognize Mary Watts is in the room with us today, and she served for a very long time on the Board of Public Utilities, and she liked it so much she came back to it even after she was off of it, so that shows real dedication. And if you'd permit me, I'd like to read a few words from a proclamation that we would like to give to Mary in recognition of her service. So this is a proclamation from the City of Santa Rosa that says, whereas Mary Watts was originally appointed to the Board of Public Utilities by City Council Member Julie Coombs in September 2015 and reappointed in January 2017. And whereas Mary Watts was again appointed to the Board of Public Utilities by City Council Member Victoria Fleming in January 2019 and reappointed in February 23. And whereas Mary Watts has a strong history with Santa Rosa Water working as an intern for the Energy and Sustainability Team from April of 2014 through June of 2015 where she helped shape the City's Take It From the Tap program. And whereas Mary Watts, Mrs. Watts, has brought knowledge and experience working for Santa Rosa Water to the Board of Public Utilities. And whereas during Mary's nearly eight years of service with the Board of Public Utilities she has provided excellent and compassionate leadership, support, and guidance to Santa Rosa Water. And whereas Mrs. Watts has served on many subcommittees of the Board, including the Budget Review Subcommittee, Water Conservation Subcommittee, and various Ad Hoc Subcommittees. And whereas Mrs. Watts has chaired the Budget Review Subcommittee for numerous years, ensuring stable and sustainable water and sewer rates that balance operational need, ease of understanding, and customer affordability. And whereas Mary Watts chaired the Water Conservation Subcommittee during the recent record drought, facilitating numerous meetings, supporting increased incentives for water use efficiency programs, and providing invaluable feedback on our marketing and outreach efforts to ensure our communities saved water. And whereas Mrs. Watts recognized the Board's responsibility to make tough decisions regarding funding, infrastructure maintenance, repair, and replacement, so that Santa Rosa Water may continue to provide safe and reliable water distribution, wastewater collection, treatment, and reuse to its ratepayers. Now therefore, be it resolved that the Board of Public Utilities of the City of Santa Rosa does hereby recognize, command, and express our sincere and heartfelt appreciation to Mary Watts for her eight years of dedicated service to the community of Santa Rosa. Signed Chairman Dan Gallum. So, first I'd like to ask if any of the members would like to say a couple of words about Mary, and then I'd invite her to come down, but first board members, yes. Mary, you will be missed. I wasn't here very long with you, but the time I was, I really understood right away your deep commitment to social justice and equity, and there will be a hole on the board with you, gone. Thank you. Mary, thank you very much for helping us. I'm looking at just thinking about this. The public service benefits them a great public, and what a wonderful job you've done. I appreciate you setting the example through appropriate discourse and leading civil meetings. You're doing a great job, and that type of, that type of atmosphere that you bring helps everybody participate regardless of where they're coming from, so I appreciate you. Well, Mary will miss you. A note is when I first came to be on this board, you're the first person I sat next to, and you showed me how to use this machine, which I've never actually figured out yet. But anyway, thank you very much for your service, and I've enjoyed serving with you on various committees and on the board as well. So congratulations on your new promotion. To add one more thing to the many things I've already said, I'm so glad you took over the budget subcommittee. Thank you for doing that. It's a labor of love, and it's a lot of work, so it's a hard committee to chair, and you did a great job. So, Mary, would you like to come up and say a few words? Well, thank you very much for the recognition, and I don't think I can really take much credit for all the things that you said. We just have such a fantastic staff and department that have really been able to give my position on the board so much support, and just has made it so easy for the last eight years. And I've said this many times, but I think every single meeting we learn something new on this board. That is my daughter. She just turned three. So, first official public meeting, I think. Public comment. She can get public comment. But I, you know, it's, you guys have so much knowledge in this staff and on the board, and I think I've kind of grown up professionally among you guys. And I've been, yeah, I've been involved in the water department since I think I was 25. It's still the most intimidating interview I've ever had. I walked in, and there was like nine people on a panel, and I was like, what did I get myself into? And I actually did not have any interest in water. I applied because it was an educational position for low-income communities, and now I am working fully in the water industry at the federal level, and it's really thanks to so many people in the water department that gave me this interest and this niche. And happy to still be involved in this industry. Water is essential. It is the most important resource and value that we have, and everyone should have access to affordable and clean water. And we do such a fantastic job here at Santa Rosa Water. I've been able to, with my new position, meet water utilities all across the country, and it just makes me more and more impressed of the work that happens here. So just thank you all. And I think this will be my last goodbye from the board, at least for now. But I really have appreciated everything that I've learned here, and thank you. Thank you so much, Mary. I think somebody wants to take a picture of you receiving your, all right. That was fun. Next, we go to, oh, yes, thank you. Now we have a chance to hear from the public. If anybody in the room would like to say a few words about Mary, we'd love to hear from you, and if there are any emails that came in in advance, we should have them read now. But would anybody like to make any public comment? I'm not seeing anybody in chamber wishing to make public comment, and no emails were received. Okay, well, thank you, Mary. Bye-bye. Now I will ask for statements of abstention. Do any board members have to abstain from any items on the agenda? Looks like there's none. Next is a study session. We have no study session. But so that brings us to minutes approval. We are now taking public comments on minutes approval. If you'd like to make a comment, please move to the podium and wait for the timer to appear on the screen. Does anybody wish to make a public comment? Apparently not. Do we have any emails? No emails were received. Okay. Then the minutes will stand approved as submitted. So next we move to staff briefings. And first, Director Burke, would you like to introduce item 6.1? Thank you, Vice Chair Anoni and members of the board. Our first staff briefing will be the Maui 2023 Fire Response from Santa Rosa and Deputy Director of Water Operations, Joe Shavoni, will be making the presentation. Good afternoon, Vice Chair Anoni, members of the board. As mentioned, Joe Shavoni, Deputy Director of Water and Sewer Operations. Here today to share a little information on the assistance that Santa Rosa has been providing to Maui County after the recent August 2023 wildfires that had a significant impact on the town of Lahaina and the upcountry or Kula area on the island of Maui. The avenue that makes this mutual aid possible is called an EMAC or an Emergency Management Assistance Compact. This is a compact between all of the states and can be requested or is used as a tool to request additional resources by FEMA. In this case, those resources were requested or the EMAC request came from the FEMA Region 9 Director, Mr. Bob Fenton. Many of us here in Santa Rosa have worked with Mr. Fenton before after the 2017 fires and he's currently leading the FEMA recovery operation in Maui County at this point. And Mr. Fenton coordinated with the city manager, the city manager's office and several of the department directors to put together a team that was part of the initial response to Maui and they did have some specific requests. They were looking for a team that had experience in the debris removal process. We had a very large debris removal mission here in Santa Rosa and there were several things that came out of that including the work that Santa Rosa did to kind of pioneer the sewer lateral capping that goes along with that. They do have a wastewater treatment plant that was impacted by this event. And then as it is kind of common knowledge now when there is a large fire like this, the impact to the drinking water system including the contamination which was very similar to what we found here in Santa Rosa. Sewer collection systems, there was some damage to Maui sewer collection system as well as a great deal of effort went into the public outreach including what is now the Maui Wildfires or Maui Recovers website. Sorry, you'll notice it's quite similar to the website that was here in Santa Rosa after the tubs fire and there was a lot of help with technical staff as well as a member of the Marin Water Team that went on this initial deployment to kind of help put that in place and help the community really understand the steps that go along with the recovery effort after this including the debris mission and then the repopulation as well as issues with the water and sewer system along the way. You'll see in the slide above us there's a red placard on a building. There are about 2200 structures that were severely damaged or destroyed. Maui was looking for assistance in putting a team together that could go and assess those structures quickly and also wanted some help because they know it's right around the corner in the rebuild and permitting and code compliance portion of the recovery as well. So kind of an interesting photo here. If you look at the photo on the left side of this slide, it actually includes the meter that you see in the center photo. It had melted to the point that it was embedded in the gravel inside the meter box. I actually picked that meter up and set it up so I could get a better picture of it and how bad it was destroyed. We found out after the Tubbs Fire that this is a good sign that you really need to look for contamination in a drinking water system and which Maui had already started the process of doing before we got there. We did provide quite a bit of assistance in that regard. Maui has about 42,000 water service connections. That is mainly because they provide water to not only the large island of Maui but Lanai and Molokai as well. The heaviest impact that we saw on both water systems were at the upcountry Kula and in the town of Lahaina. So quite a bit of damage to the above ground portion of their sanitary sewer system. The picture that you see here is directly across the street from one of the destroyed sewer lift stations. This was actually a hotel that had burned and had sump pumps in their underground garage which is now full of water. This will ultimately become a project that will be completed and the remnants removed in conjunction with Maui and EPA. Santa Rosa staff did work closely with the wastewater division in Maui to develop methods to bring their sewer lift stations back online. In Maui all of their sewer drains down close to where the ocean frontage is and then is in lift stations that gets pushed to their wastewater treatment plant. Maui did a great job right after the fire of trying to get some level of flow through all of their lift stations. Unfortunately, that flow was significantly reduced. The flow to the plant was significantly reduced and the makeup of the flow was very different and caused an upset at their wastewater treatment plant. A fairly significant one at that. And so they made the decision to turn off those lift stations for the time being. Santa Rosa worked closely with them on a method to get those back up and running and operating similarly to the way that Santa Rosa water operated their destroyed sewer lift stations. But with a little bit more attention to the timing of when those would kick on and the flows that were going to the plant to not cause another disruption. Still quite a bit more work to do on the investigation side to really understand the impacts of all of the damage from these wildfires. The slide that you see the picture on the left includes the Kula or upcountry area. At one point the entire area in green there was under a water advisory along with most of the town of Lahaina through some historical data that they were able to review after the fire and then some testing and sampling that went on directly around the time that we were initially there and some follow-up testing they have been able to lift the advisory except for the small pink area that you see at the top portion of that slide. The GIS photo that you see on the right side actually depicts the town of Lahaina. Nearly all of that area is under a drinking water advisory at this point. There are some small sections that were not put under the advisory initially that are completely isolated from the rest of that area. But the important piece of that is the area depicted in red. That entire area is the sewer is not active there. We did get some good news yesterday that one of the main lift stations is back online and they have been metering the flow into the wastewater treatment plant so far that looks to be going well. They do anticipate over the next week bringing two more of those lift stations back online and this will become extremely important. They're working closely now to try to work on the repopulation effort so there are several structures within that red area that are still standing spread out similarly to what we saw in Santa Rosa but that will need sewer service when they return. They're also working diligently to get their water distribution system fully back online and secured and then they are very close to developing their final sampling plan and have been working on their flushing plan to make sure that they can secure that system and do some diligent testing to both understand what level of contamination may be there and the best path forward to removing that contamination. I also want to mention that the support that Santa Rosa is providing continues. That could include additional deployments although right now we are trying to focus on doing as much as we can virtually. We are also doing a lot of document sharing which has required the assistance of a lot of folks in several departments. After the Tubbs Fire Santa Rosa developed several key documents that make it much easier to move forward from an event like this and they have proved to be very helpful to other agencies and we're getting those into the hands of the folks in Maui right now and they have been working quite well. We continue to discuss items and meet with them on a regular basis and we're wishing them all the best. They're definitely doing a great job over there. And with that I would be happy to answer any questions that you may have and thank you for your time. I don't have a question I just have a comment. It sounds like kind of an equal, wonderful trip and sad trip seeing what happened to them after what we experienced as a community and when we experienced it there were so many horrible things that came from it. And now we're able to help others with what we have learned which is one of the few good things I think we can point to. So thank you for doing that and playing that part to help them get back online and get their lives back. Thanks very much for helping them out. I think it's a big deal with somebody else with experience and similar items coming to say it's okay you got this we got this it's going to be all right or here's our plan it's not all going to go as planned and you keep going through and adjusting it as needed. I think it's a big deal for somebody who's been through it done the work to show up and say this is similar to what we went through here's what you should do. So I appreciate you increasing their confidence while they recover. I just want to say when I first saw your picture in the paper about this mission I was extraordinarily proud to be part of the Santa Rosa water and that there was enough expertise and willingness to jump into the fray and provide assistance but I guess a question I have I understand that this may not be the first time we've gone to other jurisdictions to help out in similar situations is this something that happens more than just you know once a century with a fire like this? That's correct in some form or another several folks from water have been either on scene to some of the other events including the Paradise or the Fire and Butte County. We provided assistance in the Marshall Fire in Colorado. There have been several fires in Oregon that have had a very similar nature to what we saw here in Maui and what we experienced in Santa Rosa and it's very common for the folks in Santa Rosa to get a call and we try to provide whatever assistance we can to them and share our experience. I just think that's a wonderful wonderful you deserve accolades for this and it's a great thing to do and I appreciate the fact that the leadership is willing to share resources and and that everybody has the expertise that can actually provide help so thank you for that presentation and now I guess we're opening it for public comment would anybody like to make a comment in the chamber first? Okay I see no one in chamber wishing to make public comment and no emails were received. All right we'll now conclude the item thank you very much. Thank you. Yes you're here. Okay so that brings us to item 6.2. Director Burke would you like to introduce that item? Thank you Vice Chair Nonia members of the board. Our second staff briefing is Water Professionals Appreciation Week for 2023 and Elise Miller our communications coordinator will be making the presentation. All right start over. Thank you for the introduction I am Elise Miller. Communications coordinator for Santa Rosa water and good afternoon chair or vice chair Arnone and members of the board. So I'm here today to share that Santa Rosa water is celebrating California Water Professionals Appreciation Week it's going to take place October 7 through 15 of this year and this week was established back in 2017 by the California Legislature to celebrate the estimated 60,000 people that work in the water industry. So this week is not only a chance to celebrate our current water professionals but it's also an opportunity to encourage others to pursue a career in water you personally as somebody who's worked in the water industry for the last 18 years one of my favorite parts about my job is that I feel like I'm making a real difference in the community that I'm serving and we want others to know this. And there's a lot of opportunities and job varieties in fact at Santa Rosa water we have over 80 job classifications you know from customer service to engineers to scientists to budget analysts to operators we do it all and we're hiring so we want people to know that. So to celebrate our team of highly skilled water professionals Santa Rosa water is hosting a series of in-person events next week and we'll have Director Burke there and Vice Chair Arnone as well and they'll take place at our various work locations to appreciate all the work that our staff does throughout the year. So in addition to the appreciation events that we're hosting on September 26 Santa Rosa City Council honored our team with a proclamation for Water Professionals Appreciation Week and they were very complimentary of our team and we even got a snap a photo with them so it was a really great opportunity for our staff. So to continue to show our love for our team of water professionals during this week we'll be pushing out information across our outreach channels we'll be using a hashtag California Water Week and we are Santa Rosa water and we'll be sharing and you can view this content on our social media pages so on Facebook we're at Santa Rosa at SR water and on Instagram at Santa Rosa water and then in addition to the social campaign we'll also have an article in our City Connections newsletter highlighting our team and this reaches over a hundred thousand subscribers and then of course all this information will be available on our website SRCity.org So why are you advancing? As part of our outreach campaign for Water Professionals Week we've also created a short animated video and I just want to take a moment to thank my teammate Katie Osagira for putting this together so we'll be sharing images like this and graphics like this across our channels and it's important that we remind the community that we do more than just deliver water we deliver high quality drinking water that's tested over 200 times before it ever reaches a tap we serve 53,000 homes businesses schools hospitals and that's made a population of 175,000 and to deliver this water we work around the clock to monitor repair sorry I don't know why it's jumping forward to monitor repair and maintain over 1200 miles of water and sewer pipe and other critical water infrastructure and this includes 6000 fire hydrants 19 water pump stations 22 water tanks and 17 sewer pump stations our operators technicians scientists mechanics and more work at the Laguna treatment plant and throughout our regional water reuse system to beneficially reuse nearly 6 billion gallons of recycled water and 33,000 tons of biosolids each year our stormwater and creeks team is tasked with protecting over a hundred miles of creeks that run through our city working to restore our waterways and improve flood protection our engineering and asset management teams and our financial teams they all work together to prioritize projects and invest nearly 41 million each year into the resiliency and reliability of our water system and all of this is accomplished by the 278 employees that make up Santa Rosa water and as you can see this is a dynamic and talented team and this is an important story for us to tell and this is why we're celebrating water professionals appreciation week and I encourage everyone to think of water pro next week and you can even use the hashtag thank water pros if you want to share a story on social this is part of the statewide campaign that's happening next week and in closing I would just like to say thank you to Santa Rosa water team and the board of public utilities for your dedication and all that you do to protect our water resources infrastructure and the environment and with that I'm happy to take any questions thank you for the presentation any board members like to make a comment or question I appreciate you having that doing a great presentation and the first one of what last last one I saw you make I think we're at the geysers to taking a tour of the geysers treatment plants and you do a great job explaining why why what we do is important I really appreciate that the I don't I always it always takes on me that our waters tested 200 times go on the story go who tests this by bottled water and plastic and they can get a gallon of it for almost a couple of pennies from us so I appreciate the quality of it I think you're doing a great job the whole team and what you do is important so thank you all right well I guess we're now taking public comments on item 6.2 if you'd like to make a comment please move to the podium and wait for the timer to appear on the screen okay I see no one in chamber wishing to make public comments and no emails were received all right thank you very much that'll conclude this item thank you for your presentation that takes us to item 7.1 the consent items do any board members have any questions about the consent items okay if not we are opening this public comment then do you have oh yeah I do need a motion yes thank you I'll move the consent calendar thank you all second thank you very much now we're going to ask for public comment on this item if you'd like to make a comment please move to the podium I see no one in chamber wishing to make public comment and no emails were received all right secretary Montoya could you please do a roll call vote on the consent calendar yes board member right hi board member Walsh hi board member Bartholome I and vice chair and only hi okay that passes unanimously with board member badden for and chair galvin absent thank you that takes us to item 8.1 director Burke would you like to introduce this item thank you vice chair and only members of the board our report item for today is the water supply alternatives plan and Colin close as well as our consultant from watered and Kern will be making the presentation and if the board will just indulge me a moment I just want to take a moment to really thank the board for all of your work on this thank the team especially think the project manager Colin close as well as the stakeholders this was a really big effort that we envisioned a little over a year ago and I'm incredibly proud to see this come to fruition and just really appreciate all of your leadership for supporting us in this effort and all of the work that everyone's done so thank you for allowing me to say that and I'm going to turn this over to Colin thank you very much director Burke good afternoon vice chair Arnone and members of the board as director Burke said we are very proud to be here today to present this water supply alternatives plan to you it has been 14 months of effort and we're very proud of all of the stakeholder input and all of what you provided us at the last study session we hope that you'll see that you're very compelling questions and your insightful comments were taken to heart we sharpened our pencils went back and did a bit more work and so thank you so much for all of what you provided to us in August you'll see how we integrated that input through our presentation I'll move a little quickly through these initial slides and then I'll turn it over to Katie Cole the project manager from Woodard and Curran to bring you up to date but you've seen these initial slides before so I don't want to spend too much time on them but I think it is helpful to in case there's anybody from the public so that they have a little context so as you know the purpose of this effort is to enhance our own water supplies so that we're more resilient in the face of climate change and any potential catastrophic events that could occur and the approach was to study a wide range of water supply options assess which ones might be the most feasible for us at this time and develop a plan that would be adaptive so that if circumstances change in the future we can change course and continue to make sure that we're assisting our community with reliable resilient water supply so we started with the five questions how much water is enough what water supply should we study how should we study them that was the study results we presented to you last time how should we mix those different supplies together to remain adaptable that was the set of four portfolios you took a look at last time and today we'll talk to you about this approach of a resilient and and adaptive plan for implementing this the scope of work as you know included a lot of stakeholders I want to take a moment and just a slide or two to thank them at this point there's probably in over a hundred people who have contributed in some way to the success of this project so we're very grateful we first set the objectives with feedback and input from our wide range of stakeholders the study was conducted we got input on that the portfolios were developed we got input on that and then we have the plan for you to look at today so from the water team I want to thank director Burke for her extraordinary leadership and also the deputy directors and their key staff who spent quite a bit of time working on this effort there were five three-hour meetings plus there were was quite a bit of homework in between that they were responsible for so I really appreciate that we had an external stakeholder group that was dynamic engaged intelligent thoughtful critical and very helpful to this process so you can see the nineteen different organizations that were represented and just today director Burke signed thank you letters to each one of the individuals that participated in this effort and those will be going out in the mail this week to those folks to thank them personally for their dedication and time and all of the effort they put into helping us with the objectives the study the portfolios and the plan we also held community meetings interactive webinars where the community could show up via zoom ask questions make comments provide their own suggestions and those were recorded and put online so folks couldn't attend they could watch them later and we've seen that folks have returned to that site and there's been some folks watching those since those were posted so that's helpful so the webpage for this site for this project is srcity.org slash our water future the technical study that we presented to you last month was revised that has been posted and the draft plan is posted on that site as well of course with your help with your leadership with your support and again with your compelling questions and insightful comments we've been able to improve this project throughout the process as well and in addition there were other groups who asked us to come and present and take questions and answer those and to take suggestions and comments and so we did a number of presentations over the last year to other organizations the one thing I wanted to meant just before I turn this over to Katie Cole you'll see in your packet there was a letter of support from jolly Johnny Nolan executive director of cap Sonoma County who participated on her stakeholder group there was also an article written by Doug Beretta of dairy Beretta family dairy farms he participated in our stakeholder group and wrote an article published on the farm Bureau's webpage in addition we also received comments from an advisory board member from the groundwater sustainability agency encouraging us to do this work and make sure that we work well with the GSA and that we consider all of the resources and community input and then just this morning I got an email from Brenda Edelman from Russian River keep Russian River watershed protection committee and I wanted to just share with you a couple of her thoughts very quickly she was again a very thoughtful and really engaged participant very much appreciated what we were doing what she said was please share this with the BPU she was impressed with our process and the amount of information presented and she does support this particularly the variety of smaller lower cost and easier to implement options rather than the larger more complicated options and basically again just supporting the effort and the stakeholder input that we had so if that I'd like to turn it over to Katie Cole to bring you up to date and to share with you the plan super thank you Colin so we'll start first by talking about work that we've completed to date to get us to this point you've seen this before but to reorient you if we talk about our process we can kind of talk about it in these four phases we're currently in this last phase but we began our work by establishing this planning foundation as Colin mentioned the goals methodology criteria and supply options in phase two we really looked at the feasibility and started grouping those into portfolios actually drafting the plan and now bringing that plan to you in its draft form as Colin mentioned a lot of work went into this process by both the water team that's the internal city group the community through the four community webinars the stakeholder group with their four sessions each of those sessions were three hours long and then the work that Colin and I did around that stakeholder engagement and preparing these deliverables including the draft plan to remind you the last time that we presented on this topic to you you reviewed the study results in the portfolios that happened in the third week of August and part of that discussion revolved around requesting more information about the desalination and stormwater options that did not advance to the final feasibility analysis so we'll talk about that here in the next few slides so as a result of that discussion that we had with you in August the study now includes updated equity scoring to address some comments it now also includes an appendix that has analysis and discussion further discussion of the desalination water supply options that captures what we talked about in August the draft plan also clarifies that the city intends to achieve not exceed its water supply goals as you all noted in our August meeting many of the portfolios kind of give us more water than is needed and so we're just making clear that it's not the city's intention to to get more water than is actually needed to meet goals so while those three portfolios have that potential the city's goal did not change the plan also clarifies that any expansion of current groundwater use would align with sustainability metrics in the GSP the plan also includes more discussion about the challenges of using stormwater as a supply option something else that we all discussed in August and finally portfolio four has been updated to identify when and why the city might reconsider desalination as a potential supply source in the future that was something else we talked extensively about in August specifically related to the surfwater and stormwater capture and use two of the three stormwater options did not advance to detailed analysis sw2 it was determined that lake ralfine did not have adequate storage to make that option cost effective sw3 was not advanced because regional efforts are already ongoing and are part of the city's commitment outside of this process related to cost stormwater options you can't just use the water that's flowing down the street you need to build treatment so the costs associated with doing so are pretty astronomical in order to meet regulatory requirements for storage in an aquifer and for drinking water standards scalability is also another issue that was identified for the stormwater options the amount of available stormwater while there's assumptions made for the purposes of this plan that number is pretty variable and there's should be additional studies to confirm that number before really moving forward and committing resources to that as a supply option specifically related to the desalination appendix as I mentioned there's more information that's provided about why the two desalination options did not advance so in addition to cost these are some items that we discussed in August significant permitting and environmental challenges those are pretty well documented for desalination turn down capacity is not ideal for Santa Rosa's use case the regional brackish facility does not reduce reliance on Sonoma water so it doesn't really address some of the core goals that the city is looking to achieve and finally ocean desalination requires extensive infrastructure particularly related to constructing a pipeline and then maintaining that pipeline through the topography based on comments we received from you all last time we did complete scoring for those two options both scored a 13 which were below the scores of the seven options that were included in the portfolios those scores ranged from 19 to 32 but we also in that appendix looked at what triggers what sorts of things would need to exist if the city were to reconsider reconsider desalination in the future so these are things like technology that may reduce baseline operating costs if that improves turn down capacity that would be something that might trigger the city to reconsider less expensive energy prices which would further reduce operating costs certainly project configuration that would yield direct water to Santa Rosa so that's particularly related to the regional brackish facility and then technology that improves water recovery so you get more water per each gallon of salt water treated so now I'm going to step you through the chapters of the draft water supply alternatives plan much of what you will see in the plan is straight from the technical memorandum that we presented to you at the last meeting so some new material chapters one chapters five and chapters six are all new material chapters two three and four are really synthesized from that technical memorandum there's no new information presented in those chapters so chapter one goes over the background purpose and plan organization essentially summarizing the presentation that Colin started us off with this afternoon that Santa Rosa received 93% of its annual portable water supply from Sonoma water kind of setting up the issue and why we're tackling this plan chapter 2 talks about the approach to developing the water supply alternatives plan looking at the goals and methodology for assessing the supply options just reiterating these are kind of our three guiding goals for Santa Rosa as it embarks on this plan mitigating droughts mitigating natural disasters and catastrophic events and mitigating peak day demand these are where we get our 7500 acre feet per year and our 9 million gallons per day but also summarizes the analysis methodology and the three stages that we went through this pre-screening to eliminate infeasible options or those that were substantially similar to other options second step being the screening analysis based on the cost effectiveness and scalability criteria and then that third the detailed feasibility analysis to evaluate and score those options as of the 7 that made it through to that process chapter 3 summarizes the water supply options the 18 that we considered you'll see those here in this table the five ground water options six purified recycled water one purple pipe recycled water to desal three storm water and one expanded efficiency program chapter 4 looks at the actual analysis this is again the bulk of the technical memorandum that we spoke to you about in August the pre-screening outcomes the five options that did not advance and the rationale for their removal the screening analysis results summarizing the six options that did not advance past this stage and finally the seven options that underwent the further analysis so the three ground water to purified one storm water and the efficiency programs this chapter also summarizes the feasibility analysis results looking at higher scores being better scores you'll recall from our August meeting the two rows at the bottom the first light blue row the total unweighted represents just a summing of the raw scores for each criterion the weighted score applies the weights that were discussed and approved by the water team and stakeholder groups that's where you start to see a bit more differentiation between each option as I mentioned chapter 5 is new material and it gets into the portfolios summarizes the the narrative around each portfolio so questions like what is in the portfolio what supply options why build a portfolio like this what's the rationale for presenting a portfolio built like that is the cost in yield performance so how does that portfolio perform financially and against the city's water supply goals it also presents an implementation timeline so how might the city actually implement this portfolio when and what order would those portfolio elements be completed as a reminder these are the four portfolios that are included in the plan you'll see as a result of our discussion in August we have included gw3 aquifer storage and recovery wells pr4 that regional direct portable reuse and then desalination also not technically part of the portfolio but given that we have included the appendix with triggers that the city might use to reconsider we've included that as well chapter 6 outlines next steps so if you look at example if the city were to implement for example portfolio 4 which you'll see represented its implementation schematic on the right there's really six actions that the city could begin to take by identifying funding grants and loans bonds looking at connection fees and water rates lots of creative ways to finance projects begin by planning for phase one of expanded efficiency programs beginning hydrogeologic studies for the groundwater option that's included and determine a sequel an environmental permitting pathway for that option prepare a siting study for dw1 plus that's converting that's looking at new groundwater wells action 5 is tracking direct portable reuse regulations and initiating planning studies to further that option and finally to conduct modeling and siting studies for the stormwater option to see if that is a viable source of water for asr wells I'll now turn it over to Colin who will walk us through timeline and milestones thank you very much Katie so this chart I think is familiar to you this is our timeline with those key deliverables I did want to mention that we met with city council in September and had a study session on the revised technical memorandum with the the attachment the desalination explanation appendix there and we went through the the study session with them they had one question wanting to make sure that there was a discussion of portable reuse and that that was being considered in the portfolio so we reiterated how that was being implemented and then comments about support for the approach for the stakeholder group interaction and for this idea of how we might move forward so it was very uneventful but very wonderful to have city council come up to speed on this and be very supportive of the work that's been done today so we're meeting with you today to ask if you would consider recommending council adopt the plan and then we will go to council on October 24th and ask if they would in fact adopt this plan so those are the next steps and then we would start to look at how to develop secret processes and studies to get this thing moving forward to give it legs and actually keep the plan on the desk and not on the shelf we want to collecting dust and not from the shelf but from turning dirt over and getting things moving so so it is with that that we recommend that the Board of Public Utilities by motion recommend that the city council accept the water supply alternatives plan thank you so much and we're happy to take any questions and comments that you may have. Thank you both for that presentation questions or comments from board members. Glenn. Yeah thank you for the presentation. I can't say that there's any surprises that came out of this presentation out of the study of the report. The one comment I have really is that we're going to have to restudy again in two or three or four years because I'm hoping that technology and things are going to change and and although I don't think the water supply portfolio is going to change is just going to change in positions on your on your list. So with that I'm ready to support this and send this on to the city council. Thank you. Thank you. I too am ready to support it and I just want to say that the appendix about desalinization was so well done and it it I learned a lot just like Mary said you learn something every time you come to these meetings and there was a lot there I didn't know I knew desalinization seemed like a great idea when you live near an ocean but there's a lot that goes into it that I hadn't thought of so thank you very much for that work. Thank you Vice Chair Arnani. I want to thank the project management team Katie Cole from Woodard and Colin Close from Santa Rosa Water. This could be an example of how how a big project has complicated in topic and also complex because all the disparate benefit third party beneficiaries. So I appreciate the way you ran it. You kept the scope live the whole time explain what's in and out of scope when you had to. The timing is feasible in the actionable plan that you can get get something done by the staging and phasing and looking at the resources we have at hand and then you're doing it within viable resources. So I really appreciate that's a well run plan. You can take this topic shift it out and if you had the input from the users like the community action partnership that wrote in agriculture the Mr. Brett of the president of the Farm Bureau Association writing in and Johnny writing in from the community action partnership and I think you made this viable for everybody so they can look at it. It's sort of the base model and we'll revise it every three or four years or something so thank you for doing a great project. Appreciate it. Thank you very much. I have a couple of questions and comments more comments than anything else but it's just from a macro level. I just think this is a poster child for how to study a big important thing. You know and there's not much more big important than water. Water rights in water in general in California. So this is a really good example of bringing a big group of data sets together and doing an actual analysis on it. That's useful and getting a little micro now. I was so appreciative of seeing the responsiveness to the comments that were made at the last BPU meeting. I for one stated a great interest in desalination and like like you I learned a lot reading the appendix and and I and I was pleased to read it not simply because it I think it justifies the conclusions that are made but I think I was even more pleased to read it because it laid out a path in the future for coming back to an important option that whose importance I think will increase over time for some of the same reasons Glenn mentioned because I think you know technology is going to massively change things as it has for some time. So I really appreciated that responsiveness. It justifies the choices made and and so I'm also ready to report it and then take it to a really micro part of it. On slide 22 of the presentation there are three boxes that talk about the amount of water that will be produced and two of those boxes measure it in terms of nine million gallons per day by 2045 nine million dollars per day by the other one talks about acre feet and so the the thing is that I appreciate the fact that it forced me to do some math so I can now transpose those acre feet into and I believe it is six point seven million gallons per day if you want to use the same metric in that box just for your consideration up to you. Yes thank you so much and if it's at all helpful the acre foot is when we're in drought we're looking at our supply over a year. We may or may not need a specific amount day to day in an emergency if we have nine million gallons per day that we can produce maybe it's a week or two weeks or a month long emergency we can provide about half of our domestic water supply plus have fire and enough water for businesses to keep moving so that's the 9MGD and then in terms of shaving off the peak we looked at not wanting to do more than we would need in an emergency there's simply no reason to develop more than that so that nine million if we needed it could be used to shave peak off in the summer so that's why there are two different metrics but I'm good on you for doing the math. I also if I could just take one moment I deeply appreciate the Woodard and Corinth team. Katie Cole, Christy Kennedy and Xavier Arias who was with us last time and all of the staff that they worked with it's the best team I've ever worked with I've worked with many many consultants on many many projects this is obviously one of the best projects I've ever had a chance to participate in but this is the best team I've ever worked with in terms of responsiveness and conscientiousness and the level of expertise and the ability to communicate deliver on time and high quality so really a pleasure thank you. Well said well said so I guess it's time for a motion. I will move that we recommend that the City Council accept the water supply alternatives plan. I will second that motion. Thank you for that. Now is the time for public comment. If anybody would like to make public comment please move to the podium. I see no one in chamber wishing to make public comment and no emails were received. All right thank you could you please conduct a roll call vote then. Yes board member Wright. Aye. Board member Walsh. Aye. Board member Barthelot. Aye. And vice chair Anoni. Aye. That passes unanimously with board member Baden-Fort and chair Galvin absent. Thank you very much please give our whole hearted support to City Council. Okay I think that takes us out of report items and now we're at item nine in the agenda that is public comment so we're taking public comments on public comments of non-agendized items. If you'd like to make a comment please move to the podium. Okay I see no one in chamber wishing to make public comment and no emails were received. All right thank you. So next we have referrals there are no referrals no written communications are there any subcommittee reports seeing none. Board member reports anybody okay I'll just state that I'm looking forward to joining some water professionals at Water Professional Day and appreciated the invite to attend one of those recognition events so I'm looking forward to that. Director's report do you have a direct report for us? Yes I do thank you vice chair Anoni and members of the board I have a few things to share with you today. First I wanted to let the board know that the State Water Resources Control Board is preparing to release a second round of funding for overdue water and sewer bills. We anticipate that this new round of funding the application will open sometime this month as you may recall we originally applied for funding and the original round of funding covered charges that incurred from March of 2020 through June of 2021 and through that process we received $365,391 for overdue water accounts and $650,074 for overdue sewer accounts. So the new round of funding will allow us to cover anything from July 1st of 2021 through December 31st of 2022. However the parameters are a little bit different this funding is only available for residential and some commercial customers but this time excludes irrigation only industrial uses process water, fire lines and delinquent fees. So in re-looking at where we are with our delinquencies for that period we now have close to two million dollars in unpaid charges through December of 2022 on a little over 2,000 customer accounts. Water billing staff has begun reviewing all 2,000 of those customer accounts to determine what if any charges are eligible for the funding and then any charges that are eligible for funding we will apply those to the customer's a re-erage account. So we're happy to see that that's open again I will acknowledge and thank the water billing team because of all the parameters are put in place it is a very time intensive and complicated process to go through all these bills and figure out what applies what doesn't remove delinquent fees remove other things and provide the application and and then once we get any funding we found out from the last time we did this that if any of the customers pay in between we have to deduct that out and give that money back to the state so it is a very cumbersome process but it is we are grateful that they're opening this up again so that we can try and assist with some of those past due re-erages. I also wanted to let the board know that we had a very successful creek week we had 230 people participate in our various creek week activities we had a really amazing article in the press democrat showing the underground piece and the tours that we do we got a lot of great feedback from citizens that participated in the underground tour we had 33 staff participate in the dash for trash employee event collecting 418 pounds of trash I contributed four pounds so I wasn't wasn't as successful as some others but taking credit for my four pounds and then we had 53 people participate in the creek to coast cleanup and collected 275 pounds of trash so it was a great week a big huge thank you to the creek team the stormwater and creeks team it's a huge effort every year but it's a very rewarding one and a great way for us to educate the community also wanted to let the board know that we recently found out that the Sonoma Marin water-saving partnership which is 13 utilities in Sonoma and Marin counties that focus on regional water conservation activities won the water sense the EPA water sense partner of the year as well as the sustained excellence award for the qualified water efficient landscaper program in particular I bring this up because this the qualified water efficient landscaper program was actually started by the Santa Rosa water team and we brought it out to the regional partnership so it's it's great to see that award that program continue to be awarded and then also for the partner of the year it really focused on the drought outreach and again much of that outreach originated from Santa Rosa water with the water use efficiency team and the communications team and just really appreciate their efforts because of that work we were able to provide that to the regional partners and then work together and it shows by these great awards so that's exciting and then the last thing I wanted to let you know and this is late breaking from yesterday is that in relation to the Potter Valley project as you might recall the Sonoma water round Valley Indian tribes and Mendocino County inland water and power had submitted a project proposal defined or they called it the new eel Russian facility proposal to PG&E asking them to consider including that proposal in their license surrender application and we received news yesterday from Sonoma water that PG&E sent them the following information quote PG&E has made a non-binding acceptance in concept of the Sonoma County water agency Mendocino County inland water and power commission and round Valley Indian tribes proposal and agrees to include it in our November 15th 2023 initial draft surrender application and decommissioning plan so I will be bringing additional information to you all in the future I do recognize that there's little that I can talk about now because we do have some conflict with one of our board members but I did want to let you know in broad terms that there this is moving forward and that is good news and that concludes my report and I am happy to answer any questions you might have thank you any questions from board members glenn glenn sorry one question on the Potter Valley thing by having PG&E include the the tribes and the agency's plan will that make it easier expedite the process or what is it what is it does it actually do anything or not thank you for the question and I need to be a little careful here but just and I will be bringing a presentation a staff briefing back to the board at a future meeting but in essence this keeps the ability to continue potentially continue diverting water from the eel river to the Russian river in play as they go through their process for the license to render thank you any other questions any public comment on the director's report anybody would like to make a public comment please move to the podium okay there's no one in chamber wishing to make public comment and no emails were received very good then that concludes our business today and I will adjourn the meeting thank you vice-chair Arnani
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South Africa Minimodule #2
| null | 2014-02-17T18:36:36 | 2024-02-05T08:05:12 | 303 |
zq-rj2JWQj8
|
One of the most interesting questions in ecology is what explains the distribution of grasses and trees. In some parts of the world forests are the norm and others, grasslands, cover broad landscapes. In yet others, savannas are grassland woodland ecosystems dominating in which there is a mix of grasses and trees. Savannas are defined as having a continuous grass understory and an open canopy of trees, often widely spaced. There are many potential explanations for the coexistence of grasses and trees in savannas, why one life form does not dominate. And these include such things as frost, herbivory, which is grazing of animals, fire, or even for soil conditions. Each of these factors may limit the competitive ability of trees in particular, allowing grasses to outcompete them. One hypothesis is that trees survive in savannas only when they have grown tall enough to withstand a fire event, meaning that there is enough time without fire for them to grow. If fires are too frequent, the trees won't survive. Fire has a long and complex socio-ecological history in the South African landscape. Humans inhabited South Africa for millennia and fire has been a common tool for managing the landscape. In fact, in other parts of Africa, for example the Messiah in Kenya, are known to use fire as a tool for reducing tick populations in grasslands, thus protecting their livestock. Other uses of fire include hunting or maintaining grassland conditions for grazing. In fact, animals prefer new grasses that grow back after a fire because they tend to be higher in nutrients and are tastier to them. Cows can often be seen grazing in newly burned fields, even when green fields are close by. These new grass tufts hold more nutrients because they are re-growing, using stored nutrients from the roots. Those roots are unharmed by the fire and so are ready to re-sprout after the fire. Humans are not the only cause of fires in the landscape though, because lightning is also a source of ignition at certain times of the year. Moreover, the environment controls fire by creating the dry conditions and ample fuel loads to sustain fire. For example, grasses can grow quickly during the wet season, but dry up dramatically during a prolonged dry season, creating the perfect conditions for fire and subtropical ecosystems. Interestingly, one phenomenon occurring in many systems is called woody encroachment. This is when trees are growing in areas that were formerly dominated by grasslands. Ideas for why this is happening are mixed. Some say it's due to the effect of elevated carbon dioxide in the atmosphere that essentially acts as a fertilizer for trees, enhancing photosynthesis, growth rates, and thus the competitive ability against grasses. Another idea is that the exclusion of fire from these systems has allowed trees to survive past their sapling stage. Once established, they're able to outcompete grasses. Both factors are likely. Understanding the consequences of these changes in woody systems is important for understanding ecosystem carbon storage and the flow of nutrients and water. In addition, these changes are likely to have large impacts on local communities, but often in complex ways. For example, people depend on woody trees for many livelihood activities, including making fences or using the wood as fuel wood for cooking. At the same time, people depend on open grazing areas for their livestock. So shifts in the dominance of grassland and woodland ecosystems is likely to affect people's use of the landscape as well. Fire management is a priority for many conservation areas, including those in South Africa. Once human fires are excluded from the landscape, managers must then decide how to bring fire back into the landscape often through specific burning prescriptions. The goal of these prescribed burns is to maintain grassland ecosystems that have evolved from millennia with fire in the absence of fire where the woodlands would encroach. Because grasslands in South Africa are extremely biodiverse, some of the most diverse in the world, they hold many hundreds of different species of grasses, forbs, and associated wildlife. Shifts away from grassland systems could negatively hurt biodiversity. Interestingly, in the eastern Cape of South Africa, fire exclusion could cause a decrease in species richness because they were once very biodiverse. But the invasion of critically endangered species of finbos vegetation can come in in the absence of fire. This vegetation type is common to other parts of South Africa. Thus fire management is complex. Managers need to understand how much to burn and how frequently in order to maximize multiple objectives in the context of many ecosystem trade-offs, such as trading species richness, rarity, as in that example. This work is even more complex when considering that fire is a tool used by poachers to attract animals. Because grass is more nutrient rich and tastier following fire, grazing animals such as zebra or blessed buck are attracted to burned patches of land. Poachers can burn from outside the park into the reserve, thus attracting animals to the boundary of the reserve where they can easily be shot.
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UCju6SKR4eh340Y0JeCQIb1A
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The supraorbital approach - How we do it?
|
Supraorbital approach is a versatile and cosmetic technique for various anterior cranial fossa and parasellar lesions. Dr. Marcus Mehlitz, Department of Neurosurgery, Hospital of Barmherzige Bruder Trier, Germany describes this in an explicit way to our surgical trainees.
Contains operative videos - viewer discretion advised
NETS, 15th Neurosurgery Skills Training Workshop
|
[
"Neurosurgery",
"Neurosurgery Skills Training",
"supraorbital approach",
"supraorbital",
"middle cerebral artery",
"tubercullum sella"
] | 2015-02-26T04:53:47 | 2024-02-05T07:54:00 | 900 |
zQ0SXSK43G4
|
It's a super orbital approach and it's the best due to our history of our department. What's about this is that you really think about your surgery before planning your approach. What do you really want to do? It's not useful to really try to make a small incision or a craniotomy. For example, if your lesion is quite superficial, it won't work. But the deeper the lesion is, you can perhaps choose if it's appropriate a minor craniotomy. But even if you choose a minor craniotomy, it should be tailored. You can't let the job somebody doing, which is not really absolutely informed about the patient, the lesion, how you want to do it. And the Keogh concept says, OK, you choose a certain size of the craniotomy and then you make the craniotomy wider in terms of visualization that you drill the inner, the tabular internal. So that makes the access for visualization and even for handling in the depths. But what we think it's good to deal is that it's the cellar region. It's the planum, it's a tuberculum. The olfactory region, we are not sure about this, we use it less. Because if you go from this position and you have, even if you drill the orbiter, it might be difficult to have total visual control for the olfactory region. And what we do with this approach in general, it's the aneurysms and mainly it's a subfrontal approach. This has to be, don't deal with the lesions you would never do with a subfrontal approach. That's the key topic about it. It replaces in described circumstances the standard frontal approach. And we'll see it later in the video as you see this is the incision. You have to preserve the suprapetal nerve, you should. And it's sufficient if you make one bare hole. What kind of anatomy do we deal? Of course you have to know the supralineal temporalis superior. You will deal with the periobucal muscle. You have to do an incision of the temporal muscle. These are the main landmarks. After we did a skin incision, we mainly detached the temporal muscle on a very short distance and make a kind of U-shaped incision of what may be uncomfortable mobility with this kind of approach is if you make injury to the frontal sinus. And because the approach is so minimized, sometimes you even don't see if you made a slit-like lesion on it. So the patient has CSF rhinorrhea and you can't even imagine that you made it from your credit to me, but it's evident and we really have to care about it. And the most simple, of course, you can use neuronavigation for this, but in general you can palpate the frontal sinus. It's easy and you have to respect it. It's a pity if you make a nice surgery with a minimized approach, but you have to do a reduced surgery because of CSF leakage and a frontal sinus injury. This is where we place the burhole. And this is the first cut. It should be really as low as possible that you really make an osteoplastic run into me and don't have to drill too much of the bone so that you're parallel to the obterufe and we complete it like this. And what's perhaps important is not only the supraorbital nerve, but you have even some motor branches of the facial nerve so that there is a risk with this approach, like with a lot of approaches, that you may cause a facial weakness for the frontal branch. And the preparation is, we talked about planning. You should, in general, for example in our department, the surgeon has to do the positioning himself. And that means, in case of the supraorbital approach, you have to think about what kind of a lesion do you want to tackle. For example, if you want to go for an MCA aneurysm, which is quite lateral, here's the opening and we choose rather a slight rotation, perhaps this 15-20 degrees maximum. So that the surgeon may be really comfortable. So the place of the cranitomy is about here and I want to have a straight vision on it and I want to go to lateral pathology. There's only a slight tilting of the head, but the more I want to go medially, the more I have to tilt the head for a comfortable position. If I don't do it properly, then I have to stand like this to see it right. This is the only thing you can really make wrong about the positioning. What is also important to gain a good visualization is that you have to... You see there are always... the orbital roof is never plain. And there may be sometimes really a severe hypostosis, which may make a straight visualization, for example, of the cellar region or even the planum impossible. And what you have to do is that after you made a really parallel incision of the cranitomy to the orbital roof, you have to drill the orbital roof a bit flat, get off all these bony ridges to have direct access, for example, for the planum. Now, this is essential. If you don't do this, you can't use this approach properly. And it's always done extra-dual. If you don't do this, then you have to do an orbitosagomatic version of this approach. That means extra-dual while holding the suction or even using additional tools. This is here you have the orbital roof, and it's what I said initially. You have to really to make the orbital roof flat. And sometimes you even see some periorbiter. And this is a case of an MCA aneurysm. So in general, you can't stay within the eyebrow. If the patient has no eyebrow, we rarely choose it out. We think it's an ideal approach. And what we always do is draw. That means what do we draw? We draw the incision. We draw the burhole, the linear temporalis. We draw what is the expected size of the craniotomy. And in this case, the craniotomy ends where the frontal sinus has this maximum extension. This is what you need. And you can extend the skin incision a bit laterally In general, the cosmetic results are good if you stay within these folds. It's about a four-centimeter skin incision, four to five centimeters which is planned. We use sutures in general with retractors. The fissure is also okay, but with retractors you take too much space. It's not suitable, very good. You need a temporalis, which is incised. We make a kind of U-shaped muscle incision. You need a temporalis, so we will place the burhole about here. And it's good if you, from that position, it's a small burhole. Just take the kerosene and goes as close as possible to the obter roof. And you need the help of an assistant which really moves the skin so that you can make adequate bony exposure. And again, it's for subfrontal root and it's not for superficial pathologies. At the surface you don't have a good exposure, it's only in the depth. Now this is the step where we try to remove all the, to improve the bony exposure. So you make it really flat to the obter roof. And with a diamond drill you remove the bony ridges of the orbiter. Then you make a, in this case, we made a puncture of the ventricle. It's just perpendicular to the surface if it's not difficult. We try to avoid lumber drainage. I don't know. And you have to take some time with this approach. That means always wait for CSF release. You can't force it. This is optic nerve. And then you get, nicely, the CSF and everything is quite comfortable. The better one. Send it back to the manufacturer. So you see, you have a nice exposure. It's not that you have no place to work, but you have to take some time for CSF release. You have to take your time for the rocknidal dissection. And then you see the aneurysm. You can, you are able to split the sieving fissure from a reverse. You now see now the aneurysm. This should be the temporal branch. And in general we use this standard Sugita clips. We don't use this inverse clipping system from Ponetski. It depends so, only in really small aneurysms. And for control, we are now lucky to have this ICG systems too. But in general we do a Doppler to really control micro Doppler. I think it's quite affordable and it's easy. It's straightforward. ICG is of course nice, but we have only one microscope which is working with that. And sometimes you may even replace. Like in this case there was some compromise ICG. It's only an additional tool. So we make an anoscope be assisted clipping. Yeah. And because you said you make a kind of variation of this approach. So you make just the reconstruction of the dura and just can skip this. Yeah. We take two of these clamps. That's so. But yeah. You have to do a good case selection. And especially it must be a legion which is just appropriate for protecting this. We do most of the aneurysms, ACOM aneurysms with this. Plam spinodala meningiomas are tackled by this approach. You can even see control of the MCA. And this is a standard case which we use it for. Yeah. But to be honest, this would be perhaps today a case we would think about doing transnasal endoscopic because there's some extension to the cellar to bechelum. If it's just behind outside of the line of sight, it may be possible that we today would do it with our endoscopic transnasal root. But we are reluctant in general. The post-op care is much more intensive in doing transnasal resection. So we still use most cases currently to me. Okay. Yeah. Cosmetic results. Of course, after people are like this day two and three, but the cosmetic results are quite good. But what are the associated complications? Frontal numbness. Yeah. Even if you think you preserved the supravitin of even palsy, that incomplete. Yeah. In most cases it's after the surgery, but within some month it's recovering full. What I said about this CSF-Line Rear, really take care about your frontal sinus. Take a desk sector and see if you open it. And if you have to do a redo case, it's not. Of course, it's not nice. Yes. It's quite visible, but it's rare. And I think we talked about that we have to really choose our case quite good. Okay. Thank you.
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UCu3Ri8DI1RQLdVtU12uIp1Q
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Soni Jiandani, Pensando Systems & Joshua Matheus, Goldman Sachs | Welcome to the New Edge 2019
|
Soni Jiandani, Co-Founder & Chief Business Officer, Pensando Systems AND Joshua Matheus, Managing Director Goldman Sachs sit down with Jeff Frick for Welcome to the New Edge by Pensando Systems at Goldman Sachs HQ in NYC.
https://siliconangle.com/2019/10/23/launched-with-love-pensando-rallies-investors-early-users-to-take-on-aws-pensandoio/
Pensando’s MPLS gang rallies investors and early users as it takes on AWS
Three engineers went out to play, along a network’s web one day. They had such enormous fun that they called for another engineer to come.
A merry band of networking engineers — Mario, Prem, Luca and Soni, known as MPLS for short — thought they were ready for retirement around 2017. But the technology world may still need the famous quad of influencers to once again rethink computing architecture. With a likely aim to take on Amazon Inc.’s Annapurna chip, the familiar team of former Cisco Systems Inc. engineers set out to create a better piece of hardware for scaling data at the edge of computing’s network, from server to device. After two years in stealth mode, Pensando Systems Inc. launched with a flurry of high-profile partners and $278 million in total funding.
Jeff Frick, host of theCUBE, SiliconANGLE Media’s mobile livestreaming studio, recently spoke with Pensando founders, investors and early users during the Welcome to the New Edge Pensando Systems launch event at the Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC headquarters in NYC. (* Disclosure below.)
Truth is out after Pensando’s formal launch
Even in stealth mode, Pensando’s two years of early development were hardly under the radar. With a founding team famous for internally supported spin-ins at Cisco, there’s been much speculation about Pensando’s objective. After a formal launch event on the top floor of the Goldman Sachs building last week, the truth is out.
Pensando’s data center chip is specifically designed to handle computing tasks related to network management, security and storage. The chip is part of an accelerator card to be plugged into a server to offload these crucial tasks, unburdening the machine’s main processor. The result, according to Pensando, is a 20% to 40% reduction in central processing unit utilization.
This power-saving capability is a primary appeal for Pensando’s new card, as it allows for efficiency gains by freeing up computing power that can be better allocated for bigger workloads. And by consolidating a solution for networking, security and storage in a single chip, Pensando hopes to replace the need for sometimes pricey standalone appliances tacked on to servers for managing these tasks.
“We saw a number of challenges and opportunities at the same time,” said Soni Jiandani, co-founder and chief business officer of Pensando. “We clearly saw that the cloud architectures that had been built by the leaders and incumbents — like Amazon Web Services — today have a lot of the intelligence being pushed into their respective compute platforms. We also noticed that, while that was what was needed to build the first generation of the cloud, new-age applications … will be processed at the edge by 2025,” she furthered, citing a recent Gartner Inc. study projecting 70% of all enterprise applications will need processing at the edge of computing networks.
@siliconangle @theCUBE #theCUBE #Pensando @Pensando
|
[
"SiliconANGLE Media Inc",
"SiliconANGLE",
"SiliconANGLE Inc",
"theCUBE",
"Wikibon",
"John Furrier",
"Dave Vellante"
] | 2019-10-18T20:10:20 | 2024-02-05T08:42:52 | 1,067 |
zQAKowNq93M
|
From New York City, it's theCUBE, covering Welcome to the New Edge, brought to you by Pensando Systems. Hey, welcome back, everybody. Jeff Frick here with theCUBE. We are in Manhattan at the top of Goldman Sachs. It is a great view. If you ever get an opportunity to come up here, I think 43 floors over the Hudson, you could see forever. But this is a cloud event, so the clouds are here and we're excited to be here. It's the Pensando launch. And the name of the event is Welcome to the New Edge, which is a pretty interesting play. We hear a lot about Edge, but we haven't really heard of that company really focusing on the Edge as their primary go-to-market activity and really thinking about the Edge first. So we're excited to have a co-founder, Cubalon and many-time guest, Sony Giandini. She's the co-founder and chief business officer. Sony, great to see you. Good to see you too. And our host here at Goldman Sachs is Josh Matthews. He's a managing director of technology at Goldman. Josh, great to see you. You too, thank you. And thanks for hosting. It's a nice place to come to work every day. You're welcome. So great conversation today. Congratulations on the launch of the company over two years in stealth mode. Talk a little bit about that. What is it like to be in stealth mode for so long? And you guys raised big money. You've got a big team. You're doing heavy-duty technology. What's it been like to finally open up the curtains and tell everybody what you've been working on? It's clearly very interesting and exciting. Normally it's taken me nine months to deliver a baby. This time it's been two and a half years of being in stealth while we've been getting ready for this baby to come out. So it's phenomenally exciting that too, to be sharing the stage with our customers and our investors and our strategic partners. Yeah, I thought it was pretty interesting that you're launching with customers. And when you really told the story on stage of how early you engaged with Josh and his team, first I want to get kind of your perspective. Why were you doing that so early? And what did that ultimately do with some of the design decisions that you guys made? And then we'll come back to Josh his participation. So I think whenever you conduct technology transitions, having a sense from customers that have the ability to look out two to three years is very important because when you're capturing market transitions, doing it with customer inputs is far more relevant than going about it alone. The other key thing about this architectural shift is that it allows the flexibility for every customer to go take pieces of how they want to bring the cloud architectures and bring it into their environment. So understanding that use case and understanding the compelling reasons of what problems both technological and business can we be solving and having that perspective into the product definition and the design and the influence that customers like Josh have had is why we are sitting here and talking about them in production as opposed to yeah, we're thinking about we're looking at it from a proof-of-concept perspective. And Josh, your perspective, you said earlier today that as long as Sunny's involved, you're happy to jump in and see what she's been working on. So how did you get involved? How did they reach out to you? And what is it like working on technology so early in its development that you could actually have some serious influence? Well, it's an amazing opportunity to get exactly what you want, exactly what you know is gonna solve problems for the business here. And the other thing is, we've worked with this team through almost every spin in, I think it was a little young for maybe the first one, but otherwise this team has worked with them through at least 15 years or more. So we knew the track record for execution and then for us on this product, I mean, it was an opportunity because it's truly a startup. Sony and the team brought us in. We kind of just put out problems on the table that we were trying to solve. And then they came up with the product and the idea and we were able to put together, yeah, these are our priority one, two, three that we wanna go for. And we've just been developing alongside them. So both software and driving what the feature set is. So what were some of those problems? Yeah, it's probably seemed like forever ago when you started this conversation that as you kind of looked forward a couple of years back that you could see that were coming that you needed addressed? You know, it's funny. We started with kind of like, well, we think containerization is gonna be explosive and really everything's on virtual machines or bare metal, mostly virtual machines. So one, as containers come out, how do we track them, secure them? How do we even secure the virtual machines in our environment? Cause they're over almost a quarter million of them. The idea of being able to put network policy that's, I would say incorruptible, not actually on the server, but that's why we use firewalls, right? So solving that security problem was number one. The other one was being able to have the telemetry to see what's happening, what's changing, and troubleshoot at the network layer from every single server. Again, it's all about scale. Like things were just scaling and the throughput's going up. Traditional methods of being able to see what's on your network. You can't look in the middle. It just can't keep up. It's just speeds and feeds. So being able to push those things to the edge. And then lastly, it really happened more through the process here, but about a year and a half ago, we began segmenting our network the same way a 5G provider does with technology called segment routing. And we just said that's kind of our follow on technology is to put the network in the server and put this segment routing capability all the way out at the edge. So some things we foresaw and other things we've just developed, it's been two and a half years. So it's been a great partnership and I think more features will come. Sony, you and the team, it's been talked about all day long, have a history of multiple times that you've kind of brought these big transformational technologies ahead. What did you guys see a couple of years back and kind of this progression that you saw this opportunity to do something a little bit different than you've done in the past which is actually go out, raise around and do a real startup. What was the opportunity that you saw this challenge? So we saw a number of challenges and opportunities at the same time. We clearly saw that the cloud architectures that have been built by the leaders like and the incumbents like AWS. Today have a lot of the intelligence that is being pushed into their respective compute platforms. And we also noticed that at the same time while that was what was needed to build the first generation of the cloud, the new age applications and even as Gartner has predicted that 75% of all enterprise data and applications would be processed at the edge by 2025. If that happens, then you need that intelligence at the edge. You need the ability to go do it where the action is which is at the edge. And very consistently we found that the architectures including scale out storage were also driving the need for this intelligence to be on in a scale out manner. So if you're going to scale out computing you need the services to be going hand in hand with that scale out compute architecture for the enterprises so they can simplify their architectures and bring the cloud models that have only existed in the cloud world into their own data centers and their own private clouds. So there were these technology transitions we saw were coming down the pike. It's easier said now in 2019. It wasn't so simple in 2017 because we had to look at these multiple technology transitions and surprisingly when we call those things out as we were shaping the company's strategy getting validation of the use cases from customers like Josh was pivotedly important because it was further validating that this would be the direction that the enterprises and the cloud customers would be taking. So the reason you start with a vision you start with looking at where the technology transitions are going to be occurring and getting the customers that are looking farther out validated plays a very important role so that you can go and focus on the biggest problems that you need to go and solve. Right. It just seems like the big problem for most layman is the old one which wide network exists in the first place which is do you bring the data to the compute or do you bring the compute to the data? And now as you said in kind of this hyper distributed world that's not really a viable answer either one, right? Because the two are blended and have to be together so that you don't necessarily have to move one to the other back the other direction. So and then the second piece that you talked about over and over in your presentation was security. And everybody talks about security all the time everybody gets hacked every day and there's this constant theme that security has to be baked in kind of throughout the process as opposed to kind of bolted on at the end. You guys took that approach from day one to bake it into the architecture. Yes that was crucially important because when you are trying to address the needs of the enterprise particularly in regulated markets like financial services you want to be in a position where you have thought about it and baked it into the platform ground up. And so when we are building the programmable processor we had the opportunity to go put the right elements on it in order to make it tamper proof. We had to go think about encrypting all the traffic and communication between our policy manager and the distributed services platforms at the edge. We also then took it a step further to say now if there were to be a bad actor that were to attack from an operating system vulnerability perspective how do we ensure that we can contain that bad actor as opposed to being propagated over the infrastructure? So those elements are things you cannot bolt on. At design time are when you need to go put those into the design day one. Only on top of that foundation then can you build a very secure set of services whether it's encryption whether it's distributed firewall services so on and so forth. And Josh I'm curious on your take as we've seen kind of software defined everything slowly take over as opposed to kind of single purpose machines or single purpose appliances et cetera. Really a different opportunity for you to control but also to see. A lot of talk today about policy management a lot of talk about observability and as you said now even segmentation of the networks like you segment the nodes and you segment everything else. How do you see this kind of software defined everything continuing to evolve and what does it enable you to do that you can't do with just a static device? I mean the approach we took we started like years ago about six years ago was saying we can get computers deployed for our applications no problem and on demand and in our internal cloud. Now we can do it as a hybrid cloud solution. One of the biggest problems we had in software defined was how do you put security policy firewall policy with that compute and in our industry there's lots of segmentation for material non-public information, compliance it could be internet facing B2B facing. We do that today. We program various firewall vendors automatically. We allow our application developers to create these policies and push them through as code and then program the firewall. What we were really looking to do here is distribute that. So day one in getting Pensando into production was to use our firewall system it's called Pinnacle. We program from Pinnacle directly into the Pensando Venice manager via API and then it uses its inventory systems to push those things out. So for us software defined has been around I like to call it the storefront but for the developer it's network policy it's load balancing and that's really what they see. Those are the big products on the net. Everything else is just packet forwarding to them. So we wanted with Pensando at least starting with security to have that bar set day one and then get all the benefits of scale throughput and having the policies close to the on the edge. We're back to talking about the edge. We want it right there with the deployment with the workload or the application and that's what we're doing right off the bat. Yeah, one of the things you mentioned in your talk was kind of in the theme of atomic computing. You want to get smaller and smaller units so that you can apply and redeploy based on wherever the workload is and the change. And you've said you've now been able to basically take things out of a dedicated space, dedicated line, a dedicated job so that you can now put them in a more virtualized situation and grab more resources as you need them. Well you would think the architecture, I mean even just theater of the mind is just you're saying I'm going to put this specific thing that I have to secure behind these firewalls. So it's one cabinet of computers or a hundred. It's still behind a set of firewalls. It's a very north, south, get in, get out. Here you're talking about having that same level of security and I think that's novel, right? There hasn't been if you look at virtual firewalls or IP tables on Linux, I mean it's corruptible. It can be attacked on the computer and once you've been attacked and that attack vector has been hit, you're compromised. This is a separate management plane, separate control plane. The server doesn't see it. That security's provided. It's at scale. It's east-west. The more computers that have the Pensando architecture inside of them, the wider you can go. And then the north-south goes away. I'm just curious to get your perspective as everyone is a technology company at the same time technology budgets are going down. People are hard to hire. Your data is growing exponentially and everything's a securities threat. So as you get up in the morning, get ready to come to work and you're drinking your coffee, I mean how do you kind of communicate to make sure your management knows kind of what your objectives are and this kind of ongoing challenge to do more with less in IT even though it's an increasingly strategic place or it actually is what the company does now. It just happens to wrap it around your plane services or financial services or travel or whatever. I think you're, and I had said it to John before, it has to come, that budget has to come from somewhere. So I think a combination of one that's less, well I'll say the one that's easier to quantify is you're going to take budget from say appliance manufacturer and move it to a distributed edge. And you're gonna hopefully save some money while you do it. You're gonna do it at scale. You're gonna do it at high throughput and the security is the same or better. So that's one, that's one place to take capital from. The other one is to say can I use the next computer? Yes, because I don't have to deploy these other new computers behind this stack of firewalls. Is there agility there? Is there efficiency on my buying less servers and using more of what I have and doing it able to deploy faster? And it's harder to quantify. I think if you could over time see I bought 20% less server capacity or x86 capacity, that's a savings. And the other one that's very hard to quantify but it's always nice to have the development community and have had it recently where they say hey this took me a month to deploy instead of a year. And the purchase cycles for procurement and deployment they're long in enterprise. You want them to be quick but they're really not. So all of those things add up and that's the story I would tell any management. Yeah, I think the old historic way the utilization rates were just so, so, so, so low between CPU and memory and everything else. Because if nothing else, because to get another box could take a long time. Yeah, exactly. Well, final question for you Sony. You talked about architectures and being locked into architectures and you talked about you guys are already looking forward to kind of your next rev, your next release, kind of your next step forward. Where you see kind of the direction don't give away any secrets but kind of where are you guys going? What are your priorities now that you've launched? You got a little bit more money in the bank. Well, our biggest priorities will be to focus on customer success is to make sure that the customer journey is indeed replicable at scale. Is to enable the partner success. So in addition to Goldman Sachs the ability to go and replicate it across the federated markets whether it's global financial services, healthcare, federal and partnering with HP Enterprise so that they can on their platform amplify the value of this architecture not just on their compute platforms but on in other areas. And the third one clearly is for our cloud customers is to make sure that they are in a position to build a world-class cloud architecture on top of which then they can build their own deliver their own services, their own secret sources so that they can excel at whatever that cloud is whether it's to become the leading edge platform as a service customer whether it is to be the leading edge of software as a service platform customer. So it's all about the execution as you heard in that room and that's fundamentally what we're going to strive to be is to be a great execution machine and keep our heads down and focus on making our customers and our partners very successful. Well, Sony congratulations again to you and the team on the launch today and Josh, thank you for hosting this terrific event and being an early customer. Yeah, yeah, happy to be. All right. Thank you. Josh, we're the top of Goldman Sachs at the Pensando the new welcome to the new edge. Thanks for watching. We'll see you next time.
|
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Live | ଭକ୍ତି ଭାବରେ ଭାଗବତ | Bhakti Bhabare Bhagabata Episode - 782 | 12 Mar 2024 | Argus News Live
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Live | ଭକ୍ତି ଭାବରେ ଭାଗବତ | Bhakti Bhabare Bhagabata Episode - 782 | 12 Mar 2024 | Argus News Live
#argusnews #bhaktibhabarebhagabata #bhagavadgita #bhagwatkatha #devotion #devotional
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] | 2024-03-12T13:06:28 | 2024-04-23T23:21:45 | 1,644 |
ZQ0AkW6bPc4
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unda Ṉa ṅ Pa-jh-au-khi ṉ Pival-ya-n h-e-u-ki Boxing ring-graw run-a-n-e-ti ṅ h-e-la-ni-ko as-sa ab-hy-as a-u- ma-na-ra p-a-tha ṅ go-l f-e-u-ki g-a-li-c-ri-cat ṅ k-i-c-i-m-i-ya-r-bani b-i ṅ h-e-la-ni-y-a-ro-g-o-s-t-i-p ṅ re-je-r-t, a-u-v-t-t ṅ am-a m-a-ti-ro, k-o-q-o अपार्दी खो देस्सी खेलो रो मोजा आपार्दी खो रो मोजा व्वाना मुर्ता उचारु मुखा गून्ची जाु जन्मा जन्मान्तार दुखा आमे कहीवा कुगले वर्तमाने सेबका आपनंका आगरे हो ची एसेबका जो दि आपना मानु कुखाईवा वर्तमाना जे आपना माने गुहा भीतरे नवरही की आपना जे बाहर जन्था कुवूडा को यह अपना संब वही परीवो जनाये मत्टा जीबव की माजशा जीबव कुवा यह कोई लगा सब शबोदिना कुवा जनाये बलेस वर siècleी शबदा कुवा यöst अपना नवरे वही परीवो वों इसका दिना जीबव ये ताक वो द म्दारसा नवरी वह ḍṃ adam ḏ mystery Ὓ mystery ᵏ mystery ḇ mystery ᵘ quest Ḳ mystery ᵛ方 ᵃ mystery Ḱ mystery Ḁ mystery Ḓ mystery Ḉ probably Ḙaken ḛ mystery Ḁ mystery ± ᴀ mystery Ḥjaḍ visa ᴀ mystery ḍ mystery ḍ mystery ᴆ mysteryAh ᴀ mystery ʰx Verry Ḗ وἑ powder ᵍichtsoul ᵐ Ņ licht ᵜ ūđ chambers Ὅijn ḃ창 ᶛ Ḝ Paige labourанизm හිනකරන් людиකීඳයේගයකන්. ිඩශෙ,ඳයේරන් itthi වකරන් badai හන් a සියේරනක sustainable 我真的是禁壳 හන් වකරන් වකම් 我 revenue හැම් වකින් i పరదివరానినికి ఇపివిడిణానారిని కమాకార౿నిలి కానింద్స్నంపింెని మానినేనింది పరరినితూగాం పరానిక౿గా కిఆరికికితూబానిపరకీ� nijayi chare se bhiharana karuchundi, manne jahu chundi asuchundi, nijayi chare nijayi chara madhyar upadharana karuchundi. Pya sajjan ebhe samiche ka chakya bire tira. Haka hai. Grahana khe taranka siddha samparka apadanko bhagya bhavishat chana. Amma munirushin ka tapasya sadana alushandhan adharane. Apadanko bhavishat chani para matham hebukhane. Dekhante abar viseis kar chakrama. Bhakya bhavishata life re. Bire tipare bhavare bhagavata kar chakrama ke sabaga svagat kur chhe. Shobhabe nana rupa dhare. Se kona karandhi nana rupa dharnakarandhi. Kete bhele se mascha abhatar hi janti. Kete bhele kachapa abhatar hi janti. Kete bhele varaha abhatar hi janti. Kete bhele nusya abhatar hi janti. Kete bhele prasurama abhatar hi janti. Kete bhele rama abhatar hi janti. Kete bhele se madhya balarama abhatar hi janti. Kete bhele buddha. Kete bhele kale ke. Amma munirushin jaani che. Je pruthibhi kala kote ahagini pinduladi he thila. Tapre jalapasila. Jala re ke na prathama abhatar amu sikhhele minna. Manhe mascha abhatar. Jaga mascha abhatar guze sheoji minna abhatar. Jala vite re minna abhatar bhagavana hele. Yes, John. Mu gurudabha ek hathaku jibana dasa nere gujante. Amma manu kubuji dhundhe. Matrugar bhavite re santanati kemi titha he. Na jalavite re tha he. Jala vite re tha he. E manu sara prathame matrugar bhavite re siage minna pari tha he. Pani vite re siye tha he. Tapre kono na kachapabatara. Kachapabatara kono na je ubhaya chara. Manhe se stala rahi pari chi. Ebon panire rahi paru chi. Choto chua ti. Kachapabale emiti anechi. Seki ji janini. Parisra karidele se pani vite re rahi ba. Man parisra vite re odahabha. Sukilabhi madhita gukara jibha. Se la kachapab. Seki ji kahiparu nahi. Kumanku anechi sedhi rahi chi. Ti baraha abhatar ha. Baraha abhatar ha. Choto chua ti. Anthe anthe challila. Seki da rahi lagono. Baraha abhatar asila. Choto chua ti jitabale. Tukutukha hi challila. Alapabha iso chua ti. Sekon na dekhah jaye. Na bammona. Bhagabha na je mi dekhah janti. Seki da rahi tankara asila. Kono na bammona abhatar ha. Tapre keun abhatar asila. Seki choto chua ti da. Chaladi ke na Seki debe se nur singhavatara asila. Seki debe se nara singhav. He ji bahana Seki debe se nur singhav haji jaye. Seki debe se shakti bhara sanhaanare se challe. She chanta kari. Kone fazem MS. Tapre se kon haji jaye na. nāma kauri kaurika jibhanare sesarū pārhī zi bhet-rēt ṅ अक दिय। बियरिण त्ँ कहीuses yirithi kah imageni khaisya hū dicyo lan ्चव्वंगषने bliss ne bhiyasajanite ko hi bārhibā Protect se bhūboards ्डव्ँवान सी व pinpoint قौist te bhiya ्ऊर्धवाहन सी उबचार अitionally ॉश patiently vaath alara jā Barbhāni sitchh 我ต syllabus నినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినినిన नेता, इभी प्रष्टूतिला महापर परी आमे परोखिब जनोता जनार्दनंको सुखखो उ दुखखरो कहाणी वंगा जोडा साम भेद दंदो उ गोटी चालना समर्तना भीरोता उ समिकरना रख्याला आम और भीससकर जक्रम भोट पुर भरु जनोता मु समवर उ सुख्रबार राती अथाती रिस्ट्रे मुप पहन्चे दूर्गमा अपंट्रा अदिस्चारे आपदंको मुहरु भिकास कुनेई सतमिचरा अंगे निभा कता मरे लुहा अव क्रोदा कु चपी रख्ये तेसरो आम्रु तो कलरे थी भीसा अव भीसा दरो कहने तो नीचा को साथकुनेई मुआसुची जना अदिट्रे रपिभार संद्या साथता तीदिट्रे जो दि आपनोग को आमा भीट्रेती बहुल लगिला बहुल लगिला, तेभे आमा चानल को लएक, शेर और सबस्क्रेप करीप को जमा भी बुलन्तू नहीं मंदर गेरी परबता कुवा ही चन्दी समुद्रा को मंद्धना कुड़ुझम देबता आबंग रख्क्यो सना सेई समझे रे मंदर गेरी परबता लिए लिए बुडी आउची देबता आमाने प्रध्धना कुड़ुझम को लगिला दोगवार नीजे कच्षा पवता रे की देब ये कच्षा पवा माने पच्चरे कोई चा पच्चदा देख्यो पिकिटा बहुत ताना से निजे ताना ही की कच्षा पविग रही ले ताउ पर से कुवा रुपी से मंदर गेरी परबता रही ला आरम्भपले ए, सम्सार आमबआ आगू जीवा पहाई ले दिश्खु मद्य वोख्चना काई बोख्चना करी पारी ले दूख़कु वोख्चना करी पारी ले आम्ँ आम्डूटर संणन पाई पारी बा से दूखचना आमबपल ना heartfelt is sat appel is is is are are that is this is బర్నిస్లు ఇడినావార్నిదిల్ల మానినినిస్ట్ారోని క్నిమియారి ప్వవవాపూరచిసం.
|
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LIVE : PM Narendra Modi addresses a public meeting in Satna, Madhya Pradesh
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The political landscape in Madhya Pradesh is buzzing as Prime Minister Narendra Modi takes centre-stage ahead of the assembly election. Today, the PM addressed a huge public gathering in Satna. PM Modi said, “Your one vote has done such wonders that the courage of the country’s enemies has shattered. Your one vote is going to form the BJP government here again. Your one vote will strengthen Modi in Delhi.”
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"pm modi satna visit",
"satna samachar"
] | 2023-11-09T06:30:25 | 2024-04-23T01:10:21 | 2,891 |
ZQl8sP7F8Zg
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विकुास माननी पसानमानती टीका पखे है सुसासन न वर गरीब कल्यान आज देखते देखते, नववगर्षो में माननी पदानमानती टीके गयी देस की तस्वीर को भी बधला है और देख के, करोडो लोगों के तग्दीर को भी बजल दीा है आज गरीब कल्यान की योजनाए आज गाँँँँँ में गरगर में गली गली में दिखाए दे रही हैं जो प्रटान मंटी जीने कहा था सबका साज सबका विकास आज गरगर में वूज सबका साज सबका विकास पहुट गया है. राखो करोडो लोग जो जो पडियो में रहते ते आज उनके गर पक्के बनगें आदेले में रहते ते आज भिजली का उजाला पहुच गया पीने के पानी के लिए गर-गर में नल्से जल देने की योजना अभी हाली में कोविट के समय से गरीबों को पाज पाज किलो का मुप्त आनाज देने की योजना को उनो ने जमीन पर वुगतारते हुए पान साल किले उनो ने आवर उसे पड़ाने का काम किया मैं हर्दाल से बिननदन करता हूँ पदार मंती जी का अगरीब बीमार परता है लेकिन उसका कभी इलाज नहीं हो पाज आद आज आज अज गरीब के इलाज के लिए पाज पाज लाक का इस्मान काट गरगर पोचा है देस में पचास करोर से जादा लोग मेरे सतना जीले में दस लाख से जादा गरो में पदाल मंती जी का इस्मान काट पूचा है लाख हो लोगों ले बड़े से बड़े अस्पताल में बड़े से बड़े चिकिस्गों से मुप्ति लाज कराश रहे में अपने जीबन को बचाने का खाम किया है अज गर गर में माताए मैंने रस्वाई गैस से रोटी पका रही है और अपने परिवार का जीबन सुरक्षित कर रही है अज गर गर में सोचाले बना कर के मामहन बेटियों का जो सम्मान मान नी प्दाल मंती जीले दिया साथ वरस तक कोंगरे सत्ता में दी अज गर में मामहन बेटिय के सम्मान के लिए सोचाले नी माना पाई अज गर बका नी माना पाई वो सारे बाँ काम किया तो 2014 कए बदान मंठी नरें,मोदी जी बने उनो ने कगोडो करोड लोगों के गरो में गर वी मझाया सोचाले बी भंाया तीहान्तिख फंजड़े आज देस की जन्था के जुबान में है किसान हमेशा दौखिर आप आता आज किसाण अगतो में सम्मान नदिरी पहोड़रिया किसाणो को खाद की सब तब च़ाएक किसानो के सबजी पल डूद बड़े से बजार में पहुंजाए तुकिसान त्रेंचल लगे मिट्टी का परिख्षन राए, फ़सल भीमा का पैसा मिलाए बड़े से बजार में पहुंजाए तुकिसान त्रेंचल लगे मिट्टी का परिख्षन राए, फ़सल भीमा का पैसा मिलाए ये पहले कभी आज तक नहींवा, समरतन मूल बड़ाने का काम हमारी सरकार ने किया पुदार मंतीजी ने किया लागत कर्ज का देल कुरा से जादा आज रभी में खरीब में, हर बार फ़सल का दाम बड़ा कर के किसानों को जो लाब कारी मूल दिलाने का काम किया बो एटिहासिक है, मैं चाहता हूँ एक बार सभी लोग मान लिए पुदाल मंतीजी किन पहिसलो पर तलीया मन जा कर किविलन्धन करी एक सुआएड करी आएड आज गावणवो में आम्रस सरोवर बन लें गावणवो में आम्रससरोवर आजादी के औमरत ऴहोशोख पर जो उनकी अपील ती खाँवणवो में पानी का सनक्षण होरा यो बजीबिका गदो पैसा कमाड़ेएए आपनी जिबिका गदो पैसा खमारेएए ये पदान वंतिखी का संकल तेख कोविट के समय में जिस तरहें से माड़ू जीबन को बचाने का एतिहास सिक्का को इसक्ता अगड़ा बचाने तीखा कि ठाएग। आज पुड़िट के समय में जिस्टरे से मानो जीवन को बचाने का एतियासी काम पुदान मंटीजीने किया था आज पुडिट दुलिया पुदान मंटीजी की प्रशंथा कर रही है आज गरी भाजवी ये में सुच करता है आज पुडिट दुलिया पुदान मंटीजी की प्रशंथा कर रही है आज गरी भाजवी ये में सुच करता है कोई अगर हमारे वारे में सुचने बाला इस दर्टी में दर्मात्मा है तो वो सिर्प पुदान मंटीन नरेंद्र मोदी है कोई इसके आबा और नहीं हो सकता है और इसलिये मैं आप सब के वीच में मान नी प्दान मंटीजी का फिर से बाअद बोत अभिननन करता हूँ शवागत करता हूँ और में प्रज्जिलाद देख छपने आदनी सत्ती सर्माजी से आगरे करूगा बो आए और मान नी प्दान मंटीजी को सादर आमन्त्रित करे सत्ना की इस पवित्र दरती पर जिसके उतर में मरे आदापुर सुत्तम भगवान राम का बास जिसके दच्छड में मासार्दा का बास आइसे थाकृ रन्मत सिंजी क्रान्तिकारी बहुमी पर देस के गवरो पूरी जिनों पूरी दुन्या में बारत का मान और सम्मान बड़ाने का काम किया मैं सभी हमारे सत्ना के सभी प्रत्याशियो से आगरे करूगा कि एक बडी माला के दोरा देस के गवरो बारत माके सच्चे सबुत, महा मानो, नारेंद मोदी जी का बडी माला से सभागत करे, सभी हमारे प्रत्यासी आदरनी, चित्र कुट से सुरेंशिंग एहर्वार जी, आदरनी रेगाव से प्रतिमा बागरी जी, नागावद से नागेंशिंग जुदेव जी, मैहर से स्रिकान चित्र भेदी जी, आमर पतन से रामखलावन पतेल जी, और सतना से सानसत गडे सिंगी, रामपुर बगेलान से भिक्रम सिंग भिक्की भिक्की भिया, और इस कारक्रम के सियोजक योगे स्ताम रकार जी, आद हम सवागत करते है, उस महा मानव का, हम साथगत करते है, बबबीश्मिला कहा, जब दोती भीषीट जल रहा एन, उनो अनी का अज, साथरो की जरूरत दे है, संगीद की जरूरत है, अ� wnो भन दूक की नालो से, उक संगीज का जंभि दिया, और नल तरंग बनाज, बन्दुख की नालो से एक संगीट का जन में दिया और नल तरंग बनाई आइसे भिस्विल्ला का की बूमी पर मासार्दा की बूमी पर आमनी देस के गवरो जिनोने पूरी दून्या में भारत का मान और सम्मान बड़ाने का काम किया इस्सतना की पवित्र दर्टी पर हम साव आम ब्यद कर्जी,api ra bandwidth krji, महा्मानो को सम्मान देने का काम कीहा �janjati and this resolution is one standard of वहूद बोध सुआगत वन्दन और विनिन्दन और मैं सीदे मान्नी महाँम दीजी को बुलाना चाहूंगा की आई आप आम सब को मारग प्रसेष्त करिए मैं जैसं कर प्रसाथजी की उन पंकतीओ के साथ मान्नी को आमंद्रत करूंगा भीवाडरी तुंग स्रंगसे प्रभुद सुद भार्ती सुएम प्रभा समुज्ँला सॉतंट्रता प्कारती आमरती भीर पुट्रो नोग द्रडष प्रतिग्या सो चलो प्रसस्च्त पुडने पंत है बड़े चलो, बड़े चलो संग ठंगड़े चलो शुपन्तः पर बड़े चलो, भला हो जिस्स में देस का वो काम सब की है चलो. मैं सादर आमन्त्रित करता हो, मैं चाहता हो की से ये ये सत्ना की दरती, गरीबों के मसीया देस के गवरो, माननी नारंद मोदी जी को करतल दूनी के साथ में आमन्त्रित करे. मैं मेरा बाशन करो से पहले, हमारी एक बेटी जोटी चोदरी यहां बैटी है, जोटी ने जी पेंटी के नेता हो को मन्त्र मुगद कर दिया था, और बन्दूग की नाली से बने हुए मुजिक बादन का, तो मैं चाहुंगा एक मेरे बाशन के पहले, उएक अवनी कलाकृती पेष करे उसके बाद में बोलूगगा. माता की, महर बाली शार्दा देवी की, बिंड के अपना सबए जनेन का, हमार रामरा, जिस दहरती पर माशार्दा का, अदा का आर्सिरवाद बरस्ता है, जिस खेत्र में राज्कुमा राम आए, और मर्यादा पुर्दोतं भख्वान राम बन गये. रूष्यों तपस्वियों की पावन स्तली, सतना को मेरा शत शत नमन. ये सतना की ही ताकत है, ये सतना का ही सामरत है, की बन्दुक की नाली से संगीत के सुर निकलते है. विष्ववजब संकतों के गेरे में है, चारो तरब बन्दुक की अवाजे सूनाई दे रही है, मानवता के लिए बहारत जैसे दोवेश आज दूनिया में अपने विचार का प्रभाव पडा करने का प्यास कर रहे है, आज से समय, सतना की दरती से एक आज सी जोती निकलती है, जो बन्दुक की नाली से संगीत के सूर निकालती है, युद्द की मानशिक्ता वाले मानो समुदाई को, सतना की देरी दरती का ये बहावती ससकत संदेश है, मैं सभी साथियो को बहत बडबडाई देता हूँ, सभी कलाकारो को शुबकामनाई देता हूँ, मुझे खषमा करना आप लोग तो भासन खुन नहाए हूंगे, लेगिन आप को मैंने संगीत, संगीत मेही रोड रगा दिया, मेरे ली भी अच्छर हा, इद दोड दूप मैं कुछ पल, हैसे पविट्र बाताबडन मैं बतादने का अवसर मिला, अभी कुछ दिनो पहले ही, मिजे चित्र कुछ मैं, एक संद समागम मैं जाने का सुब भागे मिला था, आज यहां सतना मैं, जनता जनार्दन के दरषन हो रहे है, ये मेरे लिए दोहरे सुब भागे की बात है, मेरे परिवार जनो, ये सन्तो और देश की जनता का सिर्वाद है, कि आज भारत का गवरो विष्व में नहीं भुलन्दी पर पहुचा है, आज पूरे विष्व में भारत का दंका बज रहा है, यह आपके एक वोडने सा कमाल किया है, कि देश की दुश्मनो के होसले पस्त है, इस भार भी, MPA चुनाव मैं आपका हर भोड, तरी शकती की ताकत से भरा हूँआ है, तरी वीद शकती का सामर ते आपके भोड में है, आपका एक भोड, यहां फिर से, भाजपा की सरकार बनाने जा रहा है, आपका वही भोड, दिलनी में मोदी को मजबूत करेगा, आपका वही भोड, ब्रस्ता चारी कोंगरेष को, MPA की सरकार से, सो कुस दूर्ट लेजाएगा, यानी, एक भोड, तीन कमाल, साथियो, मैंने अपने राजनिती जीवन मैं, बहुत से चुनाब देखे है, और बरसो तक तो मैं, चुनाब लडाता रहा है, मैं, कभी लडा नहीं, बहाद में, लड़नेक भी नोबता गयी, लेकिन इस बार, मतप्र देख का चुनाब, बड़ा ही दिलचस पहै, और मैं देख रहा हो, इस बार, मतदान मैं भी दिन बचे है, लेकिन उसे पहले ही, कुंगरेस का जुट का गुबभारा, पंचर हो गया पुड गया है, कुंगरेस के जुट के गुबभारे की, हवा निकल गयी है, और आपने देखा है ना, जब गुबभारे की हवाद, तेजी से निकल ती है, तो कैसे लडख़ाता है, सोर मचाता हुआ इदर उदर जाता है, बैसे ही, हारते हुए कुँगरेस के नेता, इदर उदर भाखते हुए, अप सिर्ब शोर ही शोर मचाते है, कुँगरेस के पास, मपी के भिकास का कोई रोड मैप नहीं, और इसले कुँगरेस के ख़के हारे चहरो मैं, यहां के यूँँगो, कोई भविष्ष नहीं दिखता है, इसले मपी को भाजपावर भरोसा है, मपी को, मोदी की गरन्टी पर भरोसा है, और ये भरोसा इसले है, के हर देश वासी जानता है, की मोदी की गरन्टी यानी, हार गरन्टी पूरी होने की गरन्टी, मेरे परिवार जनो, आजकल मैं जहां भी जाता हो, बहां, आएउद्या में बन रहे, प्रभुराम के बभे मंदिर की चरचा चलती है, पूरे देश में कुषी की लहर है, सवब बहागे से बहरे, इस पामन कालखन में, मेरे मन में बात बार बार आती, में कर सवयम सोथ ता रहता हो, और जो बड़ों से सुना हुए है, वो बात, हर पल मेरे कान में गुन्टी रहती है, मेरे मन को अंडूलित करती रहती है, और मुझे तेज गती से दोडने की प्रना देती है, और बार-बार में उसका समरन करता हूँ, जहां कहा गया है, राम काज किने बिनू, मोही कहा विष्राम, अब रुकना नहीं है, थकना नहीं है, और विष्राम का तो सबार पयदा ही नहीं होता, कि भाज पा सरकार को, दस साल तक, केंद्र की कोंगरे सरकार ने, हर काम में रूडे तका है, काम करने नहीं दिया, रुकाम वडे पयदा की, अभी 2014 में ही तो मद्प देस को, दबल इंजीन की दबल ताकात मिली है, M.P. को, जिस अंदेरे कूए में कोंगरेस ने दकेल दियाता, उस अंदेरे कूएं से, भाज पा M.P. को बहार निकाल पाही है, अब तेज विकास का समय आया है, सब के विकास का समय आया है, दलीत, पीडीत, शोषीत, बंचीत, पिच्डे, आदिवासी, गरीब, नवजवान, किसान, हर किसी को, अब उसका हक मेलेगा, मेरे परिवार जनो, गरीब की बहुत बडी चिन्ता होती है, कि उसके पास, आपना पक्का हब होगा, होती एक नहीं होता है, जिंद्गी येवे जिसके पास कोई अता पता नहीं है, उसको एग पता चाहीए, उसे आपना एग गर जाहीए. अपने पक्के गर के लिए, पाए-पाई ज़ूडने की कोशिस करता था, नहीं बाई जोडने की खोशिष करता था पैसे बचाने की खोशिष करता था लेकिन कोंगरेस के राज में चारो तरप आँसा बच्टा चार खाए की गरीब के पक्के गर का सपना चकना चूर हो जाता था भाजपा सरकारने ये चार करोड बड़ा आख़ा होता है दूनिया के लोग जम मेरे से सूंते हैं तो अछ्रज हो जाता चार करोड गर कै देशों की दितनी आबाधी नहीं होती हैं दितने अमने गर बना दियें अर साथियों फम तो भकती में तूभेव हे लोग है मुझे खुषी है कि भाजबाए के दबलिंजिन सरकार हुने के काराँ एंपी उन राज़्यो में से एक हैं जाहां गरीवों के लिए लाक्फों गर बनाई गये यहां सतना में भी हाजारो गरीव परिवारों को पक्का अवास मिला है एक लाक बती सदार मोदी ने आपके पक्के गर के लिए पहले ही पैसे का अंतजाम कर के रख्खा है जैसे ही तीं दिसमर को यहां भाजबास सरकार लोटेगी प्यम अवास योजना का काम और तेज कर दिया जाहेगा हर गरीव परिवार को पक्का गर मेलेगा यह मोदी की गारंती है गर मominaब सररब चार दिवारिए नहीं जब मोदी गर देटा है नहीं तो सरे सबनो को पूरा करनी का आज्याना भी देटा है सरक चार दिवारे नहीं बलकि उसे भीजली भी है गैस कन्कषत बी है तोलेट भी है नल भी और नल में जल भी है साथ्वो पक्के गर के साथ साथ मुप्तर आशन का भी पक्का इंटजाम ये भी मुदी की गरन्टी है कोई गर यासा नहीं होगा जहां कभी चूला बूजेगा करुना काल में मुप्तर आशन देनी भाल योजना हम ने शुरू की थे अब मुदी ने निच्चै किया है आपको माडूम है कितना बड़ा संकर था मुद्मद्रा रहाता हर लोगो को लगता दा कही गर में कुरोना गुज गया तो गय काम से बार निकलना मुष्किल था मुदी ने ताए किया था मैं इस देश के किसी को भूखा नहीं रहने दूंगा गरीब क्या गर का चूला बुजने नहीं दूंगा कोई मेरे बेटे भेटी राद को भूके सोना जाए ये राद बर माड तडबती न रहे ये मुदी ने पक्का किया था और इसलिये मुप्तर आशन देना शुरू किया था और ये मुप्तर आशन की योजना ये दिसमपर महने में एक महने के बात पूरी हो रही है तो लोगोने मुदे सुजाओ दिया कि मुदी जीस पर को सोच रहा चाहिये दिसमपर में इसको पुरा नहीं होने जाना चाहिये इगरीवों के कल्यान का खाम है आगे वड़ना चाहिये और मेरे लिए तो जन्टा जनादन काएदर्स यही तो इश्वर का दिश होता है और इसलिये, मैंने संकल पकर लिया है बाद़ के बाद भी गरीवोंके यो मुप्तराशन की योजना पाँद साल के लिए चलाओगा पाँद साल के लिए उसको बड़ाजीया जाएगा इसे सतना जिले के लगभाएग, 2 लाग परिवारो की राशन की छिन्ता कम हो जाएगी आज आज से लाग हो परिवार के गनेज जीग पकर अगते सम विशाग किदाओ आज आज से लाग हो परिवार करुडो लोग मोदी को आशिजवाद दे रहे हैं लेकिन गरीप के ल्यान की इस फैस्ट लेका कारन, मोदी नहीं, बलकी आप ही लोग है मेरे परिवार जनो गरीवों का गर हो, मुप तनाशन हो, मुप पिलाज हो आज इन पर भाज पा सरकार लाख हो करोड्रुडबे करच कर रही है यानी देश का पैसा गरीवों के काम आ रहा है लेकिन जब कोंगरेश की सरकार थी, तभे पैसा कहाँ जाता था sudden its wiles तभेस का �不管 को गरोड्र्प्या तू थी गोताले में जाता था कोILAगॉताले में जाता था collective wealth भान कर थी, कॉंगर�祂 के करब luego कां align Part bek liqu विड़ोड्छडि figuraoused आउज़ि की एक क्ता था पर्जी नाम आजे ते जिन्का आसल मैं जन्मब भी नहीं वाता लेकिन कोंगर सरकार उनके नाम पर टीजोरी से पैसे निकालती थी और पैसे गायब हो जाते ते लोग कोंगर इसने चेले चपाताों के जब गरीप के राशन के दुकान पर जाता ता तो गरीप को पता चलता था एक उसका राशन तो कोई और लेगा जब एसी जरुद बंदे के वो बच्छे को स्कोलर सिब ठाही होती थी तो वो अगग भी कोई और चिलने ताथा उस्कोलर सिब ठाही होती थी तो वो वो हगग भी कोई और स्छ्छिलने ताथा गेज सिलिनर की सब से थी सरकार सेदी वेटी ती लेकन वो सी दी कोंगरेसी चेले चपातरो की जीजोर्री बे जमा हो जाती थी लूपत का खेल एसे ही चल रफा ॐू ॐION ौR ॑ू ॥ ॐ.Ο приход. ॑. ॑. ॑. ॉ. ॑ू. ॑. उसको मुदी ने बचाखर के आपके हवाले कर दिया है ये खाम की आए जी अब आप शोची एं जब कोंगरेस को उसके चीले चपाटों को उसके दलालों को इतना बना नुख्षान हो गया पष्टाचार की काली कमाई को मुदी ने रोक दिया अब कोंगरेस अपनी सारी दुष्वनी मुदी के सादी देश की जनता से भी निकाल रही है उसर मुजर नहीं आपको भी परिषान करने में लगे भी है मेरे परिवार जनो बंद बदेश के मेरे पैरे भाई और बहनो आपको मेरी एक सीख्यात कोंगरेस आई तो मुबत अलाज मिलना बंद हो जाएगा कोंगरेस आई तो किसान समा निजी के पैसे मिलने बंद हो जाएगे यहां जो सीवराज की सरकार ने लाजनी बहना, लाजनी लक्ष्मी जैसी योजना है चलाएगे अपको अपना एक एक वोड को कमल के पूल पर डालकर कोंगरेस के गोटाले बाजों को रोकना है आप मेरी एक बार अज आखिर रियाद रख्येगा यहां M.P में कोंगरेस आई अपके सामने तो आईसे नेता खडे किए है जो कई वर दसकोंजे मद्धब देज कोंगरेस को चलाते है अब आज क्या काम कर रहें तोनो कप्रा फाड नेता बन गये एक तुस्रे के कप्रे फाड रहें और तुक्तिर जो गए ते अपने समर्तगो केटा तो उसके कप्रे फाड अपने चेलों को केटा अपने चेलों को केटा तुम उसके कप्रे फाड यही नेता Mp को दसो तक अपाओ में रखने वाले Mp को बनचीद रखने के लिए जिम्डार है या आपके बहतर भविष्खा बरोसा कमी नहीं दे सकते इनका तो अपी बस एक ये जिन्डा है तीस टीन दिसमर को बाजबात नहारने के बात मदबदेस कोंगरेजपर किस का बेटा कब या करेगा उनकी लगाई एह आपने बेटो को सेट करने में उपुरे मदबदेस को अपफ़ेट करने में लगे विए जिन को सरब अपने बेटो के यही चिन्ता है, वो आमपी के गरी बन्चीत, मज्दम्वर के बेटे-बेट्यों के चिन्ता ही नहीं कर सकते है। मेरे परिवार जरो सतना सहीत पुरे विंदे ख्यत्र के विकास्कूम है। विकास्कूम है, हमें मिलकर तेज्म करना है, बाजबा सरकार लिख छित्र के परिएट्वोग को नहीं बिस्तार देने चाली है। केंद्र की बाजबा सरकार रमाएट सरकेट के बाजब बड़े प्र खाम कर रही है। थिट्र कुर सहीज आने ख्चान इस योजना का लिज़्ा है। टिट्र सिमेंट कारखानो के लिए जाना जाता है। आने वाले समझ में यहां दुच्रे उद्धियोगो का भी बिस्तार के आजाए। उद्धियोगों के लिए अच्छी कनेक्टिटी और पर्याप्त भिजिली के जर्वत है। आज बाजबा डबल इंजें सरकार की इस पर बहुत जोर दे रही है। जबल पूर कतनी सथना सिंग्रोली इनवेश्मेंट कोरिडोर अर ऐलीवेट्टेट कोरिडोर के इस छेत्र में निवेश की नहीं समभावना एप आप बनेगी। लगुद्धियोग, कुटिड्धियोग, खेटी से जोडे उद्धियोग, इनके लिया आने वाला समय बहुत उजवल ओने वाला है। यहां में वेश कृटिए चोटे मजले और लगुद्धियोग के लिए, बाजबा सरकार ने शैक्रो करोडुपे के मददत दी. बाज़ावा सरकान ने आंपी में लगबाग दाई सो उद्योंगी छेत्रा और पता से अदिग, में से भी खलुस्टर भी शुक्रूति की है तीन दिसमबर को बाजबागी जीट के बाध इन सभी पर काम और तेज हो जाएगा और यमोदी की गार्टी है मेरे परिवार जनो इन षूनाو में मिरे बहली बार मोद भोट डेननले वाले नावजवान है जो पहली बार भोट डेननले वाले बेटे बेटी है जो फर्स्ट्रिम भोटर साथ है मेरे यूज़ा साथि है मैं कहता हूँ इस बार ने त्र तो आप की जीए पूरे चूनाव को लीड आप की जीए पूरे देश के आसर्वाज आप के साथ है भाजपा अब हम पी को सम्रुद्दी के सिगर कि तर ब लेजाना चाहती है एसरे अपना विदाए चुन्ने का चूनाव नहीं है ये आपका भविषे चूने का चूनाव है शाद चार पीडी से जबते वी परिवार ये मेरे लिए बन्दनी ए लोग है मेरा एक एक काईर करता मेरे लिए स्रद्दाग काईंद्र है जभ उनको मैं फरीष्शम करते हुए देखता हूँ इजी जान से जड़े हूँ लेखता हूँ तर्ष्रब एक यी रादा हुता है, बारत माता की जै, उसे दिखजी से कुछ नहीं चाहीं, आज़े लाक हो काईर करता हो, कों निरमान करने का काम भाजबान की आग्टिया है. ये बाजबा काईर करता हो का परिस्नम है, दिस दिद बाजबा को आज यहा एतनी मजबॉसत्टिछी में पुच्छाए है. ये बाजबा काईर करता हो की महनित है, का जैम पि के कुँँगरेस की हालग कहराव है, हर भूट पर कमल खिले इस अंकलप यह साथ हमें एक जुड हो कर आगे बडना है आप गर-गर जाएंगे इतनी बटी सबहागे बाद ये तो नहीं कोगे ले बहुत होगे आप एसा नहीं करोगे ना हर भूट में जाोगे कमल खिला होगे कुंगरेज को साब कर दोगे BJP को संदर जिता होगे पखता गरन्टी देके इस चुनावने आपी की गरन्टी है बाजपो को जिताने की गरन्टी आचा मेरा एक काम करोगे ये चुनाव बाला काम नहीं ये मेर भेक्तिकित काम है करोगे आावाज थ्धस ठती। अब बुकुझे। आँसा प्यार क्यढ़ याब ताम। लिजि काम है करोगे. सब करोगे. पकभ करोगे. देके आप गरगर जाएगे. गाएँ गाँँँ गरगर जाएगे. और जाकर कि बताना कि मोदीजी सतना आईउदे, आप सब को �ne oni triangle pe ja hai eyebrows और रामराम कहिह। मिरा राम्राम पुठा दहूगेategory। म stacks तुम छेरी उर्जा अने गुना ब meilleur जाए की और देज के लिए काम कं� Branch मुजे एक НАझाक bare jade nain shakti mu mir article मेरे साद बो abst she is India's mother भारत माता की भारत माता की भात बद दन्वात
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"url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZQl8sP7F8Zg",
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Japan's Evolving National Security Policy
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What are the implications of Japan’s evolving national security policy for the Indo-Pacific region?
In this video, Professor Takashi Shiraishi – one of Japan’s leading public intellectuals – will address the background of Japan’s security policies, the nature of the ongoing Diet debate on the security legislation, and the implications of Abe’s security reform agenda for North East Asia and the wider region.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s security reform bills, which are currently being debated in the Japanese Diet, aim to enable Japan to exercise its right to collective self defence, albeit in a limited way. Exercising this right – a right enshrined in the UN Charter – will represent a significant step forward for his efforts to normalise Japan’s security posture.
The security legislation package is the latest in a series of significant security and defence reforms that Abe has championed since returning to the Prime Ministership in 2012. This includes the creation of the National Security Council of Cabinet, the drafting of Japan’s first national security strategy, the relaxation of defence export principles, and the revision of the US-Japan Defence Cooperation Guidelines.
Professor Takashi Shiraishi is one of Japan’s best known and most respected academics. He currently serves as President of the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies and as President of the Japan External Trade Organisation’s Institute of Developing Economies. His current research interests include East Asian regionalism, politics and international relations. Professor Shiraishi is influential as an adviser to the Japanese government, including having served on a number of governmental advisory panels, such as Deputy Chair of a Government Panel on National Defence Policy Guidelines from 2010-11. He is currently serving on a Panel of Experts that is advising Prime Minister Abe on a Japanese Prime Ministerial Statement to be made on 15 August 2015, marking the 70th anniversary of the end of WWII in Asia.
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"Takashi Shiraishi",
"Reform",
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] | 2015-07-10T05:40:01 | 2024-02-05T06:39:34 | 4,352 |
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Colleagues, we acknowledge and celebrate the first Australians on whose traditional lands we meet and pay our respects to the elders of the Ngunnawal people past and present. Welcome to the National Security College at the Australian National University. For those of you who I've not met, I'm Rory Medcalf, the head of the college and I'm really delighted that we're working in partnership this evening with the Australia Japan Foundation of the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade to host this very special event, the 2015 Australia Japan Foundation Address, by a distinguished visitor, Professor Takashi Shiraiishi. I want to welcome you all and make a particular mention of welcome to our eminent guests, including His Excellency, the Ambassador of Japan, Mr Sumio Kusaka. I also would like to welcome the Chair of the Australia Japan Foundation, Murray McLean, one of Australia's most experienced and accomplished diplomats, former Ambassador to Japan. I'm also pleased to note other members of the Australia Japan Foundation Board here this evening, including Professor Veronica Taylor, who's also the Dean of the College of Asia and the Pacific, here at ANU, my own Dean, so welcome, Professor, and other members of the board, including, I believe, Dr Chaki Ajoka. Now, it's really wonderful to see strong attendance as well from some of ANU's leading academics and executive staff, as well as senior Australian government officials, members of the diplomatic corps, and others. Professor, I think this is a sign of the interest in your expert perspective this evening. Ladies and gentlemen, in a moment we'll introduce our speaker, but first I want to say a few words about the topic at hand and how it concerns and connects with the work of the National Security College and ANU more generally. Now, in striving to understand the strategic future of our Indo-Pacific region, and thus our own future, Australia's future, we often run the risk, in my view, of simplistically imagining that everything boils down to a China-America dynamic. What does China do with its growing power? How does Washington respond? Recent developments, however, have reminded us that there are other very substantial powers in our region with their own interests, their own capabilities, and their own choices. Not only, for instance, India, a country I would take a particular interest in, but also Japan. It's becoming increasingly obvious in my view that we cannot and should not write off Japan as an influential strategic actor in our region. I would argue that it's in Australia's interests as a friend and a partner of Japan to help encourage but also shape a responsible kind of normalisation of Japan's security posture as a contributor to a regional balance and to regional order. So what precisely are the implications of Japan's national security policy? Well, that's what this evening, Professor Shirishi, one of Japan's leading public intellectuals, will offer some answers on for you, and I certainly won't pre-empt his remarks. He will look at the background of the Japan's changing security policies, the nature of the current debate, including on security legislation, I suspect. But the implications also of Prime Minister Abe's security reform agenda in North Asia and across the wider Indo-Pacific region. Now, it's fair to say that Professor Shirishi's input has had considerable impact on some of the developments of Japanese policy in recent years, including the national security strategy in December 2013. Those documents I think helped to frame a lot of significant rethinking about Japan's defence and security posture in our region, including the way Japan is shifting from a land-based to a maritime focus in its forced modernisation and its focus, and including Japan's engagement with a wider array of security partners beyond the U.S. alliance, including, and I think really including quite significantly, Australia. Now, as part of this shift, Australia's own security relationship with Japan continues to strengthen, a process that has broad continuity of engagement against some time ago that has intensified under Prime Minister Abe. As we all know, Japan's one of the three countries being considered in the context of the competitive evaluation process for Australia's next submarine, and a small contingent of Japanese ground self-defence force personnel are currently in Australia for the talisman sabre exercise with the United States trilateralising that exercise for the first time. So in this context, it's really timely, I think, that Professor Shorishi is here to give this address. This is an example, I'll just say in closing, of the very kind of active policy engagement that I think the National Security College can usefully contribute to our national debate as part of ANU's wider mandate of policy impact. In that field, I also want to note for you a few of our other recent important activities, including convening last week a strategic dialogue with the commander of the US Seventh Fleet, Admiral Thomas, on board his command ship, Wild and Sydney, conducting the expert and industry consultations for the Australian Government's cyber security review, and conducting expert consultations to define the future operating environment for the Australian Defence Force. These kinds of activities are mutually reinforcing with our very busy schedule of training and executive education across the Australian public service and our expanding masters and PhD academic programs. Now, our guest is visiting Australia as a guest of the Australia Japan Foundation and as a contribution to the deepening of mature strategic discussion and understanding between our two countries. So in that context, I'll be very pleased in a moment to invite Murray McLean to introduce our speaker. Before I do, I do one or two housekeeping matters. As you may know, we're recording this evening's event, so please have your phones on silent, and this event is on the record. So when we get to the question and answer session, please ask your questions in that context. With that, it's my real pleasure to invite Murray McLean to introduce our speaker here this evening. Murray. Thank you very much, Rory. And it's a great pleasure to be here today. Once again, I was here last week for the very successful Crawford Leadership Forum as well. So it's been a very active time with the, I think, very much the Australian National University and in this particular instance, the National Security College headed up by Rory for joining together with the Australia Japan Foundation to host this very esteemed speaker, Professor Takashi Shiraishi. Professor Shiraishi is without any question a very, very insider, very much a Tokyo insider as far as influence on policy is concerned. And it's very broad policy as well. He's actually a specialist on Indonesia. In fact, he's without any question Japan's foremost specialist on Indonesia. And he, nonetheless, like all very good policy advisors, has a very broad understanding of Japan's strategic environment. And that is what I think we'll be hearing very clearly from him tonight, the current state of affairs in respect of that, but also how it implicates Australia's own policy. I enjoyed very frequently when I was ambassador in Tokyo having very frank and very educative for me discussions about policies of the Japanese government policies. And I know tonight you'll all hear and benefit a great deal from that as well. This is part of the role that the Australia Japan Foundation has. As Rory said, it's sponsored or at least funded by the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. But our role is actually to broaden the base of understanding at the people-to-people level, the non-government level. And that's really, I think, very, going to be amply helped by Professor Sherry Ishii's speech. We have been very active over the last number of years since its formation and next year we will be celebrating our 40th anniversary of the Australia Japan Foundation, which was indeed set up at the same time as the Treaty of Nara between Australia and Japan. And as Canberraites, most of you are, would know Nara and Canberra are sister cities, so we will look forward to that as well. Anyway, that's enough from me. I really want you to join me in welcoming Professor Sherry Ishii for what I'm sure will be an extremely important discussion. Thank you. Well, thank you very much, Professor Metcalf and Professor, I mean Ambassador McLean, for the nice introduction as well as the opening speech. It is an honour to be here. And first of all, I'd like to thank National Security College and you, Australia Japan Foundation, as well as the Australian Government, to make this meeting happen. I'd like to talk today about Japan's security and foreign policy. Two and a half years ago, two and a half years have passed since Mr Abe came to power in December 2012. Over the last two and a half years, he has done quite a lot on the security foreign policy and foreign economic policy fronts. The National Security Council, NSC, was established in December 2013 with the Prime Minister, Cabinet Secretary, Foreign Minister and Defence Minister at its members, and with Mr Yachi, a former Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs at his first director. A national security strategy was adopted for the first time in history, also in December 2013. And prior to this, there had, of course, been national security strategies, but they tended to be widely assumed and debated, but not codified and made public available. The current national security strategy contains several key phrases such as proactive contribution to peace, dynamic joint defence force and seamless response to various situations, including great zone situations, and gives serious consideration to the two most important strategic factors in the Asia Pacific, and that is the rise of China and the American rebalancing. The new defence programme, Guidelines, released along with the national security strategy needs to be located in this context. The new guidelines emphasise defence posture building in the southwest region and gives the priority to maritime and air capabilities, as well as capabilities to deploy and manoeuvre forces. The guidelines also say that the self-defence forces would develop an amphibious capability to deal with invasion of remote islands. As part of the national security strategy, the government also set out the new principle for the transfer of defence equipment and technology in place of the previous three principles and related guidelines on arms exports. The new policy allows the Japanese government agencies and private firms to develop and produce defence equipment jointly with the government agencies and private firms of Japanese allies and partners. The defence equipment agency, which will be established soon in October, will be responsible for defence equipment procurement and development, and as part of its job, it will start funding research in dual technology at state research institutions and universities, even though the funding scale is very, very small. The cabinet also decided to change the constitutional interpretation of Article 9 in October and submitted a set of national security bills to the parliament to allow Japan to exercise the right of collective self-defence under certain, though very, very limited, circumstances. The bills are now under debate in the parliament and it is hoped that the bills will be passed in a few months. New guidelines for defence cooperation were also agreed on between Japan and the United States in April this year. Originally formulated in the Cold War era to set the parameters for U.S.-Japan defence cooperation in case of military attack against Japan, it was last revised in 1997 after the end of the Cold War. Prime Minister Abe can claim credit for all these policy initiatives and decisions, but it is important to remember that some of the issues have been there for more than 25 years. For example, the constitutional interpretation of collective self-defence has been a recurrent issue, at least since the Gulf War in 1991, and some of the initiatives which led to Mr. Abe's decisions began to take shape under the Democratic Party of Japan administration. In retrospect, the government under the DPJ, though dismal I must say in its performance, turned out to be useful for defence policy. Because the party had none of the historical baggage that the Liberal Democratic Party had to deal with in its effort to change Japan's defence policy, DPJ allowed operational officials who played crucial roles in the policy making process in Japan to initiate new policy measures as long as they did not threaten party unity seriously. For instance, the security and defence panel, Mr. Hatoyama, the first DPJ Prime Minister established in 2010, submitted its report to Mr. Kan, the second DPJ Prime Minister, and this report already contained such ideas as proactive contribution to peace and dynamic defence force and the revamping of Japan's defence industry and technology strategy. Prime Minister Abe has also been active in visiting and meeting his counterparts all over the world, especially Japan's neighbours, but with this important exception of his two immediate neighbours, China and South Korea. He visited Vietnam, Thailand and Indonesia in January 2013, within a month after he came to power. He visited Myanmar in May, Singapore, Malaysia and the Philippines in July, Brunei in October and Laos and Cambodia in November 2013. He was the first Japanese Prime Minister who have visited all the ASEAN countries in one year. The Japan ASEAN Summit was held in Tokyo in December 2013. Mr. Abe visited India in January 2014, Australia, New Zealand and Papua New Guinea in July and Bangladesh and Sri Lanka in September 2014. So far, however, he has not met with Korean President Park formally. His meeting with President Xi Jinping in November last year was far from cordial, but it achieved its purpose. Both men agreed to establish a channel to deal with an emergency. Both men again met this April and apparently the second meeting sent a clear signal that senior Chinese officials of the government and party can now go ahead and undertake business with their Japanese counterparts. If we look at the countries Abe has visited, it is clear that there is a geographical focus and that this focus is a region stretching from the Pacific to the Indian Ocean. To put it differently, Abe is expanding the geopolitical arena for Japan's engagement from an Asia Pacific framework to an Indo-Pacific framework. He is also underlining the importance of political alignment, security cooperation and rule and norm making. In the speech, Mr. Abe was scheduled to give in Jakarta in January 2013, but was unable to because of a terrorist emergency. He had talked about his plan to build a network for security cooperation with Japan-U.S. alliance as a cornerstone. A network brought enough to ensure safety and security and prosperity from the Pacific to the Indian Ocean and strengthen ties with maritime Asia. In this context, he specifically mentioned Australia along with India with which he intended to strengthen relations and he underlined the position that Japan, Australia and India share in common along with Asia member countries, the United States and others, the common position that the seas, which are the most vital commons for all of us, should be governed by laws and rules and not by might. And finally, let us look briefly at Japan's foreign economic policy. Japan and Mr. Abe concluded the free trade agreement with Australia, decided to join the negotiation for KPP, Trans-Pacific Partnership, the basic agreement of which will be reached hopefully in the month or two now that the American Congress has given trade promotion authority to President Obama. And Japan has also began negotiations with the European Union for Japan-EU FTA. The government decided not to join the China-led Asia-infrastructure investment bank for now, but the huge demand for infrastructure funding in Asia for as well as the AIIB's long-term strategic implications are well understood. Mr. Abe announced that Japan would provide 110 billion American dollars to the Asia Development Bank for the development of quality infrastructure in Asia. The ADB governor also stated his willingness to cooperate with the AIIB and explore possibilities for co-financing with the blessing of the Japanese government. And it is not hard to note a few important threats running through all these policy initiatives and decisions. Japan, under Mr. Abe, is responding to President Obama's rebalancing, both in security policy and in foreign economy policy, by deepening and expanding the U.S.-Japan alliance. Japan, under Mr. Abe, is also aligning itself with its partners and building a network for security cooperation and in so doing is expanding its regional focus from the Asia-Pacific to the Indo-Pacific. It is widely understood that China cannot be contained because it is now fully integrated into the global and regional economy, but Japan, together with the United States and its allies and strategic partners, continue to hedge the risk of China's unilateral attempt to change the regional order by force while engaging China in the fields of multilateral norms and rule making as well as cooperation in areas of mutual benefits. Equally important are the kinds of policy challenges the government under Mr. Abe is responding to. We are well aware that the distribution of wealth and power is changing very fast. Globally, the G7 share in the global economy measured in current prices American dollar in the final two decades of the 20th century was 65 to 66 percent, but declined to 50 percent by 2010 and will be less than 45 percent in the coming few years. This owes a great deal to the rise of emerging economies such as China, but also India, Brazil, Mexico, Indonesia, Turkey and others. Regionally, the combined share of Europe and North America was about 60 percent in the final two decades of the 20th century, but declined to 51 percent in 2010 and will decline farther in the years to come. In contrast, the Asia-Pacific region is rising and in the Asia-Pacific power shift has already taken place. Japan had been the largest economy in the final two decades of the 20th century with a 14 to 15 percent share in the global economy. In 1990, Japanese economy was three times larger than the economies of China, India and ASEAN combined, and even in 2000, it was still twice as large as these economies combined. But this is no more. China, whose share in the global economy was less than 4 percent in the year 2000, rose to more than 9 percent in 2010 and is expected to reach 14, 15 percent in a few years, or roughly the share Japan achieved at its peak. By then, China's economy will be larger than all the economies of Japan, ASEAN and India combined. It is misleading and very wrong, I think, to foresee the future by extrapolation. For I, for one, have serious doubt whether China keep growing at 7 percent for the coming five to 10 years. There was a time when the Chinese economy was growing more than 10 percent a year while the United States and other advanced countries were in serious crisis. In those years, there were expectations that China would surpass the United States as the largest economy in the world. But I think those days are gone. The Chinese economy is now confronted with serious structural problems. Nonetheless, China over the last six, seven years has done quite a lot, insisting on its core interest vis-à-vis its neighbors and the United States becoming assertive in territorial and sovereignty issues, deploying economic cooperation as a foreign policy instrument, as if at the end of the day, anyone can be bought with money. Such actions make us wonder what it wants to achieve and what the China dream, President Xi Jinping, talks about really means. But it is a fact that the balance of power has changed radically over the last 25, 30 years, and Japan as well as other states, I think, are mapping out their strategies, at least in part, with the extrapolated future and the experience in the recent past in mind. And this perspective is useful to understand what kind of thinking informs the policies of the government under Mr. Abe. Despite Abe's reputation as a nationalist, and I'm sure he is a nationalist, the issue of generation also matters. Compared with the generation of Mr., for example, Aso, former prime minister and current deputy prime minister, or Mr. Fukuda, who was prime minister in 2007, 2008, Abe is 20 years younger than these people, and Mr. Abe is more progressive than they are in social and economic policy. And he understands that reactivating Japanese economy is the most crucial challenge. This is not the place to discuss abenomics. But let me just note that the TPP, together with Japan, EU, EFTA, are viewed by Abe government as part of the economic structural reform, along with deregulation in agriculture, medical services and labor. And it is well understood that globally, the time when industrialized advanced economies, including Japan, can readily spearhead initiatives to shape the liberal international trade system is passing with the rise of emerging economies. It is also well understood that global governance systems in such areas of development finance, international trade and investment, global warming and cyber security are either fast changing or in need of refashioning. Needed to say, Europeans have a quite different take on global security risks, while the ISIS and other radical Islamist challenges are part of their own internal security issue. And the Russian threat is real. China is not seen as a threat, but rather an opportunity for economic gains as demonstrated, I think, by the recent British decision followed by other European states to join the AIIB. This perception gap, however, may become smaller in the coming years, as China's share in the global economy keeps growing without an accompanying change in its position on many global governance issues. Regionally, the Japan-U.S. alliance remains the base for all security and foreign policy initiatives undertaken in Japan, both under DPJ after Hatoyama's plunder in handling the American base issue in Okinawa, and under LDP, Japan has been doing what it can to deepen and strengthen its alliance with the United States. The newly established NSC makes it easier to coordinate policy with the United States. The new U.S.-Japan defense cooperation guidelines and Japan's new national security laws will make it more effective to promote defense cooperation, not only for Japan's national security, but also for the peace and stability of this region. The TPP will strengthen and broaden the alliance farther, and the American commitment to the defense of Japan in the Senkaku Islands, as well as massive American support and assistance in the wake of the disaster and the nuclear power accident in the northeastern part of Japan in 2011 really enhanced public support and the credibility of the alliance. Admittedly, Mr. Abe's nationalist reputation, as well as his visit to Yasukuni Shrine in December 2013, dismayed many people, both Japanese and non-Japanese, including myself, and raised serious questions about whether Mr. Abe is a revisionist and how far he will go, not only in his views on Japan's imperil and wartime past, but also in his foreign policy. But his recent speech in the American Congress has eased this worry to some extent, and I have the sense that Mr. Abe as a nationalist, as a realist, is getting upper hand over Mr. Abe as a nationalist. I'm not in a position to say anything definite about his statement in August on the occasion of Japan's surrender, but judging from his speeches at the Australian Parliament last year, his speech in Indonesia on the occasion of the 60th anniversary of Asia Africa conference and his speech at the American Congress, I'm cautiously optimistic that he will be more realist than nationalist, and that he will most likely say what he's expected to, even if he may not use the same phrasing that Mr. Murayama and Mr. Koizumi used in 1995 and 2005. Japan also aims to support ASEAN unity and provide assistance for ASEAN integration. Japan has provided the major part of funding for ARIA, or the Economic Research Institute for ASEAN in East Asia, since its inception in 2008, and ARIA now serves as a think tank for the ASEAN Secretariat on issues of ASEAN economic integration. Japan has been active in economic cooperation that is providing ODA for infrastructure and human resource development and encouraging Japanese FDI. And because Japanese firms have doubts now about prospects for long-term investment in China, not only because of the political risk, but also, and more importantly, because of the rising labor cost and intellectual property issues and so on in China, they have turned to ASEAN countries. Indonesia and Thailand and more recently the Philippines have emerged along with India as the most prioritized investment destinations. At the same time, I should note that Japan's economic cooperation policy now has different political implications for mainland and maritime Southeast Asia. In view of China's initiatives in infrastructure development in mainland Southeast Asia, building highways and soon high-speed trains from Kuomint, the capital of Yunnan province down to Vietnam, Thailand, and Myanmar, Japan's economic cooperation in mainland Southeast Asia is geared toward building highways horizontally from east to west, providing support for trans-border production networks with Bangkok as a hub, thereby integrating even more deeply the mainland Southeast Asian economies into the global and regional economy. Japan actively promotes economic cooperation with maritime Southeast Asian countries, especially the Philippines and Indonesia. Japan has initiated security cooperation with maritime Southeast Asian countries and Vietnam and here Vietnam can be seen as at least in part as geopolitically maritime because of the little position in the South China Sea. After the Japan ASEAN summit in December 2013 in which Mr. Abe proposed defense cooperation, Japan ASEAN defense minister meeting was held in Myanmar in June last year for the first time with maritime security and non-traditional security as two major areas for cooperation. Japan has also expanded its cooperation in maritime safety, providing coast guard patrol ships to the Philippines, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Vietnam and creating programs for maritime security and safety capacity building. Here I should mention as an example the fact that GRIPS, the National Graduate Institute for Police Studies where I serve as president in partnership with Japan's coast guard will start a new English language MA program to train mid-career coast guard officials from four ASEAN countries and Japan. And Japan and Malaysia have also recently agreed to start negotiating a legal framework for the transfer of defense equipment and technology. It is hoped that this will serve as a template for Japan's cooperation with other ASEAN countries in the transfer of defense equipment and technology. The policy the government under Mr. Abe adopted on the transfer of defense equipment and technology has turned out to be a very useful in fact far more useful foreign policy instrument for promoting security cooperation with such countries as Australia, India and some European countries. The defense ministry is now designing the legal framework for the transfer of defense equipment and technology with Japan-Australia cooperation in mind designing the system for Japan-Australia collaboration project once this framework is agreed on. The implication I think is clear enough. The vast region encompassing both the Pacific and the Indian Ocean is now a de facto region. Major players in the Indo-Pacific region include Japan, the United States, China, ASEAN member states India and Australia. As the map will show, this greater region is structured with Japan, the Philippines, Indonesia and India along a horizontal axis and Indonesia and Australia on a vertical axis. To the north, this vast region includes China and the rest of ASEAN continent along the way to India in the southwest are situated I mean located such countries like Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Thailand, Myanmar and Bangladesh. What Prime Minister Abe has been doing is enhancing Japan-Batton partnerships with core countries in the Indo-Pacific region especially Australia and India as well as the Philippines and Indonesia. This does not mean that mainland Asia is not important. As I said earlier, Japan is promoting economic cooperation to make the region from Vietnam to Myanmar and Bangladesh open to the global and regional economy. But it is on the Indo-Pacific that Japan has staked its future and the imperative of maintaining the peace and stability of this region. Thank you very much. Professor, thank you very much for those remarks and I think you've left us with a lot to think about, a lot to talk about. We want you to stay here now because we have a discussion and some questions. Personally I took away from that a few very strong messages and I wasn't checking my phone, I was tweeting just in case I was distracting you in the front row. Your strong message about or your strong judgment that Mr Abe is proving to be more realist than nationalist, that is something I think many of us will watch very closely and take a great interest in and I'm sure there will be interest in that. Your view also about Abe and Japan's strategic thinking encompassing a wider Indo-Pacific conception of the region is something that resonates here and again we'll be watching with great interest and the challenges domestically in the security reform agenda you've been speaking about because if we read the headlines, if we read a lot of the media coverage we wonder whether that reform agenda is going to be as smooth or as consistent as perhaps official documents suggest. So I think you've left us with a lot to think about. I want to encourage and invite colleagues and friends in the audience to perhaps ask a question or make a comment. I'll please ask you to introduce yourselves and I guess if you do make a comment please follow it with a question. We'll begin with Lezik Kuzinski from the National Security College and we'll move from there. Please wait for the microphone. Listening to your remarks and your explanation of what is going on in Japan, I just wonder whether the Japanese public will actually support and accept those changes particularly in the national security area that you've mentioned in relation to those two bills that are being deliberated in the diet because I noticed that your Prime Minister, whom Japanese newspapers call Abe-chan, is under serious criticism. There is opposition against him. There have been demonstrations outside the diet and the further he goes in this direction the more he polarizes Japanese opinion. So far he's been riding on the crest of the wave in terms of abenomics and so forth but should the economic benefits of abenomics wear off in the future, he may face difficulties in the polls and some of these changes that you've referred to may be arrested if not reversed. Would you care to comment? Well, thank you very much. I mean, I would first say that it very much depends on which newspapers you read and then you get very different impressions. Especially Japan Watches abroad has a habit of reading Asahi newspaper, which is known to be very oppositional to any LDP government. But actually the Asahi newspaper has been losing its subscription quite radically. And actually it is Nihon Keisai Shimbun. It's a kind of Japanese version of Wall Street Journal. And Yomiuri, if we reach sort of right to the center or middle of the road newspaper are gaining actually subscriptions. So in that sense, I mean actually I would rather say that you have to be a bit cautious about which newspaper and especially if it is English language newspaper, Japan Times, this is almost, their tone is almost the same with communist newspaper. So actually, you know, I mean, it is very important. I mean, having said that, my reading of the Justin politics is now practically all the LDP politicians as well as opposition politicians are looking at the coming upper house election a year from now. And the political schedule is created with this election in mind. And my understanding is Mr. Abe wants to pass the security bills, hopefully in the coming two, three months before the current parliamentary session is over, before the end of September. And so that he has enough interval to go to the election. And hopefully by then economy is picking up so that he can go to the election in a position of strength. That is his calculation. And I don't think, I mean, LDP leadership wants to back down from this schedule especially on security bills because then it means Mr. Abe will lose a lot of momentum and that will be suicidal and therefore he will try his best and run through the bills. More actually tricky part is whether the economy picks up a year from now and that actually makes a lot of impact on the coming elections. And once he wins elections, hopefully he will use this capital to work on structural reform more than TPP. Already agriculture lobby is weakened but there are other lobbies. I mean, for example, labor market is very rigid and also the medical service sector is very rigid and very much protected. And this needs to be deregulated. And I know that Mr. Abe is very much aware of these problems but I think that only when he can win big in the coming elections he will address these issues. Thanks very much Takashi for an extremely careful and fulsome analysis of Japan's strategic position and the Abe government's response to the circumstances which Japan faces now and in the future. I'd like to go back to something you wrote in the book we launched here last week from Funabashi in your important contribution to that book. At the end of it you said that over the past few decades Japan's diplomacy had been framed too much through the prism of Japan and Asia rather than through the prism of Japan with Asia or within Asia. And I wonder in assessing where things are at now, what value add that reconception of Japanese diplomacy brings to the analysis? And how the Japanese government's response through that prism you would judge where the current government is at with respect to initiatives Japan can usefully take within Asia. And in particular are the particular initiatives that you would see that the Japanese government might pursue beyond those that you've described very carefully in your address. It's a tough question. Well I mean probably the biggest difference between Japan in the 1990s or 1980s, 1990s and Japan now is as I mentioned a major power shift. I mean Japan at the time was larger and Japanese economy was larger than all the rest of Asian economy is combined. And therefore Japanese thought I mean quite complacent thinking that Japan will be the big power in Asia and therefore they can run along with I mean together with Americans sort of quote unquote manage the region and they tried actually. But now no more. I mean China is a bigger player. China has more power and actually this is a big worry not only for Japan but also other countries. And so in a sense I mean we are very much aware that all the countries including Australia and Japan and us and countries actually maintain do a kind of very delicate balancing act because China is very important economically but security we are very much dependent with the United States and therefore we maintain the security alliance with the United States. So this delicate balance is in a sense the common denominator and that I think is making Mr. Abe act differently from former leaders because in a sense he's for the first time I mean acting like middle power prime minister rather than big power prime minister. And I think this is a new trend and this is going to going to stay. So in that sense I mean Japan in Asia is now a fact it is already accepted and politicians I mean leaders are acting on that. And I think I mean Japan-Australia relationship in a sense clearly shows this sort of changing the dynamics. Pete Van Ness A&U international relations. Thank you very much for such a comprehensive analysis of Mr. Abe's security policy all the way from collective self-defense export of military equipment TPP no AIIB and so forth. As someone who works on China it looks to me like an anti-China Indo-Pacific design. And presumably what you would say to us is that Australia ought to join in. And my question to you is do you really think Australia should join in and if so why? Well I mean I'm telling Japanese colleagues both in academia as well as in the government that distance matters. And I fully understand your perspective on China is different from ours even though we share a lot of interest together and also we share the common democratic values. And so in that sense you know I mean once in a while I use a word that Australia as Japan's de facto ally but at the same time I'm aware that some of Australians might be a bit nervous about the word. So I mean we are very much aware but at the same time we do whatever we can together. I mean that is actually my position. Be pragmatic. Colin Lyons is my name. I'm not an academic so I thought you might appreciate a question from an interested lay person from Canberra. You made fleeting reference to the tension between China and all its Asian neighbours over those disputed islands. Is there anything to prevent the Chinese military power and the threat that it poses to its neighbours? Sort of winning the day. Is it what will prevent them from getting their way in terms of what they build on those islands, what they extract from the ocean close to them and intimidating all their neighbours. I mean the United States is a long way away and it's got its own share of problems. I wish I know the answer. I don't think Chinese will stop for example building the airfield and militarising the place in the near future. And I don't think the Chinese are willing to negotiate for example the code of conduct with us and countries multilaterally and also negotiate territorial issues multilaterally. But at the same time what we have learnt over the last several years is that you have to be firm when you deal with Chinese. And when you stand firm you also need to have muscle. And that's the only way actually you need to negotiate and deal with Chinese. But at the same time I might be a bit too optimistic but I tend to see the current generation especially Xi Jinping as probably the most invoked-looking and nationalist product of cultural revolution and so on. But judging from my own encounters with younger party leaders in their 40s I mean at least they understand the language I mean English and they actually read some of the works abroad and they have at least they can imagine themselves in other people's perspective. So I mean I'm not entirely pessimistic about this but you know I would say the coming eight, nine years would be very tough dealing with Stonese. We'll take one more question from the audience. In a moment I want to ask a question of you if I may Professor which builds on your answer on China. A lot of us who've watched China, Japan relations, the maritime tensions in recent years have wondered where will this lead and as you know a few years ago there was a lot of alarm over the prospect of escalation. We seem to have seen things perhaps not cool down but reach a kind of an equilibrium for the time being. I noticed for example the in principle agreement to begin daughter-resume dialogue on confidence building measures late last year. Correct me if I'm wrong but I think the tempo of incidents and encounters it seems to have evened out or slowed down. I just wonder if you might comment on the prospects for managing the tensions. Let's assume that behaviours don't fundamentally change in the years ahead. How do you see these tensions being managed without escalation that none of us want? I mean first of all I would say that the major responsibility should be placed to Mr. Ishihara Shintaro former governor of Tokyo who in fact wanted to buy that island you know just to put the issue to the surface and then it was exploited. I mean it was seized, the Chinese seized that opportunity to make the point that it is their territory and then started sending ships to that territory of water. So in a sense you know it was partly because of Mr. Ishihara's mistake which invited this development. At the same time I think you know the Chinese probably expected to achieve too much and now finally they came to realize that they can't really get much beyond what they have established the fact that you know internationally people now understand this is disputed area even though Japanese government itself maintains that there is no international conflict. So that part you know in a sense Chinese gained a step on this issue. But at the same time Chinese worried also about an accident. I mean and that is exactly what Mr. Abe achieved in his talk with Mr. Chichin Pien last year. So I mean as far as I can tell the frequency of Chinese ships incurring into coming into that water has declined a little bit even though they regularly send ships even now. More important actually as I mentioned briefly about a week after Mr. Abe met with President Xi Jinping in Bandung in April this year. I mean Chinese party and government leaders started to come. I mean for example you know I mean our grips my university has an MOU with China's Central Party School and we didn't have any communication since 2012 until a week after Mr. Abe met with Xi Jinping and the letter came I mean the letter which I received was written in English. The first sentence said we have been waiting for this moment for a long time. So you can already see you know I mean actually there are a lot of impact sort of expectations that they still need to engage Japanese and we are doing that. So I think you know the vast is over but at the same time we have to be very cautious because you know I mean they always play the game step by step. But what you say implies a complexity in China's position in the different agencies in China that perhaps provide something to work with. Thank you Professor. There was a question in the front here. In the middle I'm sorry please. Andrew McBride I'm a former master's student of the National Security College. I've noticed you've spoken very little about the Japan and Korea relationship apart from your comments about not meeting with Prime President Park. Would you think Japan might move to making some kind of radical gesture like some paper I can't remember who published it suggested giving up say Takashima the claim on Takashima as a step towards resolving the dispute with Korea and of course there's a comfort women issue. I'd just like your thoughts on that. I think you know I mean the relationship is far more complex than Takashima or whatever. And I'm quite cosmetic about the relationship especially and the President Park because in a sense the basic framework for Japan-Korea relationship now in place is partly a product of her father and therefore she cannot afford to be soft on Japan. She has to be very tough and otherwise you know I mean already she has full of problems domestically and therefore in a sense Japan is the easy target I would say the easiest target to mobilize popular support in Korea. So I'm not optimistic at all about this. But at the same time if you look at the operational level lots of things are going on and therefore in a sense I mean as long as all these issues can be taken care of at the operational level we don't have any problem. Only when we go to the political level we have problems. Greg Jarosch national security college student. Does Russia pose any serious regional security concerns or bilateral opportunities for Japan down into the future. It seems there's very little it said about the Russian neighbor. Well I'm reasonably sure that Mr. Abe has different opinion about this from me because he is in fact keen on engaging Russians especially Mr. Putin. But at the same time if you look at the Russian behavior over the last say 20 years 25 years you can tell they are not you cannot trust them and the way they engage Japan is very opportunistic and therefore you can't really do any serious negotiations with them. That is actually my understanding. That's a very direct answer. I was waiting for the next bit. The lady over here on the on the right. Thank you very much for that very interesting talks that when we talk about the Indo-Pacific which is very very predominant in Australia now we're getting predominant. But you mentioned quite a lot of Asia but it actually reaches also to the Middle East. And I wonder what kind of implication you think about you know talking about the Indo-Pacific particularly that the issues of the Middle East for Japan. Well I mean actually Middle East I must say is very tough place to figure out. And I mean of course Middle East is crucial for Japan's energy supply. And this remains so for quite some time. At the same time actually it's a good news that Americans are now producing oil and shale oil will be exported to Japan. So at least you know it will lighten some sort of security worry about Middle East. But at the same time I mean frankly I don't know I mean ISIS definitely is an issue in Japan too. And also sea lanes are important. But at the same time I mean in a sense we actually think that Americans will stay as a kind of maritime power for many years. And in a sense Japan's sort of security policy to reach the Middle East is predicated on that assumption that Americans will stay. PhD student from Strategic and Defense Study Center. Thank you for insightful remarks on Japan's security policy. I have two quick questions. One on the our base international economic or trade policy. You emphasize that the TPP is one of the priorities of Japan but Japan is also a party of another free trade arrangement in Asia. The regional economic comprehensive partnership and the negotiation is going on with 10 ASEAN member states along with China in the Australian New Zealand. So my question is what is the position of Japan on the regional economic comprehensive economic partnership. The second question is related to the evolving regional architecture security architecture in the Asia Pacific. Because since 2009 there have been ideas and initiatives on what should be the core of regional security architecture in the Asia Pacific region. For instance the former prime minister of Australia Kevin Rod proposed the Asia Pacific community and your former prime minister Yukio Hatoyama proposed the East Asia community. So what is the current position of Japan on the core of regional security architecture of Asia Pacific. Is it bilateral security alliances should be the core or ASEAN security arrangements such as the East Asia submit all the ADMM plus should be the core of the security architecture. Thank you. Well first of all about economic cooperation I mean the FDA. Certainly the current government is putting a lot of emphasis on TPP and second I would say on Japan EU FDA. I'll say I mean trade people wants to have ASEP because it is really good for Japanese transnational production change. But at the same time they are very much aware that for example Malaysia is not that eager as far as we can see to conclude the basic agreement on ASEP and India is not really you know I mean cooperating with us and so I mean in a sense I would say rather pessimistic about ASEP. And also we are doing Japan China Korea FDA but this is not going to anywhere. So this is a trade front. The security front well I mean people talk about East Asia Summit East Asia Summit and ASEAN plus processes as very important and I wouldn't deny the importance at the same time. If you really ask you know what is the core security policy. I mean most important security framework for Japan. It is Japan US Security Alliance and try to network I mean establish networking with Australia India some of the ASEAN countries and so on. That is the most important. I mean of course you know I mean you can talk you can talk a lot about East Asia Summit as well as you know ASEAN plus defense meetings and so on. But these are more sort of confidence building and so on and not really real security cooperation. Terry Henderson I'm a member of the general public. When you took Mr. Abe on a tour of Asia I don't recall you mentioning North Korea. I'm sure North Korea gets noticed in Japan as one of its more noticeable neighbors. What is the security outlook of Japan towards North Korea. I mean certainly we're worried about the developing missiles and nuclear weapons and also in Japan the Japanese kidnapped by North Korean government longer on the go is a major issue. And North Korean government under the current Kim leadership in fact you know sort of started to talk with Japanese government under Abe hinting that they want. I mean they may deliver something new to the government and so I think Mr. Abe was interested and started to talk with them. But so far we haven't got anything from North Koreans as usual and you know I mean probably the expectation is now very low. So you know I mean I briefly said that I don't think we can really trust Russians to negotiate. But you know the expectation or trust in North Koreans is far far lower. Vafik Zavi from Prime Minister and Cabinet. I'm from the cyber policy branch so you only very briefly mentioned cyber security and I was wondering if you wanted to add any remarks about Japan's role particularly in promoting norms and confidence building measures in Asia. Well actually cyber security is very important but at the same time in the sense you know I mean the entire cyber space is almost like anarchy and we really need to create a kind of regime to police this space. And recently I submitted a report to the Foreign Minister for Affairs about the need for what we call science diplomacy and basically encouraged the Minister of Foreign Affairs Mr. Kishida to sort of experimentally appoint a science advisor and then raise some science related questions to the G7 summit meeting this coming year. And one issue I suggested is how to create and start talking about regime creation of cyber space. I mean we are actually being attacked by who we don't know. And we are actually increasing the budget and hiring more people but at the same time this is I don't know I mean whether I mean how you are dealing with this issue but in Japan those real experts in cyber security are in short supply and whenever there are good ones they are always head hunted not just by Japanese private sector but by the American private government business people and therefore we are always losing really good ones. And so actually this is really tough issue. But certainly this is really important. Thanks Professor and I think you've illuminated one of the problems that we have in this country as well. In terms of in terms of recruitment and retention of the people we need in cyber security. Before we conclude I just wanted to ask one or two I guess final questions. One on a topic that hasn't had much airing today but which the chancellor of this university Garrett Evans would not forgive me for asking you for not asking you. So I'm going to ask you for some views on where Japan currently stands on the range of nuclear nonproliferation and arms control issues both from a Japanese perspective and as a partner in the international international system. Well I mean of course you know I mean Japan is a large Japanese public is a large not just nuclear weapons but also nuclear power plant these days and therefore I don't think there is not much an issue for Japanese government as well as public to maintain the current regime and you know if necessary strengthen it. But on nuclear arms control on the nonproliferation treaty. I think you know I mean I think you know I mean I'm not really following that issue very closely and therefore probably you know more more more here but my sense is actually there is not much debate going on on this issue and probably for ever the government especially the Ministry of Foreign Affairs decide will be accepted by the public. Thank you Professor that and that issue has gone a bit quiet I think a much of the international debate but of course these things change. The last thing I wanted to ask you about was to build on the earlier point about regional architecture and to ask you about a few of the few of the initiatives in developing mini-lateral security arrangements small numbers of countries cooperating quite closely. The Australia, Japan, United States trilateral arrangement is often held up as the most effective of these. There's been debate about whether there should be other arrangements a quadrilateral arrangement within Indian others. I'm wondering if you have some views on. Well I mean actually for now we are doing three sort of this small mini multilateral engagement with Korea and with India and with Australia and but always Japan, US but this time I understand that there is something going on between Japan, Australia and India and this is a good sort of you know I mean step forward and I would love to see more actually initiative of this kind not just with India but other countries in this region. Thank you. Thank you Professor I think that's certainly an interesting area area to watch. I know that the Australia, Japan foundations brought you in here for a flying visit for your lecture tonight and other engagements are out around town and they've given you a very long day which I think is in the interest of the Australian taxpayer. I'm really excited that we hosted you here at the National Security College this evening. I want to thank again the Australia, Japan Foundation for bringing you here and for being our partner in this public policy engagement event and Professor I think I want to invite now the audience to show their appreciation for your time and remarks. Thank you very much.
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Leveraging AI to Enhance Developer Productivity & Confidence by Avishkar Gupta & Dipanjan Sarkar
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A major approach to the application of AI is leveraging it to create a safer world around us, as well as that of helping people make choices. With the open source revolution having taken the world by a storm and developers relying on various upstream third party dependencies (too many to chose from!: http://www.modulecounts.com/) to develop applications moving petabytes of sensitive data and mission critical code that can lead to disastrous failures, it is required now more than ever to build better developer tooling to help developers make safer, better choices in terms of their dependencies as well as providing them with more insights around the code they are using.
Though we are data scientists, at heart we are also developers building intelligent systems powered by AI. We, the Redhat developer group through our 'Dependency Analytics' platform and extension, seeks to do the same. We call this, 'AI-based insights for developers by developers'! In this session we would be going into the details of the deep learning models we have implemented and deployed to solve two major problems:
Dependency Recommendations: Recommend dependencies to a user for their specific application stack by trying to guess their intent as well as an overview of how we maintain and manage these production AI systems.
Pro-active Security and Vulnerability Analysis: We would also touch upon how our platform aims to make developer applications safer by way of CVE (Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures) analyses and the experimental deep learning models we have built to proactively identify potential vulnerabilities. This shall be followed by a short architectural overview of the entire platform.
If we have enough time, we intend to showcase some sample code as a part of a tutorial of how we built these deep learning models and do a walkthrough of the same!
More details: https://confengine.com/odsc-india-2019/proposal/10042
Conference Link: https://india.odsc.com
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[
"ODSC",
"ODSC India",
"Data Science",
"AI",
"Machine Learning",
"Deep Learning"
] | 2019-08-24T08:19:52 | 2024-02-05T20:57:08 | 2,704 |
zQhf-PYD-rw
|
staying so late for our talk. So we are going to show some interesting use cases we are solving at Red Hat. And this is basically how we are leveraging AI, or rather deep learning, to enhance developer productivity and confidence, because that is one of our key themes or key goals. And slides and code are available. You can check it out on GitHub. And basically, we are from the Red Hat Developer Tools team. And I'll let my co-speaker introduce himself before I get started. So yeah, I'm also a data scientist working in the Red Hat Developer Tools analytics team. And we'll cover two interesting use cases here. The overall thing is we'll cover what is this dependency landscape all about key objectives, business significance. And we'll talk about our deep learning models, what we are using. We'll try to go through some hands-on code so that you can see the kind of architecture we are using, kind of outputs we are getting. And we'll talk about the current results we have got and what are the next steps for us. So the main thing here is everyone here is a developer, at least. Even if you're a data scientist, you are building or developing models, or you have been a developer, let's say, at some point in your life. And the thing is we don't code everything from scratch. We don't code neural network models from scratch. We leverage reusable components or libraries. And that's the thing about dependencies. They are all these open source frameworks out there where people have kind of worked hard on building these frameworks and making all these cool features available for us, which we can integrate our own applications, let's say enterprise applications, and then build these applications with ease so that we don't reinvent the wheel. And these are examples of dependencies like leveraging Google Cloud, deep learning, and so on. Now, if you look at the dependency landscape, there are so many options out there. With every year, as we go into the next year, from the previous year, these number of dependencies are kind of exponentially increasing. The Node.js ecosystem is kind of the most popular one out there with JavaScript dependencies increasing exponentially, as you can see. And then you have Maven, which is the Java-based ecosystem. So all these dependencies are increasing exponentially, which means more and more better features, more and more better libraries are being available to us. But it's also hard to do the due diligence of whether our code is secure, our code is safe, and so on, right? Because we are not the ones who are writing these libraries. We are the ones consuming them. So this is a case study on proactive security and vulnerability dependency analytics. And what is the security landscape like? So the security landscape, to understand that, we need to understand, what are these vulnerabilities? Because even I am not from a security domain, to be honest, my domain is data science, right? But I'm working in this kind of a problem right now. And a lot of you may not be, let's say, security savvy. So what are security vulnerabilities? They are basically bugs in source code, so that, let's say, malicious hackers or attackers can kind of exploit your system and gain access, right? Unauthorized access. So commonly, they are termed as CVs, known as common vulnerabilities and exposures. And there is actually an online database maintained by the US government, known as NVD, National Vulnerability Database, where all the CVs are listed for each and every ecosystem. Like if you search for a TensorFlow, you will find that there is a CV ID because of some kind of malicious code which could be exploited, because of some bug in the code, some attacker could get in and exploit it. Similarly for different third-party libraries, which you guys are using, let's say, day in and day out, there could be potential vulnerabilities. And the ideas we don't want these to affect our enterprise applications, right? Because if it's a personal project, great, but if people are consuming our enterprise applications and these kind of vulnerabilities are there, it becomes a problem. And if you see these trends over the period of the last few years, with regard to all the major ecosystems around Maven, NPM, and Python, the number of security vulnerabilities are also increasing because the number of dependencies are also increasing. And there was like a 43% increase in vulnerabilities in 2017 and a 33% increase in 2018. And the idea here is, unfortunately, we are working a lot on the Golang ecosystem, which is this one, right? So the number of public vulnerabilities are often missed because if people don't find out about a vulnerability and they don't disclose it publicly, it will never be published as a CVE, right? So that is becoming difficult for more complex ecosystems like Golang because it's not as straightforward as the other ecosystems. And this is the reason only 10% of maintainers or let's say people who build these repositories or dependencies file a CVE publicly. And because these vulnerabilities are not disclosed as CVEs, what happens is if you are using these dependencies where a vulnerability exists, but these are not reported, there is a real risk, right? Because people can hack your code and they can just one of the most common vulnerabilities you all may have heard about is the SQL injection attacks, right? So similarly, there are so many other types of vulnerabilities which can really affect all your applications. And one of the other key limitations of the existing vulnerability analytics is that the time elapsed when a vulnerability, let's say exists versus when it's disclosed, it's like huge. So between that time, a lot of damage can be done to your own enterprise. So what are the key objectives for us here? So we focus on Red Hat products and trying to keep them safe and secure, that is our go-to thing to kind of focus on. So Red Hat has this product called OpenShift which uses all the goodness from Kubernetes. And what you can do here is you can build your applications, you can deploy them and monitor, maintain, and scale them at ease, right? Because it uses the power of Kubernetes. Hence, our focus is on the Golang, Kubernetes and OpenShift ecosystem. That's like a total of almost 850 plus direct and transitive dependencies. And if you kind of keep a pulse on the security news, you may have seen recently that almost a four month audit was done on the entire Kubernetes stack and 34 vulnerabilities recently cropped up. So that's like all these days people are using this and there were 34 serious vulnerabilities which could be exploited anytime. So that's the thing here, we want to kind of find these vulnerabilities proactively even before they are publicly disclosed so that we can integrate these findings into the developer processes and potentially engage with the developer community out there to improve our models. So our key objectives, what did we do here? How did we solve this problem? We potentially built these deep learning models based on past historical data where we knew that some vulnerabilities happened versus when they didn't happen, let's say, depending on that kind of data. We'll talk about what is the data shortly. And what we are doing is we are kind of monitoring all these regular public activity going on in all these 850 plus repositories and dependencies like let's say GitHub events around issues, pull requests, mailing list conversations, bugs being filed online, all those aspects. And using that public information, we are trying to predict probable vulnerabilities that based on this kind of activity, maybe there is a probable vulnerability in, let's say, Golang or let's say in Kubernetes. And obviously we have to validate with the security experts because we are not security experts, right? So coming to the business significance, I already covered this, right? So let's say when a vulnerability is already present and by the time the fix comes out, the median time to potentially fix and put it out and publicly disclose it or maybe sometimes they silently just fix it, right? It's like close to 886 days. So this is like really bad. A lot of damage can be done in like two years, right? And how we are leveraging our models to work is we are tapping into the public data because most of the time you will see that, let's say I'm a maintainer of the request package in Python. I will have so many other things to do, but all these millions of people who are using my request library, they will know that if there is some kind of a bug or something is there, right? Because they are using it day in and day out. So often publicly people will open issues or file pull requests or basically talk about bugs in mailing list conversations and so on. So we are kind of trying to tap into this data and also let's say people are doing code reviews and other aspects. So we are trying to tap into all these public events and conversations around all these dependencies and feeding that to our models to make these predictions. So to summarize the business significance is basically Golang ecosystem is quite complex and as you know you use PyPy or Konda for package management in Python. Similarly Java as Maven and in Node.js we have NPM. In Go you have some kind of ecosystems of package management, but they are not as mature as all these ecosystems and NVD feed for public CVs is incomplete. A significant number of vulnerabilities only get initiated after an issue or PR is filed. So people will not report these publicly a lot. You saw that graph right at the bottom right. Golang is like the least as compared to the other ecosystems and we talked about the time lag of issue being reported versus publicly being filed. So what is the architecture we are using for our vulnerability detection? We focus on the OpenShift source code base which is around 850 plus repositories or dependencies let's say. And we tap into all this. We pull in GitHub events around issues, pull requests commits, we pull in things around mailing list conversations, bugzilla, bugs being filed and so on. And we will have an events collector which pulls in all this data and we'll store it in a data store. And now what happens is we have built some deep learning models let's say on historical data of past vulnerabilities which were found versus regular issues, pull requests, mailing list conversations and so on. And what happens is all these new issues, pull requests which are being filed, it goes through our first deep learning model. This is a bi-directional gated recurrent unit deep learning model with attention, seems to work pretty well on text data because we are parsing all the text descriptions with regard to issues, pull requests, commits, conversations. So these are all natural language data. So this is basically a deep learning on NLP problem. And then what happens is we are using our first model to go through all the source data and find out what are potentially documents in our case events around pull request issues and so on. What are potentially related to the security domain because people will file issues about other things also, right? Like some feature is not working, something else. So what are potentially related to security that is what we first focus on in our first model. So it's like a binary classifier, right? Security versus non-security. We filter out all the non-security data and then we pass in only security relevant events into our next model, which focuses on out of all these security related issues, what could probably lead to a vulnerability. So every security issue or whatever, commit or pull request or conversation being filed is not always leading to a vulnerability. Something could be like, okay, I'm putting in a security feature request or maybe I need to change my authorization technique. So everything is not about a vulnerability. So the second model is very tough to focus on because it's all related to security, but some are a subset of it, which is vulnerability related. So our second model tries to take in all the security data and say what is potentially a vulnerability. And then basically our final predictions go to the security team, they validate it, find out the false positives. Obviously there will be false positives, right? I mean, this is a tough problem. And then we will feed it back to our models after doing a triaging and then retrain our model. So that is the pipeline we are following. And to summarize, regularly monitoring 850 plus repositories, extracting all the public data, filtering out security issues, using the filtered data to predict events which are about probable vulnerabilities and then triaging and improving our models. So deep learning model architecture, like I mentioned, using pre-trained models for, well, let's say pre-trained embeddings, not pre-trained models, we are going into that in the future. Using a stacked two-layer bi-directional GRU deep learning model, feeding in the GRU hidden states to a global attention layer and your regular fully connected dense layers to make the final prediction. So with regard to embedding layer, I think almost everyone here knows about embeddings. You have your text data, you map it to some numbers and you start with some random initialization of weights for each word. And then with back propagation, you try to improve all the embeddings. But we are not filling it with random weights. We are initializing with pre-trained embeddings. Many of you may have already used, like Glove, Fast Text, Word2Vec, and so on. For us, it performed better than random initialization. So first we did random initialization, then we did it, it performed better for us. And GRU is basically similar to an LSTM or an RNN model. So instead of the forget and the input gate for an LSTM, it uses a reset gate and an update gate basically. And what happens here is the update gate acts similar to the forget and input gate of the LSTM. It will decide what information to throw away also and what new information to add. And reset gate basically kind of focuses on what kind of past information should be retained. And it takes fewer tensor operations, dot products, and speedier to train than LSTMs. So what's the need for bidirectional GRUs? We could have used just GRUs. So the reason of this is to get better context. If you see these two sentences, if you go for the first three words, here it means beers, but here it actually means that it's the precedent. So what if we go from front to back and also back to front? So I talked about this yesterday in my NLP workshop. The idea here is if you can put two LSTMs or two GRUs, one trains from front to back and back to front, concatenate the final hidden states, they will be able to preserve much better contextual information than just going from front to back. And what we do here is, instead of sending out the last hidden state from the GRU, which typically happens, like in this case, let's say I have four GRUs, typically you will have the input going, the next hidden state goes into the next one and so on, and the final hidden state goes to a dense layer and you make the prediction. So instead of that, I take all my hidden states and I put it through a global attention model and then I get a context vector which helps me focus on all these weights where if this is higher, maybe this word is more important. So that kind of an aspect. So we use an attention model where instead of using the output from the last GRU cell, we send the entire sequence of hidden states to the global attention layer and then we get a final context vector which is a weighted average given by alpha into the hidden states. These hidden states, there are T time steps. In our case, instead of a time step, it's basically the words, right, sequence of words because we are parsing descriptions, conversations and so on. So there are just three simple equations here. The weights and biases are randomly initialized, obviously, for the attention model with back propagation, it improves. For each time step or each sequence of the hidden state, you apply a nonlinearity after this regular neuron equation, right, WX plus B. Do a soft max to squeeze it between zero to one and these alpha values kind of say which hidden state is more important so that the model can attend to those words knowing that if these words are occurring, this is the outcome. That's it. And other models under development, we are definitely focusing on BERT right now. There are some nice results we have got, but it's still in experimental stage, hence we are not sharing it yet, but there seems to be some promise with the transformer-based architectures. And hands-on tutorial, we'll go through the code briefly before I move on to the final results which we obtained. So this code is available in our GitHub. All our code which we work on is even open sourced. You can even check that out later or feel free to reach out to us. We are even looking for people who can contribute and improve it over time. So we load the necessary dependencies here around TensorFlow and text preprocessing and so on. Obviously, I'm not sharing the data here because it's huge. We are dumping it day in and day out. We load the events data from GitHub around issues, pull requests, commits and so on. All of this is text-based data. We do some text preprocessing here, trying to preprocess all the documents. And then as you can see here, our data is highly imbalanced. So this was last three years worth of data for Golang, it's much less. So we have around 22.5k potential issues, pull requests and so on, which are non-security related and only 671 which are, sorry, all of these are security related. 22.5k are non-CV related and 671 are CV or vulnerability related. So huge class imbalance. What we do is we do a regular train test played and we take in our pre-trained word embeddings by loading, first we create the word sequences with a regular tokenizer, create a length of 1000 sequences, pad it as needed, like you do in regular text processing for deep learning. And then what we do is we load our pre-trained embeddings here. We focus on the fast text, paragraph and glove-based embeddings. And what we do here is we, I think here we used fast text and paragraph. So we load these 300 dimension, two million pre-trained vectors, right? And we get the vectors for our words and we average the embeddings. So we fill our embedding layer with these pre-trained embeddings. This kind of code is anyway available even online, like you don't even need to refer to this if you have used pre-trained embeddings. So just populate our embedding matrix with these pre-trained weights. And like I said, instead of using just the last hidden state from the GRU layer, you focus on putting all the hidden states to the attention model. So this is the attention layer and just briefly covering this. Eij is basically for each hidden step here. You are computing the Wx plus B. Alpha is the softmax, but before the softmax, you do a tanh as you can see here, right? So those three equations is all that is happening here. And then you do a tanx by taking an exponent and then dividing it by sum of all the exponents. And hence you get the context factor after that. So just simple math at the end of the day and using this attention layer, plug it into the bidirectional GRU. So two layer stacked GRU, plug it to the attention layer, regular dense layers, model is done, right? So using this model, we kind of build it on 75% data and tested on 25% test data. So as you can see here, this is great, right? 99% precision we call F1 score, but that's not really of our interest. Our interest is this because we want to catch all the vulnerabilities. So as you can see here, out of around 158 potential vulnerabilities, we were able to predict around 109 of them. So got a recall of close to 70%. So that is a nice baseline which we got. Obviously we tried other models, machine learning didn't work at all. And this is basically our model architecture, right? Which we are currently using day in and day out. And briefly to wrap it up, current results, data set was focused on GitHub events data for last three years, our input data on which our models were trained and evaluated. As you saw, it was highly imbalanced, only 650 plus vulnerabilities. And these were our results, as you can see 70% recall of probable vulnerabilities identified. So this kind of brings me to the end of our use case. And the next steps like I said, working on transformer models, doing weekly scans, improving our models and definitely engaging with the community maybe if you can provide us with better models and improve it for everyone. So now we'll move on to the second use case. Okay, thanks for that. So the second use case that I'm going to talk about as the partner mentioned is previous use case around security, we are trying more on the high-risk and radar products. So this use case that we targeted the more public facing use case, I would say. And definitely the more notorious use case in its potential to kind of change the world and the way we can do that work. So this is the level productivity of the product of the informant. So I'll briefly explain the use case over here. So if you remember the opening slides of this particular presentation, you would remember that we talked about how developers at this point of time nobody got everything but themselves, right? So then how do, what does the developer work through technically look like right now? So a developer who's writing, we'll just minimize it, just go to that one. That's okay, just click on this one. Yeah, so a developer who's writing any kind of application right now, the way a typical development process starts is you have some particular objective in mind. And these are not particular objective, some dependency that you have built. So let's say you're building a machine and you already know that, okay, I have to do the recommendation system. Densis flow is going on, you're using Psy to do it, there's another thing I would be using, Psy can use for all kinds of stuff because a couple of these components depend on this particular thing. So then our idea is that, okay, now the next thing that comes in this process is that the developer typically wants to add and work in just their application, right? So at the end of the day, maybe the next thing that you want to do is you want to plot your charts. You want to plot your charts, the data in your chart should look up. So these are two okay requirements. So what would you typically do? You would go to Google, you would search a bunch of different things, you'll add some dependency, you will know, okay, what is you doing, should I use it, should I not use this? So that is the entire parameter right here. So we've tried to build a recommendation system that actually tries to understand your intention and also based on the stats, give you the best recommendation on which component you should be using. So in this case, the best component would be MATC and C0. All of them use that. MATC, I would say, I understood the chart value of five and C0 makes the chart look better than I did. So those are the two things here. So, initially the audience that you need to solve this problem when we are in RTO CQS. So, we are beginning with a very small set of data, I would say. So, we started with your to do the probabilistic tracking model based in process and stuff. If you know anything about PGM, you know that everything in PGM rather inference, the posterior, every single node is recalculated. So, that means the inference times are actually higher than your trading times. And as the size of your data increases, basically the recommendation times will increase because the number of nodes in your PGM will increase, the number of procedures you have to calculate increases. So, it wasn't really working out. So, if you work with hosted services, you know there is something called an SLA and something called an SLO. So, if you take a few seconds for a single recommendation, you are needing a SLA or an SLO. So, everything lands on your hands. So, then what did you do? So, if you remember the graph that we showed you at the beginning, MDM was the one that was the fastest growing ecosystem right now with showing exponential growth compared to everybody else. So, we thought okay, let's try and give out a problem first. Now, when it happens with something of this scale, right, 700,000 dependencies, I think there's 100,000 to 200,000 dependencies uploaded on there every day. Then, you are dealing with a very large scale. So, depending on what you do with this period, there are around 650,000 packages over there. A package is nothing but a dependency force. Data back 700,000 stacks for MDM. So, this size of the data was actually both a challenge and an opportunity. In that, this was really, really rich data. All of the packages that are available on the MDM registry, they have really rich meta-tiles associated with them. So, based on those tags, you can kind of figure out what this package does. So, that's what I was thinking, and that taught us exploring different recommendation techniques. So, the one that we did for a minute, the original research of this is from Hong Kong University by a client, Jovain Lee. We link to that in the resources, and you can read it further. But, of course, the model related to R, if you want it, which is what I'm talking about. So, the biggest change that you have to do was that, how do we actually use this for our use, right? So, this is exactly what you're seeing right here. So, I'm going to go with the system itself. So, the system is actually a combination of a variation auto-enforter with a probabilistic matrix factorization element to it. So, if you talk about probabilistic matrix factorization or any kind of matrix factorization in general, it's a purely collaborative approach. A collaborative approach means you're not taking any kind of ideal similarity into consideration. So, when you're not taking any ideal similarity into consideration, what is the point of having all of that differentiator coming in from MPM? So, for a high-precision approach, what this model is thinking we're doing is that, we build our capillary out of all of the tags that we have got from the MPM registry, and any dependency that we get, we have a way to encode it using that capillary to form this expectation. So, in this x-sector, we actually get the latent space and the dates for this. Using those latent space and the dates, we actually train our probabilistic, no, sorry, probabilistic matrix factorization model. Once we go through the code, this will be much more clear. Right, so, the x-sector representation are not an assumption. I'll do this model assumption. So, what is that assumption about? So, let's say it's a dependency, right? And it depends on number i and let's say tensor p. So, the assumption was that any dependency from the registry today for any kind of ecosystem, it will do either the things that it itself advertises that it does or maybe some additional functionality that would come in by way of its own dependence. So, let's say there's tensor flow and also a numpy algorithm dependent. So, tensor flow doesn't explicitly, let's say, appetite is added also to the linear algebra. But of course, if it's dependent on numpy, this kind of problem is that they are generally exposed. So, linear algebra would also be one of the things that would be exposed to tensor flow. So, based on that, and I'll look at it, if we form a representation, that's not technically a one-on representation. It's an encoding that we did with the algorithm to get into our recommended system to actually reprain the neural network that you are using. And now the next thing in this step was that, okay, what do you consider a user? So, if I'm a user who uses tensor flow to build a learning application, if I'm building front-end application tomorrow, tensor flow isn't building the correct algorithm. It is important. So, what we actually had to do was, every single stack that we get into our platform today we consider that a different user. Because every stack is unique in terms of it being ADQ. So, before we go to the architecture and how we kind of run and process, this kind of gives you a complete summary of thinking behind this project. So, we have the topics and the keywords from MDM days coming in, the tags, the bridge metadata that I'm starting with. The rest of the particles first, the items that need to be tagged. So, the items that actually need to be evaluated. You do the encoding of the tags and you feed that to the variation of the encoder to get the intermediate representation. So, of course, once you train the variation of the encoder if you are aware, you get a mean and variance parameter based on which you have to draw from a distribution. That distribution, once you draw from it, you actually get the intermediate representation. You use that along with the methods where we're getting into actually training for a basic method factorization model. This, in turn, makes it from a pure collaborative approach to a more hybrid approach, where the items in RIT are considered as well as the user-active data. And, of course, when you train model, it is very useful. So, I'll very quickly go over the training architecture for this thing. So, if you talk about the training architecture, we use a combination of Amazon Web Services and OpenShift, of course, to do the training. So, in terms of the Amazon Web Services component, we use the SCF course to store our data. We use Amazon's elastic map reduce because we need a lot of compute in the market at certain times. And, basically, what happens is that all of the data we have, I'll come to the system, complete platform, marketing, PRTA, but all of the data that lands on the S3 is loaded to AMR. We go through this step, which is, of course, training the variation of important, training the collaborative method factorization piece, and, of course, it gets stored back to EBS which is connected to the AMR test, and we load it back to S3. And, once it's in S3, then it's a native OpenShift, which is, of course, Kubernetes-contained as on the online app. So, those are the scaling bits of this presentation, and those also we'll talk about later. So, the user is actually the power of Kubernetes that is stored back. So, this is one of the sample recommendations that we talk about before we talk about devaluation, of course. So, another big JavaScript app Express is a very popular JavaScript framework, a means tag I think it's called. Mongoose is supposed to be an adapter that ready with MongoDB and stuff. So, just a scientific recommendation, MongoDB is coming out as one of the recommendations. And, of course, the actual evaluation that we do. So, we go through 29,000 different things when we're in the actual experiment, and around 50,000 stack. So, 50,000 stacks is 50,000 different users for us, 40,000 different user items, and 29,000 items to record. And, of course, in the case of recommendation, the recall is one of the best methods to calculate. So, number of items that you're recommending correctly. So, we did the recall calculation at 350. And, to set up a baseline for this particular work, we used the baseline that's from the original research as well, which is to actually train the order of order and start the order of order pattern, which is also the training step for our particular model. And, again, of course, the previous attempts using the PGMs and everything, what kind of recall to get. So, on those methods, the recall was 0.5, which I'm going to have to say. Let's pretend here. Of course, I've run it down, but that's, of course, where you would not go. And, the recall at 350, that's also 0.51, which is a 51% rate. This is good. Our main concerns, of course, are related to our SLA as it goes, right? So, if you can come down from these seconds for every recommendation to 300 milliseconds for every recommendation, you are in a good place, and you are looking at yourselves. And, of course, because of the different aspects of this and the major factor in the aspects of this, we recommend taking time to really increase the size of the data, which actually enables us to build really great patterns for this data. At the very time, we of course, because we use Amazon, we have access to all of the data and the data and the technology. So, it's only about two hours. And, if you go to instances, there's a lag in the P&R process. Now, it's a much faster process. Let's take a look at the model. Right. I hope the control results look great. No? So, of course, let's explore our data a bit first before doing anything with it. So, to do this, for today, there will be a load, something called NPM feed watcher. So, NPM earlier used to have this policy-based relation, but they moved to this feed system, so you actually have to collect it here, and it's really big data set, so, of course, it's not shared. And, if you look over here, okay, one of the things we had to do was, of course, if you know anything about matrix factorization, it's any way of, like, pass matrix, and even then, you should control it. So, anyway, when we had legend type track or anything, we threw that out because, in a vocabulary of, let's say, 29,000, anything that is only one value set to one is not really going to go down. So, we kind of went up, we went down with some dependencies, and then what we did is that earlier I showed you, right, that our modeling option was that packets advertise function, and also the function of its dependency is what we considered. So, here what we did is basically we changed which are all the dependencies where all of its dependencies also are like the function. So, of course, we need the data to be named, and based on that, we had a column that tells you whether that's so or not, and we considered the ones where all of the dependencies have, or rather the dependencies of the dependency we're dealing with are advertised as function. And, like you can see over here, so we have the dependencies and all their tags over here. So, when you see these tables over here, right, so you know what the dependencies name is, and you also know what other thing it depends on, what the advertiser do. And, of course, the next step is to actually create that inspector over here, so we create our vocabulary. The vocabulary side is, like I said, $29,000 out of the dependencies for that. From that vocabulary, the next step is of course creating the mapping. That will help us create our data into a network. So, the executor I showed you at that time. And then, of course, the same way time we move to the training pages. So, in the training pages, yeah, before that we do some more processing where we've created the dependencies, of course. And then we move to the first page when we do the training of this model, which is the tagging of the pattern. So, I don't think I have time to talk about the source code of that, but basically inside this module we've provided this A-level thing out of library for anybody who wants to use it. It has variation auto code embedded in it and our system coded in it. So, the pre-training of this variation auto code is where it's always done in a pattern where you do pre-training, followed by a pandering of the latent layers, and then you train the entire thing. So, I just showed that briefly. And, of course, this is just one of such layers. So, this is A-level pre-training, and then you proceed to training the entire thing and then we proceed. And the training of this, of course, you load from the pre-training module itself, and from there you're going to train both the unit of factorization bits and the unit of the variation of the unit of bits. So, here, I think you can briefly see this as well. So, for the initialization of the unit of factorization, that's the standard version of it. If I show you where you can see the run function over here, sorry, the bit function over here which calls the run functions. The very first thing that we actually do is train layer-wise. So, every single layer is trained, all of that, and the other train it literally. Then we train the latent layer of this auto encoder. The layer which is supposed to give you the mean and the varying speeds. And then we train the end product. And similar to this, if you look at the actual model itself which follows from the pre-training model, of course the way we have pre-trained them, that unit of factorization is something we use to get our initial transformations. So, once you get the transformations, the transformations to this unit of factor, you feed them to to the, of course, the probabilistic matrix factorization training. So, the way we have trained, I mean, I'm sure a lot of you might be aware that already you calculated mean, like, you've done everything and you start with the normal prior and then you can read the procedure, like you do for any problem. So, that's about that. And the last thing that I would touch upon is how we actually Yeah, so the next steps are the kind of work in the switcher. So, definitely we are working on a re-training pipeline like I talked about, an automated re-training pipeline. Also, an interesting thing over here is that not a lot of people give us explicit feedback. So, to collect explicit feedback, what we're actually starting to do is, when people go inside the industry, you go right, if they act on our recommendations, those recommendations will start getting added to their stocks. So, if they are adding them to their stocks, we can start monitoring their stocks and actually figure out if they are acting on our recommendations. So, that way we are also getting implicit feedback on top of our explicit feedback. So, other reports that we've broken. So, not everywhere in the case that we get a lot of rich data and data. So, maybe it was one such ecosystem and of course, father was one such ecosystem. And then we use a very pure collaborative approach that's called high-intensity factorization and we did other experiments in building the external cost-effect department. So, that is that. Now, let's talk about the more interesting bits, I guess, which is the scaling and the platform architecture of this. So, so, of course, this is the actual, the 5G server platform. It's through ES4 extension. Being retired completely and open source, you can contribute, you can use it whatever, you can order it from over there. But, basically, we do this thing called the start report. And this is a very interesting architecture of the platform that we made the start report. So, this is more of the client-facing architecture, but all of our components are going to be included. So, we have our recommendation model service for the license chart, the CD that he was talking about in the main. All of them are integrated into the barcode that deals with the APS server which is barcode SAS that we call this thing. It has a traffic control for us. It is a pro client. All of this is done under one nine yards and the rest of these are for AWS. So, all of our assigns are on AWS wherever we need a lot of compute. Our central, I would say lifeline is a ground-reader server that we have. So, we use the dynamic in the background with a part-time DevOps chart on the top of it which is, yeah, this is a brand name of the part-time DevOps chart. The plugin itself is called DMS chart. So, the function is work which is currently being used in this thing. It is being integrated as one of the many keys that we actually collect in the platform. So, all of the external CVs we need such as NVD are not entirely exposed to everybody else but this work, the probable CVs as well, push our time into this system. Technologies that we use for first scaling of AWS. OpenShift, so if you are aware of Kubernetes, Kubernetes is more of a, I would say, platform. Red Hat OpenShift is the hard distribution of Kubernetes which is because they are on the idea of an application.com built around Kubernetes. So, it gives you all the many of Kubernetes with some more user, I would say, tolerable interface and everything. It is easier to use stuff over there. And, of course, containers. So, containers are something most people popularly know as Docker but Docker is not the only kind of container in this world right now. There is this entire open container initiative and there is a set specification. There are other tools as well and stuff which you can actually use to build containers. So, inside Kubernetes and OpenShift right now, P.O. is the, I would say, a container of choice. So, of course, Kubernetes, the advantages that it gives us is the single-store balancing, it's an application for storage and I guess I have some time left. So, the more interesting thing I can show you over here is the after 10 grids that we need to write to get this through. So, I'm sure many of you must have already seen a Docker file at some point. But, if you're not, this is kind of what you use to build something more than any. So, this might be looking quite complex but it's really nothing. It's a bunch of 12 months that you do that's attached to something called Docker Directives. All of these together make what's called an image. So, an image is basically a container or an image. So, image is a lot of containers but not to be pedantic about that. An image is basically a completely reproducible copy of everything that you package into that container. And once you have a container, the question becomes how do you actually run that container? So, that is where Kubernetes is something to picture. So, everything you want to contain it, that is what Kubernetes helps you with. So, this is a method that actually requires quite a bit of background to write but just to go over it briefly. So, in our case, what we wanted was multi-compact data. So, you can either create a core config or a deployment config, what you created is something called a deployment config. Deployment config actually has something called a directly bus. So, you can tell Kubernetes or OpenShift in this case that, okay, I always want to find where to run that container. So, yeah, that is one of the aspects and you include that along with that out of the other details of how to actually run this container. So, basically, that you create something called config apps, you create secrets, there is a whole bunch of things. And otherwise, yeah, so that is that about Kubernetes. So, there is a lot of theory around this but it's basically one of the ways to actually access the Kubernetes radius. So, you can access the API directly through HTTP device. You can, I think they are also just an API available for this. But if you guys are messaging your company, this YAML model is technically able to use and it's the one that you should be using because it would enable you as developers to actually deploy your own model onto OpenShift or Kubernetes or whatever your company is using in this case. And it's a very difficult thing to set up. But once the setup is done, it's very easy to manage your model's capabilities. So, that's where the good parts are. So, something like a scenario where you have a very heavy load. You can just scale down the replicas. You have very less load. You can scale down the replicas. There's an auto scale that can take care of the scale and point you. There's no balance in everything. So, that is the very interesting work that we do around deployment. And coming back to the presentation for a bit. Yeah, so all of these services that you see that they all have these kind of templates for them. All of our models that we run on OpenShift, they have these kind of templates for them. So, this entire architecture that you see it's actually has the possibility to scale itself under load. So, every time we see a random traffic coming in over here, all of this has the capability to start scaling as long as you just came in the necessary infrastructure which is caused with AWS. It's something you can get on the ground. And the digital and digital jobs are something that we kindly started. So, we're doing this project where we're actually automating the training of all our models. Upon this model, once it's ready, it's going to be part of that. Yeah, and I guess that's it for the talk. And if you guys like it, you guys want to contribute, we are going to look for building a community around that thing. And of course, as a red hat, we are always open to external contributions and stuff. And also, the ideas like you guys are building this machine learning or deep learning models. You can potentially, let's say once you build a web service, you use something like Docker to dockerize it so that you can deploy it anywhere. You don't have to worry about the OS, the dependencies and all that. And you can use Kubernetes where you can scale up your applications also. So, these are some things to keep in mind as you guys, let's say, want to work on bigger datasets and serve more and more customers and all that.
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{
"url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zQhf-PYD-rw",
"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
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UCly1zcKPGzGW9wZMCZodWOA
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Short Science Fiction Collection 034 | Various | Anthologies, Science Fiction | English | 1/4
|
https://gobalex.info/The-Art-Thief-Kindle-Edition https://bit.ly/AIFN https://bit.ly/m/LSUNIQADENTAL https://bit.ly/ABOOK Audiobooks have many benefits for listeners and audiobook lovers. Here are some of them:
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11. Teach critical listening.
12. Highlight the humor in audiobooks.
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Concise excerpts of contemporary and cutting-edge audiobooks performed by professional voice actors and digital catalogs of audiobooks.
If you follow the link in the description or the digital catalog blocks and make a purchase, we may receive a commission. For which we would be grateful! Thank you!
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"audiobook in english short",
"best audiobook in english",
"famous audiobook in english",
"story audiobook in english",
"audiobookUCly1zcKPGzGW9wZMCZodWOA",
"audiolibroUCly1zcKPGzGW9wZMCZodWOA",
"sonlibroUCly1zcKPGzGW9wZMCZodWOA",
"audiobook",
"audiobooks",
"audio book",
"audio books",
"Audiolibro",
"hörbuch",
"Livre audio",
"livro falado",
"Luisterboek",
"Аудиокнига",
"ספר מוקלט",
"Książka mówiona",
"Ljudbok",
"Lydbog",
"Äänikirja",
"Sonlibro",
"hangoskönyv",
"Аудіокнига",
"Аудиокниги",
"persuasion audiobook"
] | 2019-06-04T06:00:55 | 2024-04-23T22:50:04 | 5,205 |
ZQ7s5fiGOfM
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Acid Bath by Vassilos Garson This is a LibriVox recording. All LibriVox recordings are in the public domain. For more information or to volunteer, please visit LibriVox.org recording by John Feaster. Acid Bath The Starway's lone watcher had experienced some odd developments in his single nerve-fraught job in the asteroid, but nothing like the weird 21-day liquid test devised by the invading steel blues. John Carl was bolting in a new baffle plate on the stationary rocket engine. It was a tedious job, and took all his concentration, so he wasn't paying too much attention to what was going on in other parts of the little asteroid. He didn't see the peculiar blue spaceship, its rockets throttled down as it drifted to land only a few hundred yards away from his plastic igloo. Nor did he see the half-dozen steel-blue creatures slide out of the peculiar vessel's airlock. It was only as he crawled out of the depths of the rocket power plant that he realized something was wrong. By then it was almost too late. The six blue figures were only 50 feet away, approaching him at a lope. John Carl took one look and went bounding over the asteroid's rocky slopes in 50-foot bounds. When you're a lone watcher and strangers catch you unawares, you don't stand still. You move fast, it's the watcher's first rule. Stay alive, and earthship may depend upon your life. As he fled, John Carl cursed softly under his breath. The automatic alarm should have shrilled out a warning. Then he saved as much of his breath as he could, as some sort of power wave tore off the rocky sword to his left. He twisted and zig-zagged in his flight, trying to get out of sight of the strangers. Once hidden from their eyes, he could cut back and head for the underground entrance to the service station. He glanced back, finally. Two of the steel-blue creatures were jack-grabbiting after him, and rapidly closing the distance. John Carl unsheathed the stub-ray pistol at his side. Turning the oxygen dial up for greater exertion, increased the gravity pull of his spacesuit boots as he neared the ravine he'd been racing for. The oxygen was just taking hold when he hit the lip of the ravine and began sprinting through its man-high bush-strewn course. The power-ray from behind ripped up great gobs of the sheltering bushes, but running naturally, bent close to the bottom of the ravine, John Carl dodged the bare spots. The oxygen made the tremendous exertion easy for his lungs as he sped down the dim trail, hidden from the two steel-blue stalkers. He eluded them, temporarily at least, John Carl decided, when he finally edged off the dim trail and watched for movement along the route behind him. He stood up, finally pushing aside the leafy overhang of a bush and looked for landmarks along the edge of the ravine. He found one, a stubby bush shaped like a Maltese cross, clinging to the lip of the ravine. The hidden entrance to the service station wasn't far off. His pistol held ready, he moved quietly on down the ravine until the old water course made an abrupt hairpin turn. Instead of following around the sharp bend, John Carl moved straight ahead through the overhanging bushes until he came to a dense thicket. Dropping to his hands and knees, he worked his way under the edge of the thicket, into a hollowed-out space in the center. There, just ahead of him, was the lock leading to the service station. Slipping a key out of a leg pouch in the spacesuit, he jabbed it into the center of the lock, opening the lever housing. He pulled strongly at the lever, with a hiss of escaping air. The lock swung open. John Carl darted inside, the lock closing softly behind him. At the end of the long tunnel, he stepped to the televisor, which was fixed on the area surrounding the station. John Carl saw none of the steel-blue creatures, but he saw their ship. It squatted like a smashed-down kid's top. Its lock shut tight. He turned the televisor to its widest range and finally spotted one of the steel-blues. He was looking into the stationary rocket engine. As Carl watched, a second steel-blue came crawling out of the ship. The two steel-blues moved towards the center of the televisor range. They're coming towards the station, Carl thought grimly. Carl examined the two creatures. They were of steel-blue color from the crown of their egg-shaped heads to the tips of their walking appendages. They were about the height of Carl, six feet, but where he tapered from broad shoulders to flat hips, they were straight down. They had no legs, just dependages, many jointed, that stretched and shrank independent of each other, but keeping the cylindrical body with its four pairs of tentacles on a level balance. Where their eyes would have been was an elliptical-shaped lens, covering half the egg head, with its converging ends curving around the sides of the head. Robots, John gauged immediately, but where were their masters? The steel-blues moved out of the range of the televisor. A minute later, John heard a pounding from the station upstairs. He chuckled. They were like the wolf of pre-atomic days who huffed and puffed and blew the house down. The outer shell of the station was formed from stirrelite, the toughest metal in the solar system. With the self-sealing lock of the same resistant material, a mere pounding was nothing. John thought he'd have to look-see anyway. He went to the steel ladder, leading to the station's power plant and the televisor that could look into every room within the station. He heaved a slight sigh when he reached the power room, for right at his hand were weapons to blast the ship from the asteroid. John adjusted one televisor to take in the lock of the station. His teeth suddenly clamped down in his lower lip. Those steel-blues were pounding holes into the stirrelite with round-headed metal clubs, but it was impossible. Stirrelite didn't break up that easily. John leapt to a row of studs, lining up the revolving turret which capped the station so that its thin fin pointed at the squat ship of the invaders. Then he went to the atomic cannon's firing buttons. He pressed first the yellow, then the blue button, finally the red one. The thin fin, the cannon's sight, split in half as the turret opened and the coiled nose of the cannon protruded. It was a soundless flash, then a sharp crack. John was dumbfounded when he saw the bolt ricochet off the ship. This was no ship of the solar system. There was nothing that could withstand even the slightest jolt of power given by the station's cannon on any of the sun's worlds. But what was this? A piece of the ship had changed. A bubble of metal, like a huge drop of blue wax, drifted off the vessel and struck the rocket of the asteroid. It steamed and ran in rivulets. Then he pushed the red one again. Then abruptly he was on the floor of the power room. His legs strangely cut up from under him. He tried to move. Then lay flaccid. His arms seemed all right and tried to lever himself in an upright position. Damn it! He seemed as if he were paralyzed with the waist down. But it couldn't happen that suddenly. He turned his head. A steel blue was facing him. A forked tentacle held a square black box. John could read nothing in that metallic face. He said, voice muffled by the confines of his plastic helmet. Who are you? I am. There was a rising inflection in the answer. A steel blue. There were no lips on the steel blue's face to move. That's what I have named you, John Krall said. But what are you? A robot. Came the immediate answer. John was quite sure that the steel blue was telepathic. Yes, the steel blue answered. We talk in the language of the mind. Come, he said, prematurely, monitoring the square black box. The paralysis left Karl's legs. He followed the steel blue, aware that the lens he'd seen of the creature's face had a counterpart on the back of the egg head. Eyes in the back of his head, John thought. That's quite an innovation. Thank you, steel blue said. There wasn't much fear in John Karl's mind. Psychiatrists had proved that when he'd applied for his high paying but man-killing job as a lone watcher in the Solar System Starways. He had little fear now. Only curiosity. These steel blues didn't seem inimical. They could have snuffed out my life very simply. Perhaps they and Solarians can be friends. Steel blue chuckled. John followed him through the sundering lock of the station. Karl stopped for a moment to examine the wreckage of the lock. It had been punched full of holes as if it had been some soft cheese instead of a metal which earthmen have spent nearly a century perfecting. We appreciate your compliment, steel blue said. But that metal also is found on our world. It is probably the softest and most malleable we have. We were surprised you. Earthmen, is it? Use it as a protective metal. Why are you in the system, John asked, hardly expecting an answer. It came anyway. For the same reason you earthmen are reaching out further into your system. We need living room. You have strategically placed planets for us to use. We will use them. John sighed. For 400 years, scientists had been preaching preparedness as earth flung her ships into the reaches of the solar system, taking the first long step towards the conquest of space. There are other races somewhere, they argued, as strong and smart as man, many of them so transcending man in mental and inventive powers that we must be prepared to strike the minute danger shows. Now, here was the answer to the scientists' warning, invasion by extraterrestrials. What did you say? asked steel blue. I cannot understand. Just thinking to myself, John answered, it was a welcome surprise. Apparently, his thoughts had to be directed outward rather than inward in order for the steel blue to read it. He followed the steel blue into the gaping lock of the invader's spaceship, wondering how he could warn earth. The space patrol cruiser was due for refueling at service station in 21 days, but by that time he would probably be moldering in the rocky dust of the asteroid. It was pitch dark within the ship, but the steel blue seemed to have no trouble at all maneuvering through the maze of corridors. John followed him, attached to one tentacle. Finally, John and his guide entered a circular room, bright with light, streaming from a glass like bulging skylight. They apparently were near top side of the vessel. A steel blue, more massive than his guide and with four more pairs of tentacles, including two short ones that grew from the top of its head, spoke out. This is the violator, John's steel blue knotted. You know the penalty. Carry it out. He also is an inhabitant of this system, John's guide added. Examine him first, then give him the death. John Carl shrugged as he was led from the lighted room through more corridors. If it got too bad, he still had the subray pistol. Anyway, he was curious. He taken on the lonely nerve-wracking job of service station attendant just to see what it offered. Here was a part of it, and it was certainly something new. This is the examination room, his steel blue said almost contemptuously. A green effulgence surrounded him. There was a hiss. Simultaneously, as the tiny microphones on the outside of his suit picked up the hiss. He felt a chill go through his body, then it seemed as if a half-dozen hands were inside him, examining his internal organs. His stomach contracted. He felt a squeeze on his heart, his lungs tickled. There were several more queer motions inside his body. Then another steel blue voice said, He is a soft metal creature made up of metals that melted a very low temperature. He also contains a liquid whose markup I cannot ascertain by ray probe. Bring him back when the torture is done. John Carl grinned a little trifely. What kind of torture could this be? Would it last 21 days? He glanced at the chronometer on his wrist. John's steel blue led him out of the alien ship and halted expectantly just outside the ship's lock. John waited to. He thought of the subray pistol halted in his hip. Shoot my way out. It'd be fun while it lasted. But he toted up the disadvantages. He either would have had to find a hiding space in the asteroid, and if the steel blue wanted him bad enough, they could tear the whole place to pieces or somehow get aboard the little life ship hidden in the service station. In that he would just be a sitting duck. He struggled off the slight temptation to use the pistol. He was still curious. And he was interested in staying alive as long as possible. There was a remote chance he might warn the SP ship. Unconsciously, he glanced towards his belt to see the little power pack which, if under ideal conditions, could finger out 50,000 miles into space. If he could somehow stay alive the 21 days he might be able to warn the patrol. He couldn't do it by attempting to flee for his life would be snuffed out immediately. The steel blue said quietly, it might be ironical to let you warn that SP ship you keep thinking about. But we know your weapons now. Already our ship is equipped with a force field designed especially to deflect your atomic guns. John Carl covered up his thoughts quickly. They can delve deeper than the surface of the mind, or wasn't I keeping a leash on my thoughts? The steel blue chuckled. You get absent minded, is it? Every once in a while. Just then four other steel blues appeared lugging great sheets of plastic and various other equipments. They dumped their loads and began unbundling them. Working swiftly, they built a plastic igloo smaller than the living room on the larger service station igloo. They ranged instruments inside one of them John Carl recognized as an air pump from within the station. And they laid out a pallet. When they were done, John saw a miniature reproduction of the service station lacking only the cannon cap and fin and with clear plastic walls instead of the opaqueness of the other. His steel blue said, we have reproduced the atmosphere of your station so you can be watched while you undergo the torture under the normal conditions of your life. What is this torture? John Carl asked. The answer was almost caressing. It is a liquid we use to dissolve metals. It causes joints to harden if even so much as a drop remains on it long. It eats away the metal, leaving a scaly residue which crumbles eventually into dust. We will dilute it with harmless liquid for you since number one does not wish you to die instantly. Enter your the steel blue hesitated. Mausoleum, you die in your own atmosphere. However, we took the liberty of purifying it. There were dangerous elements in it. John walked into the little igloo. The steel blues sealed the lock, fingered dials and switches on the outside. John's spacesuit deflated. Pressure was building up in the igloo. He took a sample of the air found it was good, although quite rich in oxygen compared to what he'd been using in the service station in his suit. With a sigh of relief, he took off his helmet and gulped huge drops of air. He sat down on the pallet and waited for the torture to begin. The steel blues crowded about the igloo, staring at him through elliptical eyes. Apparently, they too were waiting for the torture to begin. John thought the excess of oxygen was making him lightheaded. He stared at a cylinder which was beginning to sprout tentacles from the center. He rubbed his eyes and looked again. An opening like the adjustable eyepiece of a space scope was appearing in the center of the cylinder. A square glass like tumbler sat in the opening, disclosed a four foot cylinder that had sprouted tentacles. It contained a yellowish liquid. One of the tentacles reached into the opening and clasped the glass. The opening closed and the cylinder propelled by locomotor appendages moved towards John. He didn't like the looks of the liquid in the tumbler. It looked like an acid of some sort. He raised to his feet. He unsheathed the subray pistol and prepared to blast the cylinder. The cylinder moved so fast, John felt his eyes jump in his head. He brought the subray gun up, but he was helpless. The pistol kept on going up. With a deft movement, one of the tentacles had spirited from his hand and was holding it out of his reach. John kicked at the glass in the cylinder's hand, but he was too slow. Two tentacles gripped the kick leg. Another struck him in the chest, knocking him to the palate. The same tentacle, assisted by a new one, pinioned his shoulders. Four tentacles held him supine. The cylinder lifted a glass like cap from the tumbler of liquid. Lying there helplessly, John was remembering an old fairy tale he'd read as a kid, something about a fellow named Socrates, who was given a cup of hemlock to drink. It was the finish for Socrates, but the old hero had been nonchalant and calm about the whole thing. With a sigh, John Carl, who was curious unto death, relaxed and said, All right, bub, you don't have to force feed me. I'll take it like a man. The cylinder apparently understood him for it handed him the tumbler. It even reholstered his subray pistol. John brought the glass of liquid under his nose. The fumes of the liquid were pungent. It brought tears to his eyes. He looked at the cylinder, then at the steel blues crowding into the classic goo. He waved the glass of the audience. To earth, ever triumphant, he toasted. Then he drained the glass in the gulp. It was bitter, and he felt hot prickles jab at his scalp. It was like eating very hot peppers. His eyes filled with tears. He coughed as the stuff went down. But he was still alive. He thought in amazement, he drunk the hemlock and was still alive. The reaction said in quickly, he hadn't known until then how tense he'd been. Now with a torture ordeal over, he relaxed. He laid down the pallet and went to sleep. It was one lone steel blue watching him when he rubbed the sleep out of his eyes and sat up. He vanished almost instantly. He or another like him returned immediately accompanied by a half dozen other, including the multi tentacle creature known as number one. One said, you are alive. The thought registered amazement. When you lost consciousness, we thought you had. There was a hesitation. As you say, died. No, John Carl said, I didn't die. I was just playing dead beat. So I went to sleep. The steel blues apparently didn't understand. Good it is that you live. The torture will continue, spoke number one before loping away. The cylinder business began again. This time, John drank the bitter liquid slowly trying to figure out what it was. It had a familiar tantalizing taste, but he couldn't quite put a taste finger on it. His belly said he was hungry. He glanced at his chronometer only 20 days left before the SP ship arrived. With this torture, he chuckled last until then, but he was growing more and more conscious that his belly was screaming for hunger. The liquid had taken the edge off his thirst. It was on the fifth day of his torture that John Carl decided he was going to get something to eat or perish in the attempt. The cylinder sat passively in its niche on the circle. A dozen steel blues were watching as John put on his helmet and unsheathed his stub ray. They merely watched as he pressed the stub rays firing stud invisible rays licked out of the bulbous mausole of the pistol. The plastics splintered. John was out of the goldfish bowl and striding towards his own igloo adjacent to the service station when a steel blue accosted him out of the way. John grunted waving the stub ray. I'm hungry. I'm the first steel blue you met, said the creature who barred his way. Go back to your torture. But I'm so hungry I'll chew off one of your tentacles and eat it without seasoning. Eat? The steel blue sounded puzzled. I want to refuel. I've got my own. I've got to have food to keep my engine going. Steel blue chuckled. So the hemlock as you call it is beginning to affect you at last. Back to the torture room. Like our dust, John growled. He pressed the firing stud and the stub ray gun. One of the steel blue's tentacles broke off and fell to the rock he swore. Steel blue jerked out the box he'd used once before. A tentacle danced over it. A abruptly John found himself standing in a pinnacle of rock. Steel blue had cut a swath around 15 feet deep and five feet wide. Back to the room. Steel blue commanded. John resheathed the subray pistol shrugged noncommittally and leapt the trench. He walked slowly back and re-entered the torture chamber. The steel blues rapidly repaired the damage he'd done. As he watched them, John was still curious, but he was getting mad underneath at the cold egotism of the steel blues. By the shimmering clouds of earth by her green fields and dark forests, he'd stay alive to warn the SP ship. Yes, he'd stay alive until then and send the story of the steel blue's corrosive acid to it. Then hundreds of earth ships could equip themselves with spray guns and squirt citric acid and watch the steel blues fade away. It sounded almost silly to John Carl. The fruit acid of earth to repel these invaders. It doesn't sound possible. That couldn't be the answer. Citric acid wasn't the answer. John Carl discovered a week later. The steel blue who had captured him in the power room of the service station came in to examine him. You're still holding out, I see. He observed after poking John in every sensitive part of his body. I'll suggest to number one that we increase the power of the, ah, hemlock. How do you feel? Between the rich oxygen and the dizziness of hunger, John was a bit delirious. But he answered honestly enough. My guts feel as if they're chewing each other up. My bones ache. My joints creak. I can't coordinate. I'm so hungry. That is the hemlock, steel blue said. It was when he qualified the new and stronger joke that John knew that his hope that it was citric acid was squelched. The acid taste was weaker, which meant that the citric acid was the diluting liquid. It was the liquid he couldn't taste beneath the tang of the citric acid that was the corrosive acid. On the 14th day John was so weak he didn't feel much like moving around. He let the cylinder feed him the hemlock. Number one came to see him again and went away chuckling decrease the dilution. This earth man is at last beginning to suffer staying alive now had become a fetish with John. On the 16th day the earth man realized that the steel blues also were waiting for the SP ship. The extraterrestrials had repaired the blue ship where the service stations atomic ray had struck and they were doing a little target practice with plastic bubbles only a few miles above the asteroid. When his chronometer clicked off the beginning of the 21st date John received a tumbler of the hemlock from the hands of number one himself. It is the hemlock. He chuckled. Undiluted. Drink it and your torture is over. You will die before your SP ship is destroyed. We have played with you long enough. Today we begin to toy with your SP ship. Drink up earth man. Drink to enslavement. Weak though he was, John lunged to his feet spilling the tumbler of liquid. It ran cool along the plastic arm of his SP ship. He changed his mind about throwing the contents on number one. With a smile he set the glass to his lips and drank. Then he laughed at number one. The SP ship will turn your ship into jelly. Number one swept out juggling. Most if you will earth man. It's your last chance. There was an exultation in John's heart that didn't his hunger and washed away the nausea. Last he knew what the hemlock was. He sat on the pallet adjusting the little power pack radio. The SP ship should now be within range of the set. The space patrol was notorious for its accuracy in keeping to schedule. Seconds counted like years, but they had to be on the nose or it meant disaster or death. He sent out the call letters. AX to SP 101. AX to SP 101. AX to SP 101. Three times he sent the call. Then began sending his message, hoping that his signal was reaching the ship. He couldn't know if they answered. Though the power pack could get out a message over a vast distance, it could not pick up messages even when backed by an SP ship's power unless the ship was only a few hundred miles away. The power pack was strictly a distress signal. He didn't know how long he'd been sending or how many times his weary voice had repeated the short but desperate message. He kept watching the heavens and hoping. Abruptly he knew the SP ship was coming for the blue ship of the steel blues was rising silently from the asteroids. Up and up it rose. Then flames flickered in a circle from its curious shape. The ship disappeared suddenly accelerating. John Karl strained his eyes. Finally he looked away from the heavens to the two steel blues who stood negligently outside the goldfish bowl. Once more John used the stub ray pistol. He marched out the plastic igloo and ran towards the service station. He didn't know how weak he was until he stumbled and fell only a few feet from his prison. The steel blues just watched him. He crawled on around the circular pit on the sword of the asteroid where one steel blue had shown him the power of his weapon. He'd been crawling through a nightmare for years when the quiet voice penetrated his dulled mind. Take it easy Karl. You're among friends. He bright opened his eyes with his will. He saw the blue and gold with space guards uniform. He sighed and drifted into unconsciousness. He was still weak days later when Captain Ron Small of SP 101 said, Yes Karl it's ironical. They fed you what they thought was sure death and it's the only thing that kept you going long enough to warn us. I was dumb for a long time Karl said. I thought that it was the acid almost to the very last but when I drank that last glass I knew they didn't have a chance. They were metal monsters. No wonder they feared that liquid. It would rust their joints short their wiring and kill them. No wonder they stared when I kept alive after drinking enough to completely annihilate a half dozen of them. But what happened when you met the ship? The space Captain Grant. Not much. Our crew was busy creating a hollow shell filled with water to be shot out of a rocket tube converted into a projectile thrower. Those steel blues as you call them put traction beams on us and started tugging us towards the asteroid. We tried a couple of atomic shots but they just glanced off. We gave up. They weren't expecting the shell of water. When it hit the blue ship you could almost see it oxidized before your eyes. I guess they knew what was wrong right away. They let go the traction beams and tried to get away. They forgot about the force field so we just poured atomic fire into the weakened ship. It just melted away. John Carl got up from the devan where he'd been lying. They thought I was a metal creature too. But where do you suppose they came from? The Captain shrugged. Who knows. John set two glasses on the table. Have a drink of the best damn water in the solar system. He asked Captain Small. Don't mind if I do. The water twinkled in the two glasses. Winking as if it knew just what it had done. This is the end of Acid Bath by Vastilov Garson. This has been a LibriVox recording. All LibriVox recordings are in the public domain. For more information or to volunteer please visit LibriVox.org recording by John Feaster. The Alternate Plan by Jerry Madrin. This is a LibriVox recording. All LibriVox recordings are in the public domain. For more information or to volunteer please visit LibriVox.org recording by Jason and Golfsland. The Alternate Plan by Jerry Madrin. Bart Neely was fighting the hypo. They slipped that over on him. Now he had to struggle to keep his brain ready for Plan B, The Alternate Plan. He nodded feebly at his reflection in the mirror over the white enamel dresser. This throat trouble wasn't going to lick him. He lay back on the cool white pillow. Metal-Kulman always thought theirs was the final answer. Well, psychologist like himself knew there was a broader view of man than the anatomical. There was a vast region of energy at man's disposal. The switch to turn it on located in the brain. Rubbersold's shoes squished across the bare floor as Dr. Jonas Morton came into Bart's room. His hair was hidden by a sterile cap, his arms bare to well above the elbows. Looks like a damn butcher, thought Bart. Bart, I want you to reconsider the anesthetic. I think you ought to be out for this one, completely out. The doctor's voice became a shade less professional. I don't tell you how to run your perception experiments. I think you ought to let me judge what's best in the surgical area. No, Bart whispered hoarsely. It was a hell-squeezing the words out. Lifting his voice these days was harder than lifting a half-toned truck. Must be conscious, able to decide. Jonas had to lean down to catch all the words. Not going to let you take my voice while I'm unconscious, helpless. Dr. Morton shook his head. You're the boss. How soon? Twenty minutes, the professional tone became pronounced again. Your wife's outside waiting to see you. Don't get emotional. I don't want your endocrine system in unpror. The doctor stepped out into the corridor. Emotional. He mustn't think about it. He might weaken, consent to linger on, and invalid, just to be with Vivian a few extra years. Extra years of indignities calculated to twist the man-woman relationship into an ugly distortion. How romantic it would be. He and Vivian locked in an embrace, the silky softness of her hair falling across his arm, the pressure of her fingers on his back, and then instead of placing his mouth against her ear and whisper familiar intimacies, he would switch on the light, disengage himself so that he could whip out a pad and pencil, and his heart skipped at the sound of a pattern of high heels on the corridor. Vivian. Vivian. Her perfume pricked his senses and it took effort to shout out the emotional response. Remember the need for an alternate plan? He reminded himself fiercely and then looked upon into his wife's clear green eyes. Without a word, she bent down and laid her face next to his. He was struck with warmth of her. He gently pushed her head away. V. My lord, his eyes were wet. What a schoolboy performance. V, you know I don't want to go on here. If radical surgery is necessary, I want you to remember he has a whole man, not a dummy. Bart. Oh, Bart. There was a frown of apprehension on her forehead. She sighed heavily and whispered. Can it make so much difference when I love you, Bart? But don't you see, V? It may not be Bart Neely they wheel back here after the operation. He motioned for her to bend closer for the sound of his voice was becoming weaker. In my field, I've seen a lot of crazy reactions to loss of basic ability. Personality reversals brought about by loss of hearing, impotency, or even the inability to bear a child. He stroked the back of her hand with his fingers. Bart Neely, without a voice box, might be a stranger. I'm not sure you'd like him. I don't think I'd even like him. An intern backed into the room followed by a gurney. Bart shot a look at V. This is plan A. V's eyebrows arched into question. Exploration end, he paused. The nurse tucked a dark green blanket all around him. He raised his thin white hand and crossed two fingers. And we hope a negative biopsy. There was no pain. Whatever the anesthesiast had work out was doing nicely. The overhead light, however, was giving him a headache and the operating room was damned cold. Jonas and Hull's claw weren't talking much, and what they did say wasn't loud enough for Bart to get. He studied their faces. I'll know by their faces, he assured himself, and if it's widespread malignancy, I'll proceed with plan B. The sweat was heavy on Jonas's forehead. The sterile mask hit his nose and mouth, but his eyes, behind the lenses of his glasses, looked moist and tired. The surgeon's glove fingers manipulated, probed, cut. Finally, he turned to a waiting nurse. Get this analyzed right away. That was it, the tissue. Was it cancerous or not? The atmosphere grew heavy. Bart watched the second hand on the large wall clock swing slowly around its perimeter, and then around again and again. The nurse re-entered and spoke softly to the doctor. The two doctors whispered, explaining to each other with hand motions what they were going to do. This is it. Bart was certain. Well, he'd fool the hell out of the know-it-all doctors. He closed his eyes and thought. The years he had spent sharpening his perception, his ability to transfer his thoughts, were just the groundwork for this greatest experiment of all. He had transferred thought waves in all forms to all corners of this world with the highest percentage of accuracy. Now plan B, the alternate plan, was to transfer himself. He was willing himself out of his own body. He could feel the perspiration trickle down his arms with the effort. It had to work. He had to cheat them out of their mutilation. No, he couldn't fail. He strained against the confines of his body, burdening his brain with the thought. Then suddenly he was free. Bart wanted to shriek with laughter. He outwitted them. There stood gray-faced Jonas working over that shell, not even realizing that it was an empty body. It was like a television play or something. Everyone clustered around a port stiff on the operating table, repeating the litany of the sawbones, scalpel, sponge, clamps. Bart mentally chuckled and fluttered himself upwards above the square-shaped hospital with its rows of tiny windows. Beyond the polluted air of the city, up and up until there was nothing to look back on, nothing. Now Bart perceived something ahead. It appeared to be a body of land. It looked marvelously appealing, dark greens, bright yellows, and all the shades in between. He hurried forward eager to explore what lay ahead. But as he drew closer, becoming more excited over its possibilities, he struck a cold hard surface which repelled him. It was like glass and through it Bart could see a poorly defined figure some distance away. Bart was intrigued. This was a mental barrier thrown up by the fellow on the other side. Well, he'd give the guy some competition. Bart concentrated on crackling the wall, building a visual picture of the breakthrough in his mind. It's useless. You can't enter here. Why do you oppose me? Bart tested the unseen wall, but found no weakness in its structure. We don't care for your sort. Is that so? And how have you classified me? As a coward, a suicide, a man of meager resources, I'm nothing of the kind. In the first place, I did not commit suicide. Bart wished he could kick at the invisible wall. I willed myself away from an imperfect shell. I severed the mind from the body. Why? Because I had a cancer of the larynx and I never have been able to talk again. I'd be less than a man. You are less than a man now. There was a long period of no exchange. Bart decided he had not made himself clear. I didn't want to live without being able to communicate with other men and women. Communicate, communicate. There are a million ways to communicate. Michelangelo communicated. Bach, Beethoven, yes, Elvis Presley communicates. Hemingway, Martha Graham, actors, dancers, even a baby communicates. But speech, speech is the least dependable method of all. Few people can explain their love, their pain, their innermost feelings, and words. And often a man speaks his thoughts and having spoken them finds he really thinks the opposite. No, this is a second rate expression and my opinion of you has not been altered by your feeble argument. The other fellow's thought came over the wall, pounding against Bart's subconscious. You consider yourself a man of great intelligence, it went on. But your lack of imagination makes you less than mediocre. And as for your mind power, well, you see you cannot cross my mental barrier. That's not entirely conclusive. There may be a catalyst here in this area, which works in conjunction with your thought processes and not mine. You're familiar with conditions here, while I only know the earth. You are hardly a challenge to me. However, to satisfy you that you practically know control, let us make a test on your home ground. All right, you propose the test. Let us see. If you can re-enter your former body while I am willing you to stay here on the other side of that wall. Aha, you're trying to trick me. I knew before I proposed my plan you would make exactly that excuse in order to escape my challenge. Even in excuses you lacked imagination. Okay, it's a deal, Bart was mad. Start concentrating. I'll show you the power of my mind, both now and after I resume that shell. Bart was furious. He had tried to leave that place by the wall. He seemed stuck. There were waves like laughter vibrating against the glass. Bart strained and saw that he had come away a little. He tried again and again. There was a little more distance gained. He tried to build the picture of the operating room in his mind. And while he was doing this, a flash of Vivian exploded in his mind. With that quick image, he felt himself free to drift downward. There indeed was the hospital. Bart hurried to the operating room, hovering near the ceiling light, watching the operating team below. He's gone, Doctor. The anesthesias looked at Jonas. Respirations stopped altogether. No, thought Bart. Don't close me out now. Let's open the chest and massage the heart. Yes, yes. I think it's feudal, Doctor. We can try. Good old Jonas. Bart floated to the table and forced himself into the shell, which lay white and unmoving under the penetrating light from above. It wasn't easy. Bart tried to move the heavy hand, but it was quite numb. Not a thing. Might as well quit. Hull's claws in a hurry damn him. I'll massage a little longer. Bart pushed at the laden eyelid. No go. Come on, come on. He felt a convulsive chill, a throbbing in his head. I'm getting a pulse. Jonas' voice was excited. Bart knew there was a searing pain in his throat, but shutting it out of his consciousness was a steady thumping beat of his own heart. End of The Alternate Plan by Jerry Madron. Recording by Jason in Golfsland, Minnesota. Visit my blog at ingonotes.blogspot.com. B-12's Moonglow by Charles A. Stearns. This is a LibriVox recording. All LibriVox recordings are in the public domain. For more information or how to volunteer, please visit LibriVox.org. Rating by Bologna Times. B-12's Moonglow by Charles A. Stearns. Among the metal persons of Phobos, Robot B-12 held a special niche. He might not have been stronger, larger, faster than some, but he could be devious, and more important, he was that junkyard planetoid's only moonshiner. I am B-12, a metal person. If you read Day and the other progressive journals, you will know that in some quarters of the galaxy there is considerable prejudice directed against us. It is ever so with minority races and I do not complain. I merely make the statement so that you will understand about the alarm clock. An alarm clock is a simple mechanism used by the builders to shock themselves into consciousness after their periodic commas to which they are subject. It is obsolescent, but still used in such out-of-the-way places as Phobos. My own contact with one of these devices came about in the following manner. I had come into Argon City under cover of darkness, which is the only sensible thing to do in my profession, and I was stealing through the back alleyways as silently as my rusty joints would allow. I was less than three blocks from Benny's place and still undetected when I passed the window. It was a large, cheerful oblong of light, so quite naturally I stopped to investigate, being slightly phototropic by virtue of the selenium grids in my rectifier cells. I went over and looked in, unobtrusively resting my grapples on the outer ledge. There was a builder inside, such as I had not seen since I came to Phobos half a century ago, and yet I recognized the subspecies at once, for they are common on earth. It was a shee. It was in the process of removing certain outer sheaths, and I noted that, while quite symmetrical bilaterally, it was otherwise oddly formed, being disproportionately large and lumpy in the anterior ventral region. I had watched for some two or three minutes, entirely forgetting my own safety, when then she saw me. Its eyes widened, and it snatched up the alarm clock, which was, as I have hinted, near at hand. Get out of here, you nosy old tin can, it screamed, and through the clock, which crowned off my headpiece, damaging one earphone. I ran. If you still do not see what I mean, about racial prejudice, you will, when you hear what happened later. I continued on until I came to Benny's place, entering through the back door. Benny met me there, and quickly shushed me into a side room. His fluorescent eyes were glowing with excitement. Benny's real name is BNE96, and when on earth, he had been only a servitor, not a general purpose like myself. But perhaps I should explain. We metal people are the children of the builders of earth, and later of Mars and Venus. We were not born of two parents, as they are. That is a function far too complex to explain here. In fact, I do not even understand it myself. No, we were born of the hands and intellects of the greatest of their scientists, and for this reason it might be natural to suppose that we, and not they, would be considered a superior race. It is not so. Many of us were fashioned in those days, a metal person, for every kind of task, that they could devise, and some like myself, who could do almost anything. We were contented enough for the greater part, but the scientists kept creating, always striving to better their former efforts, and one day the situation which the builders had always regarded as inevitable, but we, somehow, had supposed would never come, was upon us. The first generation of the metal people, more than fifty thousand of us, were obsolete. The things that we had been designed to do, the new ones, with their crystalline brains, fresh, untarnished, accomplished, better. We were banished, taffobos, dreary, lifeless moon of Mars. It had long been a sort of interplanetary junkyard. Now it became a graveyard. Upon the barren face of this little world, there was no life, except for the handful of hardy, martian, and taran prospectors who searched for minerals. Later on, a few rude mining communities sprang up under plastic aerodromes, but never came to much. Argonne City was such a place. I wonder if you can comprehend the loneliness, the hollow futility of our plight. Fifty thousand skilled workmen, with nothing to do. Some of the less adaptable gave up, prostrating themselves upon the bare rocks, until their joints froze from lack of use, and their works corroded. Others served the miners and prospectors, but their needs were all too few. The overwhelming majority of us were still idle, and somehow we learned the secret of racial existence at last. We learned to serve each other. This was not an easy lesson to learn, in the first place, there must be motivation involved in racial preservation, yet we derived no pleasure out of the things that make the builders wish to continue to live. We did not sleep, we did not eat, and we were not able to reproduce ourselves, and besides, this latter, as I have indicated, would have been pointless with us. There was, however, one other pleasure of the builders that intrigued us. It can best be described as a stimulation produced by drenching their insides with alcoholic compounds, and is a universal pastime among the males and many of the sheaths. One of us, R-47, I think it was, rest him. Tried it one day. He pried open the top of his helmet, and poured an entire bottle of the fluid down his mechanism. Poor R-47, he caught fire and blazed up in a glorious blue flame that we could not extinguish in time. He was beyond repair, and we were forced to scrap him. But he was not a sacrifice in vain. He had established an idea in our unwee bursting minds, an idea which led to the discovery of Moonglow. My discovery, I should say, for I was the first. Naturally I cannot divulge my secret formula for Moonglow. There are many kinds of Moonglow these days, but there is still only one B-12 Moonglow. Suffice it to say that it is a high octane preparation, only a drop of which, but you know the effects of Moonglow, of course. How the mirrors thimble full when judiciously poured into one's power pack gives new life and the most deliriously happy freedom of movement imaginable. One possesses soaring spirits and super strength. Old rusted joints move freely once more, once transistors glow brightly, and the currents of the body race about with the minutest resistance. Moonglow is like being born again. The sale of it has been illegal for several years for no reason that I can think of, except that the builders who make the laws cannot bear to see metal people have fun. Of course a part of the blame rests on such individuals as X-101, who, when lubricated with Moonglow, insists upon dancing around on large cast-iron feet to the hazard of alt-hose in his vicinity. He is thin and long-jointed, and he goes creak creak in a weird sing-song fashion as he dances. It is a shameful ludicrous sight. Then there was DC-5, who tore down the 300-feet-long equipment hanger of the builders one night. He had over-indulged. I do not feel responsible for these things. If I had not sold them, the Moonglow, someone else would have done so. Besides, I am only a wholesaler. Benny buys everything that I am able to produce in my little laboratory, hidden out in the dumps. Just now, by Benny's attitude, I knew that something was very wrong. What is the matter, I said? Is it the Revenue Agents? I do not know, said BNE-96, in that curious, flat voice of his that is incapable of inflection. I do not know, but there are visitors of importance from earth. It could mean anything, but I have a premonition of disaster. John, tip me off. He meant John Rogison, of course, who was the peace-officer here in Argonne City, and the only one of the builders I had ever met who did not look down upon a metal person. When sober, he was a clever person who always looked out for our interests here. What are they like? I asked in some fear, for I had six vials of Moonglow with me at the moment. I have not seen them, but there is one who is high in the government and his wife. There are half a dozen others of the builder race and one of the new-type metal persons. I had met the she who must have been the wife. They hate us, I said. We can expect only evil from these persons. You may be right. If you have any merchandise with you, I will take it, but do not risk bringing more here until they have gone. I produced the vials of Moonglow, and he paid me in phobos credits, which are good for a specified number of refuelings at the central fueling station. Benny put the vials away, and he went into the bar. There was the usual jostling crowd of hard-bitten earth miners and of the metal people who come to lose their loneliness. I recognized many. Though I spent very little time in these places, preferring solitary pursuits, such as the distillation of Moonglow and improving my mind by study and contemplation out in the barons. John Rogison and I saw each other at the same time, and I did not like the expression in his eye as he crooked a finger at me. I went over to his table. He was pleasant-looking, as builders go, with blue eyes less dull than most, and a brown unruly top knot of hair, such as is universally affected by them. Sit down, he invited, revealing his white incisors in greeting. I never sit, but this time I did so, to be polite. I was wary, ready for anything. I knew that there was something unpleasant in the air. I wondered if he had seen me passing the Moonglow to Benny somehow. Perhaps he had barrier penetrating vision, like the Z-group of metal people. But I had never heard of a builder like that. I knew that he had long suspected that I made Moonglow. What do you want? I asked cautiously. Come on now, he said. Loosen up. Lember those stainless steel hinges of yours and be friendly. That made me feel good. Actually, I am somewhat pitted with rust, but he never seems to notice, for he is like that. I felt young, as if I had partaken of my own product. The fact is, B-12, he said. I want you to do me a farewell, pal. And what is that? Perhaps you have heard that there is some big brass from earth visiting Phobos this week. I have heard nothing, I said. It is often helpful to appear ignorant when questioned by the builders, for they believe us to be incapable of misrepresenting the truth. The fact is, though it is an acquired trait and not built into us, we general purposes can lie as well as any one. Well, there is. A Federation Senator, no less, Simon F. Langley. It's my job to keep them entertained. That's where you come in. I was mystified. I had never heard of this Langley. But I know what entertainment is. I had a mental image of myself singing or dancing before the Senator's party. But I cannot sing very well, for three of my voice reads are broken, and have never been replaced, and lateral motion, for me, is almost impossible these days. I do not know what you mean, I said. There is J-66. He was once an entertainment. No, no, he interrupted. You don't get it. What the Senator wants is a guide. They're making a survey of the dumps, though I'll be damned if I can find out why. And you know the dumps better than any metal person, or human, on Phobos. So that was it. I felt a vague dread, a premonition of disaster. I had such feelings before, and usually with reason. This, too, was an acquired sensibility, I am sure. For many years I have studied the builders, and there is much to be learned of their mobile faces and their eyes. In John's eyes, however, I read no trickery. Nothing. Yet I say I had the sensation of evil. It was just for a moment, no longer. I said I would think it over. Senator Langley was distinguished. John said so. And yet he was cumbersomely round, and he rattled incessantly of things into which I could interpret no meaning. The she, who was his wife, was much younger, and sullen, and unpleasantly I sensed great rapport between her and John Rogerson from the very first. There were several other humans in the group. I will not call them builders, for I did not hold them to be, in any way, superior to my own people. They all were spectacles, and they gravitated about the round body of the senator, like minor moons, and I could tell that they were some kind of servitors. I will not describe them further. MS. 33 I will describe. I felt an unconscionable hatred for him at once. I cannot say why, except that he hung about his master, obsequiously, power-packed, smoothly purring, and he was slim-limbed, nickel-plated, and wore, I thought, a smug expression on his visi-plate. He represented the new order, the ones who had displaced us on earth. He knew too much, and showed it at every opportunity. We did not go far that first morning. The half-track was driven to the edge of the dumps. Within the dumps one walks, or does not go. Phobos is an airless world, and yet so small that rockets are impractical. The terrain is broken and littered with the refuse of half a dozen worlds, but the dumps themselves, that is different. Imagine, if you can, an endless vista of death, a sea of rusting corpses of spaceships, and worn-out mining machinery, and of those of my race, whose power-packs burned out, or who simply gave up, retiring into this endless, corroding limbo of the barons. A more somber sight was never seen, but this fat ghoul, Langley, sickened me. This shame of the builder race, this adivism, this beast, rubbed his fat, impractical hands together with an ungodlike glee. Excellent, he said. Far, far better, in fact, than I had hoped. He did not elucidate. I looked at John Rogerson. He shook his head slowly. You there, robot! said Langley, looking at me. How far crosses this place? The word was like a blow. I could not answer. MS-33, glistening in the dying light of Mars, strode over to me, clanking heavily, up on the black rocks. He seized me with his grapples and shook me until my wiring was in danger of shorting out. Speak up when you are spoken to archaic mechanism, he created. I would have struck out at him, but what use, except to warp my own aging limbs? John Rogerson came to my rescue. On Phobos, he explained to Langley, we don't use that word, robot. These folk have been free a long time. They have quite a culture of their own nowadays, and they like to be called metal people. As a return courtesy, they refer to us humans as builders. Just a custom, Senator, but if you want to get along with them. Can they vote? said Langley, grinning at his own sour humor. Nonsense, said MS-33. I am a robot and proud of it. This rusty piece has no call to put on errors. Release him, Langley said. Droll fellows, these discarded robots. Really nothing but mechanical dolls, you know, but I think the old scientists made a mistake, giving them such human appearance in such obstinate traits. Oh, it was true enough, from his point of view. We had been mechanical dolls at first, I suppose, but fifty years can change one. All I know is this. We are people. We think and feel, and are happy and sad, and quite often we are bored stiff with this dreary moon of Phobos. It seared me. My selenium cells throbbed white hot within the shell of my frame, and I made up my mind that I would learn more about the mission of this Langley, and I would get even with MS-33, even if they had me dismantled for it. Of the rest of that week I recall few pleasant moments. We went out every day, and the quick-eyed servants of Langley measured the areas with their instruments, and exchanged significant looks from behind their spectacles, smug in their thin air helmets. It was all very mysterious and disturbing. But I could discover nothing about their mission, and when I questioned MS-33 he would look important and say nothing. Somehow it seemed vital that I find out what was going on before it was too late. On the third day there was a strange occurrence. My friend, John Rogison, had been taking pictures of the dumps. Langley and his wife had withdrawn to one side and were talking in low tones to one another. Quite thoughtlessly John turned the lens on them and clicked the shutter. Langley became rust red throughout the vast expanse of his neck and face. Here, he said, what are you doing? Nothing, said John. You took a picture of me, snarled Langley. Give me the plate at once. John Rogison got a bit red himself. He was not used to being ordered around. I'll be damned if I will, he said. Langley growled something I couldn't understand and turned his back on us. The she, who was called his wife, looked startled and worried. Her eyes were beseeching as she looked at John. A message there, but I could not read it. John looked away. Langley started walking back to the half-track alone. He turned once and there was evil in his gaze as he looked at John. You will lose your job for this impertinence, he said, with quiet savagery, and added enigmatically. Not that there will be a job after this week anyway. Builders may appear to act without reason, but there is always a motivation somewhere in their complex brains if one can only find it, either in the seat of reason or in the labyrinthine inhibitions from their childhood. I knew this, because I had studied them, and now there were certain notions that came into my brain which, even if I could not prove them, were no less interesting for that. The time had come to act. I could scarcely wait for darkness to come. There were things in my brain that appalled me, but now I was certain that I had been right. Something was about to happen to Phobos, to all of us here. I knew not what, but I must prevent it somehow. I kept in the shadows of the shabby buildings of Argon City, and I found the window without effort. The place where I had spied upon the wife of Langley to my sorrow the other night, there was no one there. There was darkness within, but that did not deter me. Within the air-drome which covers Argon City, the buildings are loosely constructed, even as they are on earth. I had no trouble, therefore, opening the window. I swung a leg up, and was presently within the darkened room. I found the door I sought, and entered cautiously. In this adjacent compartment I made a thorough search, but I did not find what I primarily sought, namely, the elusive reason for Langley's visit to Phobos. It was in a metallic overnight bag, that I did find something else, which made my power-pack hum so loudly that I was afraid of being heard. The thing which explained the strangeness of the pompous senator's attitude to-day, which explained, in short, many things, and caused my brain to race with new ideas, I put the thing in my chest container, and left as stealthily as I had come. There had been progress, but since I had not found what I hoped to find, I must now try my alternate plan. Two hours later I found the one I sought, and made sure that I was seen by him. Then I left Argon City by the south lot, furtively, as a thief, always glancing over my shoulder, and when I made certain that I was being followed I went swiftly, and it was not long before I was clamoring over the first heaps of debris at the edge of the dumps. Once I thought I heard footsteps behind me, but when I looked back there was no one in sight, just the tiny disk of demos peering over the sharp peak of the nearest ridge, the black velvet sky outlining the curvature of this airless moon. Presently I was inside of home, the time eaten hull of an ancient star freighter resting near the top of a heap of junked equipment from some old strip-mining operation. It would never rise again, but its shell remained strong enough to shelter my distillery and scant furnishings from any chance meteorite that might fall. I greeted it with the usual warmth of feeling which one has for the safe and the familiar. I stumbled over ten fuel cans, wires, and other tangled metal in my haste to get there. It was just as I had left it. The heating element under the network of coils and pressure chambers still glowed with white heat, and the moon glow was dripping with musical sound into the retort. I felt good. No one ever bothered me here. This was my fortress, with all that I cared for inside, my tools, my work, my micro-library, and yet I had deliberately, something, a heavy foot, clanked upon the first step of the man-port, through which I had entered. I turned quickly, the form shimmered in the pale, demo-slate that silhouetted it. MS-33 He had followed me here. What do you want? I said. What are you doing here? A simple question, said MS-33. Tonight you look very suspicious when you left Argonne City. I saw you and followed you here. You may as well know that I've never trusted you. All the old ones were unreliable. That is why you were replaced. He came in boldly, without being invited, and looked around. I detected a sneer in his voice as he said, so this is where you hide. I do not hide. I live here. It is true. A robot does not live. A robot exists. We newer models do not require shelter like an animal. We are rust-proof and invulnerable. He strode over to my micro-library, several racks of carefully arranged spools, and fingered them irreverently. What is this? My library. So our memories are built into us. We have no need to refresh them. So is mine, I said, but I would learn more than I know. I was stalling for time, waiting until he made the right opening. Nonsense, he said. I know why you stay out here in the dumps, masterless. I have heard of the forbidden drug that is sold in the mining camps, such as Argonne City. Is this the mechanism? He pointed at the still. Now is the time. I mustered all my cunning, but I could not speak. Not yet. Never mind, he said. I can see that it is. I shall report you, of course. It will give me great pleasure to see you dismantled. But that it really matters, of course, now. There it was again, the same frightening illusion that Langley had made to-day. I must succeed. I knew that MS-33, for all his brilliance and newness and vaunted superiority, was only a secretarial. For the age of specialism was upon earth, and general purpose models were no longer made. That was why we were different here on Phobos. It was why we had survived. The old ones had given us something special, which the new metal people did not have. Moreover, MS-33 had his weakness. He was larger, stronger, faster than me, but I doubted that he could be devious. You are right, I said, pretending resignation. This is my distillery. It is where I make the fluid, which is called Moonglow, by the metal people of Phobos. Doubtless you are interested in learning how it works. Not even remotely interested, he said. I am interested only in taking you back and turning you over to the authorities. It works much like the conventional distilling planets of earth, I said, except that the basic ingredient, a silicon compound, is irradiated as it passes through zirconian tubes to the heating pile, where it is activated and broken down into the droplets of the elixir called Moonglow. You see the golden drops falling there. It has the excellent flavor of fine petroleum. As I make it, perhaps you'd care to taste it. Then you could understand that it is not really bad at all. Perhaps you could persuade yourself to be more lenient with me. Certainly not," said MS. 33. Perhaps you are right, I said, after a moment of reflection. I took a syringe, drew up several drops of the stuff, and squirted it into my carapace, where it would do the most good. I felt much better. Yes, I continued. Certainly you are quite correct. Now that I think of it, you knew our models would never bear it. You weren't built to stand such things. Nor for that matter could you comprehend the exquisite joys that are derived from Moonglow. Not only would you derive no pleasure from it, but it would corrode your parts, I imagine, until you could scarcely crawl back to your master for repairs. I helped myself to another liberal portion. That is the silliest thing I've ever heard, he said. What? I said, it's silly. We are constructed to withstand a hundred times of greater stress, and twice as many chemical actions as you were. Nothing could hurt us. Besides, it looks harmless enough. I doubt that it is hardly anything at all. For me it is not, I admitted, but you. Give me the syringe, fool! I dare not. Give it here! I allowed him to rust it from my grasp. In any case, I could not have prevented him. He shoved me backwards against the rusty bulkhead, with a clang. He pushed the nozzle of the syringe down into the retort, and withdrew it, filled with Moonglow. He opened an inspection plate in his ventral region, and squirted himself generously. It was quite a dose. He waited for a moment. I feel nothing, he said finally. I do not believe it is anything more than common lubricating oil. He was silent for another moment. There is an ease of movement, he said. No paralysis, I asked. Perout, you stupid rust-ealed robot! He helped himself to another syringe-fill of Moonglow. The stuff brought twenty credits an ounce, but I did not begrudge it him. He flexed his superbly articulated joints in three directions, and I could hear his power unit building up within him to a whining pitch. He took a shuffling sidestep, and then another, gazing down at his feet with arms akimbo. The light gravity here is superb, superb, superb, superb, superb! He said, skipping a bit. Isn't it? I said. Almost negligible, he said. True. You have been very kind to me, MS-33 said. Extremely, extraordinarily, incomparably, incalculably, kind. He eased up all the adjectives and his memory pack. I wonder if you would mind awfully much, if not at all, I said. Help yourself. By the way, friend, would you mind telling me what your real mission of your party is here on Phobos? The senator forgot to say. Secret, he said. Horribly top secret. As a dutiful subject, I mean servant of earth, I could not, of course, divulge it to anyone. If I could, his neon eyes glistened. If I could, you would, of course, be the first to know, the very first. He threw one nickel-plated arm around my shoulder. I see, I said. And just what is it that you are not allowed to tell me? Why, that we are making a preliminary survey here on Phobos, of course, to determine whether or not it is worthwhile to send salvage for scrap. Earth is short of metals, and it depends upon what the old muh, the master, says in his report. You mean they'll take all the derelict spaceships, such as this one, and all the abandoned equipment? And the robots, MS33 said. They're metal, too, you know. They're going to take the dismantled robots? MS33 made a sweeping gesture. They're going to take all the robots, dismantled or not. They're not good for anything anyway. The bill is up, before the Federation Congress right now, and it will pass if my master, Langley, says so. He padded my helmet, consolingly, his grapples clanking. If you were worth a damn, you know, he concluded sorrowfully. That's murder, I said. And I meant it. Man's inhumanity to metal people, I thought. Yes, to man, even if we were made of metal. How's that? said MS33, foggly. Have another drop of munglo, I said. I've got to get back to Argonne City. I made it back to Benny's place without incident. I had never moved so swiftly. I sent Benny out to find John Rogerson. And presently, he brought him back. I told Rogerson what MS33 had said, watching his reaction carefully. I could not forget that though he had been our friend, he was still one of the builders, a human who thought as humans. You comprehend, I said grimly, that one word of this will bring in uprising of fifty thousand metal people, which can be put down only at much expense and with great destruction. We are free people. The builders exiled us here, and therefore lost their claim to us. We have as much right to life as any one. And we do not wish to be melted up and made into printing presses and spaceships and like. I'm fools, John said softly. Listen, B-12, you've got to believe me. I didn't know a thing about this, though I've suspected something was up. I'm on your side, but what are we going to do? Maybe they'll listen to reason. Vera, that is the name of the she. No, they will not listen to reason. They hate us. I recalled with bitterness the episode of Alarm Clock. There is a chance. However, I have not been idle this night. If you will go get Langley and meet me in the back room here at Benny's, we will talk. But he'll be asleep. Awaken him, I said. Get him here. Your own job is at stake, as well, remember. I'll get him, John said grimly. Wait here. I went over to the bar where Benny was serving the miners. Benny had always been my friend. John was my friend, too, but he was a builder. I wanted one of my own people to know what was going on, just in case something happened to me. We were talking there, in low tones, when I saw MS-33. He came in through the front door, and there was purposefulness in his stride that had not been there when I left him back at the old Hulk. The effects of the Moonglow had worn off much quicker than I had expected. He had come for vengeance. He would tell about my distillery, and that would be the end of me. There was only one thing to do, and I must do it fast. Quick, I ordered Benny. Douse the lights. He complied. The place was plunged into darkness. I knew that it was darkness, and yet, you comprehend, I still sensed everything in the place, for I had the special visual sensory system bequeathed only to the general purposes of a bygone age. I could see, but hardly anyone else could. I worked swiftly, and I got what I was after in a very short time. I ducked out of the front door with it, and threw it in a silvery arc as far as I could hurl it. It was an intricate little thing, which could not, I am sure, have been duplicated on the entire moon of Phobos. When I returned, someone had put the lights back on, but it didn't matter now. MS-33 was sitting at one of the tables, staring fixedly at me. He said nothing. Benny was motioning for me to come into the back room. I went to him. John Rogerson and Langley were there. Langley looked irritated. He was a mumbling, strangled curses and rubbing his eyes. John laughed. You may be interested in knowing, B-12, that I had to arrest him to get him here. This had better be good. It is all bad, I said. Very bad. But necessary. I turned to Langley. It is said that your present survey is being made with the purpose of condemning all of Phobos, the dead and the living alike, to the blast furnaces and the metal shops of earth. Is this true? Why, you impudent, miserable piece of tin, what if I am making a scrap survey? What are you going to do about it? You're nothing but a rope. So it is true. But you will tell the salvage ships not to come. It is yours to decide. And you will decide that we are not worth bothering with here on Phobos. You will save us. I—lustered Langley—you will. I took the thing out of my breastplate container and showed it to him. He grew pale. John said, Well, I'll be damned. It was a picture of Langley and another. I gave it to John. His wife, I said, his real wife. I am sure of it, for you will note the inscription on the bottom. Then Vera is not his wife. You wonder that he was camera shy. Housebreaker! roared Langley. It's a plot—a dirty reactionary plot. It is what is called blackmail, I said. I turn to John. I am correct about this. You are, John said. You are instructed to leave Phobos, I said to Langley. And you will allow my friend here to keep his job as peace-officer, for without it he would be lost. I have observed that in these things the builders are hardly more adaptable than their children, the metal people. You will do all this, and in return we will not send the picture that John took today to your wife, nor otherwise inform her of your transgression, for I am told that this is a transgression. It is indeed, agreed John gravely, right Langley. All right, Langley snarled. You win, and the sooner I get out of this hole the better. He got up to go, squeezing his fat form through the door into the bar, past the gaping miners, heedless of the metal people. We watched him go with some satisfaction. It is no business of mine, I said to John, but I have seen you look with longing upon the she that was not Langley's wife. Since she does not belong to him, there is nothing to prevent you from having her. Should not that make you happy? Are you kidding?" he snarled, which proves that I have still much to learn about his race. Out front, Langley spied his metal servant, MS-33, just as he was going out the door. He turned to him. What are you doing here? He asked suspiciously. MS-33 made no answer. He stared malevolently at the bar, ignoring Langley. Come on here, damn you, Langley said. MS-33 said nothing. Langley went over to him and roared foul things into his earphones that would corrode one soul if one had one. I shall never forget that moment. The screaming, red-faced Langley, the laughing miners. But he got no reply from MS-33, not then or ever, and this was scarcely strange, for I had removed his fuse. End of B-12's Moonglow by Charles A. Stearns The Eyes Have It by Philip K. Dick This is a LibriVox recording. All LibriVox recordings are in the public domain. For more information nor to volunteer, please visit LibriVox.org. Reading by Greg Marguerite The Eyes Have It by Philip K. Dick It was quite by accident I discovered this incredible invasion of earth by lifeforms from another planet. As yet I haven't done anything about it. I can't think of anything to do. I wrote to the government and they sent back a pamphlet on the repair and maintenance of framehouses. Anyhow, the whole thing is known. I'm not the first to discover it. Maybe it's even under control. I was sitting in my easy chair, idly turning the pages of a paper-backed book someone had left on the bus when I came across the reference that first put me on the trail. For a moment I didn't respond. It took some time for the full import to sink in. After I'd comprehended it seemed odd I hadn't noticed it right away. The reference was clearly to a non-human species of incredible properties, not indigenous to earth. A species I hasten to point out, customarily masquerading as ordinary human beings. Their disguise, however, became transparent in the face of the following observations by the author. It was at once obvious the author knew everything, knew everything, and was taking it in his stride. The line, and I tremble, remembering it even now, read, his eyes slowly roved about the room. Vague chills assailed me. I tried to picture the eyes. Did they roll like dimes? The passage indicated not. They seemed to move through the air, not over the surface, rather rapidly, apparently. No one in the story was surprised. That's what tipped me off. No sign of amazement at such an outrageous thing. Later the matter was amplified. His eyes moved from person to person. There it was in a nutshell. The eyes had clearly come apart from the rest of him and were on their own. My heart pounded and my breath choked in my windpipe. I had stumbled on an accidental mention of a totally unfamiliar race. Obviously non-terrestrial. Yet to the characters in the book it was perfectly natural, which suggested they belonged to the same species. A slow suspicion burned in my mind. The author was taking it rather too easily in his stride. Evidently he felt this was quite a usual thing. He made absolutely no attempt to conceal this knowledge. The story continued. Presently his eyes fastened on Julia. Julia, being a lady, had at least the breeding to feel indignant. She is described as blushing and knitting her brows angrily. At this I sighed with relief. They weren't all non-terrestrials. The narrative continues. Slowly, calmly, his eyes examined every inch of her. Great Scott! But here the girl turned and stomped off and the matter ended. I lay back in my chair, gasping with horror. My wife and family regarded me in wonder. What's wrong, dear? My wife asked. I couldn't tell her. Knowledge like this was too much for the ordinary run of the mill person. I had to keep it to myself. Nothing, I gasped. I leaped up, snatched the book, and hurried out of the room. In the garage I continued reading. There was more. Trembling, I read the next revealing passage. He put his arm around Julia. Presently she asked him if he would remove his arm. He immediately did so, with a smile. It's not said what was done with the arm after the fellow had removed it. Maybe it was left standing upright in the corner. Maybe it was thrown away. I don't care. In any case, the full meaning was there, staring me right in the face. Here was a race of creatures capable of removing portions of their anatomy. It will. Eyes, arms, and maybe more. Without batting an eyelash. My knowledge of biology came in handy at this point. Obviously they were simple beings, unicellular, some sort of primitive, single-celled things. Beings no more developed than starfish. Starfish can do the same thing, you know. I read on, and came to this incredible revelation, tossed off coolly by the author without the faintest tremor. Outside the movie theater, we split up. Part of us went inside, part over to the cafe for dinner. Binary fission, obviously. Splitting in half and forming two entities, probably each lower half went to the cafe, it being farther, and the upper halves to the movies. I read on, hands shaking. I had really stumbled onto something here. My mind reeled as I made out this passage. I'm afraid there's no doubt about it. Poor Bibny has lost his head again, which was followed by, and Bob says he has utterly no guts. Yet Bibny got around as well as the next person. The next person, however, was just as strange. He was soon described as totally lacking in brains. There was no doubt of the thing in the next passage. Julia, whom I'd had thought to be the one normal person, reveals herself as also being an alien life-form, similar to the rest. Quite deliberately, Julia had given her heart to the young man. It didn't relate what the final disposition of the organ was, but I didn't really care. It was evident Julia had gone right on living in her usual manner, like all the others in the book, without heart, arms, eyes, brains, viscera, dividing up in two when the occasion demanded, without a qualm. Thereupon she gave him her hand. I sickened. The rascal now had her hand as well as her heart. I shudder to think what he's done with them by this time. He took her arm. Not content to wait, he had started dismantling her on his own. Flushing crimson, I slammed the book shut and leapt to my feet, but not in time to escape one last reference to those carefree bits of anatomy whose travels had originally thrown me on the track. Her eyes followed him all the way down the road and across the meadow. I rushed from the garage and back inside the warm house, as if the cursed thing were following me. My wife and children were playing monopoly in the kitchen. I joined them and played with frantic fervor, brow, feverish, teeth, chattering. I had had enough of the thing. I wanted to hear no more about it. Let them come on. Let them invade Earth. I don't want to get mixed up in it. I have absolutely no stomach for it. End of The Eyes Have It by Philip K. Dick
|
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"url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZQ7s5fiGOfM",
"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
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UCgrpFBt6fAsBgz84MFMKkKQ
|
An Exclusive Look into this SERENE Waterfront Residence | R19,000,000
|
Experience a whole new level of grandeur and lifestyle at this stunning home found on the southern banks of the Hartbeespoort. This beautiful property in the Islands Estates has four bedrooms and four en-suite bathrooms. All private bedroom suites have contemporary en-suite bathrooms, large closets, and breathtaking views. This lovely home has access to the Hartbeespoort Dam's canals. Join us on todays episode and take a look at how beautiful this property is.
Property Link: https://bit.ly/3Ho8flK
Agency: Seeff
#privateproperty #thehomeshoppersshow #luxuryhome
An Exclusive Look into this SERENE Waterfront Residence
______________________________
Private Property aims to revolutionise the way South Africans find their next home by making the process easier, simpler, and faster.
Find all things Private Property at: https://linktr.ee/privatepropertyrsa
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"Hartbeespoort Dam's canals",
"Islands Estates",
"Hartbeespoort",
"southern banks of the Hartbeespoort",
"stunning home",
"SERENE Waterfront",
"Waterfront Residence",
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"the islands estate",
"south africa",
"hartbeespoort dam",
"luxury real estate",
"real estate",
"home tour",
"luxury homes",
"real estate market 2022"
] | 2022-12-21T16:00:28 | 2024-02-13T18:58:51 | 33 |
zQarAijsODU
|
Welcome at the island's estate. This place is awesome. This home is 19 million. It's got four bedrooms, four and a half bathrooms, 926 squares under it. Welcome home.
|
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"url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zQarAijsODU",
"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
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UCKBNaxsFV4hpGVc8QOUmsFg
|
U.S. Air Force KC-135R Stratotanker to refuel U.S. Air Force F-16 Fighting Falcons
|
U.S. Airmen deployed with the 340th Expeditionary Air Refueling Squadron operate a U.S. Air Force KC-135R Stratotanker to refuel U.S. Air Force F-16 Fighting Falcons above the United Arab Emirates, March 5, 2022.
340th EARS refuels anytime, anyplace
QATAR
03.04.2022
The 340th EARS, deployed with Ninth Air Force (Air Forces Central), is responsible for delivering fuel to U.S. and partner nation forces, enabling airpower, deterrence, and stability. (U.S. Air Force video by Staff Sgt. Frank Rohrig)
Film Credits: Video by Staff Sgt. Frank Rohrig
United States Air Forces Central
Defense Now - Mar. 2022
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLe95fdmDwNk_-u4hMJzCOzBr4sXVGAPVI
Checkout for more Latest Defense & Technology News Updates.
www.defenseflashnews.com
--------------------------------------------------
The appearance of U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) visual information does not imply or constitute DoD endorsement.
Video created under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
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Copyright disclaimer under section 107 of the copyright act 1976, allowance is made for 'fair use' for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statue that might otherwise be infriging. Nonprofit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.
|
[
"military exercise",
"marine Corps",
"Military videos",
"infantry regiment",
"infantry combat vehicles",
"fire fighters",
"wildfire",
"combat footage",
"usmc",
"special forces",
"Aviation",
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"Technologies",
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"International armed forces",
"War Conflicts",
"International Military drills",
"Weapons",
"Aircraft",
"Ships",
"Vehicles"
] | 2022-03-11T08:30:57 | 2024-04-22T17:56:05 | 106 |
Zq-OpuRq7CM
|
There you go. Sorry about that. Thank you.
|
{
"url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zq-OpuRq7CM",
"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
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UCHIKRYVrVYwKb2QpoLG5W3w
|
"Beware The Cloaked Woman Of Crabber's Bay" | Creepypasta | Horror Story
|
Never go near the waters of Crabber's Bay at night!
AUTHOR: YungSeti
►https://www.reddit.com/r/nosleep/comments/n86e5n/beware_the_cloaked_woman_of_crabbers_bay/
►https://twitter.com/SetiStories?s=09
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] | 2021-05-11T23:00:29 | 2024-02-14T18:39:29 | 5,449 |
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It's been almost eight years since I've sat down to retell this story. So forgive any, I don't know, stumblings and clarity on my part. Even now, sitting in front of my laptop, a lit joint burning closer to the filter in my right hand, and a bottle of whiskey just beside me on my left. Half of both already consumed. As I recall the events of that day, I can feel the familiar tremor starting in my hand. One that I know will only grow more pronounced and difficult to stifle as the memories are brought to the surface. Still, I've spent enough years battling with a decision to share what happened and more than that dealing with the consequences it can have. And ultimately, I know now the decision to share my story is the right one. I believe people have the right to know what's out there. And if there's a possibility that I can stop anyone else from going near that place, from going near the shores of Crappers Bay, I can perhaps prevent that thing that took my brother from hurting anyone else. The fact that other people have fallen victim to the evil of that place, that anyone else has met the same fate as my brother lingers with me, haunting me nearly as much as the final seconds I saw him and ultimately saving lives means more to me than the perspective ridicule this may garner or the pain reliving it will cause. I suppose I should start lest I manage to convince myself against it or fall apart before I complete the story. I've got a job to do now, a warning to give that I wish my brother and I had had when playing near the shores of our beloved lake house. If ever you find yourself in the area, beware the shores of Crappers Bay and do not be lured by its strange phenomena, those shores teaming with little arthropods, for they are little more than an omen of something far darker. Beware the cloaked woman who wanders along the shore. I call top bunk. No fair. You got it last time. It's my turn. Dad said, gonna have to beat me to it then. My brother Ryan said breaking into a full sprint from the front door and up the stairs before he'd even finished speaking. Ryan was the younger of the two of us by a year, though you wouldn't be able to tell given our appearances or dynamic. He was always the more outspoken and brazen of the two of us and paired with the fact that he was unusually big for his age and in more cases than one finding himself in scraps with and beating some of my bullies, all of whom like me were a great older than him. By the time of our final trip to the lake house, though he was only 11, he stood taller than me and had grown into a pretty brazen kid, never one to want to back down from any challenge and seemingly goaded by the idea of risk. I suppose because of his size and how he was often treated as a kid much older than he truly was, Ryan felt the need to be the tough kid to be my protector, even though I should have been his and because of that he's gone and I'm here when it should have been the other way around. It was mid August and the end of summer was hurtling closer, evident by the waning hours of sunlight and the subtle creep of the winter chill in the air, most apparent at night and our mother and father decided that we ought to take advantage of the rapidly fading benefits of summer, allowing my brother and I one last hurrah before school began and the unforgiving northeastern winter settled in. My brother and I had thrown our bags together, practically loading the car ourselves when our parents told us that we would be departing that night for our last lake house visit of the summer. The beach house had been in our family for generations, constructed by our great grandfather, who was also the first person to settle on the shores, the first member of the very community in which it sat, which became Fiddler's Grove, a small but wealthy little village built behind the cover of a thick northeastern forest that entirely hid the several acres of discreet private shore that would come to be known as Krabbers Bay. The reason for the name was simple, Krabbers Bay had a unique quark, a phenomenon really, that made it quite unlike any other and was responsible for the community that had grown around it. In the sunsets, the shores of Krabbers Bay become teeming with creatures of all shapes and sizes, utterly unlike anything you've ever seen. It was something of a tradition of our families ever since our grandfather had died to make the drive out to the house that our father had grown up in within Fiddler's Grove and appreciate the environment in a way he never had growing up. Before my brother and I, it was a time represented by one thing and one thing only, the beach. Our father had grown up with a father who was a kind man, but demanded respect and maintained one rule with which he was oddly strict that our father was not to be found anywhere near the shores of the bay, especially near sunset due to it being dangerous. Reportedly, our grandfather's warm and personable attitude would grow unrecognizably dark the few times my father was caught sneaking out to play near the shores when he was our age and the punishment that would follow was uncharacteristic. I suppose that's partly why he made such a point of allowing us that joy and we did find such joy in it. By the time we were passing the city limits of the small coastal town nearest the little village where the beach house was, my brother and I were practically buzzing with excited energy. The scent of sea salt was growing more pronounced, stoking the flames of our excitement even more as the wind whipped in through my brother's side window, opened only halfway at our parents request, our mom not wanting us to catch something due to the very present chill in the air. As we near the house, the side of the shore ahead and the large gray expanse of water beyond it disappeared behind the trees. And within minutes, we driven up the long winding driveway that coiled up the hill towards the house like a great stone serpent and into the shadow, the massive old colonial mansion parking the car under the archway extending between the house and garage. Within minutes, my brother and I had practically tumbled out of the car and after taking in a breath of salty seaside air mixed with the sweet smell of forest greenery that served as the signature scent of the area, we sped into the house falling right back into the same argument we had every time we arrived as my brother sped ahead to that bedroom that had once belonged to my grandfather and now served as our guest room. The old house seemed to groan its welcome as our arguing voices and racing footsteps across the old wooden floors and up the winding staircase echoed through those halls, which still felt so cavernous as a child inundating the sleepy, creaky old colonial on a hillside by the shore with a life it hadn't had since our last visit. My brother raced ahead of me speeding past hopelessly taking full advantage of his greater height and athleticism, nodding up the spiral staircase and down the stairs overhead, showering me with dust from the old light fixtures swaying under his footfalls. I cried out another complaint to the air he'd previously occupied quickening my pace while trying not to lose my footing scrambling up the stairs backpack in hand. I raced through the upstairs hall making such a sharp left into the first open door that I narrowly avoided running into the doorframe. The room was just as we left it with perhaps a bit more dust and the addition of my brother's stuff somehow already scattered messily around. Ryan sat atop the bunk bed nearest the wall and the massive window with a view of the gray shores below a smug grin of satisfaction prominent on his face as I trudged across the room making certain hand gestures at him as I threw my bag onto the lower bunk. Ryan leaned over the side of the bed holding himself up with one hand gripping the window frame clicking open the two locks on either side of the window and sliding it open with a grunt. A cloud of dust wafted from the signs as the window ground its protest at being opened for the first time in months. The familiar and ever present sense of saltwater and morning dew rolled in on a breeze transforming the thin white curtains on either side of the window into bed sheet ghost and filling the room I caught my brother's eye the same thought occurring to both of us as we breathe in the scent a swell of nostalgia and excitement rising within us the beachfront from our childhood the portion of shoreline behind our house has been my brother and I's playground on many a summer night and the setting of many of our best memories together as a child during the day it would transform into an imaginary battleground as we fended off legions of pretend pirates docking ships with massive black flags looming overhead all along the shore and during the evenings when the peculiarities of that particular beach became apparent and the sands became covered in legions of moving black things that seem to reflect the light off of slick shells blank crabs scuttling across it emerging from under rocks and shells and fallen branches and out of the water seemingly claiming dominion over the beach my brother and I could always be found out in our beach a tiger with sand buckets at our sides collecting and subsequently freeing the strange land spiders looking back through the always clear lens of hindsight I suppose the strange phenomena of our property should have been more daunting to us I've never seen anywhere as abundant with the creatures as our property would become when the sun began to set with so many of them so abnormally large if ever any one of us had chosen to dig deeper to peel back the layers of what we had so readily accepted as normal and understand just what it was that made these shores different just what drew these legions of animals here who knows perhaps somehow we'd never have gone back and Ryan would still be here we were just kids though and as curious as we were it had never truly occurred to us to question the nature of the shore that in the late evening grew teeming with crustaceans since it had always just been that way it became ordinary to us and it wasn't until the events of that final trip that we would be forced to face the horrifying reality without skipping a beat upon reaching the room we torn the bags open thrown on our swimsuits and grabbed our plastic beach buckets and we're out of the room in a blur racing down the hall just as we had moments prior Ryan running out to the lead as usual narrowly missed colliding into our father arriving with his and mother's luggage at the top of the stairs as we sped by Ryan reached the back door that opened up onto the patio first grabbing the plastic bucket we used to use for sand castles as children from the pile of beach toys kept near the door and after a few moments of fumbling with the locks we were racing down the stairs of the deck and down the path to the beach the sound of my brother and I clamoring down the wooden porch steps and our excited chatter filled the air along with a continuous whooshing sounds of the water against the shore as it approached and receded the beach was clear of any wildlife at this point with the exception of the lone seagull flitting through the sand or circling overhead not quite yet the time of day at which the namesake peculiarity of Krabbers Bay became apparent at that point in the day with the late afternoon sun still setting high above in the sky the beach was just like any other private beach and a quiet community and while we waited for the shores to fill with their namesake creatures the beach was ours and we would enjoy it as was typical for kids racing to see who could swim farthest out without passing the buoys flinging balls of mud and sand at one another and building and subsequently destroying each other sand castles that was how we spent the next hour watching the sun disappearing beneath the horizon painting the sky wondrous hues of yellow and orange until the time drew near I glanced at the sky taking note of the approaching darkness it was almost time that time in the late evening during which the odd phenomena of Krabbers Bay became apparent behind me Ryan splashed about in the water trying to catch some small fish that had wandered too close to shore by hand as I scan the beach front and the sandy hills leading up to the greenery spilling forth from the forest above searching for even the slightest sign of movement in the sand it's almost time my brother called from behind me standing with his face towards the setting sun hands cupped over his eyes for protection he trudged forward out of the shallows grabbing the plastic bucket from the sand in his right hand and cupping his eyes with his left until he was right beside me back turned scanning the beach just as I was race to see who finds one first he finished shooting me a grin with a familiar competitive glint in his eyes a smirk made its way across my face as I continued my visual search of the area for the tiniest shuffle of movement in the sand or flits of darkness speeding out of the brush of the forest spilling over the sandy sides of their hills towards the water hoping to spot one and accept the challenge all in one breath likely the only way I'd beat my brother in any sort of race I suppose this is the point at which the story begins to seem odd to you from my experience this is the point in the tale when the psychiatrist stop and mention never having experienced anything similar despite plenty of time on the beach my reply is always the same you haven't been to Krabbers Bay it was the very reason the community had come to exist a strange seemingly unexplainable phenomena of nature that happened to make those original proprietors the first fishermen and Krabbers who settled here supposedly stumbling over this goldmine of land by chance claiming this strip of shore and the surrounding forest as their own my great grandfather among them a generational wealth the stories of the original crew who discovered the bay always seemed to shift and change based on when it was being told my father himself admitting he'd never received a consistent answer but the basics were the same a group of Krabbers struggling to make ends meet set out for a day of work when a record breaking storm hits the area throwing them off course and nearly capsizing them on the rocky shores the storm would begin to wane as the sun started to dip below the horizon and as the men floated gently into a bay none of which had ever seen before and upon bringing up the nets to check for tears they found it overflowing with an abundance of crabs of a myriad of species turning their attention to the beach surrounding them jaws dropped and hearts skipped beats as they observed the beach seemingly overcome by legions of the creatures without any intention they'd stumbled onto a veritable goldmine and all the men on that boat that day swore a vow of silence to each other keeping the location and its phenomena a secret until they'd made a sizable fortune quickly becoming the most successful crabbing operation anywhere and taking them all from average crabbers and fishermen to quite wealthy men most of them anyway as lucky as it all seemed to be not everything was perfect it seemed with the discovery of the bay a dark omen seemed to follow and in the weeks and years following a few members of the crew would return to the bay alone and never return seemingly disappearing into thin air only traces of one would ever be found a shirt found floating just feet away from the shore ominous but ultimately inconclusive and far from enough to prevent the rest from taking advantage of the land's gift the rest of the crew all of whom were richer now than they'd ever thought they'd be go on to purchase the land developing a strange affinity for the place constructing the massive homes and manners that would become the neighborhood of fiddler's grove around crabbers bay crabbers bay is like most other private shores during most hours of the day quiet and calm silty shores along the green borders of the forest like any other massachusetts shore it's when the sun begins to dip disappearing behind the sea line and the sands and earth along the shore seem to shift in places with strange sentience and the crevices and spaces between the rock formations on either side of the shore seem to team with tiny forms and hundreds of spindly legs pouring forth that the place unveils its strange nature there by the time my head had snapped in his direction prompted by a shout ryan had already taken off in pursuit of something kicking up a cloud of sand for me to run through in his wake shit my eyes searched ahead while running settling on a fist-sized point of movement and color purple and black like a bruise reflecting the final rays of the setting sun scuttling forth from a freshly opened hole dug out of the sand a crab purple marsh to be specific had unveiled itself from its resting spot under the sand and began roaming the beach absentmindedly the first raindrop of a coming storm ryan had already covered more than half the distance to the thing which seemed to realize it was being pursued and veer off to the left towards the little sand slopes leading up to the forest land ahead then quickly scuttling off to the right repeating that pattern along the sand my brother remained in pursuit nearly losing his footing several times as the sand slid from beneath him but eventually managing to close enough of the gap to leap forward and drop the bucket over the fleeing crustacean gotcha you speedy little jerk he cried in frustrated triumph raising the bucket in grabbing the crab in one swift motion holding the creature under the armpits of both claws to prevent any pinching as we'd done so many times before i can't tell you why we did it or what we found so entertaining about it but it was sort of a tradition truly i've spent years asking myself damn near punishing myself for it solely for the events of that day but ultimately it seems like collecting small animals is just one of those things that little kids seem to do be it frogs from a nearby creek or fish in the local pond there's something intrinsically exciting about catching and collecting little animals even more than that it was tradition and something my brother and i loved nothing was as rewarding as a kid as the excitement of tasting the fruits of our labor when we'd rush back to the deck with full buckets to excitedly show our parents and dad would find a good blue or dungeness crab fire up the boil and we'd spend that night on the deck cracking shells and enjoying the fruit of our labor together listening to waves along the shore as our father regaled us in some familiar tale his father had told him of crappers bay ryan and i would take turns seeing who could fling their empty shells the furthest and standing there on the edge of the balcony the gentle song of the water in the distance eating our catch of the day we like to imagine we felt just like our great grandfather had when he was out on the sea i win again ryan whooped raising the purple and black cute crustacean overhead like an olympic medal before placing it in the plastic bucket he'd carried with him i hope we can eat this one it's huge this thing could feed the whole family with one leg the creature seemed to wriggle its legs with a mechanical slowness in protest before it was deposited into the buckets dismissively yeah yeah whatever i muttered dismissively at his victory leaving his question unanswered look it's almost time they're coming ryan followed my gaze to the tide rolling over the shore the water seeming to ripple and shutter with movement and disturbance beneath the shore as the waves recede into the sea leaving the sand which was usually clear say for the occasional dregs of seaweed broken seashells and rocks that would wash ashore was now littered with jagged shells in shapes from the deep at first glance it would appear that the tide had washed in a great heap of sea trash empty shells rocks in general ocean garbage but the longer one looks though quickly notice that the empty shells and rocks are making strange jerky movements they'll spot the myriad of spider-like appendages that extend from beneath them and watch as they scuttle away from the water with a speed and insectoid jiltedness for a lack of a better word and their movement pattern that's inherently disconcerting as they begin their ritual invasion of the beach quickly overwhelmed by their presence at the mouth of the bay small fist-sized portions of mud and sand began to move seemingly autonomously at first pulsing slightly with some minor signs of disturbance as though something was set to burst forth the points of motion quickly growing more pronounced and obvious as small clawed pincers of various types emerged from the earth shoveling away the mud and sand with a practiced quickness in a way that always reminded me of something out of a zombie movie all around us would appear to be hundreds of small stones left by the tide shifted the drift border of the water depositing more and more of the little six-legged creatures on the beach in small clusters of mud and sand parted to reveal all the Atlantic blue and purple marsh crabs that had embedded themselves into the earth around us come on let's go I've never seen some of these before Ryan cried out sprinting along the water dancing around the occasional crustacean emerging from the wet ground bucket held out beside him to avoid swinging around its occupant he stopped kneeling beside a particularly large purple marsh digging itself from its cover on a portion of the beach usually dry that was now affected by the rising waters of high tide all six of its legs splayed out to either side wriggling with a strange labored sort of motion jerky and odd as though it were mechanical or some poorly piloted marionette my skin crawled and a shutter ran down my back as interesting as I'd always found the creatures and enjoyed catching them I could never shake just how alien and inhuman they looked up close it was to be expected though my grandfather had always said the creatures were from another world evolving to survive both on land and life in the darkest depths of the oceans in conditions almost otherworldly comparatively watching as the tiny pincers like mouth of the crabs splayed open and shut its stalked eyes searching for escape I could almost believe it was really from another world wow look at that one Ryan dropped the purple marsh into the bucket and pointed a bit further down the shore at another crab scurrying forth from the edge of the water this one a fiddler named such for their having one giant claw that dwarfs the other like a man holding a fiddle the poor thing seemed to hesitate for a moment as if truly taking a second to take in its new environment on land until quickly taking note of my brother's approach as he barreled down on it and attempting to make a hasty retreat which was encumbered by the sheer size of its claw which it had no choice but to drag at its side all around us the shore that had once appeared untouched from a distance was covered in the creatures sand and dirt shifting under every movement of hundreds of emerging shells and legs scuttling forth from wherever they'd emerged crowding the beach like a flock of birds on their strange inexplicable schedule this was the phenomena of crappers bay the magic of the land as my dad said our great grandfather used to call it the very reason for fiddler's groves existence and the reason for the fortunes of the families who called it home even for us having grown up in the city outsiders of the community and ignorant to both the depths of their beliefs and the true nature of the phenomena there was a strange sort of reverence in which you held the place a feeling that there was something more at play there a strange otherworldly sort of atmosphere reminiscent of the way one felt standing outside in those quiet hours before morning when the world adopts an uncanny silence perhaps it was a result of how silent the shore was usually the canopy of the forest surrounding the bay muffling any outside noise leaving nothing but the sound of the waves most hours though when the sun began to set and the beach came alive with all the faint shuffling and movements of hundreds of moving legs it grew to something of a strange natural cacophony like the summer song of cicadas the hunt was on i wouldn't begin to realize it until the initial excitement of returning to the beach for the first time that year had stirred in me drowning out my other senses had faded that i felt it standing there as my brother observed his most recent catch another crab of unusual size my ears seemed to perk inexplicably the hair on my back rising along with it as i caught a glimpse of something farther along the shore of the bay at the far end of the beach where the shores of the inlet approached the forest and sand began to give way to patches of grass again i furrowed my brow squinting in hopes of better viewing the notably large shape on the other end of the shore something i was sure hadn't been there when we'd arrived on the beach my heart skipped a beat for reasons i couldn't explain something about seeing the unexpected shape sending a ripple of discomfort through me at first i took what i saw to be a massive deposit of seaweed another detritus of the sea given its strange shape and color perhaps washing up along with the crabs and the receding tide as it wasn't unheard of to have some trash wash ashore from the various bodies of waters that emptied into the surrounding ocean but even with that thought in my mind the chill i felt almost as soon as i laid eyes on it seemed to linger stubbornly my gaze brought back constantly to the dark shape at the far end of the beach ryan's excited chatter seemed to fade to background noise as he bucketed another crab my focus on the strange dark amorphous shape at the end of the shore i squinted as though to bring clarity to what i was seeing sure i must be mistaken it seemed to be moving rising steadily in its place a shock rippled through me at the utterly unexpected sight a strange electrifying side effect of the utter surprise at watching something i thought to be inanimate rise with a strange steadiness of the immediate flood of explanations and expletives that tore through my mind in that instant i began to settle in on the idea that it must have been the wind blowing what had to be a massive tangle of seaweed wrapped around something in a way that almost appeared to make the mass seem alive something in my mind unwilling to accept that the oddity at the end of the shore was anything to worry about unwilling to be distracted from my brother and i's fun on the beach yet the longer i looked utterly unable to break my gaze from the unidentifiable mass the greater the cold eerie sensation in me began to grow like the swelling tide and as it began its glacial approach my belief in the wind theory was destroyed as quickly as it had been formed r uh ryan i began my voice breaking slightly curiosity with an inexplicable hint of fear audible in my tone yeah he breathed sand all over his hands and his left cheek as he turned to face me one eyebrow raised as if to ask why i wasn't digging through the sand with him my stomach turned as the shape seemed to shuffle forward its movement slow methodical and uneven i could practically feel the gears turning in my head as my mind throughout suggestion after suggestion to identify just what i was seeing all of which seemed to fall flat only furthering the cold feeling energies within me ryan picked up on the hesitancy in my response his face shifting from excitement to a look of bewilderment and confusion until he followed my gaze along the shore his expression shifted quickly utter confusion giving way to curiosity and bewilderment in an instant what the hell he muttered rising to his feet brushing off the remaining sand from his knees what is that his question made something drop within me plummeting into a strange pit opening in my chest something about hearing what i was seeing confirmed eerily disturbing i nearly jumped out of my skin as i felt something brush along the top of my bare foot then again against my legs letting out a yelp of surprise as i leaped back finding what felt like the one clear patch of sand in the area as i fell narrowly avoiding stepping on the briny shell of a massive blue crab underfoot just one of a slow but noticeable trail of crustations flowing towards the opposite side of the shore from such a distance the shape of the thing approaching was indiscernible in my mind shot forth a myriad of suggestions convinced of each for only the couple of seconds it took to realize it was false shifting from a large dog somehow emerging from the water to a pile of sea debris carried strangely along with the breeze none of the suggestions my mind threw forth seemed to stick each theory as to what i was looking at having some glaring issue before settling on the only thing that made sense though for whatever reason it still felt off i i think it's one of the neighbors you know how weird they get around here i offered though i couldn't tell how much of that i believed and the tremble in my voice signaled a doubt i felt yeah ryan began eyes narrowed as he watched the slowly approaching figure there are a lot of weirdos around here but still don't they usually avoid us i knew he was right call it another quirk of this place but the community of fiddler's grove has always been a rather insular one likely a result of the days when the original fissures elected to keep it a secret morphing into an odd insular attitude and apparent unwillingness to even socialize with outsiders which i guess we were they always seem to watch us from a distance an unreadable but surely unwelcoming expression on their face as if they knew something we didn't it was far from uncommon for us to catch sight of a neighbor eyeing my brother and me playing on the beach from their porch or balcony a practically uniform frown carved into their expression who would respond to our friendly waves by turning their backs and disappearing into their home now here we were apparently watching one of those people shuffle towards us in such a way that made my skin crawl and raised my hairs on end whoever it was at the end of the beach they were shambling closer at that point any doubt i had about whether or not what i was seeing was just some pile of seaweed or trash held together ensuade by the wind faded as with every second it continued its approach moving with obvious intent let's just ignore them if they say anything or stuff gets weird we can go inside the suggestion seemed to satisfy ryan who gave the thing a final sideways glance before shrugging and turning his attention to a fiddler crab who'd been moving to join the strange trail of crabs moving down the beach giving chase as it broke away to avoid him a cold chill ran down my back and i could all but feel the person from the other end of the beaches approach an uneasy guardedness welling up in me as if any second a hand would clasp my shoulder that sensation grew until i could practically feel the clammy breath of someone at the back of my neck growing unbearable until eventually i turned my eyes looking back on whoever it was now halfway across the beach from us a strong breeze rolled across the water and onto land forcing me to shield my eyes from the sand it kicked up i could see the fabric whatever it was the person was wearing appearing from this distance to be a cloak of some sort with grass and seaweed and other plant life clung to it as it moved with the breeze creating an even eerie phantom like sort of appearance there's something about someone making a slow approach towards you that is deeply disturbing something about their feeling no need to move with any sense of haste or secrecy treaching forward uncaring of whether or not they're seen that can make you break into a cold sweat i tried to return my attention to my brother in our crab catch but the unshakable feeling of being watched and someone drawing ever closer was unshakable and i found myself muttering half-hearted responses to my brother's questions as i continued peering down the beach the person as shaky as that description felt for what i was seeing began to go from an unidentifiable shape in the distance and gain some recognizable form making it possible to make out certain aspects of their body beneath that unshakably odd cloak though its shape was strange the slight recognizable figure of a human woman by the look of it beneath all the strangely colored coverings was beginning to become somewhat clear at least from her lower half though there was something undeniably off about it that i couldn't quite place something i felt must be so obvious yet managed to evade notice there was one strange detail i noticed as it was impossible to miss and likely the reason i'd misidentified them is something else to begin with a hunch caused by something large and unwieldy on their back like a book bag beneath the cloak despite that the slow drip of unease like water from a broken tap was growing more intense the atmosphere on the beach seeming to shift in odd surrealism hitting me as though i were walking in a dream that sensation one gets typically followed by the question is this really happening as though my mind already knew something was deeply amiss ryan seemed to take notice of how distant i was quickly putting two and two together turning his attention back towards the figure growing nearer they're still coming huh he asked his brows furrowed looks like they're moving it looks like they're limping or something andrew maybe they're hurt and looking for help should we do something he hesitated when asking the last part and i could see that the strange shift in the atmosphere had gotten to him too a hint of anxiety breaking through his usual mask of confidence still the look in his eye was a familiar one i'd seen it many times throughout our childhood like just before he'd scaled the tallest tree in our neighborhood to retrieve the neighbor girl's cat after hearing her crying he fell halfway through his descent while i was left to watch from the ground in horror time seeming to slow as my brother approached the ground he never dropped the cat and though he broke his arm he smiled at the hospital proud of what he'd done ryan was always more than just a daredevil he was a sweet kid who would help someone in need regardless of how much his coward of an older brother attempted to dissuade him or convince him of the dangers still i think at that moment even he knew better than to just approach the person despite his helpful nature there was so much about what was unfolding beyond the usual weirdness of the beach to which we were accustomed that was unshakably weird teetering dangerously on the border of simply odd and intimidating he stepped forward then stopped his motion stuttered as reluctant seemed to wash over him the figure at the opposite end of the beach had yet to cease its glacial forward charge towards us growing more defined though little detail could be made out from beneath the cloak like garment draped over it and we began to hear a noise made faint by the distance between us over the faint murmur of the waves and whisper of the breeze i could hear something breathing quite labored by the sound of it a rasping desperate voice that sounded as though someone was struggling for air against failing lungs and intertwined with it a haunting pitchy whale like an older woman in distress sent an icy chill down my back despite the relative warmth of the day ma'am ryan called inquisitively across the beach his voice shaking uncharacteristically with a hint of the same unease i felt my entire body cringed as ryan's call shattered the silence every nerve in my body seeming to jolt in response a light but steadily growing stream of dread trickling through my chest as we awaited some semblance of a response from the odd person who was undoubtedly making their way towards us his words seemed to hang in the air punctuated by the constant clacking of tiny kindness legs darting over top shells as they scuttled over one another and through the sand which as i began to truly listen more my hearing growing more sensitive as i strained to hear a response a whispered greeting or anything from the person approaching i noticed for the first time how much louder and eerily uniform the sounds had become for the first time since their appearance on the beach i managed to pry my attention away from the disturbingly captivating figure in the cloak feeling almost mesmerized by its strange sway and began to notice something wrong with the crabs covering the beach they'd all but ceased their typical behaviors instead coming together in masses of legs and shells of varied size and appearance forming shuttering dark masses moving waves with hundreds of spindly legs and grasping claws that seem to move with a single mind like some massive ant colony even the perpetually skittish hermits which typically avoided the larger sometimes more aggressive crabs were now neglecting their typical feverish digging of safety holes in the sand to join the others it wasn't an isolated event either and as i turned to observe the rest of the shore behind us i saw the same strange sight repeating all along the beach they swarmed and circled on mass moving like a living whirlpool a constant hail of chittering clicks audible as they stampede over one another in their strange guided frenzy something was wrong opening my mouth to speak proved useless at first and it felt as though the air had been sucked out of the immediate vicinity leaving me to produce only the smallest sounds of surprise shock still robbing me of my functions the swirling masses on the beach behind us were beginning to coalesce and grow forming massive dark monoliths doubted with dull grays greens reds various colors of shells from the countless species amongst the shifting form which almost appeared as a single entity moving in concert with such fluidity if you've ever witnessed the mesmerizing murmuration of a flock of birds in the sky swooping and shifting as they move amongst each other with perfect coordination in total unison and harmony almost creating the illusion of a shimmering effect amongst the living cloud of avians or the shoaling of a massive school of fish when they form a single mass shifting morphing as one occasionally splitting off into separate clouds only to coalesce again with their awe inspiring grace of nature then you've got an idea of what I was seeing except on the ground and with far less breathtaking beauty and more of that jerky robotic like insectoid sort of movement typical of the animals excuse me ma'am my head snapped in Ryan's direction the question spoke with far more alarm than previously momentarily distracting me from what I was seeing he'd backed up drawing closer to me and it was clear why the woman had gotten considerably closer in the time I'd been distracted moving at a steady pace towards us disturbing confusing details growing more visible with her approach the cloak she wore appeared to glisten at a distance either wet or coated in some reflexive substance reflecting the last vestiges of fading light piercing the horizon and though it was growing darker and I felt as though I surely must have been mistaken in what I was seeing it appeared as though her draping's were comprised entirely of some strange blend of seaweed moss and other plant life still sopping wet covering all but the hand holding the strange shawl closed around her and a portion of her head stooped forward as she walked her skin made my stomach turn bearing a sickly modelled gray appearance reminiscent of a living corpse from a Romero film and her head was the same with a few clumps of long sopping wet black hair hanging from it filthy cloudy water dripping from its ends as the sun dipped below the horizon its final rays reflected across the cool gray surface of the water and caught her ghastly figure exposing yet another oddity that made my blood run cold all throughout her strange garment almost imperceivable due to natural camouflage shells embedded like strange decorative gems they were crabs the thought that they were dead past my mind momentarily my frightened mind's loose attempt at rationalizing a clearly irrational situation but the thought was dashed as I noticed the occasional rise of a claw or movement from a long thin leg from the fabric and I realized that somehow they were all alive and moving the almost rhythmic sound of the shifting sand as she moved had nearly faded to background noise but as she'd almost covered more than half the original distance between us I began to wonder just what caused such a sound a moan low in gravelly as if coming from a voice that hadn't been used in years rose above the sounds of the beach barely audible above the steady crackle of the teeming legions of crabs behind us thousands of legs and shells swarming over each other that made my skin crawl Ryan's wide eyes met mine unspoken messages passed between us in an instant both feeling the same primal terror pleading desperately for us to run to get as far away from the present strangeness as possible still something about that night the strange silky dreamlike quality of it all kept us in place for just a few moments longer a thick pungent odor filled the air coating the inside of my nose sea salt and rot and I swallowed against the ominous rumble in my stomach it caused I took a step back away from the wave of stench rolling forth from the ghastly woman when a sharp pain exploded through my ankle sending a wave of nausea rippling through me and I fell to the ground with an ominous crunch shit I cried out pulling my legs close and gripping my now throbbing ankle the pain was extreme at least for a child like I've been it was so much pain that for a moment I didn't notice the strange consistency of the ground I was laying on parts of it hard and slippery and wet under my arms while in other places jagged points seem to dig painfully into my skin it was a combination of the pain settling into reality allowing my senses to return and Ryan's horrified stunned expression as his eyes stared past me glazed with fear as he saw what I'd landed on Andrew are you okay get up his voice was small and frightened in a way I'd never heard from him before for the first time truly sounding like my frightened younger brother he was clearly worried about my well-being sensing that I was hurt but I could tell that wasn't his focus his eyes glazed as he stared past me what I'd assumed to be the earth beneath me had shifted practically moving me along with it and as one hand shot away from my ankle in response running along the hard shells and pointed claws of the swarm beneath me now a single moving wave of pinching claws and moving limbs completely covered the ground beneath me Ryan's head shot back and forth eyes darting between myself and the legion of crabs beneath me and the woman who couldn't have been more than 30 feet away from us at that point the stench wafting off of her growing suffocating the ground around our feet was covered within seconds by the impending mass now moving across the beach like a wave and I managed to roll myself over the shells beneath me finding a patch of open sand with the help of Ryan who grabbed my arm pulling me up onto my good leg on the ground all around us numerous crabs some impossibly large almost the size of small dogs float past like a living river the continuous prickle against my legs making my entire skin itch with a sensation of little legs crawling across me reconvening past us in a single stream moving for the same point the woman if we could even still call her that was so close we could hear each one of her slow labored breaths and the sickening gurgling sound her throat would emit with every attempt to inhale though still covered by her garment the construction of which stumped me as it seemed entirely composed of things I saw no way to fashion into clothing seaweeds and various greenery stitching together reminiscent of some natural suit her visible arm seemed to dangle before her uselessly and as she approached even with the sun now firmly behind the horizon I could see the sickly condition of her skin more clearly in my mind raced with questions it was the arm of a drowning victim out of a movie or a waterlogged corpse pruned with the skin seemingly ready to slosh off the bone at any moment hanging loose from the body I couldn't imagine what the rest of her would look like nor did I want to find out the black massive shells and legs move toward her like a living river pooling around her individual crabs crawling up her form their legs disappearing into the strange mossy coverings draped over her as they embed themselves like sick jewels I don't know why I kept looking everything in me begged for me to turn my head or close my eyes screaming out to me that whatever stood before us was something unexplainable and that I should be fleeing still my legs felt frozen my feet locked in place in the sand by some misfiring in my brain eyes locked on the approaching figure staring deep into the darkness beneath her cowl horrifying yet waiting for whatever was concealed beneath I couldn't have been prepared for what I was going to see the sky had turned from the deep purple and orange of the twilight to the navy blue of the night the moon hanging overhead serving as a brilliant source of light illuminating the beach below as she shuffled forward barely a few feet away from me at this point the face concealed beneath her hood became visible a morbid blend of humanity and something else I struggled to comprehend whatever this was this thing we'd been sharing the beach with it wasn't human her face above the nose anyways was the most human-esque aspect of her appearance with undeniably feminine eyes that would have been striking if not for their lacking any sort of whites or iris twin pools of a wide inky blackness that seemed to pierce me with their gaze that was the extent of the things humanity in her appearance her nose merely two pulsating slits in her face at first glance but a flash of motion from them caught my eye then a second in a sick feeling flooded through me as I began to process what I was seeing two little mandible like things flitted out of her nose on occasion seemingly tasting the air around her the mouth was no better almost imperceivable when shut it splayed open as she hissed two separate sets of fleshy pale pincers covered in what seemed like human skin separated like parts of a mask to reveal a circular opening riddled with a mouth full of teeth protruding from all directions a steady stream of saliva running down her chin splaying across the sand as she began to emit strange excited chitters my mind reeled in a violent wave of dizziness struck with such force my vision seemed to shake from it as the strange sense of surrealism of being in a waking nightmare grew overwhelming rising up in my chest threatening to make me vomit ryan tugged at my arm returning my senses as he tried desperately to pull me in the direction of the deck terror etched into his features as I'd never seen before I tried to follow entirely forgetting the injury to my ankle which gave way almost as soon as I placed my weight on it sending me sprawling face first into the sand I turned back to gauge the horrible woman's distance from us regretting it immediately as I got my first view of what was hidden behind the strange cloak for one what looked like a cloak from a distance was actually net a standard fishing net entangled with a variety of ocean plant life like some makeshift suit serving his home to a dozen small crabs that seem to have made a home in the thing I wanted to try to stand up again to run or crawl but I remained frozen in place staring up at the approaching nightmare waiting at any moment for myself to wake up but there would be no jarring moment of shooting up from my bed realizing it was all just a dream and with each passing second the horror I felt seemingly threatened to burst my heart the thing was an abomination the top of its head by far the most human part of it seeming to rise up from out of some sort of pale shell around the top half of her body peering out with those endless black eyes as though taking measure of me its torso was human-esque in shape but not in design covered in a clear yellowish carapace beneath which its fleshy insides were visible a pulsating mess of pink and white with streaks of red blood vessels and covered with six long fleshy tendrils two of which ended in points the other four of which ended in small useless little hands that appeared malformed or incomplete like something you'd find on a fetus with white muscle and bone visible under ripped skin that didn't seem to fit all stabbing and prodding at the air in front of it like a hermit crab trapped on its back one of her arms ended in a human hand the skin of which appeared ordinary and the question of whether the thing before me had once been human did occur to me but it was drowned out by my deafening fear the other was claw like but clearly made up of fingers stretched or malformed to appear like a claw with bony ridges running down the inside of the thumb and index as my eyes traveled down the creature every detail seemingly worse than the last my stomach turned as I saw its legs immediately understanding the strange limp in their gate the thing had four crab-like stilts for legs on which it teetered and moved like a marionette the fleshy arms continued to shoot forward reaching for me desperately and the creature picked up speed moving towards us with a quick spastic uneven motion that triggered every fight or flight response I had help help us Ryan's desperate cries only served to make my heart beat faster as I felt his hands grip under my armpits as I began to desperately attempt to pull myself towards our house the thing hissed and chittered loudly in response its body beginning to twitch violently as it shook off its strange fishing net garment grasping it firmly in its human hand revealing itself fully to us it was like some horrible god had taken a woman a beautiful one maybe at some point and stitched her into a massive crab shell replacing what should have been her back and shoulders which I realized was the mass I'd seen on her back there was something almost hauntingly beautiful about her eyes and for some reason all that came to mind was the mental image of a mermaid with pixie-like dark eyes and for the split second I could afford to be distracted I wondered if the creature before me had always been this a faint wet scratching noise came from the hole where her mouth should have been its mandibles splayed out to either side to reveal the hole full of jagged human teeth it took me a moment to realize what was happening she was speaking her voice a horrid raspy sing song whisper that made my blood freeze crack the shell eat what's inside crack the shell suck out the meat crack the shell taste the sweet tender fleshy bits the creature sang its spine tingling tune to itself as it scuttled towards us globs of drool dripped from the ends of its mandibles running down the exposed muscle and flesh of its neck and disappearing beneath its carapace an undeniable hunger present in its expression crabs from every part of the beach seemed to take notice of the creature seemingly attracted to it in droves crawling over my brother's feet and running along my entire body as he pulled me until a continuous swirling mass of legs and shells had formed beneath the creature like some freak hurricane of which it stood in the eye its eyes too wet dark orbs on stocks rose from the center of its face like snakes from a den and I could feel them staring through me an intense horrible hunger seeming to roll off of it in waves crack the shell have a taste it began to dawn on me that she wasn't talking about the crabs and a split second spent wondering what she meant by shells practically set me a fire with panic it was going to eat us or try anyways this thing this monster from the depths of some sick creator's mind was going to devour my brother and me alive the thought was dizzying like staring over the edge of a skyscraper but it provided all the motivation I needed to try and push myself up onto the one good leg using Ryan as balance and trying to flee as best I could though the root of unease had grown into a forest of inescapable dread within me knowing that she was closer to us than we were to the house and moving much faster we weren't going to make it we were going to die on this beach that we've loved all our lives at the hands of something I couldn't even understand I knew I should turn away to focus on the house ahead of me and put my every effort into escaping but something in me refused utterly horrifically transfixed with the cause of my imminent demise Andrew hurry man Ryan pleaded from ahead of me as I lagged behind my injured ankle screaming out with a red hot pain that radiated through my entire leg pulsing like a heartbeat he'd stopped running several feet ahead staring back between myself and our pursuer with an unreadable expression from behind me I heard the awful croon of the thing grow nearer along with almost rhythmic sounds of its massive crab like legs slamming into the earth as it scuttled forth I tried to stand and collapsed again into the sand beneath me shouting out in pain and frustration as I'd never felt before as my leg gave up on me once again just go please go get mom and dad I cried out to him my face fell into the sand a dejectedness spreading through me like nothing I'd ever felt as the fact of my imminent demise weighed on my young mind I knew there was no way he could do that no way for him to reach our parents and get back in time but I wanted to protect him and get him as far away from the danger as possible I just wanted him to live but Ryan was always the brave one the sound of continued footsteps in the sand brought a surge of relief overwhelmed almost immediately by a shockwave of dread as I realized they were approaching my head shot up and my heart fell as I confirmed what I'd heard no go I shouted at my brother barreling towards me tears streamed down his face yet his expression was one of rage and determination he's going to try and drag you back and neither of you will make it the thought almost killed me itself as I begged for my brother to turn back and to leave me you can't carry me fast enough it'll get us both I said Ryan was strong stronger than me at least and like I said he was a big kid but even he wouldn't be able to drag me back faster than the horror behind us was approaching its sickening croon was almost sing song now though the voice was a horrid mix between a deep wet gurgle and something reminiscent of a grandmother singing to her loved ones my brother turned to me I know he said his response unusually firm with a finality that made my blood run ice cold get up and go as fast as you can Ryan said running past me he ran towards the nightmare of a being that had emerged from Crappers Bay I heard someone call his name a horrible sorrowful shriek I realized the voice was my own as I watched him grow closer and closer to the ever thrashing vestigial hands of the woman on their long fleshy crab-like arms reaching out desperately for my brother I can't imagine what he hoped to do I suppose he thought he was going to grab the thing and overpower it battling it heroically leaving me the time to crawl the safety perhaps he thought he could even escape the thing and we'd both make it back neither was the case I watched on in horror as my younger brother came within reach of the longest of the creature's grasping arms time seemed to slow as it found hold of my brother digging into the exposed flesh of his shoulder with a wet sound everything seemed to stop for a moment as small drops of blood began to trickle down Ryan's back from where the creature's claws were dug in leaving pale trails of red in their wake then with the quickness of a striking spider the rest of her limbs followed suit all finding purchase in my brother's skin the large clawed arm grasping his own with obvious brutality a few of the thinner more insectoid limbs reaching around to plunge into his back pulling him into something of an awful hug the kiteness outer shell creaked with effort as the thing pulled him nearer I opened my mouth but found no words as she pulled him closer an awful excited moan rising from her as Ryan fought and struggled against her kicking up sand as he tried desperately to pull himself free stop he began to plead all of the bravery once present in his voice was now gone he sounded like the kid he was just a scared 11 year old his pleas were cut short by another round of excited chittering from the creature as it raised its head opening its mouth gnashing hungrily with rows of human teeth the mandibles extended out from either side of it viscous drool running down their ends she pulled Ryan into her pressing him against her exposed chest cold and hard where the shell covered it seemingly wet and fleshy where the strange human components remained exposed by the steady streams of blood running down his arms and back I could tell her grip was strong and only getting stronger the pointed hooks and small prying fingers at the ends of her arms were deep in Ryan's flesh making sure there was no way he was going to escape her grasp without leaving a significant trunk of himself behind the being a fixed my brother with a look her eyes blazing with a hunger I couldn't comprehend before glaring over his shoulder at me it's impossible to be sure with a mouth like that but I swear she smiled at me before she spoke crack the shell taste the meat inside her voice was a whisper of death over the breeze the only audible sound it seemed besides the wind and water and nonstop clatter of crabs over each other and her words rang with an audible finality then with a final haunting shriek she reared back and bit her mandibles gripping him on either side of his head pulling him close the sounds in those following few moments have remained with me haunting my thoughts like a phantom for years I hear them ringing out from the darkness in my worst nightmares and awake in a frozen chill with them echoing throughout my mind for hours to come a sickening crunch rang out across the sand starting a hurricane in my stomach as my lunch rushed up my throat threatening resurgence followed by an equally gruesome cracking squelch like the sound of someone biting through a soft apple Ryan his body rather began to convulse a shower of red erupting from the center of his head as that damn thing reared its head back again chewing noisily its mandibles capturing and shoveling what loose bits of meat fell right back into its mouth its body shuttered with an undeniable pleasure its beady eyes shutting for a moment in an alien expression of pure bliss in its many arms clattering like teeth in the cold as it ate a part of him a part of Ryan of my little brother right in front of me the feeling of powerlessness that spread through me like a cancer hurt far greater than any physical pain I was in I'd like to believe that it killed him instantly saving him from whatever else it had in store for him an injury like that should have been fatal but the way he moved the way he seemed to struggle against the vice grip that demon around him had I don't know its grip never seemed to loosen quite the opposite its spasm of excitement seemingly causing those awful little almost human hands to dig in hungrily disappearing into Ryan's back arms and wherever else they'd made contact as if merging with him my sight grew blurry almost instantly maybe it was the tears maybe it was the dizziness probably both I tried to crawl forward any concerns for my own pain safety or survival turning to dust with the sight of Ryan my only thoughts of getting to him of reaching my little brother and holding him of making everything okay it seemed aware of my intentions scuttling back away from me dragging his feet in the sand leaving a trail from the pool of blood beneath where he'd been that was quickly swarmed by some of the crabs who seemed to fight over it and whatever else fell uneaten by the creature I don't know how far I made it when my vision began to go orbs of darkness burning their way into the picture like damaged movie film growing until the dark was almost all I could see the world around me and the scene in front of me disappearing into an ever shrinking pinprick as my subconscious waned no no my tongue seemed almost as heavy as my eyelids and speech felt impossible as I attempted to protest the inevitable it was taking him this thing was taking my brother away it was every stranger danger scenario I'd feared as an older brother growing up merged with something from my most depraved nightmare and the panic seemed to sear my mind beyond sensibility the fact that Ryan was almost assuredly dead seemed to constantly escape me motivating my pathetic crawl forward growing slower and more labored as the world around me began to fade into shades of black the thing scuttled back towards the shoreline moving with its awkward gate as its useless human leg dangled between the massive crab legs carrying it dragging Ryan along with it it was strange the coolness that seemed to flood through my body as it began to part from consciousness and when combined with the feeling of the water against my fingers as I reached the edge of the shore I almost felt as though I was floating I raised my head with what strength I had left my eye struggling to adjust against the now darkened sky with only the faintest rays of moonlight piercing the cloud cover to illuminate the night it stood there with its back to the moon uproarious winds whipping the strange cloak of living things that had covered her off to the side and she stood tall arms outstretched in something that seemed like a show of dominance her stilt like legs carrying her several feet above the waves as the legions of crabs across the beach seemed to pour into the water after her in a massive tidal wave of movement as the world around me began to fade into a pinprick I watched as the creature began to wade off from the shallows of the bay a beach full of crabs around it following suit disappearing one by one beneath the water which seemed an inky black mess in the darkness she was the last to be submerged a measured carefulness in her descent casting a final look back at me and the surrounding shores an unreadable glint present in those black eyes as they disappeared beneath the water and the darkness seemed to envelop me the following hours were excruciating my father found me passed out on the beach at the edge of the water while the tide was rising and seeing no sight of my brother he knew immediately that something was wrong I'd nearly drowned hell as the night continued I wished I had I told them everything I knew everything that happened from start to finish my brother and I seeing something strange at the moving end of the beach and thinking it must be a neighbor all the way to the strange behavior of the crabs and how they seemed to respond to the thing I suppose I don't have to tell you how well that went grief is a powerful awful thing it can warp the way you think crack the lenses through which you view the world and utterly transform a person it certainly did for my father I don't think he truly believed I had anything to do with Ryan's disappearance we were best friends and a part of me has to believe my father knows I never heard him that he was just a grieving father beyond his wits and and I was the only one on a beach where my brother's blood was found by the time the police had come he'd grilled me past the point of tears himself and had to be calmed down by my equally bereaved mother and I recall believing I was going to go to jail myself for my own brother's death at the hands of something unexplainable when the cops came there were two of them a woman stern and matter of fact with her questions despite my obviously emotional state and a man a bit taller with a rather bushy mustache and a curious expression in his eyes that seemed to be searching for something the woman cop had left the room to meet an approaching car of incoming officers and show them to the beach where my brother's blood still sat the place we'd played at for years now a crime scene when the room was empty save for our family and himself he spoke up confirming what the expression on his face gave away there was something he'd wanted to say since arriving excuse my partner she's not from around here just transferred in look I'm truly sorry and we're going to do the best we can to find your boy the officer had told my father after they'd arrived and been filled in on the situation as well as my account of the events but well I imagine you know this is a weird place Krabbers Bay most folks that aren't from here or haven't been here for a long time don't come around here and especially don't go near that beach I know my father began his voice dripping with venomous grief I'd never heard from him before which made me shrink away the crab thing freaks most people out and the people here just as weird believe me I've heard it from my wife enough what has that got to do with the fact that my son is missing the officer's side shooting a look at the partner who'd arrived with him to make sure he wasn't listening too closely look I shouldn't be saying any of this but you lost your son and I feel you've got a right to know about the history of this place if this comes across as disrespectful I'm sorry but this isn't the first time a call like this has happened I grew up 20 minutes out from here and there have been stories about this place for as long as I can remember it's not just the crab thing people go missing sometimes on that beach and are never seen or heard from again it's happened for as long as that first group of crabbers settled here you'd get local kids going to visit the weird crab beach in that creepy rich neighborhood only for one of them to never return and the ones who did come back well they came back with stories wild impossible stories about things coming from that stretch of shore the officer adjusted his belt and shook his head as though trying to knock loose an unwelcome old memory my old man used to blame it on the first people to move there used to say they made a pact with something dark that's something I don't know gives birth to all those damn things or makes that place like that that they must have agreed to let it take from them just as they took from it or just accepted the consequences he paused for a moment seeming to consider what he was saying I don't know it's all just ghost stories and this state is full of them but if I were you I'd want to know I can't say for sure what happened to your son and like I said I know we'll do our best to find him but don't be too hard on your son there he said casting a glance at me there may be something to that story of his we never returned to that house and despite my parents best efforts in constant fruitless attempts at gathering a rescue party of the unwilling neighbors to go search for him Ryan or his body was never recovered I've been content to try and handle this trauma as best I can over these years doing my best to forget that place and come to terms with my brother's demise in a way that didn't make me feel insane that was until recently when a headline caught my eye while scrolling Facebook shared by a family friend who'd grown up in one of those towns near Fiddler's Grove that sent my heart plummeting into familiar depths divers discover human remains in hidden underwater cave system with infamous Krabbers Bay the article was short and I finished it in minutes a strange sensation as though the weight of gravity had changed around me flooding through me in those moments it was a short piece but it left a weight like nothing I'd read before the disappearance of a 14 year old from a small coastal town had become a frenzy in the local news after he and his friends planned a beach day on the shores of a rather infamous local beach it was the last time anyone ever saw him and each of the boys who'd been with him returned with similar stories all of which shared key details that made the whole thing seem quite suspicious the Coast Guard was brought in soon after and a team of divers was dispatched to scour the bay for signs of a body what they discovered instead was an intricate system of caves carved directly beneath the shores of Krabbers Bay caves that if they didn't know better almost seemed intelligently designed within these strange tunnels beneath the shore the divers found the human remains the scattered skulls and broken bones of several bodies some of which dated back for several years most disturbing of all was the fact that many of the skulls appeared cracked from blunt force trauma and had come to serve as impromptu homes for some of the shell seeking species of crab found on that anomalous beach morbid shells made from repurposed human I felt something in me for the first time in years as I processed what I was reading what it must mean about that place I wondered if my brother's remains were among those found serving as little more than a bone yard for sea and sex to build homes in that thought hurts more than I think I care to express in this story at least now I know I'm not crazy sometimes when sleep gives way to nightmares and I sink into the darkest depths of my mind I can still hear that awful crooning voice mocking me and that stomach wrenching crack like a shell being broken as if those sounds are burned forever into my psyche on those nights I dream of a cloaked woman and the brother I couldn't save
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Pandemic Warriors: Learn how Cambodians are turning cow dung into cooking gas
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Can cow dung help Cambodians avoid the damaging impact of cooking on wood-fueled fires?
Social entrepreneurs Sophea Sum and Ben Jefferies are proving it can! They’re using an innovative biodigester technology to turn waste into gas for cooking.
In the process they are tackling smoke pollution and climate change in Cambodia, and have managed to grow their business in the face of the unexpected obstacles and opportunities COIVID-19 has presented.
*Pandemic Warriors is produced by ABC Australia with funding from the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade.
#cambodia #biodigester #climatechange #innovation #COVID-19
| null | 2021-12-06T05:06:00 | 2024-04-23T01:04:29 | 296 |
ZQAfEHg6rtE
|
Traditional cooking is a major problem especially for the women. The biggest challenge is about the health because they breathe with the smoke, which is unhealthy and lead them to have sore throat, sore eye, coughing, lung and heart disease. My name is Som Sopier and my passion is to support the communities to improve the people's health and economies. Actually, I was born in a poor family. Most of the time the cooking is handled by the women. First of all they have to chop up the tree and then making the fire and that takes a long time to start it up and also to cook the food. My mother is just like any other woman. She's also bearing with the smoke. Around four and a half billion people around the world lack access to clean modern cooking. Cooking with wood has a huge impact on carbon emissions. It creates more emissions than the global airline industry. At the same time it's also the leading cause of deforestation in many of the countries we work in. Back in 2015, the two founding NGOs, Engineers Without Borders and Live and Learn, won the Google Impact Challenge to take what was a prototype biogester at that time and then turn it into a social enterprise where we could actually sell it as a life-changing product. So at that time I was lucky enough to be involved in that, was able to pack up the family and head over to Cambodia to kick it off. I remember one day about a year later we had about ten staff and I walked into the office and there was all these people in green shirts doing things and I was like, oh wow, this is actually real. So a big part of what we first did was actually just going out and spending time in villages, spending time with people to understand what their needs were, how they could interact with the product. People definitely saw cooking with wood as a problem at multiple levels, both for themselves, personally also their local environment and they could see it wasn't sustainable. And they were willing to do something about it, was just having the right solution for their contexts. So a biogester is like a large stomach basically. It breaks down all the materials, be it cow manure, animal manure, green waste, etc. and then the bacteria in there break it down into biogas which can be used for cooking just like LPG and then an organic fertilizer that can increase crop yield between 5-30% depending on what you're putting it on. Actually biogester is not a new technology but attic design is a plug and play system which you can install in three to four hours, which is very quick and it also can bear in the challenging environment but the area which is very common in the rural Cambodia. So COVID has had one really big negative effect and one very big positive effect on the work that we do. For example previously we do the sale by like old school selling, door-to-door selling because the COVID we cannot go out and meet people. However, we switch to the e-commerce sales. So if you take Cambodia there are now more smartphones than people in the country and e-commerce has gone from something that was a very sort of niche urban option towards being available to everyone and everyone across the country starting to use it. There's been a lot of changes in where people are living so I think there's a lot of people living in urban areas bringing back some of the habits into the rural areas, which is great. People now in Cambodia they're concerned more about the health. They used to live in the urban area where they're cooking with like good or clean or modern cooking solution. So when they moved back with the biologist they still have that. Lately I was so happy and was very proud with ATIC that they introduced the second product called a cook induction stove which I can't give it out to my mother. So now she has a cleaner cooking solution which is more healthy for her and I'm very happy with that. Once you understand the impact that solving clean cooking will have on the people and planet it's hard to focus on doing anything else.
|
{
"url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZQAfEHg6rtE",
"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
}
|
UCsIk_KmkcjyC_ySw4tDR8yA
|
Best Blow Dryer for Natural Hair (4 Type Thick Hair)
|
Here is my review of the Red by Kiss Blow Dryer. I purchased this dryer back in Sept through Amazon. It works great on textured curly hair and is very affordable. I love the fact that is a 3 temperature settings that will allow for a heatless blow out.
#blowout #blowoutnaturalhair #4c #4b
Red by Kiss Dryer: https://amzn.to/4bh1D56
Products Used:
Creme of Nature Argan Leave-in Milk
ApHogee Keartain and Green Tea Restructurizer
Proclaim Serum
Amazon Favorite Beauty Products
Wooden Comb Detangler: https://amzn.to/2Yt7aTE
TGIN Buttercream: https://amzn.to/2yhJx1A
Jane Carter Leave-in Conditioner: https://amzn.to/2Yv2Nrh
Jane Carter Leave-in Spray: https://amzn.to/2K059qb
Oyin Handmade Leave-in: https://amzn.to/316C16p
Queen Helene Deep Conditioner Cholesterol: https://amzn.to/2LK3hnp
Red Kiss Blow Dryer: https://amzn.to/2pUIzHY
Alikay Naturals Honey and Sage: https://amzn.to/2LKZxlL
MUSIC: Ryan Little
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EQUIPMENT USED
🔸 LAPTOP: MAC
🔸 EDITING SOFTWARE: IMOVIE AND KEYNOTE
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----------Let's Stay Connected---------
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|
[
"beauty",
"natural hair",
"twist out",
"thick hair",
"black women",
"black hair",
"blow out",
"blowing out natural hair",
"blow out natural hair",
"blowing out hair",
"blowing out kinky hair",
"4 type hair",
"4b",
"4c",
"blow out 4c",
"blow out 4b",
"blow dryer",
"affordable dryer",
"affordable blow dryer",
"cheap blow dryer"
] | 2018-12-07T13:27:32 | 2024-04-23T04:17:31 | 346 |
ZqhUDLmXCSQ
|
Hey you guys, here's my official review of the red by Kiss 1875 Pro Ceramic blow dryer. I specifically purchased this blow dryer for this baby right here, which you're gonna get into. I purchased this dryer back in August because I knew I wanted to blow out my hair for an event I was attending in September. Now I've used this dryer now, oh my God, I've used this dryer about 10 to 12 times. That's how much I love this dryer, so let's just go right into it. So this is what it looks like. The great thing about this dryer, it has a low and high setting, see if you can see that here. It also has a hot, warm and cool setting, so you can basically do a heatless blowout. I have not done a heatless blowout, but what I do tend to do is when I blow out my hair, I switch it to cool at the very last minute. So it comes with four attachments. We have a diffuser, we have a, I guess you call this, I don't know what you would call this, a concentrator attachment. We have a regular comb and then we have a detangling comb. I mostly have been using this bad boy right here, which is the straightening detangling comb. No, it does not get my hair straight. Come on, I have 4B4C hair. Another cute little functionality is this cool shot function that you can do at the very last minute, blasting, but again, it has the cool setting. So I purchased this through amazon.com and it's on sale now, y'all, for only 19 bucks. I purchased it for 25, so get it while you can. What you're going to see me next is actually blowing out my hair again on the warm to hot setting. All right, y'all. So I'm getting ready to blow out my hair now. As I stated earlier, I've had this blow dryer since September, and I honestly have used it almost twice a month since September, or that's September, October, November, or December. Now, as far as my hair goes, I clenched my hair earlier. I did not use shampoo. I didn't really, you know, do that. I co-washed my hair is what we say. I used a little bit of the cream of nature, organ oil, moisture-recovered, leave-in-curl milk, or a heat-protecting, quote-unquote. I will be using the Curitine and Green Tea Reconstructor by Apogee on each section, and just a little bit of grapeseed oil, and that is it, you guys. Once I'm done, I will be using the Proclaim Glossom Polish, just a bit of this, okay? Anything that I'm going to be using will be below in the description box. Yeah, I'm surprised. This is my dang on head, and I'm surprised at the amount of hair. This is a lot of hair. All right, so I'm going to put my hair in big twists, because I can't be walking around looking like this, because I'm hot. I'm getting hot. So this is what we're working with. You can tell my hair has grown. Definitely has grown, and of course my hair grows out like this, then it goes down most curly hair growth. Your hair grows up, and then it, you know, so this is what the back looks like. I'm now going to add just a little bit of the serum, like I said, just a little bit, like, well, girl, but she can open. And this is just really to help reduce frizz, and it's not that humid out here, but it has been raining. So both hands, I'm going to slick it all the way, and then I'm going to take my ends. All right, y'all. So that is it. It took me exactly one hour to blow out my hair, and yeah, what is this going on? So that is it, you guys. Thank you so much for watching. Take care. Bye.
|
{
"url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZqhUDLmXCSQ",
"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
}
|
UCu3Ri8DI1RQLdVtU12uIp1Q
|
Tim Yeaton - OpenStack Summit 2015 - theCUBE
|
Red Hat, OpenStack and OpenShift work together for fluid environment | #OpenStack
by Betsy Amy-Vogt | Aug 21, 2015
It’s a heterogeneous, hybrid Cloud world, according to Tim Yeaton, SVP, Infrastructure Business Group at Red Hat, Inc.
“It’s more than just the stateless workloads, it’s how you bring it all together,” Yeaton told theCUBE, SiliconANGLE Media’s production team, at OpenStack Summit Vancouver 2015. Yeaton sees Red Hat’s OpenShift as “the culmination of all the things we’re doing to help people modernize current applications and have them live in a Cloud-native environment.”
Yeaton added, “You get a continuity whether you’re deploying PaaS style with OpenShift or IaaS style with OpenStack. Now we have OpenStack as a way to scale out your OpenShift environments on-prem.”
The benefits of micro services
Yeaton described how Red Hat and Cisco Systems, Inc. share a common vision for the evolution of the Cloud as open and hybrid.
“In the end, we are going to see these dense fabrics of hybrid Clouds be public and private, and we’ve geared our whole product strategy, both directly and with Cisco, to ultimately respond to that.”
Yeaton also discussed micro services, defining them as “an assembly of multiple-containers in an app” with the benefits of eliminating re-invention and providing greater re-use and supportability.
@theCUBE
#OpenStack
|
[
"theCUBE",
"SiliconANGLE",
"Wikibon",
"Red Hat",
"Cisco",
"OpenStack (Software)",
"OpenStack Summit"
] | 2015-06-01T22:46:15 | 2024-02-05T08:44:15 | 903 |
ZQKPpy25PY8
|
Live from Vancouver, Canada, it's theCUBE at OpenStack Summit Vancouver 2015. Brought to you by headline sponsors EMC and jointly by Red Hat and Cisco with additional sponsorship by Brocade and HP. And now your hosts, John Furrier and Stu Miniman. Okay, welcome back everyone. We are live here in Vancouver, British Columbia for Silicon Angles theCUBE, our flagship program. Go out to the events and extract the signal and noise. We're live at the OpenStack Summit, extracting all the data, sharing that with you. I'm John Furrier with my co-host, Stu Miniman. And our next guest is Tim Eton, SVP of Infrastructure Business at Red Hat. He runs all development, essentially, one of the head honchos. Welcome back to theCUBE, great to see you. Thanks for having me back guys, good to see you too. You get Red Hat Summit coming up in Boston this year, not San Francisco, so on the left coast. A lot of action happening. We're here at OpenStack. What's the development action? I mean, it's in your world. Red Hat's used to great support big customers. OpenStack's developing very, very fast. Absolutely. And it's on a path to maturity, not yet truly mature yet. What's happening? How are you guys viewing the market and the relationships you're building? Well, I think the first thing is we do agree with the point of view that it's maturing rapidly. Even as we're driving a lot of innovation, if you look at the next release of OpenStack, you know, a huge set of technologies focused on the telcospace with NFE. So the pace of innovation isn't slowing down, but at the same time, I think we see the core getting more stable and supportable. And for companies like us, you know, we understand that the community model is always going to be about innovation. So, you know, no one in the upstream is going to build a production quality product. And so we gear everything that we do to, you know, taking the innovation as it comes, the more robust the better. But we're going to put it through our products, let's say, regardless for, you know, making that admission critical, consumable for customers. Look at the quality of the releases. Are you seeing better quality coming out of the releases? Are you happy with it? What's your take on it? I mean, you guys have a high standard, given the tier one position you have in the market. But I mean, this is emerging, but getting better, what's your take on it? Better? Do you get a good vibe on that? So definitely better. And as you noticed over the last year, so we've extended our support life. So for any given letter release, we're not providing three years of support. So a customer who takes this into production isn't forced to then, again, every six months update, the minute they can stay on for three years and ultimately will continue to extend that. And it's very dependent on both our confidence and the robustness of the core and our ability to make it bulletproof and supported. So we're already at three years and we're intending to extend that as we go forward. So definitely getting there. And I think if you just look at the buzz here, the attendance is great. People's confidence is high and you're hearing lots of stories of production customers now. I mean, there's people on the floors. I mean, the sessions, just for the folks watching, I got just to share with you that if you're not here, it's packed. There's technical sessions. I mean, literally people are on the floor with their laptops open. I mean, it's like school. It's like a builder community. A real transition quickly from the thought leadership in the early days to now, you know, engineers are here, building and wanting more data. Well, I can just, just from, you know, Red Hat, where I think we're hosting 44 sessions. And that's sort of as requested, you know, and they're all technical sessions are all how-to kinds of things, you know, hints and kinks. So, you know, the people that are here are clearly on an implementation path, which, you know, even if you think back a year ago to Atlanta, there was still a lot of, you know, is it ready for primetime yet? And I think we're through those, and now it's a question of for what use cases, you know, at what scale, the kinds of good questions that people should get. Yeah, primetime, no, basically. Yeah, exactly. Because primetime just started. Right, exactly. So Tim, you know, obviously Red Hat has a huge presence at the show. I've seen lots of Red Hats being handed out, people walking around with them. One of the things you're highlighting at the show is your partnership with Cisco. Can you talk about, you know, why the partnership with Cisco and how you're helping together to help customers modernize their partnership? Sure, absolutely. Well, you know, Cisco and Red Hat have had a long-standing partnership, you know, in the UCS space. And, you know, a year, year and a half ago or so, we started to recognize that we had a joint and shared vision around the evolution of cloud being open, being hybrid. And we started on a path to collaborate, you know, in CCS with Fiasas Organization, as well as other parts. And the great thing is, you know, they've got, you know, tremendous presence in the networking space. They work with a lot of customers. Frankly, that, you know, we've served as, you know, data center customers, but I think this is, together, given us the opportunity to help reshape how, you know, telco and networking infrastructure is playing out, leveraging open source, RELL OSP. So we've got a very multifaceted set of activities and, you know, the companies, you know, have huge numbers of engineers dedicated to building in all these areas and making RELL OSP within Cisco solutions real. Yeah, one of the key things that was talked about this week in the keynote was, you know, interoperability and portability. Maybe talk a little bit about, you know, how Red Hat and Cisco, the solutions you're doing, kind of tie into those. Well, I think, you know, it's great to see the foundation, you know, championing things like, you know, the federated identity, you know, now you're going to get interoperability at a user definition level across clouds. You know, I think just the very nature of OpenStack is such that you can build cloud-native workloads in a very consistent fashion. Cisco, for example, with their intercloud strategy, you know, is consciously trying to create ways to allow clouds and workloads on those clouds to interoperate both those that they're hosting and those that we're jointly partnered with. So we're happy to be working with them, being an enabler for that, but I think in the end, you know, we're going to see these dense fabrics of hybrid clouds, you know, public and private, and we've geared our whole product strategy both directly in with Cisco to ultimately respond to that. Right, how about if going up the stack into the application stays, how does OpenShift fit into this discussion? Yeah, so great question, and in fact, we made some announcements this week that we can touch on if you like, that sort of allude to this, but, you know, OpenShift is our Paz platform, but, you know, I think that actually does it a bit of a disservice because it's really the culmination of all the things that we're doing to enable people to both modernize traditional applications and have them live in a cloud-native environment where OpenShift winds up being the pinnacle of that, where it's highly opinionated, but also highly automated, but all of the things that we build OpenShift out of are embodied in our other platform technology. So as you look at OpenShift version three, it supports, we'll support, you know, Docker as a native container format. Kubernetes for orchestration, it's based on our relatomic host, which is our specific container footprint for rel. It's all managed by cloud forms, our cloud management platform, so you get a continuity of whether you're deploying Paz style with OpenShift or IaaS style with, you know, OpenStack, and now we have OpenStack as a way to scale out your OpenShift environments on-prem, so we've built this really nice sort of fluid environment where the choices you're making aren't Paz versus IaaS, and whatever development models predominate there. It's, you know, what services do you want to be? Highly automated, preconfigured, and then just give me a way to manage, you know, build applications across them and manage them across them. I like this vision, I want to expand on that a little bit, because this gets down to what the language of the customer, no one talks, you know, infrastructure service, because there's now a service architecture, so you guys have a unique vision, I want you to share that. Absolutely. I think I've made an announcement, congratulations on that, but I want you to tie it together, because we are living essentially in a service-oriented architecture. Web services now, all that stuff from 10 years ago is actually on the main stage in production. So what does the service architecture look like and what does that mean in the language of the customer? No one really cares about platform as a service or softwares, it's all one big cloud rollout, so I want resources. And in fact, old timers like us look at, you know, microservices, our architectures say, isn't that so? You know, we've seen this before. We've seen this before. Well, and I think that goes to the point, right? So, our view is, you know, there are classes of applications that, you know, are either stateful, you know, scale-up, database-centric, and most of those still remain very strategic to those customers, right? They just don't lend themselves architecturally to a scale-out, stateless kind of model. And then there are, of course, what we always talk about in terms of cloud-native apps. Those can be, you know, also enabled by VMs or someday soon via pure containers. So our view is, you've got classes of workloads that actually don't need to be stove-piped to an infrastructure, so take containers as an ultimate evolution. You know, you can containerize elements of an existing, you know, traditional app, you know, to make maybe captive data available by wrapping it, and have that be consumable by your cloud-native stateless app. So our view is, you know, VMs versus containers, that's not the discussion. It's what do the workloads require, both in terms of architectural approach, what things they're trying to consume, and have those live fluidly in that environment. So it's runtime assembly of resources, not so much, you know, this platform, and I've got all, you know, general purpose, whatever, locked in. That's not, that's what people in the industry put things in boxes, but what you're saying is, customers are thinking like a programmer, and they're saying, okay, I'm assembling resources, and I have to program it, so I'm really talking to services. So, okay, I get that. But I got to ask you, what the hell does microservices mean? We hear that at the Cloud Foundry Summit. Is it a buzzword? Is it specific in meaning? Is it just a service of a service? Is it just, I mean, what is a microservice? It's actually a very simple context. And I'll put it in a specific sort of container dimension. So today you can containerize an app, single app, you know, one container host OS. That's interesting because you do that a lot of times, you can get much greater density. But where it gets really interesting is when you start to build multi-container applications that may or may not live on a single host, right? So multi-container single host, multi-container multi-host. Well, the value of that is you get, you know, the runtime assembly kinds of elements so you get much greater reuse of components. Serviceability and support, people haven't even thought of, right? So if I have security vulnerability and I've got, you know, my registry of containers, I know what applications are consuming, what containers, and I build workflows that just update and automate that in a really elegant way, rather than trying to find, you know, 300 instances of an app that have an SSL bug. Or you're doing an audit, basically. You're deep in the weeds on, you know, going through data. Right, it's all automated, right? You just build the workflows and all that becomes automated in the container. So you can literally contain threats, meaning the container, but like, your efficiency isn't off the charts. So what you basically get with microservices is you get these loosely coupled service-based applications where, you know, I'm coding a lot less, I'm consuming more of what's existing. And I can also give assurance and I know where those things came from, what's in them, and. To the customer, what does microservices mean? I'm like, I hear people talk about it. It smells like a buzzword, it smells like hype. What is it? It's an assembly of multiple containers in an app where you're probably inventing a whole lot less and just organizing and orchestrating. Yeah, so Tim, you know, microservices are great. You know, one of the things I've heard from some people is just like everything else, you get a little bit of sprawl. So, people create those services just like we had VM sprawl, we can have some of the microservices sprawl. You can, but I think microservices gives you the opportunity if you build up a registry of certified containers, you now can pull from those whereas every VM, you know, was sort of constructed specific to the application of the workload. So, you get much greater reuse and supportability. So, you can propagate these changes just by automated workflows. Whereas VMs, you know, you had to go fix every one of them. All right, so, we don't have much time left. Can you talk a little bit about just kind of the customers that you're showcasing here at the show? Where are our customers? So, the good news, as I mentioned, is we've got now hundreds of paying customers around OpenStack. What's really interesting is if you look at those, you know, about half of those consume OpenStack and our CloudForms Cloud Management. So, to us, that's a really good sign because in the end, you need to manage the environment and the workloads on OpenStack. So, you know, customers are already starting to conclude that. I think, you know, an interesting sort of example of a customer that really gets it is FICO. If you look at what they've done, so this notion of, you know, Paz and I as sort of fluidly built together and you're just making service selections, that's fundamentally what they do. They happen to use all that infrastructure to do that and CloudForms to manage it. But, you know, I think we're seeing that pattern more and more and more. The other thing that you'll see here is, you know, the customers and partners that we have. We talked about Cisco, but, you know, we've got numbers of partners here, you know, that maybe in the telco space, you know, people that work with like the Nokia's, the Huawei's, the Alcatel Lucent's, and I'll forget your 20 others. But, you know, and what's exciting is they're all sort of seeing the reality of it's a really heterogeneous hybrid cloud world and they know that it's more than just the stateless workloads, it's how you bring it all together. Well, I think, I want to say congratulations. I think your vision's amazing on that. I agree with 100%. I think the service model is right on. It's layers and containers are underneath that. They're all out there, but then that's not the definition. It's not how customers think. Certainly you can put things in boxes, but like, come on. You know, John, you're a really important point that I think even at a forum like this, sometimes it gets lost. You know, depending on which study you believe, you know, the majority of the world's workloads won't be cloud-enabled for a while. People are moving there rapidly, but in the end, you know, there's a lot of vendors that talk about, you know, just the net new workloads and what lives on the public and private side and refer to that as hybrid, but we see it as much broader than that. How you bring your traditional apps that aren't going to change into that world and leverage what's there and make it all work. And to roll it out in an SLA, I mean, you start with three years, but I know your goal is to get 10, but I mean, three years is still good, considering what's how new it is. So congratulations. Thanks. I really appreciate you coming on theCUBE, sharing SVP at Red Hat. Breaking it down, I always said you guys have a good systems background. We're in a systems programming world. Microservice says it's all happening. Stu, we're breaking it down. More after this short break, we'll be back live here at Opus Tech Summit. I'm John Furrier with Stu Miniman. We'll be right back. Thanks guys.
|
{
"url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZQKPpy25PY8",
"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
}
|
UCYcdUvf2OMAlFTIxZv2eduA
|
In Christ // The Christian Life (Part 3)
|
In Christ | @vladhungrygen
Every good thing God wants to give you is not found in you or your ability to seek God! Every blessing God has for you is in His son! When you abide in Christ you will see the manifestation of God's promises all over your life!
__________
Chapters
00:00 - Intro
6:50 - The Garden came before Adam as Christ came before Christianity
09:45 - 1. As God put Adam into the garden, God put us into Christ.
11:53 - 2. God can’t take me into Jesus until He takes me out of Adam.
28:13 - 3. God's Blessings are not in the believer but in Christ.
__________
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#healing #prophecy #deliverance
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] | 2022-09-19T14:15:03 | 2024-02-05T17:34:27 | 2,200 |
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Every one of us, I was meeting with the person after the first service and they said, my co-worker, they said this about Christianity. As long as you're a good person, you're a Christian. Many people, when they think of Christianity, they think it's all about good behavior. I don't have to go to church as long as I'm a good person, I'm a Christian. Whether what I believe, it doesn't matter. At the end of the day, as long as you're a good person, that is not what is what it means to be a Christian. Amen. Maybe it's what it means to be an American. Maybe what it means to be a religious person, but to be a Christian is something different. Two months ago, I remember I was driving to a Vanatchi, took some time off to be with God. And as I'm driving there, I'm crying out deep in my heart and I'm praying in my heart, in my car, and I'm saying, Lord, I want to be closer to you, God, I just want to be closer to you. I'm taking next three nights and I'm closing everything off. I just want to be closer to you. And I felt like I heard God speak back to me and he said, you can't get closer to me than you are already. Because you are already in me. You can only get deeper. You can get rooted and grounded in me, but he says, you're trying to get to a place, you're already in. He says, I want you to live out of this place. Don't get into this place. And that's what I want to talk about today. I believe what I'm going to share with you, if you listen with your heart, it can forever change how you view your relationship with God. And I believe it's more gospel-centric and scriptural than whatever the ideas we grew up with. For example, the Bible mentions word Christian three times, but the word in Christ is mentioned over 70 times. In fact, if you were to use the Bible to define what it means to be a Christian, it would not be Christian. In fact, the word Christian twice out of three times was mentioned, it was given to us by the secular world. The word Christian is not God's word for you. God's statement and definition of you is in Christ. Not Christ-like, first in Christ. And when you are in Christ, you spend time with Christ so you can be like Christ. It's not trying to be like Jesus, be with Jesus so I can one day get into Jesus. It's being in Jesus so that I can be with Jesus to be like Jesus. This is not mental gymnastics, this is not a play of words. This is a game changer of what the gospel, what the good news, what Jesus reveals to us. I find it interesting as I started to read the New Testament, I see the New Testament is written, majority of the New Testament is written by Paul. You have to understand one thing about Paul. Paul's mission and calling was to the Gentiles, which is you and I, most of us here today are not Jews, we're Gentiles. And you see that Paul's writings always said in Christ, in him, through him. It's almost like Paul made a big deal about Jesus. I find it interesting and I ask myself a question. Why did Paul, and where did Paul get the revelation of in Christ? I have an idea, just my idea, take it, leave it. When Paul met Jesus first time, I think it shook him with the fact that when he was persecuting Christians, he was persecuting Jesus. Because Jesus said, Paul, why are you persecuting? He didn't say, why are you persecuting Christians? He says, why are you persecuting me? And I think Paul got a revelation. Jesus doesn't just relate to Christians. Jesus is in Christians and Christians are in Jesus. And I think it opened a world. I want to be a part of a faith where the God is not somebody I try to connect to. It's someone that I live in. This is not us being God, it's us being in Jesus. And that's why Paul's revelation is so powerful. You would think Paul would go to the Gentile pagan, people with garbage stuff, the things that pagans did was just crazy. You would think Paul would come in and bring Christian morals. Say, you guys are bunch of heathens. You practice, you have no sexual morality. You don't know how to manage your finance. Let me tell you the 10 commandments. Because even if you don't accept Jesus, at least you can accept Christian principles and live a better life. Paul never preached the commandments. Knowing it could change your life. He always preached Christ. Because as our sisters shared today, you can change everything about your life, applying Christian principles and the law. But the core of who you are is never changed until we get Jesus. Amen. In Book of Acts, when Paul is speaking to a lot of pagans, people who don't believe in God and he's saying to them, he says, God created us. He says, he created boundaries for our existence on earth. And then he says this, is that God gave us a time within these boundaries that God created us in. So that people will seek God, meaning you and I have a purpose and that is to seek God. And then he says this, that we will grope for him, try to feel him, try to find him. And because God is not very far from us. And you will think, yeah, yeah, that's the purpose, constantly pressing into God, constantly seeking God. Yeah, I feel that. I just, sometimes I feel God, sometimes I don't, sometimes he's close, sometimes he's not near to me. As you're thinking, this is the Christian existence, but it's not. Because then Paul says this, but we are in him. He shifts the game from trying to grope for God, feel God, am I in him? Is he close? Am I close? Am I too far? How can I get closer to God? And he says, we are in him. See, there are people without God, there are people trying to get to God. Christians are not those, Christians are in Christ. Not with Christ to be in Christ. We are in Christ so that we are with him. And that's a whole game. It's a game changer. Let's start from the beginning. And the reason, one of the reasons that I'm bringing, it may seem like a very huge foundational teaching is because we are in a culture today that is confused of what it means to be a believer. What it means to be a Christian. And another thing is a lot of Christians have worldly views of what it means to be a Christian, which hinders their intimacy with God. In Genesis chapter two, if you have your Bible, I want you to open it with me. In Genesis chapter two and verse 15, it says the Lord God took the man and put him in the garden of Eden. Let's go to the beginning. God did not create birds until he created the air. God did not create fish until he created water. God did not create man until he created the earth and the garden. God always creates an environment and element and then he creates living beings to live in that environment. God did not create a suspend us in the air and says, hold on, let me just create everything else for you to live in. The same way we do, we don't birth children and then we go trying to find a crib. We buy the crib and then we bring the children. So God makes the crib and then he brings the baby. God makes the crib and the crib for humanity was the garden of Eden. And once the garden of Eden was made, it's God's home office, it's God's headquarters. It's garden of Eden was more than just a beautiful garden where Adam was running around but naked, eating fruits, living there and having his residential area there. Garden of Eden was actually a convergence between God's spiritual family and God's earthly family. To that point where sometimes they overlapped and a serpent showed up walking and talking and Eve didn't run. Because I think it's not a first time that Eve and Adam have witnessed spiritual beings in their midst. I think once in a while people would come from that realm to this realm and interact with humans and it was normal. Two realms were combined. Adam lived in that garden. Adam lived off of that garden because he ate there. Adam got married there. Adam's world was in the garden. God's presence was there. But Adam through sin, through deception, through the lie of the serpent, he gets kicked out of the garden. I want you to notice what begins to happen after that. Adam starts having children. Guess where all the children of Adam were born outside of the garden? None of them were born inside. That means every descendant of Adam came outside of the element of God's presence. Out of the relationship with God, you and I were descendants of Adam. And the proof for that, even if you don't believe in the Bible, you do know one thing. There is a natural inclination within you to do bad. You don't have to train yourself. You don't have to take classes to do bad. It comes very natural. You don't have to develop, muster up strength to do bad. It's very natural to do bad. And this is what happens. We're descendants of Adam. And we, God placed Adam in the beginning, in his presence, he's supernatural. I believe placed him there. Adam was kicked out of that presence because of sin. And then God is working a plan to bring us back, not into the garden, but to bring us into something else, actually into Jesus Christ. Because in John chapter 15, Jesus says, my father and watch the image, watch the image of the garden again. He says, my father, he didn't say he's a law giver. He is the vine dresser. My father is the farmer. My father is the gardener. And Jesus does not say, you are divine. Like Israelites believe that the Israel was divine. Jesus says, I am divine. God takes me and plants me on the earth's soil. And God takes Christians and he places us in Jesus Christ. But hold on, because we cannot get into Jesus until we get out of this bad boy, Adam. When I started to talk to my wife on Facebook, that was about 13 years ago, there was another girl I was talking to at the same time. Bad, I know, 100%, wrong. So there was this girl before Lana that I kind of was interested in. And I said it in the morning, an accident. Deer, word deer, I guess the word deer bring a flag or trigger something. So she said, why are you talking? Why did you call me deer? So I told her that I had feelings for her. And then there was this pause from seven o'clock in the morning till seven p.m. And so my heart almost stopped. I almost died. I was like, what happened? Am I gonna get a police at my house or something? And then in the evening, I get the email that every guy doesn't wanna get the email that starts with your first name, Mr. When it starts with a Mr. from a girl that you just said you have feelings for, you know it's not gonna be a good email. And if it's an email, that's already bad. And it started with the whole thing with my brother in Christ. I'm like, oh, yep, I know where it's going and stuff. And I just don't see you that way, hurt my feelings, but at the same time, I was freed. But I continued to talk to this person because there was no one else until I meet Lana. And then when the moment I met Lana and I was talking to Lana, there's something I had to do. I had to stop talking to the person that rejected me. And so, and then I pretty much, and it was so easy to stop talking to her. I simply stopped. I didn't even notify what happened that I met somebody else. I just simply stopped responding. She got the message and it just moved on. That's exactly before God can place you into Jesus. He has to get you out of Adam. Because a lot of us, what we want to do is we wanna stay within Adam. We wanna stay with our ex and stay in our next. God wants to, has to exit you out of Adam and place you into Jesus. You cannot be in Jesus until you exit Adam. Are you with me? Now, how does God get us out of Adam? He brings Jesus on the cross. Jesus dies for our sins. He takes care of this penalty, this bill that we have. And unlike the government that cancels your $10,000 college debt, but in reality, somebody else is gonna be paying that. God actually takes the payment upon himself for our sins. He lets Jesus take the blame for our sin, the penalty for our sin, and something else happens on the cross. God takes the old me that I got from Adam and he crucifies it with Jesus. Romans chapter six and verse six says the following, knowing this, that our old man, that part that I got from being born outside of the presence of God, our old man was crucified with him. So not only Jesus died for my sin, I died with Jesus because God could not bring me in without take me out. How did I get into Adam through birth? How can I get out of Adam through death? I am born into the Savchuk family through birth. The only way I exit that family is through death. I am born into Adam, into sin, into separation from God, constantly groping, trying to find God. But the access is closed and God says, I cannot bring you into my son until I take you out of your sin. And the way I take you out of the sin is I let Jesus die for your sins. And while he's dying, I'm gonna take your old man and attach it to the cross. For those of you coming for the first time, you're like, man, why is he screaming? This is so exciting. This is a good news. And I get happy when I talk about the good news. It's kind of like when you get something new and you come in and even if you're a reserved, quiet person, you get all bubbly because it's a good news. So, but that's not what it ends. Jesus is crucified. I am crucified with Jesus. And then in Romans chapter six and verse four, it says, therefore we were buried with him through baptism into death. Every dead person has to be buried, correct? If you keep a dead person in the house for more than two weeks, something is not right. Dead people have to be buried, not carried. But it's also wrong to bury people who are not dead. That's a crime, right? Now, so I was crucified with Jesus Paul is saying, so this changes your perspective on the cross. The cross is not just the place where he's dying for you. A cross is a place where you're dying with him. The atom part outside of the garden, that part that got kicked out of God's presence, tries to get in, but the access is closed. The password is changed. Somebody changed the lock. That part, God doesn't change that part. God doesn't cleanse that part. God has no mechanism to fix that part. It's so messed up, God says, I have to kill it. You entered it through birth, you're gonna exit it through death and through the son's death on the cross. But now since it's dead, we gotta do something with it. We gotta bury that bad atom. Where do we bury? How do we bury? Through the baptism. Some of us don't realize when you got baptized, that was your funeral. And some people got baptized without knowing that they died. We're still praying, say, Lord, kill the old man. That's what, that means we don't know we died. Lord God, please help me to crucify the old man. That means you're still living as though you're not dead. As a Christian, the Bible says that's a historic fact. Jesus died on the cross and my old man was died there. Then it was buried through baptism. And now Jesus rose again three days later and in 1 Peter chapter one verse, 1 Peter chapter one verse three, it says, blessed be the God and the father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who according to his abundant mercy, has begotten us again, born again, to a living hope through the resurrection. So in Jesus's death, I die to this old race. Through the baptism, I am buried and as Jesus rose again, I am begotten again. I am born again. So I am not stuck in between two houses, two families. I am born again now in a new family where the head of the family is Jesus. He's not outside of the garden, he is in God. And I am in Jesus. When I was born in Adam, I was outside of the garden. But I have to get out of Adam through this long process called the crucifixion, the burial and the resurrection. And this is the process by which God got me out of Adam. And through his resurrection, he places me in Jesus. Jesus is already inside of God's garden because he's God's vineyard. And I am the branch in that vineyard. Come on somebody, whoo, come on, thank you Jesus. First Corinthians chapter one verse 30, it says, but of him, but of him you are in Christ. But of him, meaning that is the work of God to place you into Jesus. But of him you are in Christ, who has become for us the wisdom, the redemption, the righteousness, the sanctification. We are in Christ because of God. It's not because I went on a 40 day fast. It's not because it's been 52 days, 52 Sundays that I have not missed church. I tied every single week out on cuss, out on smoke, out on sleep with my girlfriend. And now I have worked and deserve to be in Christ. You don't get into Jesus like that. You never got into Adam through sin. You got into Adam through birth. You get into Jesus through birth, but you can't even get to birth because you're not starting with zero. You're starting with negative 100. Your negative 100 is you have to die first, be buried and then be born. And this happens through the cross. I don't wanna confuse anybody, but you wearing that crucifix, I just want you to know what that means. We have this on our crosses, on our churches. I want you to know what that means for you. This is more than just an innocent Jewish man who claimed to be God, who died and Pilate crucified him. This man Jesus is the son of God. He died for our sins. We were included in his death. Why was that necessary? Because you couldn't get out of the bad relationships and get into a good relationship without a breakup. This breakup demanded death and you had to die. You had to be buried because that's what you do with dead things. And God says I wanna raise you now to a new life. Meaning I don't wanna keep you in the limbo until you die physically one day and then you can go to your sweet buy and buy. Jesus gives us the access to new life today. Now, what I'm trying to get to is this. All that God has for us are not really in us. It's in Christ. Many times, I think I had that view concerning salvation. Like even sometimes we say things like our goal is to get everybody saved. That's not really our goal. Our goal is to get everybody from Adam to Christ. We treat salvation as an ear part. Come to the front, we'll give it to you. Now don't lose it and use it. That's what we treat salvation as. Salvation is not a gift like this. Salvation is more like a wedding invitation. You don't like, when I get married to my wife, imagine if my wife would say, yeah, I'll accept you if I can get the life that you provide for. Let me get your life that you can provide for a house, maybe a car or your last name and everything. And then I'm gonna continue to live in Vancouver, but I want the life that you're promising to come and chase me in Vancouver. See, you're not accepting Christ to get salvation. You're accepting Christ so that you can leave Adam and in Christ is salvation. In 1 John, if you can give us the verses, in 1 John it says this, for in him is life. And this is the testimony that God has given us eternal life. And we're like, yeah, great, I got the eternal life. But this life is in his son. Let's go to the next verse. And the next verse it says, he who has the son has life. It does not say he who has the life has the son. What I'm saying is don't fall in love with escaping hell. That's not what the gospel, the gospel is in love with Jesus. God is not giving you an insurance card. God is not giving you an escapism gospel. He's giving you Jesus. God is not giving you a gift to God. And the reason why I'm carrying this iPad is because I lost it this week. I went for my prayer walk one of the mornings and then I live close to one of the team leaders from our church and he has this little place where you can sit like above, almost like on the top of the mountain. So I went in there and I had this thing in my pocket. Turns out it fell off. So that day, Everett is sending me a text message. He's like, is this yours? I'm like, oh shoot, I forgot that I even lost it. See, when you think of salvation as something that God gives you and you have to guard it, you will always live in fear of losing it. Salvation is not an ear pod. Salvation is not just a gift. It is the gift of God. But please understand, it's a gift of God, like food, like a car, like other blessings that my wife has access to in being married to me. God's gift is not just salvation, it's Jesus. The gospel is God placing you from darkness into his son. And in his son is eternal life. In his son is wisdom. In his son is not just going to heaven and escaping hell. It's living in his presence right now. In his son, you bear fruit. In his son, you talk to God and you drew near to God. Everything is in Jesus Christ. The Bible says we have no condemnation to those who are in Christ Jesus. We are new creation in Christ Jesus. It says we have redemption in Christ Jesus. It says God has reconciled the world through Christ Jesus. God is doing nothing with you. He's doing everything for you. But he's doing everything in his son. God is in love with his son. If you, and he says, if you believe that my son is the son of God, all we have to do, because some are like, man, this is great, well, how do I get into Jesus? There's a very simple password. And it's so simple that it's very hard. For God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten son, whoever believes. Not behaves, but believes. You have to believe, what do you believe? That Jesus exists, that demons do the unfortunate, that's the wrong password. You believe that Jesus is the son of God. Jesus is not a truth, he is the truth. Jesus is not just somebody who can tell you about God. He is very God himself. Son of God meaning the very essence. What makes God God is Jesus. That's what Jesus is. That means that you no longer need a self-help book to find the truth. The answer the pilot asks, what is the truth? It stands right in front of you, is Jesus. When you believe in Jesus, then what begins to happen is that God takes that faith in the son of God. That changes everything because that means he defines what is good, he defines what is not good. He is the one who, what he says is true that he died for your sins. He tells you to repent, that means that you have to obey because he is God. Everything changes when Jesus is the son of God. Not one of the gods, not one of the ways, not just a good teacher, but is the son of God. And God takes that faith and says, I will account it to righteousness. I will produce within you a new nature. That faith leads me to bow my knees. Why? Because I'm standing in front of a king. Because I am worshiping a king. Jesus is not just a teacher, he is God. And God says this simple trust I will use as a passcode to bring you in to Jesus. Everything is in Christ and we are in him. Now at first it seems like, oh, does God not trust me with stuff? It's not like that. You and I are like a light bulb. It has everything it needs to shine. If it's in the socket, in Christ you have everything. Without me, Jesus says you can do nothing. So it seems like Jesus is not saying, I'm gonna give so much stuff to you. You can leave me, do whatever you want, and you got it still. It seems like if you got it, it's only because you're in Jesus. Why is that? God doesn't want you to be in love with the stuff. Love with Jesus. I'm struggling with depression, I want peace. See when you come to Jesus, God wants you to be in love with Jesus. God wants you to be on the socket. The socket is Jesus and then you shine. Then you have your peace and then you have righteousness. Then you have salvation. You have everything in Jesus. If you think you have everything because at the age of 15 you went to a summer camp, you prayed a magic prayer and now you walked away from the Lord. You want to do nothing with Jesus while you prayed this magic prayer, you're walking around, you're like, man, I am saved. No, you're just a light bulb that has no light because Jesus tells us to abide in him. Why did he say to abide in him? Because at that moment, Judas left him. He spent three and a half years with him and you can confess it. You can be like, Katie, she shared, she's like, but I profess to be a Christian. And the question I'm not asking, do you profess, do you possess it? Are you abiding in Jesus? You don't have to put yourself in Jesus. All you got to do is to stay where God puts you in. It's not that hard, just simply don't leave. Stay in him, abide in him. Now I have an iPad. It's Zach's iPad. It does not have any internet in the iPad. You know what that means. When you can buy an iPad that has the internet connected to it and there's iPads or laptops, most of the laptops where they have the ability to connect to internet if there is a wifi in the room, but they actually don't have the internet within themselves. And so this iPad will work in the room. But if I walk away from this room, the further I go, the weaker the signal will get until it just won't work anymore. Now the iPad will still be operational. It's just, there will be no connection there. And that's how our blessings are. Our blessings are in Christ. God doesn't put him in you. He just puts you in Jesus. And he says, I want you to be in love with my son. I want you to be in my son. And once you're in him, you have access to all of the spiritual blessings in Jesus Christ. You can open those blessings. You can enjoy those blessings. Now, what does this mean in a nutshell? What does this mean? A few things. Jesus is not our supplement. He's our source. Jesus is not the little vitamins that I take. Jesus is not my vitamin. He is vital to my existence. Without him, I am nothing. Paul says, for me to live is Christ. He's, Paul is an aged apostle. But he still says, I live through Christ. I can do all things through Christ. He says to be found in him. I'm not trying to find myself to him. To be found in him. I want to know him once I'm in it. I want to be rooted in him. I want to be grounded in him. If Paul can say that how much more we should to abide in Jesus means to stay where we've been placed. Jesus does not tell us to struggle to get into him. He tells us to simply remain in him. We're told to abide. We don't pray to get into Jesus. This is a game changer. We obey that we are in him. I don't go to prayer retreats to get into him. I go to prayer retreats because I am in him. The only distance that exists between you and God is your unawareness of his nearness. David Degas said that. We are not praying to connect with God. We are praying from a connection that we have in God. Prayer doesn't draw me nearer to God. It makes me more aware of his nearness. Jesus spends verses in John 15 says abide, abide. He never once says get in, get in, get in, get in. He's already saying that you are in him. He says remain in me. Let my words remain in you. Abide in my love. And then he says and whatever you ask because you remain in me, I will do for you. See most of us think that as long as I pray I can get in. Jesus says you got in because of the new birth. I want you to remain in me. I want you like a husband and wife, they live together. Like an iPad connected to the wifi source in the house, stay in me. And out of this place live, out of this place love, out of this place raise your family. The Bible says that you can even seek your spouse as long as it's in the Lord. The Bible says in Philippians that I pursue the call of God in the Lord. This is the will of God for you in the Lord. Even the dead in Christ will rise in Christ. Everyone who abides will pray. Not everyone who prays abides. When I was in Egypt I saw our tour guides pray five times a day. You can look at Muslims and I loved your Muslims but you look it in their eyes. There's no life in those prayers because you're trying to get into something that you don't have access to. You only get into it through birth but you can't get in until you get out of that bad boy. And whether you're Muslim, whether you're born an atheist whatever your family are bringing is you're either in Adam or in Christ. There is no, there is no Juan. It's Jesus or it's Adam. You're either one two families. Prayer doesn't bring you closer. Jesus does and you pray out of that closeness. Instead of saying, Lord help me to live for you. We pray, Lord Jesus, live your life through me. To the outsiders, today Jesus says come to me. To those who are here who have believed in him he says abide in me. Maybe you are here today and you left. I don't wanna get into the Christian losing salvation the whole nine yards but you know one thing is that you left being with Jesus. Whether it was 70 disciples who through offense left, Judas through deception of the enemy left, whichever way the Bible says in the last days people will heed to the demonic doctrines and they will depart from their faith. Jesus says abide in me and whoever doesn't abide indicates it's possible to be still a branch and just not abide. Whether you just kinda walked away like a prodigal son just left. There's a difference, two types of leaving. For example, a few weeks ago when I left to Coeur d'Alene went for a few days to be just with the Lord. I left my house but I didn't leave my house. I didn't switch my address. It was just for a season that I left my closest to my wife was affected. I was still in that house legally and I was still with my wife legally. But for example, the way I left my mom's and dad's house I actually left, I don't no longer live out of there. And maybe that's how you have spent. Not only you just experienced your closeness to God has been affected by certain things that you went through in the last few days or few weeks but I'm talking about if you're here today and it's been years you actually moved out of Jesus. Nothing you hate him, you just change your address. And you moved back into yourself, moved back into Adam, moved back into yourself. Now I don't know how the logically or practically that happens, I just didn't know I met a young man today at the first service and he came up and he says I was doing a tattoo on somebody and the guy that I was doing a tattoo on he said the moment I finished doing a tattoo on him he afterwards he looked at me, he said he put his hand on me and he says young man, he says God is calling you back home. He says at the age of 16 he says you gave your life to Christ but you walked away from him, God is calling you back home. He says the longer you wait to answer the call the more quiet that voice will become. He said that shook me, I went home, I got on my knees, I opened my Bible and he says it's been three months and I've been here. And he says, I don't know how to explain it but I know what that means to be in him. And to have been moved out of him. If you moved out, you changed your address, your dwelling place, I wanna invite you, your father still has a room for you. He didn't give the room to anybody else. He's still waiting, your place is still vacant. Jesus still says come to me, all you heavy laden I will give you rest and I will give you peace. If you're here just to escape hell my friend don't bother. Jesus is not offering escapism. He is offering you an entrance into a new family. He wants to give you a new nature. He doesn't want you to wait to die so you can be delivered from the sin. He wants you to experience freedom from the power of sin today. He wants you to experience new life. He wants you to open the fridge of your father's love today and experience his goodness, experience his love that you don't want to live in sin. That's the gospel is that he loved us. Hey, thanks for watching this video. If you enjoyed this content and this was a blessing to you would you help us and hit thumbs up so that it could help more people to discover this video. It cost you nothing but it can go a long way to help with the algorithm. As well as if you're not subscribed to our channel hit subscribe, click on the bell so that you can do reminded each time that we upload videos. Thank you so much for being a part of this community. If you're interested in learning more about Hungry Jen, our internship, our conferences, deliverance, and so many other things go to HungryJen.com for more information. And as always, remember, better is not good enough the best is yet to come.
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Hallmark Playhouse - Thunder Shower (#180)
|
Hallmark Playhouse - 11/16/52, episode 180
OTRR version 2303
This episode provided by the Old Time Radio Researchers
|
[
"1952",
"Old Time Radio"
] | 2023-05-15T00:00:10 | 2024-04-23T14:13:45 | 1,805 |
Zqf6jE3edL4
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Remember a hallmark card when you carry it up to send the very best. The hallmark cards bring you Edward Arnold in outstanding stories and presents as your host one of the most distinguished actors of the American Theater, Mr. Lionel Barr. You know the day of many shortages seems to be pretty well past. Nowadays we're turning out plenty of just about everything we need and want except for one special commodity. The supply has never caught up with our demand for good light-hearted stories of everyday America. That's why we of Hallmark Playhouse feel lucky to be able to bring you tonight our adaptation of Bellamy Portridge's novel called Thunder Shower. It's a story as American as ice cream and just about as hard to resist. Pan come to think of it, that's also a pretty good description of the man who's to be our guest star this evening, my old friend Edward Arnold. And now here's Frank Goss from the Makers of Hallmark Cards. One of the particular joys of Christmas is sending and receiving Christmas cards. While the pleasure Christmas cards bring can never be measured, isn't it good to know that Hallmark Cards are priced the same this year as they were last year and the year before and the year before that? And that the quality of Hallmark Cards has constantly improved throughout the years? Yes, today justice for many Christmas seasons that Hallmark on the back of your card is looked for and welcomed. It tells your friends you cared enough to send the very best. Lionel Barrymore appears by arrangement with Metro Golden Mayor, producers of the Technicolor picture, Plymouth Adventures starring Spencer Tracy, Jean Tierney, Van Johnson and Leo Genn. And now here is the first act of Thunder Shower starring Edward Arnold. Just the right size, Simpson falls, big enough to be the county seat and small enough so a man can know just about everybody in it. Just about everybody does know Jim Stebbins. Every summer's evening along about this time you can see Jim swinging up the album-shaded street toward his house. He reaches that picket jake which he's still meaning to repaint sometimes. He always gives out of the signal and there's another whistle from the front veranda. That'd be Caroline or maybe Jim's daughter Harriet. But this evening, this particular evening, Jim doesn't get any answer. Caroline, Harriet, why don't you go back into town? Just a few minutes ago, sir. I see. And your first stop was our front porch, huh? Who was I? Here in the Twain Father. Sammy Whistle? Oh, was that you? Erskine and I were so engrossed. That is, in talking. Oh yes, of course, in talking. Erskine just graduated from college and now he's home to stay. Isn't that wonderful, Father? Well, isn't it? Hmm. And there's something odd about this swing. Odd? Erskine, would you see if Mother would like? Oh, I know. I think it's a new canvas. It's been recovered. Now, Dad. No, by Jinx, it's more than that. It's a brand new swing. Jim? Oh, Jim? Yes, Caroline? May I see you, dear? Right away, Jim. Yes, excuse me, Erskine. Yes, sir. Yes, Caroline? Darling, you mustn't embarrass Harriet. Embarrass, huh? You mean I'm not supposed to notice the new swing that I've got to pay for somehow? Jim, you're not so loud. What was the matter with the old swing? Have we suddenly gotten too shabby for love's young dream? Darling, please, we can talk about it later. That's what I keep telling my creditors. But one of these days... One of these days you'll be rich, dear. Hmm. Well, you could be right today if you'd make all your clients pay what they owe you if you'd just stop doing free work. And the turn they can't turn away people that are in trouble, my dear. At least I can. Mr. Everett. Oh, no. Oh, dear. Let's grab a beach again. Hmm. Borrowing napkins. Well, whatever he wants, tell him we haven't got it. I have. All my wife wants is the loan of a quarter pound of butter. Oh, good evening, Fred. Ah. See, you got a new swing on the porch, Jim. Uh-huh. Well, now that you're spending money again, how about me selling you that extra life insurance? No, no. I'm not spending any money, Fred. The swing's on credit and probably going back. Oh, Jim. I wouldn't worry about that, Mr. Evans. Not the way Jim's prospects are picked up today. My prospects? You heard about Judge Robinson resigning, didn't you? I don't see how that affects me. Jim, you mean to say you haven't had it all up? With Robinson out of the State Supreme Court, the governor's got to appoint another man. Well, actually, Judge Meade, most likely. All right. When Meade leaves our county bench here, we'll have to elect another local judge. And who's the best man we got? Jim. Yes, Jim, of course. Oh, no, no, no. Caroline, you know I'm not a politician and with me owing bills to half the town, I doubt I'd stand very high with the voters. That's just why they'll elect you, Jim, so you'll have the money to pay them all. Well, even if you're right, Fred, there's somebody else to consider. The father of the boy who's sitting out on the porch with Harriet. I guess we all know that Lehman Roberts in his bank run this county politically. All right. And don't you suppose old Lehman would like his son to marry the daughter of a judge? I tell you, it's in the bag, Jim. I'll run home and get you that insurance application. Fred, I can't afford it. Maybe not today, but after the election. Well, we'll wait and see. Oh, too many men have said that before, Jim, left their families unprotected. You know, there's no telling when your summons will come. Maybe the strain of the election and all the campaigning you'll be doing. Well, Fred, I'm not running for office, so I can buy your life insurance bottles and get dropped dead, you know. Caroline, hurry up and give me that quarter pound of butter, will you? A half a pound, Mr. Evans. A half a pound. Fred, you said a quarter of a pound. Oh, but that was before I was your campaign manager. No, I'm on your payroll. Carter, come in. Miss Carter, I'm looking for that file on the Whitcomb case. I think your secretary stepped out to launch, Mr. Stevens. Oh, well, what else can this is a surprise? Come for some advice, Mr. Stevens. Harriet thought I ought to, because you know about these things. Oh, I see. Well, it depends on what things. Mr. Stevens, you know why my father sent me away to college. Yes, so you can go into the bank with him. And now I don't want to. I want to be an engineer. I know I'd be a good one. All I need is another year or two at a technical school. I see. And your father is against it. I've been afraid to tell him, sir. He's so sad on the idea of my being in the bank. And I guess you know what his temper is like. I certainly do. But just the same, son, you've got to talk it out with him. But if he still says no, he will, if you don't show more spunk, my boy. Lehman is stubborn, but I think he's intelligent enough to want his son to be happy in his career. I hope I can make him see it that way. But if he doesn't, then you've got to stand on your own two feet. Go to your technical school, even if you have to work your way through it. That's what I've been wondering about, sir. What would you think about Harriet and me? I might not have any money. All I can say to that is, come on in, boy, the hot water is fine. Thank you, sir. I was afraid that maybe when you got to be judged, you might want somebody else for your son-in-law. When I get to be judged? I haven't told anybody about that. Well, you haven't? I just saw Fred Beecham on Main Street. He was giving away handbills about you. Oh, great son, sir. Well, I guess that settles it. If I'm in the race, I might as well start running. You'll be elected, sir. Everybody knows you don't. Well, I hope your father shares that view. I better see him right today. When's the best time to talk to him? Right after the bank closes. I'll be seeing him at lunch, and I'll tell him to wait for you. Fine. I'll be there. I've seen him, Jim. Fred Beecham came in here and scattered handbills all around the bank. Then you know why I'm here, Lehman. If you come out for me, everything will be very simple. Really? Mm-hmm. Well, the governor doesn't promote Judge Meade to the Supreme Court. If he picks somebody else, there won't be any vacancy on the local bank. Oh, that's true enough. But everything looks like Meade will get the appointment. Mm-hmm. What's the matter? Why the frown? Guy Herondine came in to see me during the lunch hour. He wants me to talk to the governor about putting him on the Supreme Court. Herondine? When everybody knows his record as district attorney, he's completely incompetent. Yeah, completely. Well, then, what did you tell him? Nothing. I was right in the middle of a little problem of my own. Well, we mighty thankful, Jim, that you've got a daughter instead of a son. Nowadays, a young man is just a young fool. Oh, I don't know about that, Lehman. My girl Harriet is a pretty high-witted, idea-versed girl. Yeah, and that's something I've been meaning to take up with you, Jim. Those two are getting much too serious for my liking. That love has got to be a serious thing. I love puppy love. You might as well know it, Jim. I've got certain definite plans for my son. And they don't interval death. They're too definite. Erskine? I stopped by to tell you that I've thought over what you said at lunch. I'm tired of threats. I'm tired of being bought with promises. So there's nothing left for me except to leave home. Erskine, this is a private matter between you and me. That's all right. Mr. Stebbins knows about it. What? And as he says, it's time for me to make a life of my own. He says. So he says, does he? Now look here, Jim. Now, now hold on, Lehman, hold on. The boy simply asked my advice. And I'm taking him. You're not. Don't expect me home for dinner, Dad, because I've got my bags packed outside and I'm not coming back. Erskine? Goodbye, Dad. Well, I guess I'll be getting along, Lehman. This isn't exactly the time to talk politics, baby lady. No. We'll settle it right now. You've been planning this a long time, haven't you? First you throw your girl at my son and then you... Just a minute, Lehman. Then you're pushing out of his own home so he won't have me to advise him and you can run him in that girl to the nearest picture. Now, Lehman. You want to be judged, do you? I'll see that you can't even be elected dog catcher. I'm for herrington and what I say around this county goes. You know, I'm glad to hear you say that, Lehman, because now I realize that's just what's wrong around here. Too much goes on just because you say so. It's time the citizens did their own thinking and talking and by thunder I'm going to help them do it. Defeat me if you can. I don't care. I'm out to win something bigger for all of us. In just a moment, we will return to the second act of thunder shower starring Edward Arnold. What does Christmas really mean to you? Holly Wreaths and church bells and carolers in the snow? The thrill of watching a small child see his first Christmas tree? Or memories of other Christmases at home with your school friends gathered around the family piano? For all of us, Christmas has a different meaning. And that is why the makers of Hallmark cards bring you so many different styles to choose from in the Hallmark Christmas card collection. And because your Christmas card becomes a bond of friendship that reaches out across the miles to let your friends know your thinking of them your choice of the card you have imprinted with your name is a very important choice. So why not see all the styles, all the beautiful designs in the Hallmark Christmas card albums at the fine stores where Hallmark cards are sold? You're sure to find that one ideal card. And by ordering now, you'll have plenty of time for leisurely addressing. Remember the Hallmark on the back of every card you mail and say, you cared enough to send the very best. Now back to Lionel Barrymore in the second act of Thunder Shower, starring Edward Arnold. Jim Stebbins and Lehman Roberts is just about equal by Mother Nature herself. The night is hot and humid. On the front porch of the Stebbins house the steady creaking of the swing blends with the night music of the crickets. And there's a sudden flare of a match. Jim is lighting his pipe. Jim? Yes, dear, yes, yes. You have a set of words for ages. And words? No, it's just hot. Ah, usually we have a little breeze along life this hour. Well... Jim. Hmm? If there's something on your mind. You know what makes you think there is? Well... Politics, maybe. Darling, I do hope you aren't running for judge just to please me. I don't want you to think that you have to earn a better living for me and Harriet. You do understand that. Of course, my dear. By the way, did Harriet say that we're going? Down to Lake. Erskine thought it would be a good night for canoeing. Oh, perfect for her. You know that boy surprises me. How he ever got that job in Carter's garage with no experience at all. Well, that's what he needs. If it's going to be an engineer, he's got to learn about machinery at first hand. I know, but for Mr. Carter, it's a hire. Well, the boy's got to earn his keep or go back to his father and surrender everything. It seems to me that you have it awfully well thought out. Hmm? At least Erskine decided. Oh. All right, Caroline, all right. Oh. We made a deal. I said I'd cancel Carter's bill for the lead to work. I did for him last year. Yeah. But for heaven's sake, don't tell Erskine, will you? Oh, even Harriet. Good evening, everybody. Oh, hello, Fred. Hello. My wife was wondering, Miss Devons, if maybe we could borrow some ice cubes. Need some price tea, you know. Well, I'll see if we've got some to say, Mr. Dickens. Mm-hmm. Oh, Caroline, how about some ice tea for us, too? All right. Well, Jim. Jim, I hate to say this, but, um, I got a resign as your campaign manager. Oh, well, you never were officially my campaign manager, Fred. But why do you think you have to resign? Well, you haven't got a chance, Jim, now that old Lehman Roberts has come out against you. Oh, I'm not so sure of that. All my friends say they'll vote for me, and I've got plenty of them. That's what they tell you, sure. But old Lehman is telling them something different. Something a man don't like to hear. Like what, Fred? And they say... they say Lehman's talking of calling a few of his bank loans around town. He's saying the political situation is too risky. What? But that's... Why, that's almost brought me. Sure it is. But, Jim, you can't buck Lehman's power. Besides controlling the town's money, he's a good friend of the governor. Sure, a shootin' Harrendine will be appointed to the Supreme Court. You'll stay down here in the court your after. Well, Fred, do whatever you like. But I'm staying in this fight to the finish. It's already finished, I tell you. I sure hate to see a good family man like you lose everything. Well, hardly everything, Fred. You never know, Jim. Times aren't good around here. Folks have to pay off bank loans. They can't be paying fees to you. Most of them aren't paying me anyway. Harder, you know. This hot spell keeps up and the farmers have a bad drought. Anything can start a panic. Fred, the way you talk, I don't see how you ever sell a life with human's policy. That's what does it, my contagious gloom. Makes a man realize the worst is just around the corner. Look, this is enough ice, Mr. Beecham. It's all we can serve. Oh, that's plenty. Thanks. I better get it home before it melts. Oh, good night, Fred. All right. Uh-oh. Hear that thunder? Probably have a cloud burst now and wash away half the time. Oh, that's Fred, that's Fred. Look, Harriet's coming. Harriet's coming on the gate. What's she doing home so early? Where's Erskine? Harriet? Is anything wrong? Harriet? Yes? What's happened? Where's Erskine? I don't know and I don't care. Oh, my dear, you haven't called. If Erskine thinks so much of his father, I never want to see him again. Oh, oh, I think I know what's coming. All I said was that I didn't think it was fair for his father to call dad a failure and say he'd be a bigger failure on the bench. Erskine says something back in this and it got worse and I slapped him. Oh, Harriet, my Harriet. Oh, Jim, this is terrible. Yes, it is. And so are a lot of other things around here. I'm afraid they've all got to get worse before they can get better. A lot worse. I'll be with you as soon as I get this little time. Oh, no, no, no, the heck with that, Jim. There's a run on Lehman's bank. What are you joking? Am I? Go look out your window. The first thing I saw was a big limousine roll up to the bank and two men get out with briefcases. Bank examiners, I say to myself. But next thing, people are storming into the bank. Oh, they're not now. Lehman's closed the front door, everybody. But not this way. Lehman Roberts has always run a good, solid bank. Now, we want to keep it that way by all of us keeping our heads. We grew up together. We helped build this town together. And now let's not turn against our hometown. That's exactly what you'll be doing if you use violence. You'll disgrace Simpson Falls before the whole state. You'll be telling the country that we use our muscles but not our brains. You're not to break the law. The homes are taking over. Jim? Yes, Lehman. Will you step into the bank a minute? Jim, the governor wants to meet you. The governor? Mr. Stebbins, I want to compliment you on your handling of that crowd. Your courage is all that prevented the dangerous rat. Well, thank you, sir, but there's something I don't quite understand. Where are the bank examiners? Bank examiners? Yes. So that's the crazy idea that started everybody running. How could any idiot mistake the governor and his secretary for bank examiners? Well, I don't know, but Fred Beecham told me that... Uh-uh. The truth of the matter, Mr. Stebbins, is that I merely happened to be passing through this section and stopped by to see Mr. Roberts about a certain political appointment. Uh, by the way, Lehman, after what I've just witnessed, I think there's a better man for that post than Guy Erendine. Well, whatever... Whatever you say, governor. Mr. Stebbins, with your permission, I should like to appoint you Associate Justice of the State Supreme Court. Yeah. Oh, whatever. Whatever you say, governor. Clearly for Harriet and Erskine, you know. Oh, it seems they prefer the piano bench. They play a very nice duet together, don't they? Yes. I guess they'll be doing it for a long, long time. It was just the lovers. Yes, sure, that's all. Now, do you suppose Mr. Roberts will let Erskine be an engineer now? Well, that's all said. I talked it out with Lehman this afternoon. It's funny to see how agreeable he's gotten to my ideas. Well, after all, the area of sun is making a very good match. The daughter of a Supreme Court judge. Yeah. Speaking of matches, my dear, you and I, Carolina, have struck it off wonderfully well ourselves. Oh, what a shame. What's the matter? You made a joke. I did what? What, don't you see? Matches. Tracking balls. Oh. Well, it's more than a joke, my dear. It's the truth. Life has been rich and full for us because we've had each other. That's all that counts, Carolina. All that ever will. Oh, my darling. You know, I think it's a little cooler than mine. Well, it's about time. Oh, what a summer. And for that matter, what a day. You know, it's been like that thundershow of this afternoon. First the heat and all the discomfort, then the fury of the storm. And now it's all over, my dear. And all nature is beginning to smile again. All of us have a particular love for thanksgiving, for it's our own day. The one day of the year when we give thanks for the rich bounty. If it's possible, we gather the family around us and eventually the conversation turns to friends. And someone asks, how are Johnny and Sue, or have you heard from the Thompson's lately? Yes, friends are a part of thanksgiving too. And one wonderful way to make the day even more pleasant is to thank your friends for being our friends. It's such a gracious, easy thing to do if you make a point of sending hallmark Thanksgiving Day cards. You'll choose styles for everyone you know at the fine stores which feature hallmark cards. Sparkling new styles that are humorous or warm. Styles that bring back memories of your childhood. And you'll find special hallmark cards for those relatives who can't be with you on Thanksgiving Day. Remember when you send thanksgiving cards with the hallmark on the back, your friends will know immediately. You cared enough to send the very best. Here again is Lionel Barrymore. Thank you, Edward Arnold, for an outstanding performance as Jim Stabbins tonight. Thank you, Lionel. You know, it was a good story. There's all of your stories on hallmark. And by the way, I want to thank you all tonight for reminding me of something. What's that, Eddie? That Christmas is getting closer and closer. Frank, us were telling me about the dates we should mail our packages and cards overseas to guarantee Christmas delivery. That's right. That's right. Packages, a card sent regular mail must be sent right away. And the one sent air mail must be sent by December 1st. Because we surely don't want to forget our fine men and women in the service or our friends in other countries. And you know, Eddie, there are hallmark cards that say Merry Christmas in foreign languages, as well as special ones for the men and women in the armed services. Well, I didn't know that. Oh, sure. Sounds like a great idea. No wonder hallmark cards are so appreciated. There seems to be one for just about every occasion and person. Well, that's exactly right, Eddie. And now I want to tell you about our Thanksgiving show next week. It's called Standish of Standish and tells the exciting life story of that famous captain who led the pilgrims through their first struggle around his continent. And as our star, we are most happy to have John Hodiak, a hallmark playhouse as every Sunday, our producer, directors William Gay, our music composed and conducted by David Rose, and our story tonight was adapted by Leonard St. Clair. Until next Sunday then, this is Lionel Baron Orr saying good night. Look for hallmark cards that are sold only in stores that have been carefully selected to give you expert and friendly service. Remember a hallmark card that you will carry enough to send the very best. Edward Arnold can be seen soon in the forthcoming picture of my dad, J.R., being produced by Hal Macalod. Every Sunday hallmark cards present two great programs for the whole family's enjoyment. On radio, the hallmark playhouse with host Lionel Barrymore, and on television, outstanding dramatic entertainment, on the hallmark television theater. Consult your paper for time and station. More student nurses are needed. If you're a young woman seeking an interesting profession, investigate nursing. It's a profession that offers opportunities in many fields. Next week at the same time, hallmark playhouse returns to present John Hodiak and Jane G. Austin's Standish of Standish, and the week after that, Bruce Lancaster's The Secret Road, starring Dana Andrews on the hallmark playhouse. This is the CBS Radio Network. This is KMBC, Kansas City, Missouri.
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Jonathan P. Peck - Full Interview
|
A professor, an inventor, and an entrepreneur, Dr. Peck is renowned in the field of mine automation. He pioneered the use and development of high precision GPS guidance systems, production monitoring, and rock recognition systems for open pit mining in the 1990s. Among his many innovations is the revolutionary uGPS Rapid Mapper 3-D scanning technology, which allows to create virtual mines with GPS coordinates for underground operations.
Part of the Mining and Metallurgy Legacy Project.
Interviewer: William McRae
Date: February 2017
|
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"Jonathan Phillip Peck",
"Jonathan P. Peck",
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"Mining",
"Mines",
"UGPS",
"UGPS Rapid Mapper 3-D Scanning",
"3-D Scanning",
"Virtual Mine",
"Pioneer",
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"Professor",
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"Underground Mining",
"From Rock to Reality – Oral History",
"Mining and Metallurgy Legacy Project",
"MMLP videos"
] | 2017-11-15T15:29:44 | 2024-02-05T08:40:51 | 3,161 |
ZqtIF58-eHs
|
So please state your full name. My name is Jonathan Phillip Peck. And your age? 56. And where were you born? I was born here in Montreal, 1960. And when you were a child, what did your parents do? My parents were both teachers, elementary school on my mother's side, and college and university. And ultimately, I kept coming back to high school on my father's side, so language specialists. And what were your interests as a child in your past times? They varied. They moved from all different types of careers to, again, to the one that I'm in currently, which I never anticipated, actually, when I was a kid. So that only came later in life. And how about at school? What would you consider to be your strengths as a kid and going into high school? Torturing my teachers was one of my strengths. I would think that I was an average student, but reasonably consistent in terms of grades and interests across the board. I didn't really have any one topic that I was particularly interested in. Science isn't mass, maybe, but really, my calling towards that end in science and engineering was mainly when I hit the college level. And it wasn't prior to that. So what, if you, I guess, didn't have specific interests until college, how did you know what to get into? I tried a variety of different things. So I went through the CESHEP system here in Quebec. And I didn't finish the DEC or the degree from CESHEP. I went to John Abbott College. But I ended up going to Ontario after three semesters at CESHEP. I ended up in mechanical engineering at University of Ottawa. And that inspired me to go down one direction. But then I decided that wasn't enough. And I came back to Concordia mainly because I wanted to be a civil engineer at the time. And from civil engineering, I discovered geology. From geology, I went into geology. And from geology, I went into mining. That's kind of the route that happened. But that was, again, late in my career. I was 22 at the time. And what ended up attracting you to mining? What's appealing to you? The practical aspects of mining. The fact that it's working with your hands, it's working with a variety of different knowledge that traditional engineering doesn't really need. It's a jack of all trades, really. And so it combined mechanical engineering with the civil engineering with geology. And it put it all into one job. Plus it was outdoors. It was an interesting area. Big equipment, open pit mines. That's really what attracted me. And so what was your degree when you completed it? I completed it. My first degree was in geology, geological sciences, Concordia, 84. And from there, I already had quite a bit of background in terms of an engineering degree. And I carried that forward to McGill, where I was then able to get into the masters of engineering program. And it was inspired through a prof there that in fact, we've talked about in the past, Malcolm Scoble. So he was the one that drew me out of the geology program into mining. So because it was at McGill actually doing a masters in geological sciences as well. Geotech engineering, when Malcolm pulled me across. Okay. And what was your thesis or most prominent work? Well, the thesis I started on, it was related to automation to some extent, but it was monitoring machines, looking at large blast-hole drills. And that's the work that attracted me. So Malcolm had a project that was funded by Natural Science and Engineering Research Council. It was a collaborative research development project with Ford and Coal at the time. This was about 1987. And so that became the core of my thesis as a result. But it was that that inspired me in. And that was the basis for me staying within mining, doing a masters degree, and then finally my PhD. So that was it. And what would you consider to be your first official job within the mining? After I graduated, 89, I took on the responsibilities primarily at an academic perspective. I was running an automation robotics lab at McGill, which was joint with a coal polytechnic called CCARM, CCARM, Canadian Center for Automation Robotics. And it was, there was a director there, a fellow named Andre Pichet, who was ex-Naranda Research, who was running the group at the executive level. And I was the McGill Laboratory Manager. And so that was my first job after graduating with my PhD and stayed there until the funding ran out in 1992. And how was, back in the late 80s, early 90s, how did robotics look at mining automation? Early stages. In fact, CCARM was one of the first centers in the world to look at this whole aspect of applying automation robotics to mining. But in 89 through 92, it was pretty early stages for it. There was a prof that was brought across to run that center eventually, a fellow named John Edwards, who came from the UK, where he had been working for the National Coal Board and doing quite a bit of work in terms of large machine automation. And so he was brought across to be the expert to port that expertise into mining here in Canada. But it was very early stages. The machines were still heavily geared around manned operation. The technology wasn't ready for prime time. It was really early stages. This is, again, 89 to 92, before really there was a lot of different technologies around including smartphones or anything else like that. It was very, again, very little on the market that you could work with. You had to build everything from scratch. So from there maybe take me quickly through your career and we'll maybe I'll stop you afterwards. So after CCARM in 92, again with the drying up of the funding, the whole group was let go because there was no further opportunities to fund it through McGill. Federal government, provincial government funds were gone. I basically closed the group down in 92 around June of that year. I took the whole team outside and at that point incorporated Aquila Mining Systems which was the company that I ran for many years. So it was the embodiment of all the technology that we developed within CCARM. We kind of pulled it through that company and chose the ones that had the most merit terms of actual products that the industry was looking for. And you have examples of, I guess, your best products? Well, the monitoring, we proved to the world. I would think that we could create ruggedized industrial level computer platforms that would actually survive on mobile mining equipment. Starting with Blastle Drills, we did our first project with New Brunswick Coal in 1993. That was the first purchase order that I got through Aquila. So it was, again, early stages, but we built and adapted industrial level on an assembly line to use in mobile mining machine applications. And we could see that there was just an incredible amount of interest in that sort of level of product. So we decided to expand upon it and we took it to the next level from monitoring to high precision GPS adaptation. And everything is a question of timing because around 93, 94, GPS receivers were coming down in size, they were becoming more robust, they were becoming faster in terms of update rates and accuracy. And we just found that the confluence of our product demand was right at the right time with respect to these GPS receivers. So by 94, we had a GPS guidance solution, not only for drills, but also for electric cable channels. And that was the beginning of the product line that we developed with Aquila, so. You're getting, continue, then. So 94, 94 was the first commercial version of a high precision GPS system for Blasso drills. We worked in concert as we've always done. We've always had a partnership with the mining industry in Canada. And we found supportive people within New Brunswick Coal, a fellow named Andy Cormier, who was the CEO of the company, and 93 who funded us and believed in us. And we deployed a solution that met his specific needs for New Brunswick Coal. And another big sponsor of ours was Ford & Coal and particular people like Don Shilak and also Jim Popovich, who at the time was the CEO of Ford & Coal. And they believed in technology and they wanted to see it adapted and they could see the avenues for where it would make a big difference within mining. And again, through their support and funding, 93, 94, they were really the reasons why we got into the GPS guidance market. I've proven that it would work, but we didn't quite have the financing to support it. But they gave us a bridging loan of half a million dollars with the opportunity for us to return that in terms of royalty payments to them. Although they didn't believe it at the time that they'd ever see a dime back. They didn't see all their money back and more than that. So it worked out well. And it was that partnership that allowed those products to be, again, made correctly in terms of meeting customer needs and being able to be deployed correctly such that the client could use it and support it properly. And that was, again, that's always been our mantra in terms of doing these products. And how were you guys among the first to develop this? We were the first in. There had been nobody since that time or at that particular time in the history that had ever looked at the synthesis between onboard monitoring and the use of high precision GPS. Caterpillar, in fact, was at that time playing with some of those components in the 94-95 timeframe. But we can honestly say that we were one of the first ones out with a unit on blasto drills and also one on cable shovels. And so, again, there were people looking at and recognizing where these new technologies, these new enabling technologies like GPS could be utilized. But we were the first one to really put a commercial product out there. So. For someone who is listening to this and doesn't necessarily know much about mining and how that works, how is a GPS system important and how has that applied? Well, everything's about accuracy. I mean, mining is really looking at a three-dimensional image of what's in the ground, again, which is defined through your initial program of exploring. So going in and trying to define what the ore body or the resource is. And then once you have that plan in the three-dimensional model is how do you then go after each piece of it and take the various slices off accurately? Because, of course, it comes back to how much ore you take versus the waste material. And so, GPS allows you to stay closer to that plan of how you go after and extract the ore body by having the capabilities of plus or minus five centimeters accuracy in three dimensions. It allows you to be very detailed and very accurate with respect to going after that ore body. And every little improvement in accuracy means millions of dollars. And so that's really what GPS is all about. And your other the automation systems must have been also helped with safety? Well, automation comes into play because, again, like anything else, mining can be a dangerous industry to work in. Big machines with high voltage on board, high hydraulic pressures, dust and noise and everything else. Could you take the operator away from that hazard zone? And the answer is, you can. And the key is to having some technologies that will allow you to do that. One of them is automation. Whether it's automation while you're drilling the hole or while you're operating the machine, which, again, it's still at this point in time today. Some of that is still in its infancies. But the fact is we try to do certain parts of the drilling process that would be conducive to automation, such as when the operator needs to drill a hole from one position to another in the elevation. And so we automated that process. And subsequent to that and where we are today is trying to automate the whole process so you can get the operator fully off the machine. It was just a stage in that whole automation sequence. Did you, with the whole automation system, did you, you said you worked with CAT? Yes. Well, yeah, 96, we, well, 95, I'll go back up a bit. 95 is when we started talking to Trimble Navigation. At the time, they were one of the key players in the high precision GPS market. Today they're the dominant player. But they came and approached this because they had a problem. They had a client in South Africa that was looking for a high precision GPS system for drills. They didn't have the capacity to deliver one. And they came to us to partner on that particular project. As a result of that, they purchased a minority interest in us in a kilomotting systems. And at the time, we didn't know it, but they were also partnering with Caterpillar. And as a result of Trimble taking and investment in us, Caterpillar subsequently came after us in 96. And they bought a majority stake in us in September of 96. And so that's how we forged the partnership with Caterpillar and became part of that organization, at least from the point of view of the mining technology side. And in retrospect, you'd say that was a good thing? It was a good thing. It was a great thing. If we hadn't joined with Caterpillar, we would have been competing with them. So better to work with the large US companies than to try to fight them. And I think together with Caterpillar, we did some amazing things. And we put our minds together and we put our best foot forward to come up with products that today are considered the industry standard. And from my perspective, that's probably the biggest legacy we have. We pushed the envelope. We delivered these products that were fairly innovative at the time. And basically, nobody's caught up to that product today. It is the standard by which every other product out there is compared. Which is a very nice thing to have. So, and we did it with Caterpillar and Trimble. So. Did the automation systems make it to the oil sands? I don't know, did they work with the 400 ton trucks and things like that? They did, but we didn't have much of a direction with respect to the autonomous haul truck programs, which are really where things are at today. If you look at autonomous haul trucks, they started back in 96. They probably started a little bit before that with Caterpillar. 95 is a research project within them. But we weren't involved in that. We stuck to blast oil drills and cable shovels with Caterpillar. That was the main focus. But many of the technologies that came out as a result of the developments we did are affiliated or associated with the autonomous haul trucks today. So, again, it all builds up towards higher levels of automation eventually. And I think we may not have had anything direct to do with autonomous haul trucks back when, but certainly indirectly, some of the technologies we did use will feed into it. Yeah, yeah. So, after CAT, so Akila's been purchased by CAT, what next, what happened? So we, 96 Caterpillar, bought a majority stake and I had, I remained the CEO of Akila Munning Systems. So we grew, we grew substantially larger than we, you know, we were at the time of the acquisition. Always based out of Montreal, by the way? Always based out of Montreal. Yeah, we were based downtown Montreal, you know, right in, in Centretown. And the company grew to a fair size, probably at maximum size, we were 50, 52 people. So we were a significant player in the industry and we were one of the few at the time. I mean, as I say, we had a gap of many years where we were the only one in that marketplace. And there were others that were competing with us, but they were, you know, far behind. And so we had really had a dominant position, but the industry through its fluctuations going up and down from 96, 96 was a down year, 2000 was a down year. It was a struggle for those four years, just trying to get out there. The products were not cheap, they were new. People were a little bit skeptical. The industry in general is always a little hesitant about changing their ways. And so we had to fight those hurdles as well to get the products accepted. And so we spent four to five years really pushing the envelope in terms of getting the technologies adopted and accepted and proven out. But it was a tough time. And through it into 2002, I stayed on as CEO and then I decided that it was time for the whole change to occur. And I left the company or at least left my position as CEO and became a different or played a different role within Caterpillar for the next two years until about 2004. Which was, what was the role? The role was new product introduction and development manager for the complete product line. So beyond just the Achilles stuff, I went on to do more technologies as well. Mindstar was one of them, the fleet management system and Cat's own products were under that umbrella. So I did that for two years. It's been interesting, the things you... Interesting and frustrating. Again, working with a large US company was a different story. And it was no longer my game because Caterpillar owned 100% of the company then. And so it was really dictated by their process and by their people and so on. And like any big company, there's strengths and weaknesses of it. So I stayed on until 2004. 2004, I decided that was it. And I think we agreed to part ways amicably, but it was time to leave. And so 2004 was when I formed my new company, PekTech, the one I'm in now. Where we are filming currently. Correct. And that, be more out. Yep. So could you talk a bit about PekTech? What is PekTech? How does it start? PekTech started as a result of the experience that I had built up through Caterpillar and Aquila and having worked in the industry for many years up to that point. And our role that I saw, I didn't want to get back into product development. I wanted to basically help clients identify their technology needs and then help them go out and find the right solutions. Find in the sense that we wouldn't build something, we would go and buy it off the shelf and help them integrate it. In other words, help them buy it, help them integrate it, help them deploy it, help them support it. So given that most clients were still unaware of most of the technology needs. And again, suppliers tend to sell things in a manner that convinces you they have all the answers. But the question still remains is, there's many gaps within what they offer and what the client actually needs. So our role was to come in and help the client do a better job of bridging to the supplier and making sure that he got the right solution deployed in his operation. So we sat mainly on the customer side. And through the course of four years, we decided that finally in 2007 that we could identify a lot of areas where we as product development people could become engaged. And so we saw opportunities jump into the market again. And in 2007, I decided to do that. We got involved in some product development work with a particular client, Western Canada. And that was the beginning of where we are today where we're actually a company of consulting services and also product development and product sales. And so we diversified in 2007 to enable that to occur. Just couldn't resist staying out of the industry again. So since that time, we've done a number of projects to develop some reasonably innovative solutions. And we continue to do so at this present time, which also includes having a renewed partnership with our friends at Caterpillar as of 2015. So it's all good. Good. What are the, actually first question, if you had to give a percentage of consulting versus product development, what would you say? Probably equally divided now. If you'd asked me this about a year and a half ago, we've been, probably the balance was in favor of the consulting. But now I think it's starting to shift more towards product end. The consulting is still very good and we still do a lot of it. But again, giving a product or having a product in a direction as well tends to skew our views a bit in terms of the customer because we have a bias towards our own products, obviously, versus competitive ones. So it's changing a bit. We still can maintain a firewall between our consulting and our products, but it becomes a little bit more difficult as we tend to get out into the industry. So I'd say right now it's probably 50-50, consulting and products, but I think it's shifting higher towards the product end over the next two years. So you see yourself kind of returning to your roots? Kind of, yeah, absolutely. Yeah, it's going back the way that we started, but it's a comfortable way to be because I mean, that's where we started. So we have the history and we have the legacy to build upon as well, and that helps. And how would you say the mining sector and economy is doing nowadays? Is it on an up-swing thing? It's always cyclical. It's always cyclical, but it's been flat for the last couple of years. I mean, it's a harder sell these days that I can tell you, but it was hard back in the Aquila days as well. The products are not cheap, and to get $100,000 to half a million dollars out of a customer for a particular product is a hard sell unless the return on investment is there. And this is part of history is that business case becomes more clear and as more people move towards more automation and the operations, it's an easier sell. But I'd still say the industry is a little flat at this present time, you know, January 2017. And time will tell whether or not it improves this year. So. And out of PekTech, what would say are your proudest because naive, I mean, maybe very recent but proudest products that you've developed or worked on? Well, we've done two, the significance. One is the UGPS Rapid Mapper product, which is a solution that was based on state-of-the-art technology. Again, almost in the same vein as what we realized with GPS at the time. Enabling technologies, in this case, the enabling technologies were LiDAR devices. In other words, laser type scanning devices that give you three-dimensional capabilities. And the formation of that product was based upon a need from a customer. Again, it was driven by needs of Barrick Gold who needed a better solution for underground positioning in the absence of obviously space-based satellites. And so UGPS came around as that result. But the fact was, is it evolved beyond just a positioning system into one that provided 3D mapping of an underground opening so that you can do again that comes back to accuracy, comes back to being able to understand where you are and what you're doing in three-dimensional space such that you can compare it to some plan that you have regarding how to get that ore out of the ground. And so UGPS has been a good product and it was through a relationship again with a customer and we're quite proud of our development history with customers. The second product would be the autonomous drilling product that we developed in collaboration with Tech, which was the company that eventually bought Ford and Coal. So a lot of the legacy is of being the leader in technology development was reflected in the fact that Tech believed in us given our past history with them over the past 20 years. And they also funded the development of this autonomous drilling product. And as a result of that, we've been able to get credibility and footprint in the industry to go off and sell that to a number of other clients. And this is why Caterpillar and I came back together because it made sense for us to cooperate in that regard. And again, given the legacy that we had, we had a history with Cat. So it made perfect sense for us to come together on this drill product again. And that's why we're together today. What is that drill product, the autonomous drill product? It's a, yeah, no, it's for open pit. It's for large blast-hole drills. I mean, one thing in technology development you always have to realize is that what you know is what you know. It's sometimes hard to go off into a widely different area than your own core competencies and experience. And so we stayed, the underground product that we did with UGPS was a different thing, but it doesn't, it takes some underground knowledge, but it's really understanding the fusion between embedded platform, software, and sensing. That's really the key. That's what UGPS is. But the drill product is one that goes right back to our roots in terms of having pioneered high precision GPS and drills. And this builds upon that. It's an incremental process where by you then go through the process of looking at the drilling cycle in terms of what it does as a machine and look for how you put it all together in an automated package so that the operator doesn't have to be anywhere near the machine. And so what this device does, it allows for a drill to continue to drill from a hole to hole because it moves from hole to hole and does a series of drilling removal of the drill steel and then it essentially moves to the next hole. All that's automated. And so put in a direction, put in a map of what you want it to do, it goes off and does it without the operator being involved. And so it's a semi-autonomous solution because there is some part of the process once it reaches the end of its path that an operator has to get involved. And by nature of the definition of autonomous, autonomous means no human intervention, it's more of an automated system. But it's one that, it's not a large market base currently for any supplier. And given that CAD is a very large drill supplier in the world, there's the market that we can go after. And so this is why we've teamed with them. But it is, it's a very unique product in that sense. And one that customers are demanding. So again, timing is everything. Absolutely. Looking forward, and this can be a, there's no limit to this question, it'd be more of a fun question, but where do you see the next big technology in mining? What is it? Well, if you read the, read the press releases of all these companies that are doing digital strategies or digitalization strategies, it's all about collecting data and doing analytics on that data. And one thing I can say is that there's lots of data that's been collected over time in mining from various, you know, devices on all sorts of machines. But people have made very poor use of the data. They haven't really taken it together into a larger analytics package, big data, you know, the internet of things, and use that to make, you know, some decisions based upon the outcomes or the information that's from that. And I think that's going to be the trend. It's not so much there's any real breakthrough type solutions that are coming. I think the solution is of combining everything is really the future. That's where things are going. So it's again, making more effective use of data that you already have available. And if there's gaps in that, today's world there's tons of sensors out there and there's a lot more of a choice in terms of how to, you know, get information off a particular component or a particular machine that again, just rolls up into this larger big data type concept. But I think it's having the facility to monitor, transmit, analyze, and make sense of that information in a shorter time period that's going to be a key game changer in mining. What do you think of, that's been around 2000, Robin McEwen with the Gold Corp challenge where he basically opened data, right? He threw absolutely everything he had on their red lake mine and said, world makes sense of this information. Well, again, that's an interesting concept. I mean, it's giving a data set. And again, hopefully the data set is correct. But what came out of it was a cheap way to have a bunch of people go out and hack it and see if there were any other different ways to slice and dice that information from which to make the right assessment. And I think it's happening. There's a number of companies that are trying to do hackathons and trying to inspire people to look at things a little bit differently because sometimes in one industry, you have a mindset and you tend to approach it from the front versus from different directions. And I think getting different opinions or different viewpoints is very important. And I think that is also happening within the standard information side of mining as well. This is where analytics comes in, is different ways to sort of process the data and as opposed to the old way. So I think that's totally appropriate. And Barrick has done some things recently, as I said, they're throwing out some concepts and inviting technology people to come in and hack solutions. In other words, work with them in a more of an agile, scrum type manner to come up with ideas that may be throwing ideas at the wall. But sometimes those ideas stick and I'm all for it. I think we need to mix it up. There's a shift to it seems to, a lot of these mining companies seem to be less secretive now, or at least mining seemed to, used to be a very secretive, conservative business. Correct. And now it's at least some of them trying the opposite. There's more collaboration out there between parties and I think people realize that holding intellectual property, let's just look at it in the context of technology, everybody's heard quite a bit about Rio Tinto and one of the future type projects and they tried to retain all that IP internally. The problem with doing so is that you don't continue to develop it because it's so unique to the people that are there at the time and those people leave which Rio has laid off tens of thousands of people, that IP all leaves with them and therefore the IP that you developed six years ago is totally obsolete because it's not evolved. So it allows you to get the lead on your competitor but I don't think there's lots of value in terms of just possessing it all and holding it in. So in many cases when we work with a customer they give us all the IP. We have provisions with respect to the fact that they've given us or transferred the IP to us for a dollar or whatever the legal agreement is that we will give them preferred pricing, we'll give them royalties on the product that we commercially exploit but they also know that we'll continue to commercially exploit the product so the IP is actually growing and they recognize they'll get the improvements that are coming about as a result of us going fully to market. So it's a much better relationship in the long run and most mining companies wanna stay mining, they're not a technology company. They use technology but it's not there, it's not their core expertise. So it's better to put it out and get it used in the industry to learn. That's generally how it works. I'll keep going a bit on these kind of questions, get more into the social questions. And this next one's no wrong answer but just yes, no and why. Do you believe there's a disconnect between the mining industry but we could also say more probably the natural resource industry and the general public in Canada? Absolutely, there's a massive disconnect. When you tell people that you're in mining industry and they go, mining, what's that? And then I just sort of hold up my smartphone and I say, you see this thing here? Without mining, you don't have this and they go, wow, that's really intense and the answer is, again, most people don't really know. They don't know where metals or minerals come from and they really don't recognize how it contributes to the country as a whole or to industry as a whole and I think that is a big challenge and most people see mining, they see the bad side of mining as well. It's a funny industry but it's like any other industry. What makes the news more so is the bad situations, the sensational stuff versus the successes and when you look at other mining countries of the world and I've been to all of them, you realize how good Canada is at what it does in terms of extracting ore from the ground. I don't think most Canadians know that. I think if they had to say, is Canada mining jurisdiction number one, most wouldn't know. Secondly, if you had to say, is mining a clean industry or a safe industry in Canada, they probably would say no because they see nothing but the bad. They talk about oil sands or people slamming their oil sands or some other disaster elsewhere in Canada and that becomes the focus point of the news and it tends to condition people's mindsets. So I'd say that yeah, there is a disconnect big time. And do you think the, it is true that seems that the media, as for anything they'll go with what's sexier and usually which is more negative, but do you think the industry is also doing enough to include and help the people understand what they truly do? I think there's lots of groups that are trying to do things. I mean, I can remember back to the Mining Association of BC, this is back in the early 90s and there was a particular gentleman there that was trying to reach out to the universities and high schools and colleges to sort of dispel all the misconceptions of mining and trying to profile them in a much different way. And yeah, I was a struggle back then but I'm sure that other groups have seen the same thing. I mean, you can keep talking about it and promoting it, but again, people that are out in the communities and the mining areas recognize the value. People in cities don't realize it because it's not around them. They don't see it, they don't experience it. Their mother or father doesn't get up every day and go to a mine, but so there's a disconnect between urban centers and out in the regions for sure. And I think that's how to bridge that gap. It's a tough one. It's very tough. Next question is Abe. It's an earful, again, no wrong answer. In your opinion, are there any events, people, inventions, contributions, disasters, anything really that must be mentioned when talking about the history of the natural resources in Canada? There's always lessons learned. I mean, there's a tremendous line of different events that have occurred that from which hopefully you recover from, but you also learn from. Tailings, pawn failures and things like that, which we recently had in British Columbia. You'd think that would be over in this day and age, but it's not. There's a number of different things like that. But look, I think some of those disasters have certainly from a Canadian perspective has happened less and less. The footprint upon the earth or the footprint of mining in general is only a certain reduction you can do. I mean, an open pit's an open pit, but I think Canadians have been looking for new technologies for extracting ore. And I'm certainly working with a lot of them now that are looking to be much more sensitive and being able to work in areas like Nunavut, where the environmental footprint needs to be minimalized by every degree, plus you're dealing in a harsh environment in general and indigenous people around. So Canadians are inspired by that to try to do things differently. And I think they certainly are very conscious of past issues and problems in the mining industry in general in Canada that they're building on. And so they look to the future to see how they can avoid doing those things again or again doing things differently. And I think that's, those are lessons that every mining engineer, at least I know in Canada, is conscious of. But any one instance, hard to say. I don't know if you've ever seen the movie by the NFB or something called The Whole Story. It's something to take a look at. Yeah, it's very interesting. What's that one about? It's about mining in Canada, Sudbury and some of the other gold mining areas of Canada. So it's, again, it's got a certain perspective on it, but it also doesn't promote some of the value of it. If you suddenly said, we're not going to do any mining, then what would the society look like here in Canada? If we didn't have minerals to rely on? Yeah, we can recycle a lot, but you still need to replenish the inventories with new minerals, especially if we have such demands from society on consumer-driven products. So it's, again, you can always see things in different light. And The Whole Story gives you sort of a one-sided look at things, but, you know, so it's those sorts of things that people tend to look at. And in today's world, I mean, we talk about false news, it all on the, through social media. I mean, hard to ignore. Again, people are influenced heavily by what they read, whether it's from a reliable source or not. And there's a lot of that on mining, you know, so. Well, that's people, I guess. Well, mining watch is another one. And mining watch tends to be somewhat, you know, focused on the negative versus the positive. And they're a very aggressive group, and that's fine. I mean, you always need a balance in anything, and it's always good to ask the hard questions, and hopefully you get the right answers. And I, but again, it does tend to skew people's viewpoint. If you don't want to read the other side of the story, you can always read, you know, the other extreme. And that tends to become, you know, what you believe in. So, that's mining. A few perspective questions here, looking back at your career, and this is usually what people find the toughest, this question is, what has been the most challenging or difficult, either project or part of your career? Well, I've had some challenging projects. I've had some challenging products. I've had some challenging clients. I've had some technical hurdles that we've had to overcome. All of the above, but it's part of the growth of a company. It's by having some failures in your career and having some failures as part of being a product developer that makes you stronger the next time around. Mining is an interesting industry in that it's everywhere. And so some of the places you have to go and do work in are in the middle of nowhere. And language can be a barrier. Cultural differences can be a barrier, not only with the language, but also with just the environment and the way that the people work. All of those things have been hurdles to us in the past. I mean, we've done work as far away as, you know, South Africa, Botswana, Zimbabwe. And, you know, again, those are in isolated areas, but we've done work as well in Latin America in some places that are extremely isolated as well. And they all carry with it certain challenges. So, again, dealing with clients sometimes and making sure that their expectations are calibrated with yours and you deliver the right product. It, there's been a few of those in my time, but nothing that hasn't allowed us to continue. It hasn't sunk the company or, you know, we just use those as lessons learned and we deal with it and engineer a solution around it and deal with the customer in the right manner, commercially and openly. So the best way to get through these things in mining, and I can tell you is it's better to tell them the bad news and be honest about it than to, you know, to lie and or, you know, diminish the issues. Best thing is to come out straight and just tell them. So. The whole transparency. Absolutely. Absolutely. What's the next one I wanted to ask you? I'll ask you one about women in mining. Yep. Throughout your career and you've done, like I said, you've traveled a lot. You've worked for different companies, with different companies, different clients. How present or absent have women been throughout your career and has that changed? And if so, how so? Very few in the beginning. And I started my career in mining in about 89, but were there, you know, women that came into the industry after that point in time? I'd say slowly. It's still a fairly man dominated industry. There's no doubt about it. It's a male dominated industry. And it really comes back to, you know, the fact that this is an industry that it's not viewed as being very innovative. It's not viewed as being very conducive to a young woman that wants to get into a suitable career. It doesn't appeal to people that have been growing up in urban environments to go to the remote. It's the exception. There are some that prefer that, but it's been tough. It's not easy for women, as I said, given the domination by males. But I've seen it change. Some of the people that I deal with today in consulting projects that I have, those interfaces are women. And they're women that have a long career in mining, demonstrated a great capacity for knowledge of mining and have been able to fight through the hurdles that they face. And they're now in fairly senior positions. And you can see it right across the industry. I mean, Barrick, their VP innovation strategy, a woman named Michelle Ash is there now. She was a Rio Tinto person. I deal with another woman at Agnico Eagle, Dominique Baudry. She's the manager of innovation. So she's come a long way. And basically, they've gotten to their positions because they have good knowledge and they're capable people. So, but it is still in the minority. It's just not an easy environment for them sometimes. Yeah, whether it's wanted or not, it's not necessarily the most appealing thing. It's all men, for example. Well, it is, I think, but again, it comes back to the challenges of modern life. I mean, if you're going to have a family and where do you want to raise them and what do you want to do? Raising them out in small towns is not all that easy either. It's challenging. It's limited in terms of services, in terms of a variety of different things. So most people want to give the best of their family. So after a period of time, if you graduate, again, do a lot of women come back to the urban centers and looking for jobs, mainly in big cities. And I don't know, I think it's the same with some of the young male graduates that come out. So I don't think it's just a question of men or women. It's a question of just the mentality, sometimes of the people that are graduating. What do they want from life? Do they really want to go and sacrifice in their view four to 10 years out in the middle of nowhere? And the answer is, I'd say the vast majority probably don't. They want to quickly rise up in the ranks and settle down in a comfortable job in an urban environment in most cases. I mean, we've seen the change and I've seen the change within the hiring of people, just given that change in mentality. So it's just the nature of the current generation to some extent. So again, I don't think it's a man or woman thing. It's more the way that particular mindset is these days. Would you consider to have one or many mentors through your career? Well, one key one is Malcolm Scobal. I mean, Malcolm would be my biggest mentor. He, again, being at McGill in a master's program in geotech engineering and then taking Malcolm's course, it was one of my inspirations for getting into mining. I just thought it was very cool. It was a great industry in the sense that there were so many different facets to it. It didn't seem to be focused on any one particular area. It seems to be very broad. I saw the opportunities of being there and Malcolm was the one that inspired me. He encouraged me to get into the industry. He dragged me across into a master's, didn't drag me across, but inspired me to come across to a master's with him at McGill as my thesis advisor and he gave me all the leeway to do what I wanted, which was good because I'm not one to be overly managed. I kind of like by freedom. I kind of like to do my own thing and Malcolm gave me that latitude. And it's for that reason, I probably was able to complete my master's and PhD in a reasonably quick time. They're done four years total and it was well worth it. So Malcolm would be the key instigator of a lot of what I did and what I became. I learned a lot from Malcolm. I'll ask you a few last questions. What are you proudest of throughout your professional life? Probably a keel of mining systems was a proud moment. And in fact, I'm flying to Denver the 19th through 20th of February because I've actually been inducted into the Technology Hall of Fame through the International Mining Journal. And it's really for that legacy for Akila. And Akila was a pioneer in many ways. And I look at it and I look back and I said, how did we do it? But it was just a question of being in the right place at the right time with the right ideas and the right people. It wasn't certainly only me. It was the group of people that we had that were able to persevere and work through some challenging times to deliver some interesting products. So I'd say Akila was probably yet because that set me up for my next phase of career which was where I am today. That legacy in mine, or behind me, it was an easy thing to build upon because automatically you can go to people and make the connection and say, well, we were Akila Mining Systems and they go instant recognition. So they know you've done it before, you could probably do it again. So I'd say that was it. But also for the training of people, I mean, if we look at the roots of people that we trained through Akila and also through PecTech, there's been a number of highly qualified people that have come through the organization, have gone off to do wonderful things with other companies. So we actually trained a lot of interesting people and those people were, you know, have gone on to contribute quite a bit to other companies. So including within Caterpillar and Trimble and other large companies like that. So that's also the training aspect and again, development of people is also a big thing that I'm proud of. And last question, if you're speaking to a student, someone much younger, for example, what would be the one life lesson or piece of advice you would give them looking forward if they're going to, maybe, go into mining or something like that? Mining is a great career and to be honest with you, it's what you make of it. There's no instruction manual when you come out of mining. You can walk into a whole bunch of different things. It really depends on what you want to do. People can either feed you what you're going to do or you can define for yourself what you want to do. And again, it depends on the company you're getting into. But there's always a mentor like Malcolm around the rim that will allow you to have the latitude to think outside the box. And I think the key is don't think too close to what your job description is. Try to see opportunities and go after them. And one thing that is always recognized in mining is somebody that goes the extra mile, somebody that takes the initiative on its own, on their own to go off in a certain tangent and take responsibility for a project. And I think that's the interesting thing about mining, which is not as structured as other industries, certainly not as other engineering disciplines where it's very well-defined. Because it is an engineering thing in which there's a liability associated with it. Mining has liability and you have some constraints, but in the world of technology and mining, doors open, massive amounts of opportunities, especially these days. This, the next five to 10 years in mining is going to be very exciting, especially with respect to the application of technologies that have been proven in other industries coming into mining. There's going to be more and more of that. So this is a great opportunity to be there. And hopefully the mining companies recognize it, so that they need to continue to recruit from universities and support them. That would be the biggest challenge that I see coming up is that connection that industry actually hires students, which when industry is down, they don't hire students, which is a problem, so. To a brighter future. Absolutely. Is there anything else you'd like to add? No, I think that's fine. I think, look, it's been a great run, good and a great career. I'm not done yet. I've got another five to 10 years to go and watch this space. There'll be more coming out of this in due course. So we're not done innovating by any means. We're going to continue to push the envelope and we'll be here doing that for the next many years. Well, thank you. Thank you.
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"url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZqtIF58-eHs",
"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
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UC4YNwIa0KQ455Ji2jYVLKFQ
|
A Word From Ken Bone
|
this is where the money goes
SNAKESCRIBE FOR MORE!: https://bit.ly/2wqRdxT
BUY MERCH: https://teespring.com/stores/dumbest-of-all-worlds
BECOME A PATRON: https://patreon.com/dumbestofallworlds
DISCORD: https://discord.gg/7wjVRHx
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FACESNAKE: https://www.facebook.com/DumbestofallWorlds
WEBSNAKE: http://dumbestofallworlds.com
|
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"dumbest of all worlds",
"dumbest",
"snakes",
"halo 3",
"E3 2018",
"comedy",
"funny",
"sketch",
"sketch comedy",
"sketch comedy (tv genre)",
"humor",
"stand-up comedy (tv genre)",
"hilarious",
"skit",
"parody",
"humour",
"comedy skit",
"laugh",
"spoof",
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"video",
"meme compilation",
"facebook",
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"commercials",
"cameo",
"ken bone",
"cameo murder",
"cameo story"
] | 2020-01-23T13:30:04 | 2024-02-05T08:31:27 | 112 |
ZqBuE4D_jCo
|
Hey, this is Ken Bone, and on behalf of Ashley, I want to congratulate Mike Glob for your big lottery win. Shout out to the Glob gang, your family, and roommate. Now that you're rich, you should probably help Ashley out with her surgery. Don't like do it yourself. Just give her some money. Hi, Ashley. Mike just wanted to say that he is so sorry he couldn't visit you in the hospital and apologize for his parents. I hope that you get better soon. Hey, it's Dominic from The Dominic Natty Show. Mike Glob, you owe Ashley money, and I want you to know that Tony is watching, and Ashley's surgery was expensive, so you need to pay up. Also, shout out to hashtag Glob gang. Hello, Ashley Glob. First off, this camera was booked by Tony, who seems to be a marvelous friend. Oh, here's my catch. He's interrupting. Mike's in really good hands with Tony here. He seems very experienced. One last thing, shout out Glob gang. Which is your last name? Your Ashley's going off. Lois Strix is over here. Mike wants to let you know you messed up recently. He wants you to reconsider, man. You can please call Tony and get this whole thing sorted out. Be a great service to everyone, including myself, because now I'm associated. You consider me family. Glob gang, you already know the vibe. Ashley, if you can, often fast and furious family. If you can kind of be considered, you already know. Y'all go fast, vibes. Hello. This video is for Mike and his family. I just want to say I am so sorry for your loss. He will be Miss Dearly and will always be their little Savici, and they are hashtag Glob gang for life. My thoughts and prayers are with you guys during this time. Take care.
|
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"url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZqBuE4D_jCo",
"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
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UCUp6Pd9fx8_UX7S38Ih_JqA
|
History® - Sequencing the first Human Genome
|
As public and private sectors raced to sequence the human genome, their work was accelerated by the International Human Genome Project’s commitment to share data freely every day. In June 2000, President Clinton recognized the first draft of the human genome sequence as “the most important, most wondrous map ever producedby humankind.” Please Visit:
http://unlockinglifescode.org/media/videos/544#546
| null | 2015-03-19T19:23:29 | 2024-02-05T06:21:06 | 284 |
ZQifx8BpaqE
|
The mission to create the map of a human being, what became the International Human Genome Project, was a massive undertaking. Officially launched in 1990, this was biology's first foray into big science, a consortium of more than 2,000 researchers in 20 labs in six countries all working on one problem. The project's funding came in large part from the U.S. government through the National Institutes of Health. Somebody has to put up the front money to start big projects, and I felt it was a classic role for government, that if we got the ball rolling, that at some point, you know, the whole infrastructure of science and research and the university sector and the private sector, it would all take off. Different research teams took on separate tasks. Some were dedicated to sequencing the genomes of other species. Five were chosen, a bacterium, a yeast, a worm, a fruit fly, and another mammal, the mouse. The hope was that these would shed light on the human code. At that time, it was probably a bit of a shot in the dark. People didn't really know how much different animals would be comparable and how much you could learn from one animal, model system like the worm or the fruit fly and transfer it into humans. But it was a good guess that by finding out pieces of biological mechanism in the simpler organisms, you could learn about the human. That guess turned out to be a good one. A significant percentage of our genes are shared with other species, as much as 92% with mice. As the project marched on, some scientists thought the public consortium's protocol was too slow and too expensive. Among the critics was Craig Venter, who founded the private company Solera Genomics in 1998. Solera built the third-largest supercomputer in the world to enable a faster technique using mathematical equations to analyze the genome. The simple insight was that everybody's genome, your genome, my genome, every species has a unique mathematical solution because we're enough different. It's like if you had a New York Times and a Wall Street Journal and you shredded each of them into 50,000 pieces, mixed them all together and had those pieces read into a computer. Using our algorithms, you could totally out of that mixture reassemble the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal. Solera's race to be the first to sequence the genome, a healthy competition that sped up the process. But the work was also accelerated by a commitment made right from the start by the International Human Genome Project to freely share data on a daily basis. It's a very good thing that the genome project was delivered in this totally open access fashion that it would have slowed things down a lot if we'd not had the ability to make everybody with a good idea to start working on it right away. On June 26, 2000, much earlier than expected, the world celebrated the completion of the first draft of the human genome sequence. Without a doubt, this is the most important, most wondrous map ever produced by humankind. If you look at what Jefferson sent Lewis and Clark out to do, to map the way from the known America all the way to the Pacific. And Lewis and Clark found a lot of other interesting things along the way. We needed to map America in the same way we need to map the human body. And the genome is our map of life.
|
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"url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZQifx8BpaqE",
"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
}
|
UC8gaiQHu6uEfWa87kZ0_FkQ
|
DRUGSTORE CONCEALERS better than HIGH END PRODUCTS | Laugh Lines & Crepey Skin
|
Concealer creasing, crepey under eyes, dry under eyes, caking concealer, high coverage concealer, dark circles & bags under eyes, did I leave any mature skin concerns out for the OVER 50 mature woman's under eye area? Wow! We have a lot to try to keep in check with our concealer! Oh and did I mention that it needs to be high coverage concealer? Whew! Let's see how I do! Love to you all!
CONCEALER ROUTINE FOR 40+
https://youtu.be/1P2nV5RB90U
SUBSCRIBE https://www.youtube.com/c/mrsmelissam
New videos every Monday, Wednesdays & Fridays
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*EBATES/RAKUTEN Get cashback for online purchases. My link gets you $10 & I get a referral perk. My cashback checks are usually $100s http://bit.ly/2kxOSPq
I get asked all the time what false eyelashes I use. Well, I don't use falsies, but if you want the best eyelashes of your life, check out this AMAZING eyelash growth serum!
https://amzn.to/3dcTnVF
https://amzn.to/36EnTVO
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Contact or PR mmulder1026@gmail.com
My Previous Dupes Videos:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QXCTue4tzyQ&list=PL2xJ9Iy23JL-NhFMGHeHLumOEXdMrqZr-
More Videos You Might Enjoy:
7 Look One Palette, Sydney Grace Enduring Love
https://youtu.be/N1wFJByn364
Best Drugstore Cream Blushes
https://youtu.be/ixbXPG33ZEY
Step By Step AM & PM Skincare Routines
https://youtu.be/RLrjCevb1BM
Age In Reverse Skincare & Makeup Tips
https://youtu.be/UfcMxOJhxgQ
Flower Beauty Favorites
https://youtu.be/sC-DHelDVUM
*My Nail Polish Color https://amzn.to/37Z5wf5
*My earrings https://amzn.to/3dt9HR9
*Products Mentioned:
Wet N Wild Photo Focus Concealer (Light Neutral)
https://go.magik.ly/ml/mqw2/
No7 Lift & Luminate Serum Concealer (Light)
https://go.magik.ly/ml/y6df/
Makeup Revolution Conceal & Hydrate Concealer (C7)
https://go.magik.ly/ml/qtot/
ELF Camo Hydrating Concealer in Light Peach
https://go.magik.ly/ml/v5vi/
Revolution Pro Ultimate Crease Proof Concealer (C6)
https://go.magik.ly/ml/y6dd/
Makeup worn:
No7 Serum Foundation in Cool Ivory
ELF Earth & Ocean Palette https://amzn.to/2CGQjDT
Essence Lip Liner in Sucker for Grey
https://go.magik.ly/ml/elf6/
NYX Butter Gloss in Eclair
https://amzn.to/3fVn3aw
Anastasia Beverly Hills Mascara
https://go.magik.ly/ml/vjs2/
About Me: I'm 52 years old. I have dry skin. Skin concerns are age spots, wrinkles under the eyes, lip lines, dry skin, uneven skin tone, shedding from Retin A. Fair/Light skin with neutral cool undertone. *The items listed below are accompanied by affiliate links, meaning I earn a small commission if a purchase is made through my links. This has no impact on the cost to you the consumer. I link to products this way whenever possible, and it has no bearing on the products I choose to review or recommend because all products can have links attached to them, no matter what they are. I would link the products on Ulta/Sephora/etc website anyway as a means of connecting you to the products, so now it simply offers the potential for a slight financial benefit to me, which I greatly appreciate as I've not done sponsored videos. Feel free to use, or not use, the links provided. And if you decide to use them, thank you so much for helping to support my channel. #concealertips #concealertricks #over50skincare
|
[
"best drugstore concealer",
"drugstore makeup",
"concealer tutorial",
"concealer for dry skin",
"concealer as foundation",
"concealer tips for mature under eyes",
"under eye bags",
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"under eye concealer",
"concealer creasing",
"mrs melissa m",
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"concealer for mature skin",
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"everyday concealer routine",
"makeup over 40",
"makeup over 50",
"laugh lines"
] | 2020-06-26T08:45:01 | 2024-02-07T17:20:48 | 679 |
zQZxZ4cPWZA
|
Welcome back everyone we are going to be talking about my top five Concealers at the drugstore. This was a really really hard video you guys and the reason is is because I do have a very favorite at the Drugstore and we're going to count backwards Towards that one and the one that I love the most but a special welcome to you if you're new to my channel I would love for you to subscribe and be a part of our family. Thank you so much If you've been here with me for a very long time, I love you guys very much And I appreciate the support so much please if everyone wouldn't mind giving this video a thumbs up It just takes a second and it does help my video out a whole bunch So we're going to get into the top five starting with five and then we're going to go backwards to my number one Drugstore concealer that won't crease it won't make you look like you've got more underneath your eyes going on I am wearing two of these today one on each eye So hopefully we'll get into that you can tell which one I'm wearing on each eye and then we'll go from there Let's get into this video right now Okay, I do want to mention before we get into this that right before this video I put up my concealer routine that's going to help you to see how I actually get rid of how dark my circles are The tools that I employed the most are the Catrice under eye camouflage primer I love this stuff very little bit goes a long ways also the LA girl Pro concealed Correctors this one is in peach you can get an orange one if you have deeper skin You can even go all the way to red if you have really deep skin So the peach worked great for me because I'm pasty. So yeah, I love that So I'm going to start off with one that doesn't get a lot of attention here on YouTube And I'm not exactly sure why I really like the photo focus concealer from Wet n Wild and They don't have a big shade range. It is kind of sucky. It really is terrible But I do love this formula and I've loved it for a long time And I love that it has a little bit of the yellow in it That is what is one thing that I will say about taking care of this whole under eye area If you have really purple look under there No amount of putting a pinkish or a neutral concealer on there is going to give you a good look Because all it's going to do is make those look a little bit more discolored It's going to keep that cool tone going and we want to counteract that cool tone We want to use something that might have a tad bit yellow in it And that might sound a little bit foreign to everybody But if you think about it yellow is the opposite of purple on the color wheel So we're counteracting that we do counteract it a lot with the peach But sometimes you have to get into these concealers to do that too. So this one right here I believe this is in light. That's usually what I buy no matter what I buy But that one right there. Let's see if we can get a really good look at it here But what I love about this one particularly is it doesn't take a lot to get it to do its job You don't want to pounce your finger over there and just blend everything out if you use a brush You don't want to continue to blend and blend and blend while it's wet You're gonna blend away your product beauty blender will pick it up the brush will pick it up Your fingers gonna eventually pick it up. So I'm gonna show you a trick that will really help with that When we get into the next one, it's the one that you absolutely have to do this with so I'm just gonna tell you I like the way that this applies. I like that it covers Horrible horrible dark circles and I like that it does increase if you employ How I applied it in that other video. So make sure that you watch that video But I do like this. It is a really good color for me as far as being a little bit on that yellow tone It's not too thick that it's going to get into the creases and stay there Some of us have that no matter what let's get real. Okay, this is our problem area This is the area where we have to get realistic about our aging It's where I sweat when I get hot flashes. It's where in the humidity we sweat It's where you're gonna get those creases because we smile and grin and don't use it lose your smile because you Don't want to get creasing on your concealer So definitely love this one and it's probably the most affordable of all of them that I have in here as well So that is number five now in at number four. Let me tell you I love this serum concealer from number seven And this one is in light as well again, not a huge shade range shame on them Hopefully these companies will get it. Let's put a bigger shade range in there now This one does have almost the exact color of my eyes Let me tell you how I do use this one So go ahead and put this on your eyes and you're gonna really just kind of take this Doe foot applicator and you're just gonna pounce that around until you have a fairly good coat on there and Then you have to let it sit and you have to let it sit for quite a while as a matter of fact I'll let it sit. I'm doing all of my other makeup. I love the way that this looks But it won't cover you're gonna wipe it away really quickly unless you let it sit that whole time You have to get in the habit of doing that with your thinner concealers If you have really dark circles like I do now if you have medium dark circles Or you have really light and all you want to do is just you know, bring some light to that These ones that are thinner are great So that I would say that this one is a medium coverage Maybe even a light coverage I really like that it doesn't make me look extra dry Because it is that serum and it has all those good ingredients in it And this one will almost completely set down by itself So take care to not use too much powder on top of this one The other ones you might have to use a little bit more and the last one that I talked about I do have to use powder on because my under eyes will start to look really nasty if I don't pay in it number three Is the makeup revolution conceal and hydrate? I really like this you guys This is one of my very favorites as far as how good it is about covering I think mine is in C7. Yes, it's in C7. So mine is a little bit lighter I use one dot one dot. That's it I don't want to get this so thick that I can't just dot it out with my finger And this is one that you can again you can work with this quite quickly when you're on this inward part Don't bounce your finger around there too much to wipe too much away Just leave that part a little bit and kind of work with all of this around here If you put it down on your cheeks like I do because I have such bad sunspots Then you're gonna want to make sure you work with that and then you can go back in and very very lightly Just blend that out in that cavern. That is the darkest. That's where the circle is, right? That's it right there. So this one works so good. It doesn't dry me out I have very dry under eyes unless I sweat So we need that balance and this one seems to be able to give it once I do the whole entire routine Love this one. It's a really good one. Okay in at number two is the elf camo concealer But this is the hydrating one This one is the one that I have on my eye today on this side And I really like the way that this one lays down. I love how it covers I love that it has that hydrating property It covers a little bit better than the makeup revolution as far as I'm concerned. I like color a little bit better I think that this one is in light peach and I like the color a little bit better because it does have a little bit more of the color correcting in it at the same time as being able to Cover really well and not dry you out once it sets down and this one same thing as The makeup revolution one we just talked about you have to let it sit there for a second Especially in that deep cavern right there and then go in and blend it out Coverage is so good on it and it lasts for all day And that's the thing that I like about the when I do this routine on the other video that you need to see Once I do that all of these are gonna last on me all day long So love that one as well and my holy grail one from the drugstore that I love This has been in my last video that I did of my under eyes. This is the makeup revolution revolution pro an Ultimate coverage crease-proof concealer and this one is in C6, but what you're gonna do with this it comes out Hopefully this is gonna be able to be seen. This is all you need. You need the tiniest tiniest dollop of that I mean, I'm talking the size of a pen the tip of a pen You don't need very much of this you need so little and what's gonna happen when you start to work with this This is extremely emollient. It's extremely creamy This is a dupe for the it cosmetics by by under eyes So if you've tried that before and you didn't like it It might have been just because you used too much, but it also might be that you don't like this creamy of a concealer This is super duper creamy So it is on this I I did work with it on the other products that I used on it in order to keep it from creasing throughout The day what I love about it though is it's coverage. It's so brightening and it covers with so little I mean look how much I've still got on my finger and it's just completely covered that out and it's so pretty you guys it It works so well because of how dry and how many wrinkles I have underneath there And I feel like as long as I set it down that it's not going to make me look more dry That's what I really love about it is its beautiful blend ability It just works so good and it doesn't make me look dry and part way through the day Nothing's going to be peeking through it just is it's so gorgeous. I love it and Hopefully you will get some really good tips out of that video I'm going to make sure that I link it down below throw it up here in a card so that you can see it I probably did that earlier in this video But you guys definitely check that out because it's not only just the concealers that we had It's definitely about the actual way that we do apply it and the other products We use besides just the concealers, but all of these concealers that I've shown you except for the number seven one This is a medium to light coverage. All the rest of them are full coverage and that's what I love about them I have bad bad dark circles So you're going to be able to cover them up and you're going to be able to have that Beautiful canvas you're gonna be able to still get the brightness with the coverage and not have it creased throughout the day So much for spending a bit of your day with me today I hope that one of these will work for you and maybe you already have them Maybe you're already using them. Maybe you have a concealer that you think is the best Let me know all that information in the comment section below So that we can open up a discussion and talk about concealers and how horrible this whole area is for us as women It is our most challenging makeup area I feel like it's one of those ones that you can put it on go out be two hours later Look in the mirror and go holy crap. What just happened to my eyes. Thank you guys so much again Please give this video a thumbs up on your way out of here. I love you very much. Stay safe Stay sanitized stay hydrated if it's hot where you're at and I love you and I'll see you all in my very next video Take care. Bye. Bye guys
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What Are Epigenetic Clocks for? (X10 #Shorts)
|
Interested in epigenetic clocks? Watch the full episode here: https://youtu.be/eXmGbe9czek
#aging #epigenetics #epigeneticclocks #longevity #shorts
|
[
"X10",
"LifeXtenShow",
"LifeX10Show",
"X10show",
"X10 show",
"Extenshow",
"Aging",
"Ageing",
"LEAF",
"Lifespan.io",
"Anti-aging",
"Anti-ageing",
"Anti ageing",
"Anti aging",
"Life Extension",
"reverse aging",
"reverse ageing",
"cure aging",
"cure ageing"
] | 2021-06-25T21:00:11 | 2024-02-05T08:23:08 | 42 |
ZqEgpMeflmM
|
The clocks were designed to capture the link between an aspect of our biology, DNA methylation, and our age. But what happens if the relationship between those two changes? For example, lifestyle choices or diseases can make biological markers like DNA methylation look more like those in an older person. In that case, an epigenetic clock would report that the person is older than the number of years since they were born. That mismatch is the difference between biological age, as measured by epigenetic clocks or other biomarkers, and chronological age, which is simply the number of years that you've been alive.
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9 Ways To Increase Your eBay Dropshipping Store Profits and Outwork Your Competitors
|
Our main goal as dropshippers is to find more profitable products, improve our stores, and increase our profits.
In this video, we are going to share with you 9 different strategies to increase your eBay dropshipping store profits and outwork your competitors.
Costway Dropshipping: Get Extra 3% OFF! The Official Partnership With AutoDS is HERE!
https://autods.com/videos/costway-dropshipping-partnership/
How To Register to The Banggood’s Dropship Center and Get Immediately The VIP Level? (Tutorial)
https://autods.com/videos/banggood-dropship-center/
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PLEASE, Don't click this link if you don't want to succeed with your business 👇
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✅ AutoDS Tutorial Videos
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL5pVml6bBbuyxW9mtYSdCg1RbnFXtrSWY
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Connect with us on social media:
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➡️ Telegram Group: http://bit.ly/telegram_active_yt
#eBayDropshipping #Dropshipping #AutoDS
|
[
"dropshipping tools",
"dropshipping tools ebay",
"best dropshipping tools",
"dropshipping",
"drop ship on ebay",
"aliexpress dropshipping",
"drop shipping on ebay",
"ebay drop shipping",
"dropshipping products",
"best dropshipping products",
"eBay dropshipping profit",
"ebay dropshipping profit margin",
"dropshipping profit margin",
"dropshipping profit margin calculator",
"how to increase dropshipping sales",
"how to increase dropshipping profit"
] | 2020-08-31T18:00:06 | 2024-04-22T17:50:45 | 1,076 |
Zq4ocmsBJAY
|
As rope shippers we are always trying to find more profitable products and improve our stores. But there are some very easy tips and tricks that can help us to maximize our profits for every buyer that comes to our stores and get much more sales. In this video I will show you nine different strategies that I am implementing in all my stores to improve my profits for every client that comes into my store and wants to buy any of my products. Short intro and we are starting. Hello everybody! So our first method to get more profits per sale from our products is to have partnerships with our suppliers. The partnerships can be private partnerships, direct partnerships with our suppliers if we work with big sites like AliExpress for example, or it can be a special partnership with a specific supplier. For example in AutoDS we have a special link for a discount of 3% for any purchase from Costway.com. You can get more details about it below this video. So this method will really help you to get more 3% of profits per sale when you work with Costway. We have something similar for Banggood where if you go to Banggood's dropship center instead of 5% discount you will get 7% and it will be much more profitable than your competitors and we will talk about it later in this video. The second method to maximize your profits when you work with dropshipping products is using the lighting deals. So if I go to any site for example we will take Banggood.com. We have here the flash deals section. If I go to the flash deals section I will see there that I can see more products with discounts that are with the discount right now. So for example this camera price is $30 while right now it costs only $13. Now think about it not all of the dropshippers are using dropshipping softwares and not all of the dropshippers are following the prices of the suppliers. It means that if you work with flash deals you will be much more competitive and you will be able to make more profits per sale because instead of really decreasing your price you can decrease your price a bit just to be below the competition but to grab more profits. So for example this product I wouldn't really decrease the price as the the source price is $13. I would sell it as considering if my price was for example $20 and in this method I would grab at least 10% profits more from the sale. That's the second tip number three use the global shipping program of ebay. What do I mean? I'm talking about it in other video which will be in the description of this video but the global shipping program is a program that will help you to send from United States suppliers not only to United States. For example if you work with amazon.com you can send only inside the US but if you work with a global shipping program your audience and the people who can buy from you will be much bigger audience. What do I mean? If I go to a site which called for example similar web.com which is a site that shows traffic to stores to sites. I will write here ebay.com and I will get the result of how many people are going to buy on ebay.com from different countries. Now if I scroll down here I can see that from the United States it's only 80% of the traffic of ebay.com but what about Canada, Russia, United Kingdom, China is less relevant but more other countries. What about them? What about all the people that come to buy from these different countries on ebay.com? If you are not using the global shipping program you are missing these people and they will not be able to buy from you. This why we created the guide about how to work with the global shipping program and I'm really really recommending you to use this program and apply it to all your listings that don't have the global shipping program and don't ship worldwide from other sites like AliExpress for example that offers you worldwide shipping. The fourth thing that I'm doing in my stores is to add at least 10% of my products as products with coupons. The coupons can come directly from the supplier from a specific partnership as I said in the tip number one but you can also use service for example like the Autodesk Finder. In Autodesk Finder we scan Amazon every day for coupon products. Now think about the huge potential of it. Sometimes Amazon offers you coupons of 50% discount even or 20% discount or $20 it doesn't matter. They offer really huge discounts in a term of coupon for different products. How can we use it for our stores? We just put the regular pricing for our products and then when we place our orders we will grab the coupon and grab much more profit per sale. If we take a look on the Autodesk Finder we can see here that we have the products with high chance of coupons which are products that Autodesk found that they really have a coupon right now and then you can upload them with the click of a button directly to your store. This tip made a huge results to part of the people who I taught in the past and for the students of our mentors. You can even see that on our mentorship program page the huge profits that people shown there. Let me show you that. For example this student of Clayton in the mentorship program showed a huge result of $80 difference from a coupon that he sold a product using this coupon. So think about that. This user made for example around $13 in profits but he made additional $80 in profits just using the coupon. By the way the automated orders will also grab the coupons for you automatically. Tip number 5. Use dropship center of different sites when they have this option. For example Banggood.com offers you a dropship center with huge discounts. We have a full video about how you can get there immediately a VIP level and get more discounts but I will talk about it shortly in this video too. So we have a partnership with Banggood.com that offers you 7% discount initially instead of 5% discount that everyone who will register to the dropship center will get. Below this video I will add a link to the Banggood dropship center and to the video about how to opt in to this service. Now how will it help you? If you go to Banggood dropship center you can see that you can get up to 20% discount just from this that you are working with at Banggood dropship center and then you will get much bigger advantage over any of your competitors and grab much more profit on your sales. Now something important here. You need to be consistent with one dropship center because if you sell more using this supplier for example Banggood you will get bigger discounts and Banggood will love you more and then you will get much more discounts per sale and grab much more profits. So I really recommend you to take one supplier when you focus on their dropship center. I recommend Banggood because they have the US shipping center and Chinese one and then just grow with them more and more until you get to the highest discounts here and then you can be much more competitive, sell much more and make much more profits. Tip number six. Let's say that you listed in your store a product where the keyword was the lightweight tripod. Now let's say that you listed this product from a US supplier for example amazon.com and you will have here the different prices of products. Now if we check what is the average price here we would see prices like $30, $17, $70 and many other different prices which are higher than $30 in average as we can see here. Now if we go to any Chinese supplier for example Aliexpress we will see on the same category and on the same keyword much much cheaper prices which goes up to $10 from what I can see here. Now think about it. You can take a product that sells well for you from a United States supplier where the prices are much higher and then list the same product from Chinese supplier where the cost for you will be much cheaper and you can grab much more profits. That's what I do. I'm first listing products from US suppliers. I see that they work well for me and then I'm just taking the same product finding it with cheaper price which usually will be from Chinese suppliers listing it to my store and I will grab in this method much more profits for sales of the same product for the same keywords. Remember what's important in eBay search algorithm is the keywords. So if the keyword is the same the photos are good mostly you will be able to still compete with yourself and with other sellers for the same product for the same keywords but with much cheaper prices because you buying it from China. Now something important here it will decrease the sales a bit because the slower the slower shipping time but not all of the buyers are care about the shipping speed. So it means that maybe some of the buyers will see our product and will not buy it because of the slower shipping time but for this you also have your products for the same keyword from United States suppliers with faster shipping speed. I hope that it's clear. It means that basically what you do you take the same product with the same keyword and listing it with two different shipping speeds one from China and one from the United States then people who search for cheaper prices will buy from your Chinese listing and people who search for faster shipping will buy from you your US warehouses and US listing. Remember it cannot be the exact same product because it's against eBay's policy but it can be similar products on the same keywords and again not exactly the same title but something similar with the same main keyword. I hope that this tip is clear for you. This one is really important and we really help you to scale up your business and to gain more profits per sale for products that you already know that works well for you. Seventh strategy that I'm doing in my stores to increase my profits per sale is using the business policies. If you put the right business policy you can grab some more profits using a very simple and special trick. Let's see what I do. So if you go to the account settings here and then you click here on a business policies you will have here all your policies. Now let's say that you work with China but you can also implement it for US suppliers in the same method just think out of the box how to implement it right. So what I do is that on my policy I offer one shipping method which is a bit slower for example economy shipping from China and another one which is the standard one. Now for the standard one I will grab more profits $2 per sale just for this that the buyer will ask for faster shipping. Now for us when we work from Chinese suppliers the price will be the same anyway and anyway AutoDS will include for you the shipping price inside the product price. But what we do here is that we give to the buyer the feeling that they can get the product faster using this that they will just pay you $2 per sale. Now from my experience really high percent of the buyers will ask for faster shipping and will pay you this to extra dollars. You can play with it you can put a bit lower amount or a bit bigger amount and just grab more profits using this method. Now if you see here here I take more money for the shipping and this is because from this to this locations the shipping is more expensive for me and this is why we also grab more profits here and asking more money from the buyer for this shipping. Tip number eight this feature is one of my favorite features in AutoDS and this is the price optimization. You can do that also manually and just use the bulk changes and filters in your tool if the tool doesn't support the price optimization but in AutoDS what you can do is to configure the AutoDS platform to increase the price for you automatically every sale. So what I do here is that after I sold at least one product from a specific product the price will be increased after each sale by five percent for example in this case. Now what does it mean? It means that when we start selling more and more the price will be increased more and more and we will do more profits because we will have an advantage over our competitors because we have more sales history and we will just grab more profits for the sales. Now I recommended to start increasing the price not after the first sale especially not for beginners but after something like two or three sales at least. Another thing here is that you shouldn't worry about this that the price will be too high because AutoDS will also decrease the price for you automatically and you can just take a look on this feature it will just go and decrease the price every X days according to your configuration and this way you will still be competitive in case that your price went too high. The last tip here tip number nine is using the messages to buyers. Take one product that works well for you your best selling product and it should be a generic product it should be something that not very specific to it shouldn't be a chair for example it should be something that most of the people will find it as relevant for them for example a gift or something for for home or something for garden something that most of the people will find it relevant especially for the specific period of the year you should also think maybe we are in summer or in the winter or in this case right now COVID-19 and find something that is really general for the specific season then take this product and push this product as upset to your users to your buyers how to do that when you have an order it's highly recommended to send three messages to your buyers thank you for buying for us this is your tracking number and please leave us a positive feedback after the buyer received his order now we can maximize it for ourselves if you go to messages to buyers thank you message you can add here a link to a hot selling product and say there hey I know that you bought from us and I want to help you even more this is one of our top selling products and we highly recommend you to buy this because right now we have a discount for this product for example and you can even offer them a small discount then most of your of your buyers will not buy that but part of the buyers even a small percent of them will still buy that and then you will grab more profits for a specific client that anyway bought something from you this tip is amazing because it's really easy to implement it doesn't take you any time especially if you work with the automatic system of the messages and it really really works I hope that you like this video I hope that you will implement these nine tips it will increase your profits each of the tips will increase it by a small percent but all of them together will do will make a huge difference in your store and in your see in the next videos and don't forget to subscribe this youtube channel like this video so more people will get benefits of this video and share it with your friends and other dropshippers to help them become better sellers see in the next videos bye bye
|
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Washington Circle: Nancy Gibbs
|
This channel is a forum for open discussion and idea exchange where all are accessible to anyone world-wide. Produced by the U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Global Public Affairs, you will find videos on topics related to U.S. foreign policy such as economic empowerment, inclusive security, human rights and disinformation dynamics.
Get updates from Interactive on social media!
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/statedept/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/StateDept
Website: https://www.interactive.state.gov
#democracy4all #AskWashCircle #democracy
| null | 2017-03-24T14:10:38 | 2024-02-07T17:24:34 | 2,849 |
zqFcO8Hl744
|
Welcome, everyone. Good morning. This is Washington Circle, our international exchange alumni show, where we are trying to connect alumni with fabulous experts in various fields across different industries. We're joined this morning at the Foreign Press Center by Nancy Gibbs, who's the editor-in-chief of Time. Time has 50 million readers around the world. She's the first woman to hold this prestigious position. She joined Time as a fact-checker in 1985, and she is one of the most published writers in the history of the magazine. She's covered virtually every major news event over the past two decades, including presidential campaigns and the September 11th attacks. She is also co-authored to best-selling presidential history books, and she often appears as a guest on radio and television. Thank you so much for joining us this morning. Thanks for having me. We're honored to have you. In addition to this live viewing audience we have here in New York, we have viewing parties around the world at embassies, consulates, and American spaces. So we just want to give a quick shout-out to our guests in Cuba, Ethiopia, Mauritius, Seychelles, Nigeria, Israel, Canada, Nicaragua, and Guatemala. Welcome to all of you, and to everyone who's joining us online at alumni.state.gov.slive. Please remember you can always join in the chat space to ask your questions, and you can also tweet us at exchange alumni. You can also use the hashtag Ask Nancy Gibbs. Don't know if you saw that hashtag floating around this week. I hope that doesn't get loose. It might. It might continue on. Our guests in Cuba were the first to ask questions, and so we thought we'd start with them, if that's all right. So the first question from Cuba says, time has featured Fidel Castro a number of times since 1959. Which other Cuban person or subject could become a time front cover page anytime soon? What was interesting was last year or the year before, as the sort of new opening to Cuba was really becoming a reality, we did a cover that was not about a Cuban personality, leader, athlete, artist, but just about what it would mean for Cuba to open up again to the U.S. and for people who have not been able to easily visit for generations to be able to go. And what fascinated me was it was one of the favorite stories when we do research with our readers of what cover stories did you like the most over the course of the year, and our newsstand sales are a teeny tiny fraction, so they don't tell you much, but it was both one of the best selling on the newsstand and one of the ones that our readers liked the most, which just clued me in on the fact that interest in the U.S. at least in Cuba is really significant. So I'm not sure that we would, we always like to tell stories through individuals, but I think people are interested in the country and in what the experience will be like for these two countries to reinvent their relationship. And of course, assuming that that reinvention continues under the next administration and that's going to be the asterisk to probably every single thing we talk about this morning. Very true. Our next question is about women in journalism. So Time Magazine, you have next generation leaders that you feature and we're very proud. Two of them are actually exchange alumni. Ikram Ben-Sahid and Negat Dodd both work in different aspects of women's empowerment and in women's issues. As a woman in journalism, do you feel any special responsibility or pressure to discuss women's issues in the magazine? That's a great question because, and it's one that we, there's a new group at my company, Women at Timing, where we were having a conversation about this very subject. In fact, I'm in a dinner tonight that Harvard Shorenstein Center is running that's about women in journalism. This is very much an active conversation. And I think one of the reasons it's challenging is I always get anxious at anything that sort of treats women as a minority group or as any kind of a monolithic group that at some point, like back in 1974 maybe, Times Man of the Year, it was still called Man of the Year then, was women. It's just like, really? And so where I find myself always getting a little uneasy is thinking about women as an interest group or as a special category because the, I mean we all know this in our own lives, the differences in attitude and interest and priority among individual men and women differs much more than, you know, it's not, so many things are not defined by gender, they're defined by, you know, your job, your family, your community where you grew up, your faith, you know, so many other factors. Having said that, I think that, you know, certainly time for a long time, like many news organizations, especially sort of traditional news organizations, was heavily dominated by men. And, you know, many of you know it took lawsuits for many of these newsrooms to actually start integrating women into their upper editorial ranks. And I can't help thinking that the conversation around the table changed simply by having twice as big a pool of people to draw on when you're hiring writers and editors and when you're promoting writers and editors, that just by definition the range of topics that we would be aware of and thinking about. And so in my newsroom, especially this year, we've been having a lot of conversations about gender, about gender politics, about identity politics, and how to cover this. And there isn't anything like a consensus either among the women or the men or the newsroom as a whole. I'm glad it's a conversation that's going on, but I don't feel as though there is a, there is one specific mission or set of goals and priorities that any woman in a leadership role in media needs to adhere to or work against. I think it's more complex than that because our audience is, especially at time, you know, there are fewer and fewer media organizations, news organizations that are speaking to as broad an audience as we do. It's, as this indicates, it's a global audience. And it's almost equally male and female. And sort of ideologically and politically, we speak to a very wide range of people. That's, as we all know, it's as the president talked about last night. That is less and less the case as we all, you know, find our information bubbles and decorate and inhabit them. And so one of the things I'm most conscious of is thinking it's a huge part of our mission at time to maintain that audience that welcomes everyone into the conversation. And so if I feel like we are skewing one way or another in our approach, that starts to make me anxious. And so again, having the most diverse possible group of people around the table. And I define diversity in very broad terms. I was very, I was angry at Rick Stengel, my predecessor at time, and who went to the State Department, that he took with him at one point the only person in my newsroom who had served active duty in the military. And I felt like we lost a crucial piece of diversity and of insight by losing Nate, who is also just a wonderful colleague and a wonderful journalist. So, you know, it'll be as high a priority to me of like, okay, how do I address that as any other kind of recruiting challenge? And in follow-up to that, some people are wondering what obstacles are women and others when you talked about diversity more broadly facing in the field of journalism nowadays. You mentioned the lawsuits and other changes that have helped shape current newsrooms, but what are the big obstacles now? Yeah, I think we've seen over the years, you know, we've seen so many women rise to the top positions at, you know, everywhere from the New York Times to anchoring the evening news to, you know, very important magazines and newspapers, that this is no longer, I was actually surprised when I was named the editor at time that it was treated as being as big a deal it was that, oh, you know, after 16 men there's now a woman in this position. Because I sort of assumed at this point that these barriers have been coming down. I think that the obstacles to women in many cases are the same as the obstacles to men, which is as a almost a matter of lifestyle journalism has become very challenging. If you're doing it in many parts of the world, it's become very dangerous for men and women alike. If you are, at one point we realized that most of the reporters and photographers we had in combat zones and in the most hazardous postings were all women in their 20s. And we were like, well, this is, that's interesting. That wasn't intentional on anyone's part, but the most sort of frontline reporters during that period was a bunch of really talented, fearless, enterprising women covering really challenging stories. You know, those stories are challenging for men and women. And in the age of 24-7 news, the job really never, you never feel like you're off duty. And so for anyone who's trying to figure out how do you have a balanced life, which I think is important to everyone, I think is particularly important for journalists, I think you have to make time to live in the world that your audience lives in and not just in the world of hyperactive media consumption and creation. How do you discipline yourself to figure out when do you turn off, when do you unplug, when do you actually talk to human beings and take your eyes off your screens and your devices? This is not a challenge unique to journalists. It's certainly not distinct to men and women. But I think it's a real one. I mean, I think that the fact that we can be working all the time and feeling like we never can be completely on top of the stories that we're covering because these stories, I mean, think of the last 24 hours. These are just extraordinary amounts of important, interesting, fateful stuff that can happen in one 24-hour period. And so if your job is to make sense of any of this, you feel like your job is constantly impossible. And so it becomes really hard to say, you know what, it's actually more important for me to go take a walk or talk to my kids or meditate or, you know, make a smoothie than it is to just stay continuously revving within the new cycle. I think that's a challenge for certainly all journalists and for a lot of people who are in all of the related fields that we're in. Definitely. I think we all feel that anyone who works in digital media as well. I just want to remind our audience here if you all have any questions, just signal and we'll make sure we get the microphone to you as well. We're going to open the floor here. Does anyone have any questions? Yes? Yes? Okay. We've won in the front row. Good morning, Ms. Gates. Hi, Kristi. I'm a teacher and an educational consultant. I'm concerned about my students' future. So could we talk about climate change and the press? For so many years, the press gave equal voice to climate deniers who had no background in climatology or were hired by oil companies. And climatologists like our own Dr. Wallace Broker, a professor at Columbia University here. As a result, it's now 2017 and many people in America are still confused about the science of climate and climate change. So how does the press help us get out of that quagmire? Yes, I would challenge the idea that the press gave equal coverage or treated climate deniers as being every bit as authoritative and sources as the scientists who were... The standard thing that most stories about having to do with climate policy say is that there is a consensus in the scientific community that climate change is driven by man-made actions. And climate deniers are typically called out as being a minority that is very much at odds with the consensus of the scientific community. And so I don't feel like there's a sort of equal time, all points of view are equally valid in the way that climate change is covered. But, and I think this may be partly what you're getting at, it is exactly because of the siloing of information streams that it is certainly possible for someone to have a media diet that only includes people who are disputing the science of climate change because it is very possible to tailor your sources of information to the ones that support a world view and where you will not encounter any kind of disagreement. And so the larger question is how do you... And again, this is one of the things that the president raised last night as a challenge I think that certainly policymakers feel, politicians feel, journalists feel of who has authority to be orbiters of fact. And I doubt there has been a political season in which Moynihan's injunction about your entitled to your own opinion but not your own facts has been cited more often as having been now challenged, that now people feel entitled to their own facts. And the 2016 was a year in which the notion that there is a set of agreed upon authoritative expert factual knowledge that can be taken as a baseline for debate was routinely undermined by the way the political conversation unfolded. And I think that that's very much where we are now in everything from the age of fake news to the what is reported as proven, what is reported as rumor, what is reported as... Because nothing stays unreported anymore as we are reminded again that the ability... And this goes back, I mean you can sort of put a date on when that started which was when the Drudge Report was first born and published the news about Monica Lewinsky where there were reporters who had been following that story and trying to figure out what was going on in that story but didn't feel that they had proof that met their standards for publishing. And every news organization has how many sources do you need and what kind of evidence will make you confident enough of the truth of a story that you're willing to publish it. And that has been true in newsrooms forever. Now where if a story doesn't meet the standards of these news organizations it will meet the standards of these outlets or this blogger or this individual with a Twitter following and so nothing is ever likely to go unpublished. If by published it means put out into the information ecosystem through one channel or another. The days in which editors like me controlled the channels are obviously long past. And so anyone with an agenda, whether it's an agenda about climate or an agenda about foreign policy or an agenda about health and health care reform or vaccines and whether they're safe. Anyone who has a point of view has a way of sharing it, promoting it, publishing it, whether or not it ever appears in any kind of a traditional news organization. I think that that is the challenge to authority, the challenge to expertise. It has been so much the narrative of this past year and it makes the stakes all the higher for those of us who are operating on principles that what our readers and viewers need most from us is that we be disciplined about our fact checking and our sourcing and how confident are we about something that we're willing to publish it, that there have to be sources that people trust when you are operating at a time when there's so many sources that are not adhering to those standards. So when you mentioned people who have blogs and Twitter accounts with large followings, how they're now able to publish their opinions often as facts, we did get a question as the editor in chief of time, how do you see social media changing the landscape of traditional media and the way the press functions and gets information out and what do you think the future relationship will be between say those people with those large Twitter followings and blogs with traditional press? I'm suspecting most editors keep wondering if this is sort of a devil's bargain where on the one hand if all of us who are in journalism aspire to reach as many people as possible and engage in a conversation with as many people as possible and to just raise the quality of debate about issues that matter. The power of social media to amplify really great reporting and profound insight is extraordinary. Henry Luce was the greatest publisher of the 20th century and in his wildest dreams he would not have been able to reach an audience that we can reach now. Even at a time when I would be the first to admit that time as an institution is less powerful than it was in 1950 or 1960 and yet our audience and our ability to engage with people and not just one way but in a two way conversation has never been greater. That's an extraordinary gift. But on the other hand the challenge that it represents to the business model that supports journalism has been profound. It is just much, much easier to have access to information without having to pay for it which makes it much more difficult for us to fund the creation of important... I mean some of the work that I think is most important that we've been doing as a business proposition is counterintuitive. I feel like we've talked about how a lot of news organizations are going to be hiring people who can write grant proposals that some portion of journalism is going to become a philanthropic, nonprofit driven because the business model to support... We have a project that I'm very invested in that we launched at the beginning of the year with a fantastic photographer, Lindsay Adario and Aaron Baker, our bureau chief in Africa called Finding Home where we're following the newborn babies of four Syrian women in refugee camps in Greece about what is the experience like of being born stateless and you come home from the hospital with your newborn to attend. What is this year going to be like? And the investment in resources and trying to take this enormous epic story of mass migration and the challenge of refugees in Europe and making it human, making it one that we can all identify with and follow and imagine ourselves walking in these shoes. That's at the heart of what we need to be doing but there isn't any business model for supporting that. There isn't an easy way to have that make sense as a business proposition. And yet to go back to the social media part of this when we do a project like that if I want to put that in front of an audience that would not normally encounter it who might not be subscribers to time, who might not find us and Christy Turlington tweets out what we're doing or Ben Stiller does or any of any number of celebrities or for that matter David Miliband and any of the NGOs who are profoundly invested in this topic where their entire news and social ecosystem is now tapped into this project. We have the ability to reach people that we never would be able to reach otherwise. So it's an enormous tool of amplification even as it's, of course, you know, it's in some ways an economic challenge and it's a challenge in the sense that, you know, who is the arbiter of what counts as true or not true? What deserves attention as opposed to what gets attention? Not always the same thing. Definitely. I'm glad you mentioned finding home. That was actually one of our next questions for you from the chat space. It's something that Brittany and I looked into. We're both really looking forward to following that project. And when we've polled alumni on social media, Facebook and Twitter, refugee and migration issues always rank at the very top of the things they're concerned about. And last year we hosted one of our very first ties, the Matic International Exchange Seminars in Croatia on refugee and migration issues. And we gathered European alumni who work in the field together to find solutions. And one we're really proud of, Zuzana a month later was actually awarded the International Woman of Courage Award by Secretary Kerry. And so we were all fascinated by the finding home project and we wanted to know what led your photographers and the time team to take that on and how did they pick the location and the families that they wanted to follow. Lindsay and Aaron had been covering the refugee crisis from any number of different angles all through as our other correspondents in Europe and the Middle East had been. But I think in a way the tipping point came when they were looking at, after the land routes were either closed or became much more difficult and a lot of the traffic shifted to Libya. And the idea of hundreds of people including pregnant women and children, hundreds of people boarding these rubber-wrapped that it was absolutely certain they could not physically make it to Italy. It wasn't even like it's risky, it's dangerous. No, the number of people on that kind of a vessel traveling that distance was not going to happen. So what they were gambling is that they will be rescued at sea either by the Italian Navy or by any of the Doctors Without Borders and the humanitarian rescue efforts. That they will be spotted by the many spotters in the air and rescued before they all drowned and that they were willing to take that risk. So Lindsay and Erin embedded on an MSF ship that was on these missions. It was the most harrowing tale of really just bringing home the desperation of these men and women who would have set out on a journey like that. So they did that project last year and then started looking to see if they could get access to the camps in Greece where a lot of the Syrian refugees were ending up. And getting Syrian women particularly to open up in this way, getting access to those camps in the first place, which we have not as journalists typically been able to get into. And then to find these women who were willing to let us be in the delivery room with them as they are giving birth and trying to imagine giving birth in a hospital where none of the doctors and nurses around you speak your language when trying to explain, in a couple of cases these ended up being pretty high risk deliveries of what is happening to you and what are the risks and decisions that you're facing. And then imagining leaving the hospital with your newborn to go back to a place that has no running hot water, there are no toys there, and what that is like. We thought it was really important as a way to make this story that is so typically told in terms of enormous incomprehensible numbers or of huge geopolitical conflicts and players on the National Security Front and the Economic Front and what is this going to mean for Angela Merkel's electoral prospects. Lenses through which the refugee story is told, which are also important, it's very easy to miss just the very human experience of this. And so our priority was to say, okay, how do we really make this story and the experience of these people real to the largest audience we can? Very nice. We're all looking forward to reading it and looking at those photos. Your photographers are amazing. Looking at the opening piece, I was all in seeing that opening photo, really captivating. In your 30 years of experience of journalism, these questions from Ethiopia, what are the ups and downs you have seen? In Ethiopia, for example, the media is more restrictive. How could we move to having more independent media? You know, in any country, the ability of journalists to operate safely and independently is, I think, something of a grand bargain where in the United States, what has been vitally important to the success of the vibrancy of journalism in America is a tradition that's practically embedded in the Constitution that, or is it Jefferson, if I had to choose between a free press, that you pick a free press, that a basic premise that having a free press, having freedom of assembly, having freedom of speech is an important enough core value that the people in positions of power, whether positions of political power or economic power, who have the ability to block or undermine or diminish that, are deterred from trying to block or undermine or diminish it. And creating that sense of shared value that as a society, as an economy, as a political system, as communities, we will all be served by allowing the free exchange of information. That seems to me to be the baseline that is necessary in order for journalism to be able to work. And if you have powerful interests, whose interest is opposed to that, as we have seen in many countries around the world through history, then it becomes very difficult and very dangerous for journalism to happen. And what's fascinating to me now and what we're seeing in so many parts of the world is because of access to mobile technology, particularly, it is just harder to censor information. It's harder to keep people from being able to find stuff out if they want to. And I was amazed on my wonderful, full-bright excursion last summer in New Zealand that I think someone had told me that there were more time readers per capita in New Zealand than anywhere in the world. And I certainly came to believe that because this was the summer of 2015. So the American presidential campaign was just starting to kind of come to life. And I was having conversations with people there that you would have thought it was face-to-nation. I mean, it was the level of interest and knowledge, I mean, detailed granular, like down to the which way will a given congressional district swing a year and a half from now was unbelievable. And I'm just thinking, how is it that, because I feel like I have flown all the way around the world because I had flown all the way around the world to be in this magical place that feels as far, far away from the green rooms of Washington, New York, as you can possibly get. And yet here we were having the same conversation about the same issues, whether it was the future of Uber in Auckland or whether it was about, is Donald Trump really a viable candidate for president? And so it was just such a reminder of how there is the ability for people in the United States who's preferred source of news as the Guardian or people in China who figure out ways to work around firewalls in order to have access to information that they're not going to find in local media. I think that that's a fascinating challenge to authoritarians everywhere, that it just technology is making it harder and harder and harder to limit the ability of people who want to know what is happening in the world and find out. Definitely. I just want to remind our audience here, we've got about 15 minutes left, so if you have a question, don't forget to signal. Okay, we've got one. Thank you. Hi. I'm a teacher, a middle school teacher, and we use time for kids in our school, and I'm just curious what time's mission for young people, particularly adolescents, is moving forward and how you intend to reach them in coming years. We have just undertaken a partnership with something called News Literacy Project, which is a reflection of an awareness that teaching news literacy, teaching kids how to distinguish reliable sources from unreliable sources, good information from bad information, which you can have taught your students that Wikipedia is not the source for their term paper, but how do you go multiple layers deeper in educating students at all ages of how do you know if a source is trustworthy or not? In a sense, that's always been part of a teacher's mission, but it's become so much harder because bad information is so much more readily available, and I could say good information is more readily available too, but that means that the ability to tell one from the other becomes an essential academic, intellectual, social skill. I think our obligation is to foster that process of learning any way we can. I think Time for Kids is a fantastic institution that I'm looking, which I would like to be a much bigger presence in classrooms, particularly digitally, as more and more classrooms turn into essentially digital classrooms. I think Time for Kids should be a portal into an information environment that helps kids both stay on top of current events but also be able to tell why is this piece of information more reliable than this piece of information? It isn't just obviously part of common core standards about informational nonfiction and providing content that kids want to read and engage with to turn them into readers. One of the things I'm heartened by is I actually think as much as we may decry what has occurred to all of our attention spans, I would bet if there were ever a way to measure how much my children have read and written compared to how much my generation growing up read and wrote. So much of their time is spent reading and writing. You can say it's all reading and writing, snaps and texts and Instagram posts, but it is still true that communicating, I mean we joke that they don't know how to use their phones as phones, that they are consuming so much information, they are consuming so much media that the appetite for news broadly defined is vastly greater than it has been in the past and surely that's an opportunity for us to include not only news about whether One Direction is going to get back together but news about, I mean I was fascinated by how engaged young people were in this election, I was very heartened by that, how passionately they felt about it and so I think that that is an opportunity that can start at a younger and younger age that part of being a citizen, part of growing into adulthood and into citizenship is learning to be a good consumer of information and a good analyst of information of what is reliable. I think the mission of time and time for kids is to promote that as much as we can. I'm going to take another question from Kenya and then we'll come back to you. What would you like to accomplish in your time as time editor in chief? How do you hope the stories you oversee will be different or stand out and that's from Olive in Kenya? I think that the, I'm very proud of what, I have a very young team, I have some very grown up experienced people but I have a lot of people in my newsroom who are very young and tireless and enterprising and excited about journalism which is hugely inspiring to me and where I push them, and again the events of the last year have reminded me how important this is, is to be extremely ecumenical in how we define news and how we define what counts as news and it's very easy, given the pace of the news cycle now to never take your eyes off institutions and individuals in positions of power and institutions that are regulating, ruling, legislating and that just keeping up with the news generated out of institutional life could keep all of us occupied all the time but if you do that then you're going to miss the opioid epidemic. You know, we did opioids on the cover three years ago when it was not being written about but where if you went into any rural community and you talked to any EMT any police officer any teacher they could tell you just what a scourge this was in these communities and now three years later we are seeing how the whole way that we are thinking about a topic like drug addiction is changing from how much is it a criminal matter how much of it is a moral failing versus how much of it is a health emergency and how do we think about our resources and our treatment and our approach and our thinking and our conversation about a topic like that so that kind of story is, you know, it begins on the ground it begins at people's kitchen table it begins in a coffee shop or a rotary club or the Walmart in a town that is never going to be on the radar of big institutional makers of news and so I think we aren't serving our audiences or taking advantage of our opportunity or serving our mission if we aren't really disciplined our resources are finite I don't have nearly as many reporters as I would like how we deploy them and how we define news and what we go out looking to find out what kind of prospecting we do has to go beyond just covering this week's Supreme Court ruling this week's Senate Foreign Affairs Committee hearing or this week's you know, Goldman Sachs earnings report it's just, we have to go deeper and broader and look beyond the sort of traditional makers of news and to that end, alumni in Guatemala are wondering what you pay the most attention to in terms of Latin American news and Latin American happenings that you'd like to report in time one of the things I regret is, you know, in the contraction that all news organizations have gone through at time as many other places there just are not as many reporters covering Latin America and other regions when you start to have to make choices okay, if you're going to go from this many foreign correspondents to this many foreign correspondents what do you give up where do you no longer have permanent people where do you rely on stringers and contributors and so one of my regrets is even though we've gotten really interesting important reporting out of Central America and South America I don't feel like I have the same kind of eyes and ears that I have in Europe the Middle East or Asia and I think that I would bet if you pressed a lot of news organizations that they would say the same and I don't know what it takes to change that this goes back to at some point as a society we're going to have to figure out what is it that's important to us to know and how are we going to support that, how are we going to make it possible for this news gathering this coverage to be supported because if it's at some point this is every day is bringing us another headline about how many jobs are being eliminated at the Wall Street Journal or at the New York Times or the Daily News this or that network and those jobs are often going to be the people who are covering far-flung parts of the world and stories that editors have decided okay, if you force me to choose this is what I'm going to choose which is not the answer that you want to hear but I think it is unfortunately the reality of where we are at least what I'm seeing across the industry it's good to know and before we close I'd like to give one more question back to our audience here hi, my name is Wawa Guthero I'm a recent alumni at the University of Thailand it seems like we've been talking about the phenomenon of fake news and inaccurate news it's a topic that's been circulating in the news community in the recent years especially after its role in the most recent presidential election so we were talking about the emergence of news literacy programs in American education programs so what advice do you give to the youth that have not yet been educated about news literacy and how do you think we should be able to navigate this world where there are so many different news outlets and when the definition of news is so inclusive right now I think that you've put your finger on a fundamental challenge because the trick about fake news is that it looks very much like real news these sites have been named and designed and created that you could very easily mistake it for a reliable local newspaper or a national news organization it's obviously self-interested for me to say that established news organizations, whether it's time or the New York Times or CBS or NBC or Reuters are it's incumbent on us and you're hearing a lot of this messaging of saying there is a difference between what we do and how we do it we do not publish fake news doesn't mean that we are always right doesn't mean that we're perfect but the standards that we live by are different and to make that very much a part of the messaging that we all make I've looked at some of these sites and I think if I were especially if I were a young person that doesn't know all the visual cues doesn't know the established organizations and my Facebook feed is full of these these stories I think it would be very challenging to be able to tell I think it's fascinating challenge to Facebook that's a really interesting conversation about you know Mark Zuckerberg talks about we're not a publisher, we're a platform I think the obligations that platforms are going to have to acknowledge in the role that they are playing in creating this ecosystem they will say the last thing people want is for us to be the arbiters of what can and can't be posted what is and is not true they are hoping that there will be a technological fix to this problem but this is a you know if the press barons of the 20th century had a set of ethical challenges that they faced about libel and slander and when you publish a rumor and free speech versus national security and what those competing values are their legacies in the 21st century include Mark Zuckerberg and Tim Cook and Evan Spiegel and the creators of I ask people like Tim Cook about this, what is your ethical obligation when you're having the debate about unlocking iPhones as part of criminal investigations I would put it to any of the leaders of social media platforms isn't that you have to have an answer right now but what is the mechanism whereby your organization is going to explore and address and weigh the competing values and challenges that we are now seeing you know we've seen Facebook Live can be an extremely powerful force for good or for ill and so how is Facebook going to have the conversation about what their obligation is about how that tool can be used and I think that's going to be one of the most important media conversations one of the most important media conversations occurring right now is going to be occurring in organizations that we don't traditionally think of as media organizations thank you and in closing we have a request from two viewing parties in Cuba in Ethiopia if you wouldn't mind giving some advice to aspiring women in journalism women who hope to become journalists, do you have any special tips for them any encouragement you would give looking back over your career anything you wish you knew this may sound counterintuitive but I think this is a golden age of journalism for a couple of reasons it isn't that we don't face very real challenges as a profession but this goes back to what I had been saying the fact that you have a combination of appetite and audience and opportunity that if you find and tell a good story that matters the ability to you don't have to be employed by a huge news organization or have 30 years experience in the field the ability for quality to find its audience is now just as enormously powerful corporations can now be started in garages the power of a single individual or a single idea married to the technology that now makes everyone a filmmaker everyone a music composer everyone a novelist everyone a journalist these technologies are are almost limitless in the opportunity that they give people who want to tell stories who want to have an impact that I just think it's the great challenge to us is is how do we make the best use of the incredible advantages that we now have to do the kind of work that we want to do I think that is a perfect note to end on thank you so much for joining us today on behalf of the Office of Alumni Affairs at the State Department and our colleagues at the Foreign Press Center we're so thankful that you all hosted us this morning and to all of our viewing parties particularly those that stayed up really late to join us thank you so much for being part of this conversation and we hope you all will continue it online with hashtag we'd love to keep talking to you about this we'd love to keep chatting with you so thank you again for joining us
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Balancing Innovation and Organizational Structure | Knowledge Management | MGTE630_Topic125
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MGTE630 - Knowledge Management,
Topic125 - Balancing Innovation and Organizational Structure,
By Prof Dr. Khalid Mahmood
@thevirtualuniversityofpakistan
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zqHVa-ipkUs
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नोलत्ज मैंज़ाचनोग के पाचडे बूग से औरिँनाजाचन दो तराखी होती हैं थी होती हैं फलुव़ट यारख्नोजाचनरदूँच वो थी होती हैं इस्टिकिस्टूँ यारग्नोचाचन तु इं दोनो अगनीजाईश्यान के द्रम्यान हम ने बलास करना हुतें जब हम नुलग मेनज्मेनेंध को इंपलीमें करने की बात करते हैं तो ये दिखते हुँँँँँँँँँँँँँँँँँँ. तो सब से पहले, fluid organization हुती है यह क्या हुती है, knowledge के पन्ट्बृसे individuals with ideas originating and growing from a given person means intuition, personal networks that form outside formal organization charts jaisa ke communities of practice हैं chance and counters that occur between people अदारे में जो जो भी फुंक्छन होने है, उन फुंक्छन्स को करने का जो तरीका है, उसको पुरी तरा से कंट्रूल करने की कोशिष करती अर्ँनादेशन अदेशन की राय की जैदा एहमीद नहीं होती, एकस्प्रिस्ट नालज नालज नालज नहीं होता, जब किस मुखा� नालज अच्चन्डिए आप खूगे लगा किस क्रती चछने होदा गा, अच्चागा किस मास नालज खूगे नालज जिदा Likeyaле नालज औस्चनत मैं लिके ऐसके, सब मेंग़ गल औस दहाँ, तिलत हो सोंसे देशना। अदिस नोलिच यज शेएर थो अपशिल चेन्च अप कमाण्द और अर्गन्द आदशनल हरारकिज के अर्गन्द शन में जो हरारकिबनियोगा यज चेन्द अप कमाण्द बनियोगा आई उसी के दुई हज़ारता नोलच जो है जो शेर होता है अगर यहांपे इन्फामल आँ़र्ठेशन तो नहीं होती नालेज की और नालेज यहँज एख रही पहने होता है हम तो नोंग तर में जो बलनस के उच्छो यह यह उग्छू यह आई दो नों के बलनस की बात करेंगे अगर भी ज़ादा प्लौवगट है, तस्का नुक्सान के? तस्का नुक्सान के, नुग्स नुलिट कनाच्छन आच्छन करते है, तब बिसुनुस गॉल्स, आद्टिट फोड़ी रही करते लेगर अकॆँईट्टेबनुन एक लोग या एंप्रोईज पने तोर पर फैसले करते हैं, उनको सुचने के लिए अर्गनाजिशन ने अजाज चोडा हूँए है, उसक नक्शान ये होगा, एक लोग जो सुचते हैं, जो करते हैं, उसका बिसनस के जो गोल्ज ने उसके साज ज़ाजद आडुक नि होगा, औ ने एक गोल्ज बाज़ सकता हूँँग, नहीं खाहा हुँँ, अर्गनाजाचन विसक सकता हुँँँँँँँँँँँँँँँँँँँ, जब आप लाटिख दे साचच बागपिज साचच चऴा ती रह ती बन पी गोगा ने या नावाश company करिए आचएत है, एक थ बोगे खॉगा खॉगा खॉगा और मैयएद होगा और फिर इसके नुतीजे में इवेलॉयशन असाण होगी और जेजो ख्लूड आरगनल्टिशशन में जो ननेजच है बुजॉईतर टेसिट होगा और जो असिटुशनलाएस इस में अनर्स भी आजाते है, इस में ताब मैंज्में आजाती है, कि वो नोलिज को शेर करने के लिहाज से, और ये बेलन्स काइम करने के लिहाज से, अपने आपको एक रोल मोडल के तोर पर पेश करते थे, और उसकी लिह एक जो यहां पे वो अज़ुएश्फाज यसमाल कीगे वो ठा गे दिवाओख छाड़क, तो उमके कोलो फिल में तदाद नहीं ता और जो भो बात करते थे जो बो ख्लेम करते थे उंके आख्उन में बी उही नजराता था, और इसके नितीजे में यह यह जो मुल्ती नेशल कमपनीज है, इनोने बहुत तरकी की और बहुत रेवेनीु गेएन किया.
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Cloud Foundry Growing Pains: Lessons Learned Keeping the Largest CF Environment Alive and Kicking
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Cloud Foundry Growing Pains: Lessons Learned Keeping the Largest CF Environment Alive and Kicking - Michael Maximilien, IBM
Bluemix is the largest CF environment by far. It is also arguably the one with the most usage and users. Come to this talk to hear from the World Wide DevOps and development team who answers the call when things go wrong and who also help keep Bluemix up to date and running.
We plan to share what we have learned in the past year as we grew and encountered unexpected failures and how we dealt with them.
About Michael (aka dr.max) Maximilien
My name is Michael Maximilien, better known as max or dr.max, and I am a computer scientist with IBM. At IBM Research Triangle Park, I was a principal engineer for the worldwide industry point-of-sale standard: JavaPOS. At IBM Research, some highlights include pioneering research on semantic Web services, mashups, and cloud computing, and platform-as-a-service. I joined the IBM Cloud Labs in 2014 and work closely with Pivotal Inc., to help make the Cloud Found the best PaaS.
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[
"cf summit",
"cloud foundry summit europe",
"cloud foundry",
"paas",
"cloud native",
"containers"
] | 2016-10-07T16:13:08 | 2024-04-23T02:16:33 | 1,761 |
ZQvxfL3Wb7s
|
OK, so I'm Max, and today I'm going to talk about what we've learned operating Bluemix. The sad part is that a lot of the people operating Bluemix are in the audience, so they probably could join me and give that talk. But I'm here representing them, so I'll do my best. Another person that is not here that I've done this talk with before is Matt Zuchiu. He's actually part of the IBM China Lab, and he's the lead developer for our CPI group. This talk kind of covers what I've learned indirectly being the open source liaison with working with my colleagues here, and then the product manager on the back here, which is, well, the director, Fabio. Doesn't have the long hair, but that's him. All right, let's get going. This should be fun and interactive, so feel free to stop me. Obviously, I've got a deadline to stop, and then you guys got to go to lunch, so if the discussion gets too much, then we'll move it. But ask a question. I've given this talk before, and it was interactive, and you'll see why. It has this format that helps it. So let's get going. So first thing is, what's Bluemix? I'm not going to bore you too much, but it's important to set the stage of this. It's a certified pass. Well, we're getting there. I mean, there's other aspects of the certification that we still need to get, but it's a moving process, and our intention is to definitely support that. I'll share some public statistics that Simon Moser, my colleague, mentioned today in the keynote, is that it has, well, first thing we did mention is that we have three kinds of deployments. So one is public, dedicated, and then the last one is private. Public is what you get when you go to Bluemix.net. Dedicated is essentially a slice of a software environment for a particular customer. So we have different customers. So the customer gets its own, but we manage it for them. And then private is on-premise, so very similar to Pivotal PCF, in some ways, and other companies have that too. So as Simon mentioned this morning, we have over a million registered users. So these are the public numbers. If you want to know more, talk to Fabio. I'm not allowed to say more than that, but it's getting pretty big. We have 500-plus-thousand running apps and hundreds of services. And we use software. Now it's a source of strength and pain, but let's leave it at that. We've also looked at OpenStack as a potential alternative. But OpenStack has its issues too, so don't get me wrong. So everybody has issues when you start operating at scale. And it's a worldwide team, right? Developers and also DevOps. So a lot of our colleagues here in Germany and Bublingen are essentially doing a lot of the development. So they're in the room here. But we have also people doing DevOps, like for instance in Roma. We also have people in North Carolina as well as in China. So it's all over the world. It's a worldwide effort. So what have we learned? All right, so in the US, there's this guy called Dave Letterman, who is now retired. But he used to love doing top 10 list. And those work really well, especially when you have a short amount of time and a very focused set of things that you want to talk about. So that's what we're going to do. So we're going to use top 10. And that's why it's sort of interesting for you if you have questions. We're going to go from 10 to 1, OK? So number 10, I call this change. So Fabio and his team and a lot of other people essentially have this tight change request process. It has its bad parts. And you'll now see kind of the format of each one of those top 10. So I start with the bad, I talk about the good, and I talk about the lessons. So what's bad about this? Obviously, it makes it slow. We have to go through a tight change process where people like Fabio, Richard, and others have to essentially approve any change to the system. That can make it a little bit hard. But we're a huge company. Remember, we are 300 something thousand people. And I don't know how many works on Bluemix, but it seems like all 300,000 work on Bluemix sometimes. And then because it's worldwide, well, people in the middle of their sleep, what do you do? You have to deal with it, right? So that's a problem, but there are some good things. So what is good about it is that if somebody in Woma decided, well, they're going to make a change, and they figured it out, before it actually gets approved, it actually has to go to the US. And then also the guys in China have to take a look. And then people are traveling, right? So before it actually happens, there's this process that essentially sort of coalesce it and make sure that it can actually make it good. So what it does is it limits any problem. It makes it slow to adopt new changes, but it can limit things. And there are more eyes reviewing it, right? So that's sort of good. So what we found is that definitely if you're doing a large team like we do, if you can't afford not to do a large team, obviously do that, right? If you can have everybody in San Francisco like Pivotal does, more power to you. IBM, we can't, right? We're I with International for a reason. We are global, and we are a very large company. So we have to go worldwide. That's just the way it is. Yes, Chris? I just want to right now. Yes? I would generally cut. Yeah, and obviously there is going to be that too, right? There are customers that like this. They are happy to slow down. So that's number 10. Number nine, audit checklist. So what we do in some ways is we audit things a lot. Obviously it comes with the bad part. So what it is is that some of them are manual, and it can be a long time to sort of check those. But the good part is that using canary-based deployment, which is sort of a feature of Bosch, it helps because then you can sort of run your deployment and verify, oh, things not quite working, and then you can backtrace. And we do some audits for just at steady state. So in some ways, it's operating the system and then verifying as it's running that things are working. So the lesson here is that we've actually ended up creating our home-grown tool called Doctor. It comes from the China team that essentially allow you to, in some sort, it's getting there, do a continuous monitoring and then audits of all of the deployments. So in many ways, you can think, I can't reveal the numbers, but you can imagine we have X number of customers that have private, and then X number, maybe X square number, dedicated, and then public, which is a smaller number. And all of these go to the same tool so that the teams all over the world can kind of get a view of it. Number eight, checking, log checking and monitoring. The bad part of this is that because we are such a large environment or such a large set of environments, the log rotates very quickly. So you end up with a problem, and if you don't catch it, you might lose it in some sense. So a large amount of data, it's in the terabyte. How do you keep it? How do you manage it? Obviously, better cloud would help. Things like S3, for instance, you can keep large amount. But over time, it becomes also impossible. So what happened two years from now? It becomes an issue. Bluemix already has operation about a year and a half now, so it's getting close to that. And then how do you separate? How do you query over those logs? So that's a huge issue that we've sort of experienced. The good part here is that the way it's sort of designed, it doesn't always work. So don't get me wrong here. But when it works, or at least the design point is to allow streaming and allow different syncs. So when you do that, then you can use that data to your own set of tools to do the kind of query that you would need. So I've seen a pivotal working with them, for instance, that we've used Splunk as an example. But at IBM, we have our own grown solution. So it's not really a solution to you, but it's a lessons learned that you definitely want to start introducing some level of log tooling early. Because as your system grows, it can become an issue. How do you debug? It becomes a problem. All right, so moving along, number seven. I actually like Drake a lot. I don't think he's always kind of like sad, but that was a sad phase of Drake that I thought that was cool. So what is this? It's Boschinate rules. The reason I say this is because I have actually contributed a third line of code in Boschinate. You can just go to the repo and you'll see. So I'm not complaining about it, but I'm saying there are some issues with new stuff. And for instance, in the case of Boschinate, it can become, and I think we're solving this now, to recreate a director. And certainly because it was in development, we've had lots of frequent updates. So keeping up with that was an issue for us. Obviously that may not be an issue for smaller companies, but as a large company with a history of being very good at keeping, we deliver something to a customer. And then 20 years later, as long as they are still paying the bills, I mean, we'll support them. And it's a great thing, but it's also a source of pain. So when you're in that mindset, it can become an issue with frequent updates. The good part is that in general Boschinate has been great. I mean, it's moving towards the new Bosch CLI. If you haven't looked at that, it's going to be a single binary. And it really works well. And we've also, as part of this, introduced external CPIs, which, as we mentioned today, is essentially the source of growth for this movement, which is Cloud Foundry. If you think about all the other clouds, Paz, none of them have this one feature that we have, which is we can work across different clouds. And as far as I know, it's close to 20 now. And then today, I just, right before this, came from a talk of multi-CPI, where we have a CPI, or meta-CPI, to talk to multiple clouds. So it's a great source of strength for us. And we definitely love that. So the key is to deal with better planning for things like changes. And it's important for you to do that. Otherwise, you run into some issues. All right, next one is what I call custom software. This is actually a super important one. What that is is you want to make sure that you have custom releases. So in other words, if you want any piece of code in your organization to be part of the environment, whether it be installed on a stem cell, on all the VMs, or you want to have them as a separate deployment, like, say, for instance, a service, don't try to, I would say, use Bosch, adopt it, and embrace it. So what I mean by this is, like, some people at IBM, we've created our own hacky stem cell. And then we put a little agent running in there. And then we said, well, maybe some of those deployments, we should have our own job. And it doesn't really work with Bosch. When you start doing this, you start breaking the abstractions. And it becomes much harder for you to upgrade and to keep the system healthy. So create your own custom software. So first thing is, custom software is going to happen when you're a large company. Like, for instance, we have a security release at IBM, because the security guys think they know better, and probably maybe they do. I don't know. But they have their own release. Who am I to say I'm not an expert in security? So I have to just deal with that, right? So they create their own release. So that's going to happen. You can try to bake things into the stem cell. Usually a bad idea. Create your own release, add it. These days, Bosch has this thing called add-ons, where you can easily run time config and deploy those custom bits into all VMs. So definitely want to do this. So of course, with external CPI and co-located releases, you kind of solve this problem, right? And of course, there's a lot more information these days about creating releases, which was an issue. So Maria, who's the top essentially committer for Bosch at Pivotal, she's written really great presentations about how to create releases. So I urge you to go there. Towards the end, I have a couple of slides to point you to where to go. But if you go to Bosch in it, you'll see on the top of Bosch in it, there are some pointers to our slides. But definitely you want to create your own release. It's not easy, but the point is there's more information now. So simple lesson. Do not have your own custom SEM cell, custom Bosch, use the extension point. So the CPI is an extension point. The release is an extension point. But don't try to do more than that, because then you can survive with the rest of the system. Number five, this is an important one. It's kind of still work in progress, is that power DNS is actually an issue, right? So we highly recommend you not to use power DNS. But we don't really have a good alternative yet. We're still working on it. But let me talk about what's bad about it. So first is that it's single point of failure, so it's very hard to do HA on it. And we don't really have a solution. So if you're deploying on a cloud that has a DNS solution, then obviously you use that. Otherwise, you're going to have a bad day. The good thing is, as I mentioned, some of those IaaS support it. And we're also working on a power DNS test solution for Bosch where we're essentially using local DNS. So all of the VMs will have all information, in sync of all the other VMs. Now, that doesn't solve a full non-DNS deployment of CF because CF uses as part of it like discovery, especially Diego, discovery of services. And they use console. And you can't really replace console. But there's various discussion in the open source community to see how to do this. So you may still be able to use those other DNS solutions. But maybe the platform will have a power DNS less solution, basically batteries included. So the lessons learned is you really do have to think it's a general lesson of any node in the system that is not designed to BHA. Because when you do that, it will prevent you from growing in the future. So be careful of that. And it can become very hard to remove. I mean, this is based on our experience. We're still struggling removing power DNS usage. Number four is update. Security update are important. And they're painful. But you got to do that. Why is that? Well, obviously, the internet, as you know, unlike some orange person in the US, is not a source where you want to go and think that trust any information. It's actually exactly where a lot of bad guys, bad girls are coming and trying to attack your system. So this is nothing new. You should all know that. So what happens is that there are CVEs pretty much weekly. You're not all aware of them. But I can tell you, Chip and the rest of the Cloud Foundry Foundation and various folks at Pivotal and IBM and various other companies, we know about when there is a CVE. And those happen pretty much weekly on average. I mean, sometimes you don't get them. And what happens when you do get those is you have to be able to get the security in. But they're costly. But you still have to deal with it. Because the last thing you want is to be hacked in. And then you be in the news that your system, like what happened to Yahoo, it's unfortunate. It's like you're struggling. And they just got hit by this massive security bridge. You don't want this to happen to you. So what does the Bosch team do about this? Well, they essentially release new stem cells and new releases frequently. And recently, they've been going to a hardening of the entire system for security. And obviously, as I mentioned at IBM, we have our own security release. So you definitely want to take this very, very seriously and follow the guidance. So if there's one thing you want to remember from this talk, is definitely make sure if you're going to go in production, being able to deal with that is very important. We did come up with a way to essentially make it faster to even update the OS, we call OS reload. It's also a source of various pain. But this is one maybe advantage of that feature. Number three, multi-bosch deployment. So this is still something we're struggling with, but it's certainly an approach that you should think about. So what this is, is that when you start with one Bosch director, it becomes essentially your bottleneck and potentially your spoff as well. And when you start going, especially when you have multiple environments, that becomes a problem, right? So having a way to do multiple deployment with Bosch, that's definitely, so this is essentially, you do one Bosch and then you create other Bosches for your other deployment. So that when one fails, you don't lose the entire system. We've seen the director fail. I mean, we've seen pretty much every failure that you can think of in the book. Some of it self-inflicted, but some of it also because the software has problems. It's a big piece of code, right? So there are issues. So divide and conquer, right? That's the obvious solution. So definitely reconsider your deployment strategy. There are different sort of best practices. Certainly Dimitri is a source of great knowledge. He's seen a lot of it because he talks to everybody. So you wanna sort of hone into what he discusses on Slack, for instance. But experience with other things. So as you have your deployment, try other things. Don't just be stuck on your own style of deployment. There are other ways to do things that may be better for you. Number two, this is something we've learned from our colleagues in Italy. And it's kind of interesting because you see cultural things from different places kind of filter into a worldwide team. I know talking to Fabio and the rest of the team is that a lot of the deployments never work 100% of the time. So you do a deploy and you think you're gonna do like thousands of VMs and you're like, okay, I'll come back tomorrow and then it fails halfway. And then you think, well, when was the last time the whole deployment actually did work? Can't even remember that. So what do you do? All right? So you have to address the failures and then obviously continue. So Bush allows that model. But the point is that it's never gonna be 100% successful. And the guys in Rome, like maybe with their cool attitude, yeah, fails, just restart it. Don't stress about it, right? And that's the key is that the system is so large and there's so much, especially for big environments, there will be failures. Don't expect a fully pristine 100% just work perfect. All right? Like my camera is perfect German engineering. Doesn't always work like that. It fails and then you kind of deal with it. So Bush will help you with that. And even when the system is failing halfway, it's still usable. So don't stress too much about it. So embrace failure in some ways, right? And that was the point that Simon made today. This weirdness, it's gonna happen. And you just have to adopt it as part of your culture. So trust the tool. Failures are gonna be part of the system. And sometimes they don't work perfectly the first time. And it's okay, right? As long as it works in the end. And number one is to back up your director DB often and a lot. Okay, why do I put this at the end? It's an obvious one. Well, because I've experienced it personally. So last year, trying to go on vacation, Friday, this is a story I'll finish with. I think it was like Thursday and I took Friday off. I get a call like 4 a.m. in the morning. Chris Ferris tells me, we need your help, buddy. The whole blue mix is falling apart. And I think it's Bush. Now, Michael Franco on the back actually does a lot of that sort of firsthand. And he's very good at sort of identifying where the problem is. And I guess maybe, I'm not sure if he was the one identifying where it was in Bush. But anyways, it got down to me. And I know, of course, I'm going on vacation. So what do you do at 4 a.m.? Chris calls you. Well, I deal with it. So I'm getting ready to go to the airport in San Francisco. Got my laptop. I'm going to the code. I've got very little bits of logs to go by. And then on the plane, I kind of have the aha moment to see where the problem was. And of course, I get back and identify two lines of code in Bush where we're not checking for an error in the go code. And potentially that's what happened. The symptoms was that disk on the director where the director keeps all its data disappeared. So now we have a director in a deployment. And they don't know about each other because the data just disappeared. So first is identifying it. And of course, what do you do about that? So in the end, the disk got lost. So when you disconnect the director for its deployment, there's not much you can do. Although we kind of came up with some clever thing to do, the guys in China. So I'll talk about that. Obviously, how do you solve this? Or how do you prevent this from happening? Becoming a problem is to back up, right? You back up your director database. So when something like this happens, then worst case scenario, you can always go back to the old backup. But any VM that was created since the backup, you lose those in disks and so on. So that's a real issue. The problem with backup was that it was very slow for us. So when we have a large system, the backup took forever. Before the first backup got done, we were already doing the next deployment. So it's used this, right? So what happened is we worked actually the team from Rome work with them, with the Bosch team to make the backup come in faster. And partly it's because we're not backing up any information about blobs because they're kind of in a separate place. And you can recreate them, which is good. Now, some IaaS, for instance, AWS, has a way to snapshot disks. So if you can, the best thing to do is to take your disk on your director and snapshot it so that way the IaaS is doing the backup for you, in addition to maybe Bosch backup, right? So one solution we came up with, and it's kind of a clever one from the guys in Beijing, is to modify the dummy CPI and replay the deployment. So think of it this way. You have a director who no longer knows about the deployment, but you have the deployment. And when you have the deployment, you can always go to your console and get all the IDs for your disks and all the IDs for the VMs. So now you can create or modify a dummy deployment. You have your manifest, pretend that you're gonna deploy that one again. And instead of deploying, it gets the disk and VM ID from a list that you've created of what exists. And when you're done with your deployment, which is a fake deployment, you reconstructed your database. So we did that. That was over my two weeks vacation. The good thing at IBM, and I'll say this, is typically we have very, very good managers and I happen to have one, Alex, and he's super cool. So those two weeks I got back, generally. So I'm trying to get a couple more weeks, but anyways. So it happens. So with that, I wanna thank you and take some questions. So questions. The OS reload. Okay, so the guy that owns the OS reload is sitting next to you. That's Fabio on your right. So the problem with this is that in software, this is kind of a unique software problem, but it's actually an interesting solution we came up with that actually probably works other places, is that there are some data centers that have limited VM capacity and software doesn't have a first-class reservation system. So if you have a large deployment with VMs in it and you try to say, for instance, update or redeploy or add to your deployment, you might lose the VM. So if you release some VM, you might lose it. And since the system is out of capacity. So instead of releasing VMs and getting new ones, we essentially keep the VM and we reload the operating system, which is in some ways what you need to do because the VM hypervisor is fine. It's just the OS that you have to reload, right? So to do this, you actually have to modify the CPI to do this. I've talked to Dimitri a long time because at Pivotal, they actually have a similar problem for their data environments where instead of having created a new VM and then reload large amount of data, they'd rather update the stem cell by reloading the operating system. So there is some discussion about maybe potentially making this a first-class citizen. Any other questions? Before you go, I've got number 11. Oh, Chris. So he's the hiring manager. Thanks for taking my talk and doing a little advertising. Okay, so number 11, let's do this. Always seek knowledge. Why is that important? Because it's large and it's hard. So if you're a new Bosch developer, you might not understand how to use Bosch. That is very true. Not everybody that are great developers at Bosch know how to use Bosch. I was at Bibli again and I mentioned this. I love cars. I'm an engineer. I love the German cars, but guess what? I am a terrible driver. I think most of you probably fit in that category or one of those, right? So it's not because you're a developer, you know how to use it. Bosch is complex, so large learning cycle. So the good thing is there are lots of talk. Dr. Nick has tons of information. Maria is adding stuff. Dimitri, anything you need to know, just ping him on Slack. Pretty much you'll get an answer. If you can't get an answer from him, he'll point you to somebody that can give you an answer. So Bosch IO is your source, right? And Dr. Nick, as I mentioned, so seek knowledge, okay? So that was in case nobody had question. Anything else? Okay, we have 15 seconds. No? Thank you.
|
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|
Working in a 3 Michelin Star Restaurant: Jean-Georges
|
Before returning back to Los Angeles to open Little Fatty, David Kuo worked in a 3 Michelin-star restaurant: Jean-Georges. Located in the heart of New York City, David was met with a real wake-up call. He wasn't as good of a chef as he thought he was.
Over the course of a couple of months, David studied and practiced to get better. He even kept a notebook with all of his detailed notes on how to get better.
By the end, he was able to work all of the roles in the kitchen while helping everyone else, which is the goal of a successful line cook in a 3-star Michelin restaurant.
#businessinterview #podcast #podcasts #losangeles #entrepreneurship #michelinstar #michelinstars #michelinstarchef #littlefatty #nycrestaurant #nycrestaurants
******************************************************************
🐖 David Kuo Social Media:
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chefdavidkuo/
🐷 Little Fatty:
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/littlefattyla/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/littlefattyla/
Website: https://www.littlefattyla.com/
🐽 Fatty Mart:
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/fatty.mart/
******************************************************************
🎙️ Startup to Storefront Social Media:
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/startuptostorefront/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/startuptostorefront
Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/startup-to-storefront/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/startuptostore
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/67EyhF5DGLPucswOrS7LhK?si=IUPguzApRm6nnhlIHUBJxQ
Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/startup-to-storefront/id1477095646
Website: https://www.startuptostorefront.com/
******************************************************************
😎 Our Team:
Diego Torres-Palma: https://www.instagram.com/diego_ventures/
Nick Conrad: https://www.instagram.com/nickgconrad/
Lexi Jameson: https://www.instagram.com/lexijamesonyt/
Owen Cappellini: https://www.instagram.com/owencapp/
|
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"entrepreneurship",
"startup",
"jean george",
"jeans georges",
"jean-georges",
"michellen star",
"Michelin star"
] | 2023-02-07T23:00:41 | 2024-02-07T17:18:00 | 32 |
zQLynknRFyQ
|
After cooking school, I worked at a three Michelin star place in York. It's called John George. I first started, it was a real wake up lesson that I thought I could cook, but you couldn't. I think after the first or second month, I got tired of yelling at. So I said, as soon as I walked out the door, I started writing down all the things I could do to get faster, better, how to get ahead, because you always didn't have enough time. Did everybody do that, or was that just something you did? I didn't worry about everybody else. Wow. If you really want to see what the best is, what it's like to have three Michelin stars, then you go work for one and just see what it takes to be part of something that can attain those three stars is pretty amazing.
|
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|
UCwazI0dBL644wwNpuM6cVYQ
|
WHAT BOOKS MEAN TO ME...
|
Watch me get unintentionally emotional about books and mention a few books that mean the world to me.
TUMBLR:
http://tilly-and-her-books.tumblr.com
INSTAGRAM:
https://instagram.com/chantilly_b/
FACEBOOK:
https://www.facebook.com/tillyandherb...
TWITTER:
https://twitter.com/tilandherbooks
THANKS FOR WATCHING!
|
[
"books",
"reading",
"booklr",
"booktube"
] | 2016-05-06T19:00:33 | 2024-04-23T14:54:09 | 442 |
zqkoCOxw2xg
|
Hey guys, it's Tilly and today I am back with another video. This one is slightly heavier than the ones that I'm used to doing mostly because I have been wanting to talk about this for a while and today I was kind of feeling lost and a little down so why not talk about my journey of reading and how it has helped me so much throughout my teenage years and what books mean the most to me and how reading them just at the right time just seemed to make the entire world a brighter place. So I have loved reading for a very long time as a kid my nana used to read to me and my mum loved reading so of course I picked up on the habit too and I read like you know a series of unfortunate events and tomorrow when the war began and I absolutely love those series and especially like Big Book Attachee if any of you guys have read that that was like my jam back in primary school and then pretty much as I got older I still read a few books like The Pretty Little Wires and everything like that but it wasn't until I got to high school that books kind of went away for a while. I can't even tell you why I like stopped reading or when or how exactly but I just think it might have been like excess schoolwork and then I just completely didn't bother picking up a book at all after that. In 2011 that was the dark year for me so I hadn't reading books for about two years before that and then in 2011 it seemed to be the year that death seemed to stroll into my life and just touch some of the people that I love the most and so many of my animals. It was like a really really really tough yeah um and it was just really hard because I'm the kind of person that prefers to be on their own and so I isolated myself from my friends and my family and so I pretty much just sat in my room binge watching tv series in the dark with a blanket over my head and pretty much I had depression for about two years um after that and it was only when I started to read again that I started to come out of this dark room that I had locked myself into. I remember the first book that I read that brought me back into reading was Fallen by Lauren Kate and the entire series wasn't out yet so I just remember the excitement of finishing this book and wanting more and so that ensued with my huge paranormal love relationship and pretty much that just kept the fire burning inside of me for months and months because I just completely devoured all these paranormal books. And then some stranger at the bookstore recommended to me a fantasy series and I can't remember exactly which book it was that they recommended to me but fantasy absolutely changed my life because I read these books and I could go to a complete new world with these amazing characters and it was just the best way to escape like life and reality gave me more strength to know that I could deal with problems that I had to face when these characters could like totally kick everyone's butts during the war. However I did stay away from contemporary for quite a while but if you guys know me you guys would know that I read a ton of contemporary now and I think that that genre is one that I tend to binge read more than anything because there are a lot of heavy, heavy contemporary books out there like All the Bright Places. For me the Sidekicks is a little bit heavy, Lovelace to the Dead. Those are just like a few books that completely are just heartbreaking and shattering and eye-opening all at the same time but it was those books that have truly helped me to overcome a lot of things that happened to me during my depression and like I can honestly say now that I wouldn't have recovered as well as I have if it wasn't for those books. So back in 2011 one of my friends ended up passing away and that's something that I had never really been able to look back on without struggling to breathe and everything like that and it wasn't until I read Wilka Stakas's The Sidekicks which features a story of three friends who all had the same best friend and their best friend ended up passing away and after I read this book it kind of opened my mind a little bit more and I found myself looking back at memories of my friend and actually smiling at them and feeling okay rather than the heavy weight on my chest that I used to feel and for me that was just one of the greatest things that I have had the pleasure of getting because of reading and I'm just so thankful for books and reading and the book community and all the friends that I have made through books because I just haven't felt more myself and more comfortable than I have since I have started to read more and blog about books and just meet more wonderful book people and I can say that it's definitely one of the best parts about my life is reading these are you know happy emotions don't take it the wrong way I'm just overwhelmed because this isn't something that I actually um talk about a lot or say out loud which is the weird part because you know really I'm just talking to myself in front of a camera I've just kind of learned that whenever I'm feeling alone that I'm never truly alone because these books are all lives that I've lived and when I read them as the character and they have these amazing friends I have those friends and people who are there that care and it's just yeah books are just great guys like they have completely saved me. It wasn't until I read The Book Thief by Marcus Zuzek which many of you guys will know is my favorite book of all time was the moment that I realized my life is going to be centered around books I am forever going to be reading and on top of that I'm always going to be writing with the life goal that one day I want to have a book published one is going to be such a place in my heart as much as the book thief is uh so that is why reading is so important to me um it has just made my life better even though some people will watch this and think how can a 400 page book change your life well you just have to read them and find out because they truly are life-changing like they may be fictional but the stories behind them and the meanings they're not and they really take root in your heart and change you to be a better person and that's what books have done for me and they're always going to be part of my life literally and figuratively um I will always have a library and a book in my bag and pretty much I will love them forever so thank you for watching and kind of traveling with me on that rollercoaster ride there um I shall be back again with another video so yeah don't forget to like subscribe and turnly talk to me um on my blog and my other social media sites or just comment below and we can have a good old chat so little me and pipa say bye-bye bye-bye
|
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|
GET READY WITH ME FOR MY SINGLE VALENTINES DAY 8AM SHOOT | KIRAH OMINIQUE FT. Youth Beauty Hair
|
Hey qweeeens welcome back to my channel, for todays video I did a shoot , just because I'm single doesn't mean I can't feel the loveeee on valentines day! Were all about self love OKKAYYYY but anyway I hope you guys enjoy don't forget to like, comment, and subscribe XOXO
Follow Me On Social Media Bae:
♡ I N S T A G R A M @KirahOminique https://www.instagram.com/kirahominique/
♡ S N A P C H A T @KirahBae
COUPON CODES:
JBW WATCHES : KIRAH30 FOR 30% OFF
NEMI GLOW : KIRAHO FOR 10%
Use code “KEN20 “ Get 20% OFF
Direct link to wig:
https://youthbeauty.com/collections/new-arrival/products/hd-transparent-lace-13x6-lace-front-wig-straight
Hair Color: Natural color
Length:22inch
Cap Construction:13x6 lace wig Texture:body wave
Density: 150%
Hairline: Pre plucked hairline
Cap Size: Medium
Lace Color:Transparent Lace
Super Sales Hair Weft&Wig :
https://youthbeauty.com/collections/clearance
Link of our website:
http://www.youthbeauty.com/
Youtube Channel:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCSucfisCYamR7BtuSdkNB1g/featured?view_as=subscriber
Instagram:@youthbeautyboutique
https://www.instagram.com/youthbeautyboutique/
Facebook: Youth Beauty Hair Co., Ltd
https://www.facebook.com/YouthBeautyHairBoutique/
|
[
"photo shoot",
"get ready with me",
"grwm",
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"soft glam",
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"how to be a baddie",
"Instagram baddie transformation",
"ugly to less ugly"
] | 2020-02-19T02:05:03 | 2024-02-05T06:29:54 | 1,105 |
ZqbmiG8Ynas
|
hey y'all good morning oh my god it's a fucking echo in here hey y'all good morning happy valentine's day oh my god so today I'm doing a little get ready with me because okay y'all so oh my god but it's so cute y'all like I can't so anyway so anyways I'm getting ready because I'm about to do a photo shoot it was supposed to be last night but y'all I didn't get my hair done until 4 a.m. 4 a.m. and it's currently 8 45 I just took a shower got up let out all my stuff y'all know what but it's all good though because I want content I want y'all to know I just wanted to like you know feel sexy on Valentine's Day like I wanted this content for a reason so I'm like let me just you know just hustled out cuz winners don't complain so I'm just trying to make a way out of no way okay and I only reserved this room for the day because today is Valentine's Day and they don't have any like openings for tomorrow so I was like forget it I'm gonna get my hair done tonight and do my photo shoot right in the morning before check out so yeah that's what we're doing right now so I'm currently laying out all my makeup so I can do my makeup as efficient and well not but efficient as possible first of all I want to tell y'all about this hair that I have in my head right now let me just lay out all my brushes I just won't really want to be organized like I'm yesterday when I got here it was like 5 a.m. I didn't come here yet even before my hair appointment and I was gonna try out a new foundation today but I don't feel like trying anything new right now because I just really want my photos to come out you know good where y'all this hotel room is so cute so if you're in the Milwaukee area girl come here cuz I know people just be liking a plan like special little occasions stuff like that for their man or significant other like that come to the journey man and ask for the king's fastly I'm gonna show that it's up like in a second but it's so cute in here y'all probably had see me in the here the vibes they try to trick me with the candy you know they try to have a little snacks right there but they really cost arm and a leg and I'm like no I need to go to sleep I need to be skinny in the morning anyway so let me just go to sleep let me tell y'all about this hair that I have in my head this week so this week is my third this week is so bomb y'all like oh I'm a cute like what was your ex Peter no no oh my god I can't believe it's paid cuz y'all I did not I only had three of these pains cuz I already knew my hair was gonna get in the way and the shower cap I was like I'm sleeping with a shower cap because I don't want to roll my hair but I probably gotta touch it up anyway so I'm gonna show y'all like how bomb this hair curls and it also holds a curl very very well this hair is by youth beauty here y'all when I tell you this is one of the best weeks I ever had like ever I swear to God this is my third time putting it in because I couldn't tell y'all about it yet so I'm like I'm just gonna keep using it and it's so good y'all I'm gonna show y'all like my latest ones I like do my makeup and stuff but y'all it's so good and it's so flat I really hate bulky wigs and this wig in the inside is so structured it's structured so nice and it fits my head so good like it looks it's structured so good and tight-looking I thought it wasn't even gonna fit my head I swear to God I was like oh my god this gonna be too small on me but it fits so good on me I was like what it fit too small for you like like me trying to struggle when my side looks good none of that it's no struggle so this is probably my favorite way the quality of the hair is so good like bro this is my third time so it's been through plenty washes plenty blot irons and it's still shiny y'all see that okay so I wanted to show y'all the wig in its natural state it's super soft the lace is super transparent and oh my god y'all the wig protector that it comes in is so cute it looks like one of those bags that you put a suit in I think that is so convenient and it came with these two straps some lashes and a wig cap so yeah make sure you check out youth beauty hair so I'm probably gonna touch up my hair after I do my makeup but I just really wanted to talk about the week before we even get into it but I'm gonna show y'all how I style it after my makeup but I just want to put my shower cap at home because I mean well I really don't need it on but yeah youth beauty if you want to keep sponsoring me girl I'm here for you oh let me brush my teeth I came for hair this is my favorite way and my stylist even was like he was like what hair is this is so good and I was like I know youth beauty I love them oh and it's full of body and it's 22 inches but I did cut it into layers but it's so full and full of body y'all gonna see like cover girl like seriously literally the best wig I ever had like I'm not even gonna like you so yeah if you want to sponsor me again you can because a girl is ready I'm excited today's Valentine's Day and what's so crazy is you know everything happens for a reason y'all right and I was when I walked in this room I was like wow like I'm not gonna wake up to this luxury ass room in the morning and it's so beautiful and I wasn't gonna like I really wasn't gonna do this y'all I was gonna say fuck it I'm over it like I don't even care if they charge me I don't even want to shoot but I'm like you know what it's 2020 let me just push myself and go ahead and do it because you just never know and I wanted to do it anyway but I was just like nothing is going right my hair and I getting done I gotta go all the way to Kenosha to get my lashes feeling and it was just me running around all day feeling so organized and I was just like that's when I was like maybe I should just do it tomorrow and then she was like oh my god we're all booked so I can't and also we would just charge you a full night because you're not in our 24 hours 72 hour cancellation or something so I was like whatever but then when I got here I felt like I don't know I just felt better because it was luxury and it's nice and it's cute and I love the vibes in here pray for me that these pictures come out good obviously before obviously I haven't a photo shoot is so long I really want to focus on my brows so I'm gonna come back real quick so it literally took me a minute to do my brows just because I just got them done and the lady fucked me up my supporter works at the one I went to I always go to this one but I had took a break once to the one by Mayfair location then went back and was like fucking I'm gonna just go here cuz they're all good at this one location and she fucked me up like I swear to God so girl if you watching this please let me know her name so I don't go to her tomorrow but now I'm about to do my eyes first I'm gonna wing liner and I just picked this color pop nude palette up yesterday y'all it was so pretty it's only 10 $12 it's so fucking cute y'all know I love only new I'm trying to get out of it but I can't so fucking cute so I'm about to use these colors the wing real quick and leave it in my face makeup and y'all this elf or less primer was on tiktok so I'm trying it out it's all I did a lash hack today I put the lash glue on my eyelid before I put on the lashes so I put a strip of adhesive on my leg line and just stuck it on there and that was a little hack too and it worked really good so I highly recommend and I only decided to put on a little bit more dramatic lashes just because it's like a bullshit oh okay y'all home this is Sean this is who's gonna be shooting me today his Instagram will be in the description box so if you're in a Milwaukee, Wisconsin area even in Chicago I have a lot of Chicago to work y'all can come shoot with him. I travel too. He travels so make sure y'all go book. Period. He's going to be in my bio. Okay y'all so my makeup is done it's super cute so now I'm about to do my hair so like I said this is installed last night I had an improvised for the shark at home and some more shit. I really did want to take like a picture with like some silver pins I thought that would be so cute but I don't know. Okay y'all let me show y'all this with ladies before I even get to do it. Look at quality and I said I wore this three times with three times so y'all need to get with the way on youth beauty hair about to burst these out and like I said it holds a curl really well. I'm about to put my first set of lingerie on so I'll be right back. Okay y'all I got my first fit on I can't show too much because I don't want to give you monetized but curls are popping so make sure y'all check out youth beauty hair so I'm about to start shooting and yeah pray for me these pictures come out good but by the time you see this y'all probably already seen the picture. Okay y'all so I changed into outfit number two so let's go. So crouch right down by the tub and then you're gonna throw them up or sit on the tub actually. Throw it up above your head. I'm gonna pose. Yeah so throw them one two three on the snap so everything thrown gets your position. Let me just make sure the lighting right first. Yeah. I like the lighting. Oh yeah. Okay y'all so this is a little bit behind the scenes so I'm going to fill the tub. Now it's time for the tub part because we are done shooting the main. This tub is so beautiful. I need a tub like this. So y'all we are gonna add the non-fat dry milk because this is what a lot of girls use for like baby showers for those in the tub and stuff. It's what it smells like. Okay y'all so this is the tub so I'm about to get in it. So we like little Instagram pictures in this because I didn't get any photos in this tub. So y'all we just wrapped up this shoe so I hope you guys enjoyed this little get ready with me and I hope y'all have a good as Valentine's Day. Remember you don't need a nigga to show you love on one day and he only showed you love on one day fuck him but it's over over here we still love in that home period because you don't need a nigga to make this happen and I love y'all so much and don't forget to check out Youth Beauty Hair because the series comes back and all the details we need is in the description box below. I love y'all so much. See y'all next video!
|
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|
BUDGET PLANNER SET UP FOR 2024 | NORASCOVE 2024 FINANCE BUNDLE | HALF LETTER DISC PLANNER
|
Hey friends! Happy New Year!
Today I'm finally setting up my budget planner for 2024. I'm using half letter discs. I'm also using my NorasCove 2024 finance bundle as promised!
THE BUDGET BOX : https://www.norascove.com/products/the-budget-box-subscription?variant=41925012160698
PAYCHECK BUDGET INSERT TAUPE: https://www.norascove.com/products/digital-download-2023-paycheck-budget-taupe
MONTHLY BUDGET TAUPE: https://www.norascove.com/collections/budget-and-finance/products/2023-monthly-budget-taupe
Weekly Budget Insert: https://www.norascove.com/products/paycheck-to-paycheck-weekly-check-in
Monthly budget insert:https://www.norascove.com/products/monthly-budget-breakdown
BUDGET & FINANCE TOOLS: https://www.norascove.com/collections/budget-and-finance
___________________________________
Join Upside and get money back on gas: https://upside.app.link/DUMA6
My Website : https://www.norascove.com/
My Etsy Shop: https://www.etsy.com/shop/NorasCove
My Amazon Storefront: https://www.amazon.com/shop/mzzflawlessbeauty
My Pinterest :https://www.pinterest.com/YoShidaThornton/
My Podcast:https://anchor.fm/norascovethepodcast
____________________________________
Fetch Rewards Referral Code: VEEA9
Join my Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1245215439005994
Sign up for a weebly website:https://shareasale.com/r.cfm?b=366125&u=2015858&m=37723&urllink=&afftrack=
My filming equipment:
______________________
Tripod: https://amzn.to/2O0QtYh
Soft box lights: https://amzn.to/2CkDrQz
Canon rebel t6i: http://amzn.to/1ZJrjvM
Lapel Microphone: http://amzn.to/1XhUUyg
Remote for canon : http://amzn.to/1XhUQ1x
A little about me:
I'm a self employed Hairstylist, Nail tech(sometimes) and I own Noras Cove a stationery shop.
I really appreciate you stopping by!
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Fort Washington MD, 20749
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MUSIC BY: BNB PRODUCTIONS
NO COPYRIGHT MUSIC
TRACK: OCTILARY
https://www.youtube.com/redirect?event=video_description&redir_token=QUFFLUhqa3duYmkxSFZoY1lISDhjdzFhblJPc1pFMnNYd3xBQ3Jtc0tuc1N1NlkxWUUwcE1FUHQxQkhycldDY1MxYi00cnVQZHl2U25ydHZWcm04a1BIRDR2Q1BXZk1PWU5KX3lsd25mOEVrMnNHSGctR0RXbGx5NG1iNFVKS1NleTVsWFJPX1VFd3REX08wX2dJMXo1RWxnOA&q=https%3A%2F%2Fsoundcloud.com%2Foctilary
_________________________________
FTC DISCLOSURE:
ALL PRODUCTS WERE PURCHASED BY ME UNLESS STATED. LINKS MAY BE AFFILIATE LINKS WHICH I MAY RECEIVE A SMALL COMMISSION IF A PURCHASE IS MADE. MUSIC IS FOR ENTERTAINMENT PURPOSES ONLY. THIS VIDEO IS NOT INTENDED FOR CHILDREN. MATURE AUDIENCE ONLY.
#CASHENVELOPE #BUDGET #LOWINCOMEBUDGET
|
[
"budget",
"budget planning",
"planning",
"minimalist planning",
"budget community",
"cash envelopes",
"cash budget",
"CASH STUFFING",
"NORAS COVE",
"SELF EMPLOYED",
"HAIRSTYLIST",
"entrepreneur"
] | 2024-01-04T13:52:03 | 2024-02-15T16:04:52 | 993 |
zqfFOYyDVTc
|
Hey everyone and welcome to or welcome back to Norris Cove I am Yoshida and I love to get my life together by planning minimally, functionally and also planning my budget. So as promised I told you guys that I would do a setup of my budget. This is still all 2023 so what I'm going to do real quickly is I'm going to dismantle this and then we're going to get in to it with the new things. Okay so I pretty much took well I took pretty much everything out that I no longer needed that was like for 2023. I may have to go through some of it but of course I start with my inbox and then I downloaded these pages because I was just too lazy to do a dated monthly this year. I may get to it at a later date but I downloaded these from Rosie Paper Tree and I think that's how I'm going to set up my monthly so I have calendar here. I have calendar listed here so that's where all of these will go. So now we have our calendars in there from January to December. I'm going to try to keep those in there without it being too bulky and then now let's get into the finance bundle and as I was kind of prepping for this video I realized I need to actually list the separate separate things like the paycheck budget and all of that. I don't care for a undated monthly I like to add it into the bundle so that those who need one they can do it and this is monthly so we're going to just start here let's start here for calendar I don't need that so let me take that out let me just put this in and I'm going to try my best to use the perpetual calendar this year. I haven't quite decided what it is going to be and then we have goals. I like for those to be in the front so I might move those and have them kind of right after the inbox. Also I have this dashboard this was an hour december box so I'm going to put that right after repeat and I left some of these sticky notes only because I'm trying to get my color thing. All right so we have calendar goals need to be in front of the calendar right after inbox and if you hear some noise in the background that's me printing actually a bundle for customer. All right now let's move on to monthly so now I don't need this calendar however I'm going to keep some of these notes but I'm going to put those in the back but I did save some from last year so I'm going to move these notes to the back and so far my sections are going to stay the same I probably will update them maybe in a month or so not certain. All right let's get back to monthly and I want to keep this as the cover page for monthly and this is like um I haven't folded over but it is some expenses from last year let me just take that out and I'll leave a little bit of this for like a brand up and here we go with monthly and it should be 12 okay that's monthly and then going into the weekly which would be my paycheck budget okay I got a lot of going a lot going on let me take this out because I may move it I'm gonna leave that cover page by clock and paper so let's do a paycheck budget and I believe that there is either 18 paycheck budgets it appears to be a little bit more than 18 it's 20 something okay so now we have paycheck budget next is envelopes which I'll be giving back to this year. Spending tracker here we go envelopes and the good thing about this bundle is you as you can see you can separate it move it the way that you feel that you need through your planner. Next up we have spending tracker this is debt well excuse me next up we have debt I'm going to put one of these here because I like to kind of just drop some things down sometimes and this was our last year's debt payment I left it in here because I think I'm gonna need more than just a few so I'll leave that but I'll put the new ones in just in case I run into the ones from this year okay and then we have spending tracker this is last year's spending tracker uh this is this year's spending tracker so I honestly just love the plain one but I'm gonna add up this one and we're almost done with this bundle y'all and then here is the savings we're starting over so here's the savings and this year's bundle we're gonna add that and then we have a year in review we have notes but I'm gonna slide my year in review right here outside of notes I'm gonna re-put this dashboard here I just didn't want it to be on a blank page if that makes sense so then I have the weekly finance assessment so this was in our December box as well and what I'm going to do is kind of go through and try this side if I don't put it in between each week let me see I would really probably have this let me put it behind here um and my personal planner as well which is my everyday carry I would put one in there as well and then so that goes before you get to the monthly and then that way I can kind of come in here and do an assessment uh for the week and now let's just put those little small things back let's see can y'all see I've just been working like I had had it in having events it really seemed like y'all were in the shot so to pay I'm gonna put that on like the paycheck budget so I can do that um my word for this year is to be intentional but I need to find somewhere to put it let me see I gotta found uh I think I'm gonna put it here so to go against that um background there and I love to have these in here and these are just like encouraging words and I have like show me how good it gets I'm your sheet of thwarting and I'm so lucky everything always works out for me I'm going to keep that I'm gonna slide it here so I can kind of see it and then this was a journal card from last year um syncing funds to create I'm gonna slide that to syncing funds I need to make a tab for the spending track obviously I never did it OMG we all look at that oh my god do I have another one I think I do let me see thank the lord wait a minute whoa ain't that good well I guess we're adding this here unbelievable so let's add this thing I'm like why is my planner moving but I have to say um I'm a little rough sometimes with um this planner especially but even though it doesn't go out the house I just it gets used to the side and this uh maybe I got too much in here no I don't and truthfully I probably need one just for the back cover to put in this cover opposed to sliding this one in here I'm thinking about getting a um different folio but I know I don't need it okay so we have this we're going to syncing fund syncing funds it should be it should be a top tab the syncing funds business spending tracker here we are so for syncing funds I'm going to add this over here I really want more of a neutral paper clip but we're just going to use that and then I have a note on here I'm going to take that off and I'm going to add it to this week where I'm at where I need to be at right let's kind of go through it now just a quick flip this is just going to stay this away maybe I should let me see I think I'll take since I have this page I'm going to take this out add it to the front here excuse the holes on this but I like it so now this is how it looks let's go through we have our inbox which I don't even know if I need to inbox for this we have our goals I might change that just to go um calendar and we have our monthly's month on two pages and we need to fill that out and then we get into the finance bundle we have our monthly budget set up and y'all I'm so excited besides a few little dashboards and um those monthly's from rosy paper rosy paper tree this is pretty much on me I created a whole budget planner um and then this is the paycheck then we're going to get into the weekly finance assessment and I wish I had like a page flag on me to label this so that I know to get here I'll probably do that later and then we get into the envelopes the envelope breakdown we have our pocket here with just some stickers which I really need to clean out because I don't really use these like talking about then we get into debt that is our next one and here's just a little sticky half page just to jot down some debt and the way I'm going to pay it off so that's debt payment then we get into sinking funds no excuse me spending track spending tracker here's our spending tracker and then I think these are our sinking funds oh we have business expense here and this is just something I made for myself to just track my business expenses I need I have a data version but I need to put in here and then we get into sinking funds and this is a dashboard from last year saving into in-year review and then notes and that is it y'all and this is just some tool paper that I had and that is my 2024 budget setup and she's not too thick she's perfect perfect perfect perfect for me so I hope you guys enjoyed today's video if you have any questions feel free to leave those in the comment section and I'll be happy to answer them for you if this is your first time watching any of my videos and you enjoyed today's video do me a favor hit that subscribe button also hit that notification and let me know that you have joined the cove and I'd love to welcome you and I will see you guys in my next video
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"url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zqfFOYyDVTc",
"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
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UCfX55Sx5hEFjoC3cNs6mCUQ
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Linux Kernel Tracing Using eBPF - Vandana Salve, Prasme Systems
|
Linux Kernel Tracing Using eBPF - Vandana Salve, Prasme Systems
In software engineering, tracing is a method to collect data for profiling and debugging. The objective is to provide useful information at runtime for future analysis. The main advantage of using eBPF for tracing is that you can access almost any piece of information from the Linux kernel and your applications. BPF adds a minimum amount of overhead to the system’s performance and latency in comparison with other tracing technologies, and it doesn’t require developers to modify their applications for the only purpose of gathering data from them. The Linux kernel provides several instrumentation capabilities that can be used in conjunction with BPF. In this presentation we talk about these different capabilities and show how the kernel exposes those capabilities in your operating system so that you know how to find the information available to your BPF programs. We are going to talk how tracing can provide you with a deep understanding of any system using eBPF.
| null | 2023-06-01T19:35:03 | 2024-02-05T08:13:46 | 2,291 |
zqt1hWpHMQU
|
Hello, everyone. Welcome to open source submit 2023. Today I'm going to talk about lens kernel tracing using APBF. So let's start looking into what is APBF. So before that, let's me give you idea about what we're going to cover in this session is about maybe how it can be used for instrumentation kernel instrumentation. We'll look at some of the tools that are there that can be used for tracing them and external functionality. So what is APBF? It is a revolutionary kernel technology that allows developers to write custom code that can be loading the kernel dynamically and thereby helping to change the way the kernel behaves. It was originally created to speed up the filtering of network packets known as the BPF by this Berkeley packet filter. In 2014, Alexid redesigned the language of this BPF into what we currently know as extended BPF functionality. So basically, it has helped to turn the BPF into a more general purpose execution engine that can be used for a variety of things, like beyond packet filtering, it can be used for profiling debugging security as such. So this BPF technology is added into the kernel in 2014 and 3.18 kernel. With it comes the BPF system call to load the BPF program into the kernel and the support for various BPF programs, not just packet filtering but programs for tracing, profiling, and security. So that's how the BPF evolved to be what we call as extended BPF. So let's try to understand the overall components that are their part of the BPF as such. It is a flexible and efficient technology composed of instruction fed storage objects and help of functions and it is considered as a virtual machine running the instructions in an isolated environment. Since the BPF are execute programs are executed in the kernel, it is mandatory to ensure that the BPF programs are safe to run and cannot crash the system. For that we have this EPF verifier. EPF verifier in the kernel ensures that the program EPF program is safe to run that it cannot crash the kernel. It has to run to compilation that is what should not contain any loops that would run forever. The another component is the JIT compiler, which translates the generic bytecode of the program into the machine specific instruction set optimize the execution speed of the program. And there is another constant constants called as a maps that provides the ability to share the data that is collected between the kernel and the user space. And that can be done through various types of maps that is hash tables, arrays, string buffer, a stack trace as such. So why EPF is important for that. Let's understand the difference between the user space and the kernel space. The kernel is software layer between your applications and the hardware and the applications run in an unrevealed a layer called as user space, which cannot access the hardware directly. The application needs to make a request using the system call interface to request the kernel to act on its behalf. And when you say access the hardware it involves like reading writing into the storage device or sending or receiving packets onto the network through the network control or accessing memory and many other such activities. And if you want to see how the system call works, in that case you can make use of this SPS utility whenever application runs it would trace down the system calls that has been called through that application. So the main purpose of the Linux kernel is to abstract the hardware and the word or the virtual hardware and provide a consistent API as it forms system calls allowing the application to run and share those resources. And this is achieved through the various subsystems that is part of the kernel, which handles all this responsibility. So, like each system typically subsystem typically allows some level of configuration to account for different needs of the users. And if some particular behavior cannot be configured, then there is a need to make a change in the kernel. Whenever change has to be made in the kernel, it can be done either by adding the change into the kernel that is a native support or by adding the change dynamically with the help of kernel modules. So if the change has to be added in the kernel, then the changes to the kernel has to be made and then the developer has to convince the kernel community why that change is really important and it is needed as such. And it might take several years to get the feature into the new kernel versions. Another way is to dynamically implement that feature using the kernel modules. But it has its own risk like it can, the programs that return kernel module might not run in a safe way, which might lead to some kernel crashes and thereby halting the system as so. So, how can we get rid of this limitation as such. So with the help of a new option is available that allows for reprogramming the behavior of the kernel without really making changes to the kernel or by loading the kernel modules. And as far as safety is concerned, the API verifier ensures that the programs that are loaded are safe to run as such. So let's look at how the loading of the API program happens. The behavior programs are the event driven or even driven and they run whenever an application of kernel passes a certain hook point. And then there are multiple hook points that are defined as such. And they are at the system called levels of function entry or exit or current trace points network events and several other events inside the kernel. For example, like if a process wants to attach the attach the wants to what you say trace the system calls related to files files we open. In that case, the ebf program can be attached to the open system code. And it would be triggered when other application tries to open the file as such. The ebf program is attached to the exe system call. And when a binary application programs is executed through the exe system call, then that ebf program will be called. So this leads to one of the great friends of tracing tools using the app. Because why is that that it instantly gets the visibility over everything that's happening onto the system. And here in this presentation, we're going to look how the bf can be used for tracing a kernel behavior. So, to start with using the bbf tools, the bbf functionality, we can write the bbf programs, but in a lot of scenarios ebf is not used directly but they're used for the projects like CDM, DCC or bbf trace. So let's look at what are the tools they are the abstract they provide the abstraction on top of the the bbf framework and the app developers don't need to really go and write the bbf programs. But like if the developers want to write the bbf program, then there are different ways in which you can do is like you can write in Python or Lua or Sudo cgo language as such. Now the programs has to be compiled. That is been done by the LLVM or as a C line compiler that compiles the programs into a bbf bytecode. Now one of these bytecode has to be loaded into the kernel and executed. So there are a set of tools that is done to deal with this bbf programs that are called as frontends. And here we are basically going to look at bcc that is a bbf compiler collection and another is a bbf trace frontend. So these are part of the GitHub IO wiser, where the vcc provides a framework for that enables the users to write the Python programs with the bbf program embedded inside them. And whenever you run the Python program it generates the bytecode and loads it into the kernel. So basically when you are trying to develop some complex tools and then an application in that this bcc programming framework becomes handy as such. And another option is a bbf trace. bbf trace is a high-level tracing language and it can be useful for writing short scripts or one-liners scripts as such. And it uses LLVM as a back end to compile the scripts into bytecode and bcc for interfacing with the bbf subsystems loading the generated bytecode onto the kernel. So here these are the snapshots from the bcc tools that affect that there are different tools that are part of this bcc repo toolkit as such that gives you the information, tracing information about the various subsystems in the kernel as such like here if you look at this is the virtual file system, file system, wallet manager, blocklayer as well as as far as networking concern. You get the information on the socket level, at the TCP IP level, at the ethernet level or even at the device driver levels. Other subsystems like scheduler, memory manager and system for the interface and the application altogether. The information about the system can be connected with the help of these tools bcc tools and we're going to look at some of these tools to extract the information from the system. Okay. So let's see how this tracing can be done with the help of this bbf framework. So tracing gives us the visibility across the full software stack and allows to collect the data for profiling and debugging. And tracing can be used, can be used for debugging by the developers and troubleshooting by the administrators like whenever the system has is not behaving as expected or there is no or missing configuration or missing files as such in that case with the help of this bbf tools, the administrator can debug, can troubleshoot the system and as well as the developers can use for debugging as such. There are traditional tools that are available, like ftrace for SR, SRase and they provide the information about the system as such but it can make use of bbf framework to add more logic for analyzing the data that has been collected as such. Okay. So bbf tracing supports multiple sources of events to provide the visibility of the entire software stack. And here we are going to look at the instrumentation ways to look deeper into the system that is that works at the dynamic that provides the dynamic instrumentation as well as static instrumentation. So, let's look at what we get at the dynamic instrumentation is its ability to insert the instrumentation points into the live software and production and the instrumentation can be done at the kernel level as well as the user level. In the kernel, in the kernel, the instrumentation is provided in the form of cable functionality and in the user space with the, with the help of this upro functionality. And they can be used to instrument the starting or end of the kernel function or the user application functions. In the static instrumentation, the instrumentation points, they are already encoded in the software and maintained by the developers. And the static instrumentation can be done by making use of the trace points and in kernel and in user space application by using this user static and different trace points as such. And the static trace points in the kernel application kernel functions are the user space functions as such static instrumentation as they have been developed and put it in the software as they are, they are considered to be stable as such whereas in case of dynamic instrumentation the cable are unstable because it might change as probably kernel versions. So let's look at the kernel instrumentation with kprobs and trace points. So with the kprobs allows you to set the hooks in almost every kernel function as such with the minimum overhead as such and there are two ways to categories for this is one is a kprob, kprob, and another is a kprob as such. So kprob allows instrumenting the kernel function at the beginning or at some offset as such and that propping can be done by the VCC interface or BFF trace interface as such both the ways kprob as well as kuretum. As far as trace points are considered they are inserted in the kernel code and you can take a look at what are the trace points that are part of the compiled kernel by looking at this this is kernel tracing available events which gives you the number of events, the list of the events that are available on the system that has been compiled and booted up. On my system I have a 4 kernel version which has more than 1500 trace points defined. Okay, so what we are going to do is we are going to use some of the VCC tools to collect the information about the system. So this is like high level tools that are there they are basically written in Python, which embeds the BPF code, which goes and attaches to different places in the kernel so you're in this case first let's look at the open system called the tool that traces the open system calls which shows the process are attempting to open which files so you're in this case are the open system call has been traced by the BPF program. Similarly if you want to trace the new processes that are been created when the exact system call has been executed in that case exact smooth is the tool that can be used as such. And then we have another tool called a stat snoops which traces the stat system called stat system is basically provides the information about the files which are being accessed as such as like it will show you process which are attempted to read information about the files. So let's look at how what kind of information we get from this. Let's start with open snow. So we are trying to resolve the open system call interface and you're in this case what it does it prints it captures it captures the information, wherever the application tries to open the system or execute the open system called now you're in this case if you see the output here. The output has which process process ID then which is the process is trying to open the files and here is the name of the fight but complete part of the file so the IRQ balances the current current thread that does the work of balancing the IRQ work as such so in that case it goes and opens the data to interrupt handling as such. So you're in this case we see that the profile system has IRQ related. These are the numbers gives the interrupt number and in that case it goes and balances the interrupt, interrupt balancing it is doing as such. So from this we get to see that these are processes trying to open this files as such. So another tool that we will try to see is the exact. So when you say the the program is been attached to exact same system call aside and your view would see how all those process that calls. So to generate the load what you can do is will execute some. Another window and then you'll see that this has been captured by the BPF program as such so you're in this case it's printing the command is the PS command it is this is PID and these are the arguments that are being passed as such. LL is to LL is the alias for LS minus color with giving the option minus ALF this so that's what that's where we see this so this way using this different commands we can get to know what is the status of the system who is executing what what files they are been touching as such. So now that we wanted to look out in the stats. No pain. So stats no pain will tell you that which process is trying to read the particular file information about the file as such. So you're in this this PS command has generated the load the events that has the PS comma is going and opening the files, a lot of files here you see in the from directory as such as well as there are other housekeeping function that is going and opening the files. There's month file or home directory file as such so this gives you the status and the health of the system by running this various commands as such. Okay. So this is by simply making use of the BCBC tools as such to collect the information about the system. The way is like we can make use of the beer. This is to show you with the demo using the BPF trace functionality. So, the trace functionality basically is useful for writing one liners to get a great get the information from the system, it is like, you're in this example what you're going to do is perform the operation of tracing the files that are being open. Similar to the opens to pass such so basically that helps to look at the configuration files or log files as such and here with this interpretation what we're going to do is we are going to specify the K pro as the pro option that is the dynamic instrumentation and what you're going to instrument is the open system call this open loop says open and here in that case we just brought into what process and the argument one argument one of the open system call is the file length. So, what should we expect from this is let's do one thing is so here I just will just take the command from this file and execute it. So, you expect the open system call to show the output that is like here in this case we're attaching the BPF program to the open system call and you'll see that system is showing the process which are trying to open the different files to the system. And again here we see that IRQ balance is running in the background that is going and accessing opening the files in the proc IRQ directory as such. So this is with the help of the BPF interface. Similarly, we can make use of the year we have used the dynamic trace point here we can use the static trace point that is the trace point as such and in this example within it make use of the read system call enter and three point at the read system call and particularly going to read the read read for the SSD process as such. Okay. And this argument is the, the count gives you the number of bytes that has been read as such. So this will trace down all the read system call current corresponding to the SSH process, SSH process as such. Let me do something when we do some activity on the SSH session, you'll see that there is a reads happening and it tells the how many bytes of data has been read as such. Okay, so this way this is another way through the BPF crest to extract the information from the various system call enterprise. This system call is not the only way of putting out the hooks there are other places as well to do so. Let's look at another example of map as a map is the data structure that is used to store and summarize the data such that can be done. For this example what you're going to do is a count is called count by the process like the process that are running how money system calls they have made as such and that information is stored in the map as such that in represent by the special variable that is at the rate a policy map, and it stores and summarizes the data, and the count is the function of the map that counts the number of time it has been called as such. So what is been called is the system call that is a system calls at the entry point as such. And it is been saved by the calm that is the process name as such. Let's do that. If you let run this for a while and then when we do control C, it will, it shows the, it shows the processes that are that has executed the system calls and it shows the count how many system calls has been executed so far as such. So if you look at SLD has executed 18 system calls, there has been BBF crisis that has executed 71, as well as other crime has executed seven system calls as such. So this gives you the real idea like how what is the law that has been generated by the processes. Okay, so now let's look at some other examples for getting the information at the process, process level as such. So you're in this example, what we're going to do is count the process level events that are happening and to get that information at the process level, particularly we're going to use the schedule, schedule pro category. And that is basically collects the information or information about the process even such as for exact or context switching that is happening so that gives us in general information about what is happening at the background when there are multiple processes that are been running as such. What we will do is we'll just generate some load so that it can, and here in this case we're giving the interval of five seconds in five seconds, it will capture some of the events that are happening on to the systems. Okay, so here in this case it is came out from that BBF trace and printed out the information of the schedule, a scheduler events that has occurred, particularly to the fourth. Forking of the process context switching exact thing the process now you're in this window what we have done is we have executed the LS common. So that is one of the event that has triggered this. The fourth has been there, sorry, fourth is there then exact. So for when you see LS command it has to be it has to work across time process and execute the LS common assets so all that events has been captured by this BBF trace program where we are telling this schedule probe to capture all those events related to scheduler as such. Okay, so this helps us to get the information of what is happening currently in that time interval of five seconds. Now let's look at some of the examples for getting the information about the network traffic as such. In this case, first we'll look at the TCP connect tool that is a BCC tool that traces the TCP connection traffic and at the back end it uses the connection system call the BP program is connected to the connection system call so whenever the connect happens whenever there is a TCP tap and generated through the connect system call it will be trapped the capture this. So, what we're going to do is to see the connect. Okay, and in another window what we would do is just send a call request to Google.com. It generates the TCP connection load as such and here you can see that it has the source IP destination IP and the port on which it is the traffic has been going on as such. Okay, so this way we can get information of all the live connection that are happening and also useful for troubleshooting to say what connections are initiated by the local server. And at the back end it makes use of the kernel functions for tracing what is TCP before connect and TCP with six connect. Similarly, this function, the function tools can be used for debugging into the kernel functionality as such, suppose like here in this case what we'll do is we'll take an example of ICMP workload. And how this function what values have been part of when this ICMP what when this being utility a generating the ICMP traffic as such. Okay, so here in this case what we'll do is we'll use make use of this one count as the tool to count the basically does the function how many times it executes and also prints a function name as such happening as and then we will debug this functions in much greater details as such. Okay, so what we will do is possible. And then another way to generate the ICMP traffic. Let me do that. Let's do the thing to Google server with IP address and then just do just do the phone count for the functions corresponding to ICMP. So in this case like let me put this here you see that the functions that are getting fall when the ICMP traffic is generated as one is ICMP receive and analyze ICMP of these are the two functions that are explicitly been getting executed when the ping command has been ping tool has been executed as such. So let's we can do as we can debug some more into this functions as such using the trace command as such. So what we would do is use the trace command. The trace is another business you choose that close the function you specify and display trace messages. And here in this case you can use like printf kind of function argument parsing to print the values as such so here in this case what we'll do we'll look at this ICMP out function and what what parameters it takes as such. So you're in this case it is taking two parameters that is a network structure which represent the network device and the type type is basically used to is used for identifying the ICMP type as such packet type as such so you're in this case. It would be either echo or echo request or echo reply as such so we can figure out that by by passing the those parameter to the trace command so you're in this case what we will we'll just trying to print that type type the second parameter as such from the ICMP out. And then generate the traffic. I see what values you get so you're in this case you say that you it prints the PID number it also brings the timing information and then they come on that is it is coming from the thing this is function and it is passing it the value. That is it as we have seen here in this the echo in the out ICMP out is the function that sends the echo or request packet to the destination server as such. And so this way you can go and debug the values that are passed to the into the functions as such. Another way is like we can also pass the we can also look at into the greater into the other data structures as such like coming to this function like if you want to look into the. Into the more into this network data structure as such and then figure out some elements that are there now you're in this case one of the component of this network data structure the index as such. It tells the network interface as such so that we can be, we can pass those parameters and collect as such so let's see for this example I have over here. Okay so you're in this case you tell that we have be specify the header file path, where the definition of this function ICMP out count so here we give the complete declaration. And then we are printing the index that is the pointer into the next structure as such and the type as such and then again that generate the load and see what we get so you're in this case like stop here. What we are getting is the index that correspond to the network interface as such and then the type that is it is sending the echo request packet onto the destination server so this way that the tool can be used for debugging the current functionality whenever there is some panic or there is some issue or a crash has happened through using the different groups and the hope points as such. So this is to give an idea of networking interfaces can be pressed. So, another major area of the kernel is the memory management. So, a lot of times that we suspect that there is some, some application leaking the memory as such whenever a particular kind of workload is happening, and we want to get into understanding who is doing that. So in that case, we can make use of this memory leak tool becomes handy what it does is it traces and matches memory allocations and your location and collects the stack stack traces for the allocations as such. And it prints the summary that which call stack perform allocation has happened and which and those who have not yet read the memory as such. So that allocation memory leaking instrumentation can be done either at the process level, or at the whole system level as if it is done at the process level then the instrumentation will be done at the leapsie, tracing the memory allocation functions a law, a law, free law or free SI. If it is done at the system level then the instrumentation is done as came along or cash allocation or page allocation, APS as such. So let's do, let's try to run that to and see what does it gives what kind of information it gives. So if you, sorry, so here in this case it is printing it shows this there is the allocation done from the stack that is coming on as such. And this helps to get you the information which kind of applications are doing how much allocations and have not yet freed the memory as such. So this will potentially help to understand the memory leaks and resolve the issues as so with this we have demonstrated the use of different tools and be a trace tools to get the information and do debugging at the process level. At the memory networking and the file system layer as such. So this is how the BPR functionality can be used extensively for tracing the terminal functionality as such, and this just gives us the terminology that are being used extensively in the BPR, BPR terminology. And my session on the BPR using for corner tracing. Thank you.
|
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"url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zqt1hWpHMQU",
"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
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UCVzExvwnw-Cg7t-l2bRqP1Q
|
Whats In The Box? Trimcraft Design Team New Product
|
I everyone, here are the new Dovecraft, Secret Garden & Happy You collections.
You can find the 'Happy You' collection by following the link below.
http://tidd.ly/989eac76
You can find the 'Secret Garden' collection by following the link below.
http://tidd.ly/b15c4518
Shop my Amazon Storefront for the supplies I use below.
https://www.amazon.co.uk/shop/mixedupcraft
Shop at Craft Stash for the supplies I love and use.
https://www.craftstash.co.uk/brands/first-edition?awc=7803_1553115895_3d322f9c5432e7c4f211c758c8a24954&utm_source=Mixed+Up+Craft&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=affiliatewindow
You can find all of the supplies and measurements used in my blog post below.
Blog post for this tutorial.
Mixed Up Craft Blog
https://mixedupcraft.com/
Facebook
https://www.facebook.com/Mixeduppapercraft/?ref=bookmarks
Twitter
https://twitter.com/mixedupcraft
Instagram
https://www.instagram.com/mixedupcraft/
#newcollections #trimcraftdesignteam #ad
Disclaimer
Some of the product links used are affiliated, these do not cost you
extra but by using them I will receive a small % of the sales which then help me to continue bringing you great YouTube tutorials.
Thank you all for your support.
Sam
|
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"what's in the box?",
"trimcraft design team new product",
"new product",
"trimcraft",
"trimcraft design team",
"craft supplies",
"happy you",
"secret garden",
"dovecraft",
"dovecraft happy you",
"dovecraft secret garden",
"mixed up craft",
"paper craft",
"cardmaking",
"scrapbooking",
"gift bags",
"gift boxes"
] | 2019-05-21T20:15:00 | 2024-02-15T16:06:14 | 1,102 |
zQszN7aMoQw
|
Hi everybody it's Sam at Mixed Up Craft thank you for watching today so I have my latest design team package from Trimcraft, I've already had a little sneak peek and it's amazing so let's get into it. Okay so I'm going to start with these paper packs first so this is the Dovecraft premium collection and this is their new Happy You. It is rose gold enough said it's absolutely stunning I love this so much this is the 8x8 and here is the 12x12 okay I'll just do this smaller one because the designs are exactly the same on the 12x12 they would just be blown up you get this overview page here which is perfect for using as well so here we have see how well this oh yeah it does picks up perfectly look at that gorgeous marble effect absolutely stunning wow love this so you get three of each design then you've got this one here which is covered in glitter again it's got that rose rose gold throughout this gorgeous foiled effect this is really picking up lovely with the camera today look at this I think this might be my favorite one all those geometric shapes absolutely love it you've got the marble there and then these soft past kind of dusky pink color and then that rose gold and then you've got this one here and that one that's a beautiful background just that lovely marble effect you got this one here which is kind of like yeah it's like paint splats which again perfect for backgrounds and then you've got a geometric heart I've got a heart die actually which is very similar to that so that's going to work really nicely in fact it is like this it might even be a Dovecraft die from a while back now I will have to dig that out this one's really cool and you can fussy cut these especially on the larger I compare it in size there we go so those will be perfect for using as toppers so you've got dream smile choose happy dream big make it happen enjoy every moment yeah I think that's about it really nice then we have this one here you are loved and that's just repeated all over there and like a diamond shape and then you've got here be happy be bright be you that's really nice and then that lovely triangle one there as well so gorgeous paper pack it's going to be already yeah because there's some fussy cutting in there which is great I can already see some cards coming together quite quickly so 12 by 12 and the 8 by 8 okay and this is all the amazing accessories to match the paper packs I've just shared so this one here I believe is everything inside this one is the buttons and I think maybe and some bows maybe they're just waiting on these to arrive so let me just show you these first of all so I imagine you're going to have a pack with these bows really really pretty and they're really soft so they're going to sit perfectly on your cards I just show you them really nice and shiny and then these rose gold buttons so I imagine there's going to be a pack of each of them because that's pretty standard for the dovecraft collection you usually get your buttons and bows and things I think standing out for me straight away are these and they're going to work perfectly in my planner but also equally they're going to look great on cards as well so the smile and you've got that again that geometric heart so they're really nice then I also like where is it oh here we are the dies oh look there it is so I think I might have a slightly larger one for maybe a way back so I'll have a little look at that one but here you've got be happy be bright be you in that same shape there which matches obviously the paper pack lovely smile die cut there that look nice layered up just so you've got quite a deep sentiment and then those hearts there really nice like that a lot beautiful sequence here it's like a dull rose gold rather than shiny although they look like they're quite shiny there I think that's more the packaging but they are quite a dull matte finish which I really like so I'm looking forward to using those lovely washes here so you've got love and again that's just another let's have a little look just another geometric print really nice it's going to complement the cards nicely and I'll just show you that one in a bit more detail there we go you can see there it's all foiled so that's really nice then we've got the stamp and be happy be bright stamp as well so two little clear photopolymer stamps there which are nice I really like these these are like your Polaroid photo frame how nice they can look especially for scrapbook layouts really like them you can imagine having like three photos in fact I've already then I've decided I'm definitely going to be doing that that look really nice having them all framed and then have like these attached here already I just love it because it is so easy to work with then we've got these faceted glitter enamel dots but they are faceted so you can feel it it's probably hard to pick up in the picture but can you see all the little square faceted sides as I move that in the light so it almost looks like it looks like a diamond you know the way it catches when it moves really really pretty again all matching perfectly that's where guys this is just like Christmas the feeling you get when your presents are under the tree this is what it was like when the trim craft delivery comes so thank you guys you know how much I love and appreciate this these are heart charms and they are metal ones really nice yeah and they just attach and I like that they're attached separately I hate it when they attach it all on one thing so when you take one off you have to take them all off and I like to keep when I'm working through my design team stuff I like to keep it all together so this way I can but they're really nice look lovely hanging off of gift bags you know the drill they are just perfect for finishing off projects then we got some nice ribbons here so you've got again that same heart that runs throughout geometric foiled print there you can see hang on there we go you can see the foiling that it catches in the light there so that's really nice be happy be bright be you yep that continues the hearts and dream big so again really nice positive quite motivational words throughout this one so I think that's gonna yeah it's definitely going to get used a lot I really like it these here are your puffy stickers I loved the puffy stickers and use them loads with the nature's grace collection when that was out so I know that these are going to get used loads again that lovely heart that runs throughout enjoy every moment smile make it happen it's all those same exactly the same elements that you see in the paper packs but this time with the puffy stickers and they are lovely so I'll probably be purchasing extras of those because they will get used lots good old paper flowers you know I love my paper flowers so these again match nicely so you get 16 there these are your sentiment toppers so you've got here just two you've got the dream big but you've got one two three four five six really good really thick ones those so they're lovely and then these here you are loved and then these wonderful really nice really sparkly alphabet number alphabet and number sticker pack this is going to work perfectly you can see here for a scrapbook layout with these with these yeah it's all coming together the washi tape I can feel it already so that's definitely going to be top on my list and then obviously the buttons and the bows so that is all of the new happy you dovecraft premium collection and then this is the gorgeous dovecraft secret garden collection so this is the 8 by 8 and the 12 by 12 this one is in aid of mind charity so a minimum of 10 000 pound will be donated to the mind from sales of this collection so any part what I show you so if you did if you go into the range if you go to any of your online stores anything that you purchase from this collection will help go towards that minimum of 10 000 pounds that's really lovely and that was the same with the fairy tales collection that I shared in my last dt package so yeah really nice okay so I've opened this one up already and I'll just give you a flip through again you've got the overview of what you've got here and then if we go on in here because this I like that they're not sealed with like that gum that they have because it does sometimes buckle your card or your papers when you pull them from the pack and sometimes you can't get it off so I love that this has none it's just all free papers so you've got these three here which you've just got this really nice kind of sprig over the front with the gray background this beautiful one here and this is what I love about this collection is the color palette I like this purple with the green and then you've got the pops of that like purple blue it's really really nice soft colors so you've got this one it's got some script writing behind it there as well so you've got those three then you've got this one here just for you and with love perfect for it's got you know a masculine and feminine feel to it then you've got that one there so that's like that purpley blue background with the flowers running through really like the images on this one you've got herbs garden and then you've got your trowel and your fork and then the spade and the larger fork this is garden and stuff really really nice and then this one here has got all lavender over the front it also tells you the meaning of lavender the latin of lavender so yeah like that then you've got this nice kind of tartan checked print which looks good look at those love them and the bigger versions on here even those as well but for fussy cutting gonna be absolutely brilliant love them lots really really cute then you've got this nice rose print with that real nice lemon background here you've got your different herbs you've got bay mint sage thyme tarragon mint think I said that one already yeah again really nice and then this one I love these so easy to cut out and just finishes off the cards perfectly she's got garden flowers number two lavender herbs more flower more birds yeah really nice even in primrose and then the last one flips one over look at that and you're gonna love the little embellishments that match this this is probably my favorite I think for this pack I love that wellington boot with the flowers coming out of it I just love everything about that I think it's such a lovely image so yeah imagine the slightly larger versions of that in that 12 by 12 it's going to look gorgeous and you can see them there as well okay so I think trim craft you've excelled yourself with the embellishments to match the papers because these are just absolutely amazing so my favorite are the welly boots the little signs and where is it the birds oh my god so these are wooden toppers and just look at how cute that is let me just get my there we go and it's really thick you've got a little sticky dot there if you want to but it's gonna tie it up to you how you use this but it's gorgeous and the same the welly boot and they are wooden really thick such good quality and they look just like the picture as well sometimes when you see things made in different materials in terms of embellishments and stuff they kind of get a little bit distorted or color change but that is exactly the same so again look how lovely and these are all perfect for using on gift bags cards gift boxes scrapbook layouts just any kind of 3d decorative projects that you might be doing so you get six wooden toppers in each pack so even if you just buy the paper packs those are definitely something that I would say is to get as an add-on because you can't get those there's nothing similar out there to those those are one-of-a-kind and I just think they're gorgeous then you got the signs so these are eight sentiment toppers and I like that you get eight of them really really nice so you've got with love and that would hang beautifully and you know what that would have worked really well with and that's my the little crates that I've made I made that pop-up crate card imagine that hanging off the side you could turn it over and have something that you wanted you you know write something yourself on there as well so you've got with love you've got happy birthday so you've got yes it's just with love and happy birthday so you get four of each so those are just gorgeous absolutely amazing okay another favorite miss these these are 10 it says 10 wooden shapes but it's look if you paint these white you've got to pick it fence oh how amazing is that going to look around a gift box or something obviously or you know just along the bottom of a card there but again they're wooden you can just stress them like I said cover them you can heat emboss them oh my mind is absolutely going mad right now this is genuine excitement guys is there just so adorable okay then we have the wooden frames now you know this is the one thing I always struggle with in these collections I don't know what it is I promised myself last time and I did use them in some tutorials I used them on a scrapbook layout I think I used them on a card so I am slowly using them more and more but these are the wooden frames and again they are lovely they're perfect for framing you know like a little sticker you might fussy cut some of the paper you die cut some of these and you can frame them so they do work I just I don't know what it is with me I just never it's not something I just go and grab but there you go so you've got four of each color you've got the green like the lavender color and again that purpley blue okay just a bit overwhelmed with this one there's so much these are your paper blossoms so I've had these with some other of the collections but I like the leaf shapes that they've done here I'll try not to bring them all out like all over the place but you know they're just really nice you've got that minty color and then you've got that one there you've got different styles you've got that one and then you've got it in the darker so it's quite nice to have that variety and then you've got these small ones as well so there's the small and there's the other color and you get 30 so there's actually more in this than I think there's been in previous ones so I think there was only maybe 20 or 24 I think so and you get the big ones there so much to layer up and play around perfect add a nice embellishment in the middle okay then you've got the 15 flower pearls so they're nice like a die cut flower on some smooth like shiny cardstock and then you've got the large pearl in the middle so they're nice instant flowers for you then you've also got these paper flowers which you've got the diamondy in them really nice and then you've got the bunting and this is always good it works with so many card styles you get tons in there 60 mini bunting and twine so again perfect especially for this themed kind of collection then we've got these puffy stickers here okay so there you go you can just see it's a lot of the same images just shrunk down really nice love the the big fork there you've got your trowel and the smaller fork welcome to my garden isn't that lovely so these are your eight sentiment toppers and I'm just taking it out so you can see it better but you've got just for you happy birthday lots of love and then just for you again happy birthday so they repeat but just with different colored backgrounds so you get eight of those then you've got your five cotton ribbons so you've got kind of like the black flowers there at the top the birds happy days then some nice kind of foliage and then just for you at the bottom then some lovely charms here so these are eight metal bird charms really cute love them and then you've got your do the washi tape there so there's that one really nice subtle floral print and this one here a little look a whole lot of lovely oh I like that one I love that saying really nice okay and then we finish here with eight cutting dies and five clear stumps so again you've got the wellington boot there you've got a little plant pot with a sign some sprigs your spade sorry your trowel and your fork this one says I love my garden I really like that you got the bird and you got that lovely flower there so they're really nice and then this one you've got lovely days and then you've got garden in french and there you go you can see a bit better there so there's your lavender and the bird and you can depending on how you paint that you can really change the bird itself so you could make that into a robin you could make it into a blue tit you could make it into what else we've got we've got starlings and swallows and all kinds of things sparrows and probably same ones that it wouldn't be but you know what I mean you can change it up and then you've got that one there which looks like the poppy so yeah really like them okay so completely spoiled completely overwhelmed I'll put it away now that's what I tend to do is put it away and then go back to it because otherwise yeah my mind's all over the place but what amazing two new dovecraft collections so I would love to know what your favorite one is is it on the left the happy you or the secret garden on the right I am like this because I'm really drawn to all these beautiful accessories here the picket fence the wellington boot the bird but then I'm loving the rose gold over here so you can see really different projects will be made with this so that's why I love again receiving this design team package because it does allow you to really change up your style from you know one day to the next so I hope you've liked what I've shared with you today it's going to be a thumbs up if you did and subscribe to my channel so you get to see now what I'm going to make with all this lovely stuff thanks for watching bye
|
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"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
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UCwBK7Cdk0wq8rCjxcvaoHzg
|
ଦୁର୍ଗମ ଓଡିଶା
|
ଦୁର୍ଗମ ଓଡିଶା
ଦେଖନ୍ତୁ ଆଜି ସଂଧ୍ୟା ୬ ଟା'ରେ
#ArgusNews #DurgamaOdisha #ArgusReels #Shorts #OdishaNews
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[
"Argus News 24X7 Live Odia News",
"Live Odisha News",
"odisha news today",
"No.1 Odia News Channel",
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"odia news live",
"Live National News",
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] | 2023-11-23T11:41:04 | 2024-04-23T23:25:07 | 27 |
zQyfh_5JdlI
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नाही नाही रे जीबना बंचुचन ती भालो खरा वो गान्दिली वाद्ती. उदर गिल रे जीबना को गान्टी देलानी रास्पा. भून्पूरे दूई मास तलु आमल रहलानी कपा. से पते एजें खोलिल्यानी भान्टी. सास्थारी भीकिवाख को बाद्त्यो जासी. इस आबो ख़बर सो अने को गुर्टोपनो ख़बर दिखन तु आजी संज्या छोटा दूर्गो मोडिसाने.
|
{
"url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zQyfh_5JdlI",
"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
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UC_TneqvSfh-KsIyZMlJjVsQ
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Polis şöbədə həyat yoldaşını belə güllələyib - ANBAAN VİDEO
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#Kanal13 #VideonuBəyən #AbunəmizOl #Kanal13Televiziyasi
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© KANAL13 [ Azərbaycanın ilk peşəkar internet televiziyası ] The First Internet TV of Azerbaijan
|
[
"xeberler en son xeberler",
"xeberler 2020",
"son xeber",
"xeberler bugun",
"xəbərlər",
"son xəbər",
"xəbərlər 2020",
"aksiya",
"mitinq",
"kanal13",
"kanal13 xeber",
"yeni xeber",
"tecili xeberler",
"en son xeberler",
"bugun xeber",
"xeberler 2021",
"ən son xəbərlər",
"son xəbərlər",
"son xeberler",
"gunun son xeberleri",
"günün son xəbərləri",
"günün xəbərləri",
"günün xeberleri",
"etiraz aksiyası",
"bakıda aksiya",
"mitinq aksiya"
] | 2022-04-12T17:45:10 | 2024-02-14T18:43:56 | 165 |
zqJNInq_WXQ
|
Ötənil Sintiyaburun 30-u 24-ci polis bölməsində Khanın Mənmədova nın həyat yoldaşı polis serjantı İsmail Mənmədov tərəfindən cüllələndi anın görüntləri yayınlanır. Gəlidətçi, baki ağır cınayetlər mərkəməsinin hakim isə bu hüseyinovu sədirli ilə keşirlən prosesdə bugün polis məktaşı İsmail Mənmədova üç müxunub və o, 18 il müddətində azadlıqdan məhrum edilir.
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"url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zqJNInq_WXQ",
"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
}
|
UCJvZYspa9qxhoccHGQfYIFA
|
Condensation of LINE-1 is critical for retrotransposition | RTCL.TV
|
### Keywords ###
#condensates #LINE1 #retrotransposons #biophysics #evolution #phaseseparation #RTCLTV #shorts
### Article Attribution ###
Title: Condensation of LINE-1 is critical for retrotransposition
Authors: Srinjoy Sil, Sarah Keegan, Farida Ettefa, Lance T Denes, Jef D Boeke ,and Liam J Holt
Publisher: eLife Sciences Publications Ltd
DOI: 10.7554/eLife.82991
DOAJ URL: https://doaj.org/article/b800709cd680453f9e278e86691a284d
Source URL: https://elifesciences.org/articles/82991
### Image Attribution ###
Background images were sampled from the source article
### Channels ###
YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@medicinertcltv
Odysee Channel: https://odysee.com/@medicine_rtcl_tv
### Video Timestamps ###
0:00:00 - Summary
0:00:46 - Title
0:00:52 - End
|
[
"LINE1",
"RTCLTV",
"biophysics",
"condensates",
"evolution",
"phase separation",
"retrotransposons",
"shorts"
] | 2023-08-29T10:23:51 | 2024-04-23T16:58:09 | 53 |
zQ6O3dgaO98
|
The L1-retrotransposin is a major component of the human genome, accounting for approximately 17%. It contains two proteins, ORF1P and ORF2P, which are essential for its movement from one cell to another. ORF1P is a trimeric-RNA binding protein that forms a structure that allows it to interact with the RNA of the L1-retrotransposin. This interaction is important for the formation of an L1-INP condensate, which is necessary for the retrotransposition process. Mutations that disrupt this interaction result in a decrease in retrotransposition activity. Additionally, ORF1P's dynamic oligomerisation on the L1-INA is thought to be responsible for the formation of the L1-INP condensate. This article was authored by Shrinjoy Sill, Sarah Keegan, Farida Etifa, and others.
|
{
"url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zQ6O3dgaO98",
"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
}
|
UCO9Q5_D6tItyoilmDogexng
|
Surveying Safety
|
Surveying Safety - Iowa Department of Transportation 1999 - Video VH-600 - Highway Work Zone Safety. Federal Highway of Administration and the Iowa Department of Transportation. This program describes how to survey safely, describing the hazards surveyors face as they work in each phase of construction, from pre-con to post-con, both inside and outside of work zones, in all weather. Emphasis is on personal responsibility for safety and use of personal protective equipment appropriate for the weather conditions and situation. With footage of actual surveying operations, good safety practices, actual safety hazards and unsafe working conditions and procedures are illustrated.
|
[
"iowadot.gov",
"public.resource.org"
] | 2010-08-01T04:07:56 | 2024-02-05T06:37:03 | 1,056 |
zQudiWpkg4c
|
Well, you're right. This hardly looks like a highway work zone. But let me tell you, it's gonna be, and somebody has to start the job. Field engineers and surveyors begin the process of road building way before anybody even knows where the work zone will be. And right from the beginning, they have to be concerned about safety. If it's not the nasty little critters like mosquitoes and chiggers, sometimes there's bigger critters like snakes and skunks that at just as soon you didn't disturb their private little corner of the world. Just finding an existing reference marker can spoil your whole day. And probably the most dangerous critter out there is you. During the next few minutes, we're gonna be talking about surveying. Not how to survey, but how to survey safely. Like most safety concerns, both in and out of the work zone, surveying safety is a matter of attitude, your attitude, and the way your fellow crew members think about safety. You got to look out for one another. When your eyeballs are locked onto that instrument, they sure can't see the traffic. The surveyor's work zone can be just about anywhere. And while there will be beautiful summer days like this one, where it all seems like a stroll in the country, more often than not, you'll be out in the hot sun, or slogging through the snow in slush, or stomping in the mud. And on many of the locations, you'll need to be looking out for the traffic that's fast and up close, or the really big and nasty ones. The high up and treacherous, and the down deep and dangerous. But again, whenever you go out to survey, don't get caught just thinking about the numbers, or daydreaming, because sometimes the work can be repetitious. You've got to stay focused. Let's start with the basics. Your gear. Your personal protection gear. It goes without saying, when you're in and around the traffic, it's time for the high vis vests. Always. Don't forget them. And don't neglect your traffic control. There are times when surveyors have to go in harm's way, right out there on the center line, where your most important personal protection is your thinking cap. Surveyors spend most of their time outdoors. You've got to keep track of the weather, and dress for the environment. In summertime, that means loose clothing. Nothing wrong with short pants on a hot day, but sometimes the weeds and brush or that barb wire fence may change your mind. Hats and eye protection are good ideas, although it can be tough to focus your instrument through sunglasses and under the bill of your cap. Sturdy boots or shoes are a must. This is no place for your nikes. And don't neglect the fluids. And, of course, surveying frequently has to continue in winter. The secret to winter wear is layers. The temperature can drop, the wind come up, and your environment can change rapidly. Although the wind is blowing pretty good on this job, it's not too cold. These guys are just wearing their ball caps. But notice they've got those hooded sweatshirts just in case things change. And check out these. Hunter's Mittens. Helps prevent frostbite finger. The real danger out here is hypothermia, where your body's core temperature goes down. It can sneak up on you and you can become a little punchy and disoriented. Not a good situation when you need to stay sharp. Keep your eye on your buddies. Out here, teamwork is important. Heavy duty coveralls, leggings, and, of course, warm and waterproof foot gear is very important. Once your feet are cold, you're going to find it hard to concentrate on your work. Talk it over. Take a break for some hot coffee and a little warm-up in the truck. Earlier, we met this guy swinging the brush hook. A very effective tool when handled properly, but also a potential hazard to yourself and those around you. So let's take a look at some of the hand tools surveyors work with. This trusty little hatchet, for example, it can put a point on your stake and drive it as well. Two for the price of one. Probably gets used as a hammer more often than a chopper, but don't treat it casually. That blade is sharp and you got to think about where you're swinging it. Talk about driving stakes. Surveyors get to drive lots of stakes and sometimes a pretty heavy-duty sledge is required. Running a long series of markers can get pretty repetitious, but you got to keep in mind the potential hazard that sledge represents. Not only because your partner is close by, but think about the care and maintenance of your hand tools. A loose handle on this baby is an accident waiting to happen. This heavy-duty post pounder is the answer for putting in those re-rod markers or driving posts. This is a two-person operation and teamwork and good communication are most important. Surveyors use all kinds of hand tools. Everything from pickaxes and machetes to chainsaws. They all can be important to getting the job done and they all can be hazardous to your health. So treat them with the respect they demand. We said that the surveyor's work zone could be most anywhere. Well, let's visit some of those locations with an eye out for the kinds of hazards they present. We watched these two go up this embankment earlier. Footing on these slopes can be pretty nasty, especially when the grass is wet. Sometimes the marker you need is just across the barbed wire. Fence climbing is always tricky. Notice how he sets the pole by the marker, but they go to the next post for the climbing. And he's not just being a proper gentleman here. He's practicing good teamwork and giving his partner a steadying hand. Moving dirt along the haul road. And that means the surveyors need to be there checking locations and elevations. Whenever you're out in this situation, you gotta do what your mama told you. That's right. Look both ways before you cross the road. Visibility can be a real problem out here. Dust gets in your eyes and also clouds you from seeing those big and nasty scrapers. Your bright vest helps, but the rule of these haul roads is to stay out of their way. The drivers are up high, bouncing along, mostly concerned about where the next rig is. They can't see you down there. The noise can make it difficult to concentrate. The wind is blowing, and they're coming at you from both directions. If you don't much enjoy the haul road, the borrow pit can be even worse. Because here, there's no defined roadway. It just keeps changing. And to add to the comings and goings of these big scrapers, you'll often see other gear like this big dozer. It can be muddy, noisy, and confusing. So again, you got to keep looking. Some pits will be working big dumpers. They follow a little better defined route than the scrapers, but they're just as big. The drivers way up there above you, and he's frequently going a whole lot faster. You know you got to be out there to do your job, but keep your head screwed on and stay out of traffic. Obviously, there was some heavy equipment on this pipeline site, although they're not working today. Looks like it's been a little wet. The hazards of working around these deep cut ditches are legend in the utilities business. Cave-ins and mudslides are your nightmares here. Once the basic route has been marked out, survey party's not going to be back through here much. But even when this operation is done and finished, it's good to think about why those signs are posted. In the urban and suburban environment, surveyors frequently need to mark out a job that requires crossing the existing underground utilities. You need to be sure the area you're working is fully tagged and flagged for what's under there. You sure don't want to be driving markers down into somebody's communication cables, or worse yet, a power cable or gas line. Construction sites can be a real challenge, like locating piers and checking bridge decks. The bridge crew gets used to working out here, but you need to review your situation carefully and just take it slow. Frequently, that deck is loaded with stuff to trip you up, especially when you're moving without looking first. Seems like a pretty nice day out here today, but remember, the wind can get the whipping around when you're up high like this, and no day is a good day for a fall. Day in and day out. The most dangerous place to be doing surveying is out here on the center line. Let me remind you again how important your personal protection is out here and how you need to rely on each other. Talk to each other. Watch out for each other. And don't forget, the job isn't done when you take the last reading. The job is done when you get back off the center line. So have a good day, but more important, have a safe work. The instructional designers for this series insist that all demonstrations show positive examples, but just this once, we thought it might be valuable to see some really stupid mistakes. So let's go out with good old boys from close and nuff surveying. This is Marty Nuff, junior partner in the firm. He's a former rock musician who believes in on-the-job surveyor training. And believe me, he needs it. He's real proud of his new tool time belt. Says, there's nothing like a belt from the belt. And here's the principle of the firm, Lindy Close. Got his surveyor training in the Corps of Engineers and still likes to wear his military gear in the field. Doesn't hold with these new fangled digital instruments. Says his good old reliable meets the company's motto, Close enough for government work. On cool fall days, Marty likes to leave the Jeep running. A little warmer when you get back from the field, but a hot muffler in the dry grass is not a good situation. The secret to safe surveying is looking after one another and planning ahead. An extra-tall range pole and overhead power lines? No thanks. Meanwhile, back at the Jeep, you smell smoke? Earlier, we mentioned that it's advisable to be a little cautious when proceeding into terrain that may belong to the natives. And any damn fool knows how to cross a fence, right? Finally, across the fence, our dynamic duo heads off across the field. Good luck and stay safe.
|
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"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
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UCvTvoFwSjau_MwJqxGm5cmw
|
The Big Blur
|
How might be reinvent higher education, high schools, and the work force... all together?
This week the Future Trends Forum is delighted to host the authors of The Big Blur, a Jobs for the Future (JFF) effort to reimagine all of those domains in a cohesive way.
https://www.jff.org/resources/the-big-blur-an-argument-for-erasing-the-boundaries-between-high-school-college-and-careers-and-creating-one-new-system-that-works-for-everyone/
https://www.jff.org/
The Future Trends Forum is a weekly discussion event created and hosted by Bryan Alexander. Since 2016 we have addressed the most powerful forces of change in academia. Each week, this video chat brings together practitioners in the field to share their most recent work and experience in education and technology. The intent of the Forum: to advance the discussion around the pressing issues at the crossroads of education and technology.
http://forum.futureofeducation.us/
https://bryanalexander.org/
This event is powered by Shindig, the video chat event provider. On Shindig, audiences all can see one another and engage in private video chats sharing and discussing the content of the presentation. Event hosts may also bring selected audience members to the stage to ask questions or otherwise interact with guest speakers. Shindig; the dynamics of in person events, online.
|
[
"FTTE",
"higher education",
"post-secondary education",
"reform",
"high school",
"secondary education",
"labor market"
] | 2022-10-09T18:51:34 | 2024-02-05T06:38:56 | 3,356 |
zqplMd3al0w
|
Again, let me welcome everyone, welcome to the Future Trends Forum. I'm delighted to see you all here today. We have a couple of great guests for a really, really interesting proposal to talk about. We have, for the past nearly seven years, been exploring quite a few ways to reform higher education, everything from performing finances to pedagogy to hiring to curricula. What's interesting here today is two gentlemen have proposed a really new framework that manages to reform both higher education and high school and the job market at the same time. They call it the Big Blur, and this comes from an outfit called Jobs for the Future, which I think we'll hear about a little bit. So let me just take turns bringing up each of the authors right now. And let me start with Joel, who's very kindly joining us from a busy airport. We really appreciate him making the time. And let's see if he comes through. Hello, Joel Vargas. Hey, Brian. Thanks for having me here. Good to see you. Very, very good to see you. Joel, besides being trapped in an airport, let me ask, what are you going to be working on for the next year? What are the big projects and the big services or the big ideas for you? Well, you mentioned one of them. It's a big one of ours. And it's really Kyle, who you're going to bring up momentarily, I know. And I, along with the team at JFF, are really going to be focused on doing everything we can to see if we can blur the lines between what we know traditionally as a traditional high school, the transition into and through college and the relationship, the integration of those two things with career and work. We're proposing an idea called the big blur. It's inspired by a lot of innovative practitioners and policymakers out in the field, who I think have tried to blur the boundaries between those systems on their own in spite of the systems that they confront. And they're very constrained. But we think that if you take stock of them and maybe coalesce them, which is one of the things we'll be doing this year, we think there may be more than meets the eye. They may constitute actually a growing movement that we think could tip the systems eventually. And I don't know, I would just want to have people here imagine when we talk about the big blur, what the kind of radical change we're seeking and calling for. They would manifest it in some ways if the systems were built this way, these little programs wouldn't be needed anymore. So what we, Kyle and I propose along with co-authors is what if you imagined the systems to spend your disbelief about the current high school and college systems. What if we design learning environments that are really tailored to the needs of older adolescents, roughly 16 to 20 year olds. And let me say, why don't we create institutions, for example, that encompass grades 11 through 14. And given the economic demands that we have, if you want a good job, you need some kind of post-secondary credential now. So these, going through these institutions, you would graduate with a post-secondary credential that has labor market value. That would be the new high school diploma. That would be the default. And we know would have value because they would be co-designed with regional employers who would help educators make sure that what they were doing was aligned with the needs of industry. They would actually also require that every student would have some kind of internship or other work-based learning experience as a part of that education. And they would also prepare students, frankly, probably even better than our systems do now for further education. Should they want to do that? There would be no dead end here. It opens doors, not closes them is how we've envisioned it. Last thing I'll say is, if you can imagine that, then imagine the systems that would be needed, financing, accountability, governance, staff credentialing regimes, even the way we think of a teacher or a professor, like suspend that and sort of think, like, what would it take to be an instructor in such an environment focused on older adolescents? And those are the kinds of policy changes that we're going to be working with national advocacy organizations in key states to try to advance this vision. So I hope I've laid out an interesting provocation here for discussion, but I know Kyle may have some things to add here too. Well, he will. And so I love that you answered my question by saying that you're going to be working on this really intensely for the next year, it sounds like. We are. We have to probably, we have to show some progress here in the next year to ourselves to see if we can make some step changes. I think it's a key moment. I understand. Excellent. Excellent. Well, hang on a second. Let me bring up your colleague so he can join us as well. And we have Kyle. Hello. Hey, Brian. Good to see you, sir. Good to see you. You heard the question. What are you going to be working on for the next year? Are you going to be the same thing with Joel? Well, you know, we're kind of tight at the hip on this thing and we have a really awesome team at JFF that is really helping to support this. And so I could talk a little bit about some of the tactical work that's in front of us in the coming year. And it's really centered on building out some of these ideas as we think about what would it really look like to integrate work in learning at a fundamental level and establish systems so that they're really oriented to create a career navigation approach that supports not just lifelong learning, but what I would call life-wide learning by design. And just to be really sharp and clear on this, like we're not talking about another high school reform initiative. Like this is really trying to fundamentally dismantle and reimagine the way systems could really work at a truly in a truly different way. We haven't created a new type of educational institution in what 100 years, maybe more. So how are we going to get to some of these things that Joel's talking about? So one of the things that we're going to be starting to put in motion pretty soon, Brian, is starting to figure out how do we effectively network innovative leaders and practitioners who are undertaking some of these approaches, creating pilots, creating signaling systems about things that might work to really share and cultivate a base of knowledge and experience and who can collectively advocate for and support systems change along the lines that we articulate in the Big Blur. We'd like to be putting forward what we're calling the Big Blur Employer Summit. So how do we also discreetly convene employers in this space? Large Fortune 1500 companies, but also small and medium sized employers who are really interested in collaborating across their industries and sectors to reimagine what building a talent pipeline looks like. This can't just be, quote unquote, a talent grab. This can't be asking education to become a job training vision for our country. Like what is the collaboration of this really look like? Tactically, there's three things I can name. We're going to be trying to do this through some partnerships that we have on the ground right now. One of them is through an existing school-based model. Some people may have heard of PTEC. And so we're going to be working with a number of IBM-partnered PTEC schools to really help these school models reimagine how they're operating in the context of systems and how that might be able to leverage new conversations about systems level change and scale because of the work that they're doing. We're going to be working with in existing state systems, for example, in the state of Delaware. We're going to be helping them think through and implement a model that's embedding apprenticeship at a fundamental level in their vocational high school system so that all students are earning their first year of college credit before graduating high school in an earn and learn model. And we're also going to be doing this through a new national initiative that will be announced soon with a number of partner organizations to JFF. We're going to be convening five really innovative forward-thinking cross-sector teams to stand back a little bit from the problems in front of them today and lift their gaze and engage in some problem finding rather than problem solving and really work with them to redefine the nature of the problems we think we're trying to solve and then partner with them and have them partner with each other to define really innovative next generation solutions that we feel can start to tackle some of these large intractable structures and policies that have created really durable inequities over generations. And all of this for me adds up to a narrative change component. How do we compel current practitioners, folks on this call, but also my neighbors who are not engaged in this work actively in a real conversation about what is our public responsibility to young people, to our economies and our communities as we think about educational attainment and real readiness for launching a career in a high-quality job that has a career ladder and people can see themselves in relation to their future working self over a lifetime. Oh, wow, wow, wow. Well, thank you both. And here, I promised you I would show you some cool effects. So here's one cool effect right now. This is quite a vision. And I'm really glad to hear about your upcoming announcement of a partnership at a national level. Friends, I'm going to turn the mic over to all of you in just a minute. But I want to ask a couple of quick, quick, clarifying questions just to get the ball rolling even further. One is you've discovered, I think, very well the role of secondary education. But what are some of the ways that you would imagine colleges and universities changing to fit into the big blur? Yeah, I think they would, I think they would absolutely have to change as a part of this vision. Brian, if we suggested it's only secondary schools, we probably haven't done our job. And, you know, I say this, like getting out on a limb here, I think they would have to connect much more systematically to the labor market needs than they do now. And that's just one big change. And then I also think that they have to think of their the intake of their their talent pipelines, if you will, like starting much sooner. So reaching back and providing sort of integrated support with secondary school educators as well. But again, this change like sort of in blurvana, if you will, we're really talking about neither a high school nor a college, but a new kind of institution, an institutional form. Just as a way in some ways to provoke kind of like just different kinds of thinking from the archetype that we've had for so long of high school, then you have college, then you go to a career. This would all be much more integrated because we think, in part, one learns best when you're doing actually having some work experience as well and applying that learning. Anyway, so those are just a few answers. I don't know, Kyle has some other perspectives, usually does. I mean, it goes a little bit back to the provocation I put forward I think a cultural and societal level conversation around public responsibility is right now post-secondary education is very much a private good. And in our community, in our country, where most working adults do not have a post-secondary credential. Most high school kids actually don't attain one. And so when we talk about post-secondary, it becomes a very isolated conversation and a very narrow conversation about who we're talking about when we talk about the young adults or adults in those systems. And so I think we have a moment where we can engage in a very public discourse about how do we transition from a private good when we think about post-secondary credential into that being part of the public commitment that we have to supporting young people attaining the careers that will allow them to take care of themselves and their families and contribute in meaningful ways. And so I don't know if that speaks to your question about how does post-secondary need to transform, but I think that all of these isolated institutions and systems need to transform concurrently so that we don't just create better band-aids across them or stronger bridges but how do we really merge them in a way that feels seamless to a young person moving through them? Where they see that what they are doing is something that they're a part of and it's not something that is being done to them. Well, thank you. Thank you. That's a really good start to the question. I have more questions but people have already come out of the gate and there's an observation from chat and I may mispronounce this. Charles Finley says that there's the Hulu Institute at Northeastern which I don't know so he put a link to it in the chat and I'll put a link right there right now and I'll also tweet a link out and I'll CC your jobs for the future too. But Charles if you want to say a bit more about the connections you see there you just either type in the chat or type in the Q&A box or you can join us on stage we'd be delighted to hear from you. Is that a familiar institution for you gentlemen to respond to? No, I hope he says more because I would like to learn about it. Okay, I'll give him a chance. Now he's saying he's been regretting that I've asked him to do this stuff but we'll see what he says. We have a couple other questions and again the forum we have we're all about this kind of conversation. This is from John Hollenbeck and John says isn't the problem that they are three systems that they should be replaced by individualized learning opportunities focused on the professions that they're interested in. I'll put that back up on the screen because that's a deep question. John, I mean I could just say yes. I mean in some ways we're proposing I mean it's hard like even for us right we're trying to push the thinking of the field but then you get back to like I thought I saw someone chat in you know oh you're talking about great progression again you know and like yes I know you know we should actually have a more seamless learning system if we did it right and we had that kind of infrastructure you wouldn't need that kind of great you know hard great Carnegie unit you know whatever whatever the units right the silos those are things that just need to be busted but so I'll admit that there's you know sometimes a little talking out of the both sides of our mouths here because we're kind of constrained by what we know as well even as we're trying to just suggest something really different but I would just that's a long way of saying emphatically agreeing that we need to really merge those systems thank you thank you if you're new to a forum by the way that's that's an example of a text question so you can so you can of Charles Finley answers very very kindly says the Rue Institute Northeastern's Rue Institute is designed to spur innovation build talent drive economic growth in Portland the state of Maine and the Northeast partnerships with industry academia and government so Charles thank you that sounds very very interesting thank you yeah thank you and I would just love to encourage folks like when you when ideas are sparked you're like oh I've heard of the Rue Institute and you should take a look at that we we need this kind of input because we want to we want to be able to size and catalog the field of innovation and who is making strong momentum and even at local regional levels because I don't want to leave good learning on the table or or not harvest the right insights here you know but when I hear even what I just heard about that in the brief remark it's my question would be and I haven't looked at it yet is how do we help support efforts like that better reaching back and building a system that begins possibly as early as middle grade helping young people have this conversation with themselves about their career but create a system that is fluid enough to account for the fact that young people they develop at different rates and they change their minds I'm almost 15 I'm kind of a hot mess and I don't know what I want to be when I grow up you know let alone my 13 year old son right but so how do we design for that reality but all along the way make sure that the opportunities transition to things like expectations so that those opportunities don't get not taken advantage of or not put in front of particular students for whatever reason good point good point you have a fan by the way in the chat Lisa Durf says we have to grow up so you have a fan or a fellow tribe member and Don Lubach says he's almost 50 and he's a hot mess you know this is this is scared you know lots of lots of fans here when you were speaking Kyle I was thinking this might connect to the paradigm project and before I could finish that thought there's the paradigm projects director and founder put in a question so let me put that up for everyone to say this is the wonderful David Scoby he says I love the focus in education is something that empowers students instead of subjecting that a lot's locked at ed this seems intention with focusing on the immediate labor market I agree with that I think that some of the best work that we've seen historically in the pathways field and I don't remember if Joel mentioned this that some of these ideas and this provocation was born out of a bit of our collective impatience about the slowness of the reforms that we've seen and so people across the country and states regions have done really good strong work building these more coherent systems and not in traditional just trades but really reimagining a whole variety of career clusters into different professions and I lost sight of the question I'm so sorry can you oh no problem no problem that oh there there's a stuck to the intention of focusing on the immediate labor market there it is thanks David is I think that our experience to date has been partly about convening around what are the current unique needs but also pushing industry and employers to be thinking about and they are frankly thinking about the future needs of the workforce and that even includes trying to imagine what is around the corner and the types of jobs and careers that don't even exist yet so there's the immediate needs and pressure points that industries across the country are facing as a result of the pandemic the current economy skills and competencies but also I see this as a very future facing and fluid proposition so that how does a school or an institution or design like this allow for evolution over time and not become fixed and that is a little bit about my bias around focusing on the strategies and systems as opposed to the models or programs which can become really stuck in time as opposed to outline what is the vision and what might it take to allow that to become true and then allow that to change as needs emerge and look forward about the future labor market well there's a quick question that comes up from the chat from our awesome friend Vanessa Vale who just asks what if the jobs have disappeared by the time students graduate it's happened before all the time I mean it's happening all the time in this dynamic economy and you know I think I'm building on a point that Kyle was making I would put it in my own words however inarticulately but it's you know we have to prepare young people for that future definitely we're not talking about just preparing for a job right we're preparing preparing young people for lifelong learning including being able to learning on the job learning how to like you look you interview employers they want problem solvers they want critical thinkers and when people who can learn how to learn that meta cognition they don't always put it that way like they say oh we need soft skills I actually think there's an organization called America succeeds give them a shout out they then they've done a great job categorizing the durable skills that are needed that across the economy for for highly skilled work including you know if you really look at those I like the word durable because no matter what you know jobs disappear or get created you can see the value and the transferability of that learning and and and how it can set young people up for success in there in a career and a career is going to be looks it already looks so much different than it did you know 30 years ago I'm a rarity I've been a JFF for 20 years I mean that you you just don't see that anymore you know you see people changing jobs every couple of years as well so we do have to I think it's a terrific comment and we're not suggesting here to just preparing for a job but on the other hand I don't think our institutions do a great job preparing young people for at all for a career much especially one that's like sort of grounded in some kind of experience which is the best kind of learning in the in the chat by the way my my multitasking maven friend here Michael Crawford shares a link to the durable skills page on America succeeds so you can find that in the chat thank you Michael Michael who is also tweeting live tweeting at top speed so I'm I think he might not be a single person but a collective you know something like the Borg you know right on our side we have we have more questions coming in and I'm trying to arrange them so that they fit nicely our good friend and hardworking writer Tom Haynes asks simply how do we get away from a linear model of educational progress? By that Tom do you mean how do we move away from the current structures that seem to suggest that you just move lock step through going with a series of grades based on age levels is that sort of the spirit of your question? I'm just going to bring him up on stage I'm not even going to ask him I'm just going to pull up on stage right now cold call cold call that's right well it's always good with a with a very warm mind and a warm heart like Tom's hello Tom hey so I mean what I was trying to point out there is that you know we've we've we've had a lot of these models for a while now and it's in terms of you know early college and dual credit and things like that but they you know and I understand not attacking the system directly but one of the problems with the current system is this conveyor belt mentality when it comes to students and that you lot you know Kyle has also said in the in the chat you know we and and John as well talking about age segregation when it comes to learning and things like that it's really hard to generate learners who are critical thinkers who feel like they have agency in the world if they only have one linear path laid out in front of them now that linear path may lead to different careers but it's still a path you choose a path and then you go that way so these are all legacies of industrial education and in a lot of ways this doesn't make sense in a world where we have scattered digital information all over the place we're going to be pulling it stuff you don't have a career path right as you just said you have career experiences you jump around you do a lot of different things it's very unusual for people to be somewhere for 20 years or something like that so how do we break that mold? I know what you're doing is trying to erase some of the fissures in that mold but it's still accepting that general you start at grade nine and end up at grade 14 or whatever 11 or 14 or whatever arbitrary cutoff you want to make so that's what I was trying to ask I mean I love the spirit of the question and I don't claim to be an expert in in maybe the the most satisfying response here but here's what it gets me thinking about which is the balancing act of well I'm just going to be I'm just going to put it on the table like here's what's coming to my mind that the system is designed to move people forward in a very lockstep way and while it's also true is people quite literally move through their lives from where they are to where they are not and so for me the crux of this are one of the questions I have as we think about redesigning some of these systems or where we maybe missed the mark even in great models like early college and some of these career pathway things is do we have enough folks in those systems who are really thinking intentionally about how do we not just ask young people to have a series of experiences and ideally in the workplace ideally getting paid for that work as they get older but what are the structures and intentionality that we bring to helping them make meaning of those experiences so that they can start to activate different types of decision making and why I'm saying that as I feel like that is one of the ways that I think that we can break that linear lockstepness and that if you have an active mind sort of engaging in a conversation with themselves about what they are learning and what this says about what their best possible future might be in the ideal sense of that if they have the right adult supports around them and conditions they can be asking the types of questions that can then shepherd them in different directions because they're learning how to quite fundamentally be curious and I feel like it's an undervalued skill that is not one I believe that we can quite teach but through conditions over time I think we can nurture people's ability to be curious and to really value curiosity as one way to figure out how I move from where I am to where I am not. Right. Well my argument is that the structural system the structure of the system tends to undermine curiosity as a concept because if you are an independent thinker if you go far afield the system punishes you and you don't make progress and you may be accumulating a lot of useful artifacts and of learning and of you know I when in my class I very intentionally have my students create a tangible artifact of the semester that they get to keep and very few other you know very few others do that and there's nothing in the system that encourages that if anything there's things to discourage you but that's another conversation entirely but the point I'm trying to make here though is that if you go to explore the system punishes you you graduate late if you change majors you know doesn't this just extend that down into the high school environment even more so because none of my kids well one of my kids kind of knows what he wants to do with his life the other three not so much they're exploring but they're in a situation where they're you know they're burning money exploring which is a scary prospect right because they're all at college at this point and I fully expect and I want them to explore but at the same time the system doesn't reward that well Tom thank you and and thank you for for being a good sport about letting me be me up on stage by surprise I kind of expected almost no I know it's not quite you might back pocket there again friends if you're new to the form that's an example of video call and believe me I you can volunteer I won't just ambush you I just save that for Tom but and of course we have more text questions coming up also in the chat by the way people who have shared a few more links and so I've just reposted them a couple of times so if you want to find follow up with some of these a little further but we have more clarifying questions or questions of imagination where people are trying to see how this new institution this new model could work this is one from Betsy Kells who says how does the square with a physical infrastructure of schooling as in how many kids is it a place to meet their basic needs I would say kids by the way I would say that's not just 11 what is today left the 12th grade but also some college students as well Joel yeah I mean I think that I think it's I think it's all on the table I think it's a terrific question Betsy these can I don't know I mean one thing it makes me think of is there are some colleges I think Tom are the previous person who joined us on the stage mentioned early college schools now they're few and far between at the end of the day they're very successful some of them which got me into this work because I said that's a different kind of vision a lot of them are based on high schools that are based on college campuses and it's interesting like sort of that sort of proximity or if you know the word is not coming to me but the co-location alone alone it changed the way that young people identified themselves with higher education they just they saw people around them were just near Pierce right they're like I'm here I belong here they're getting some support from the high school granted but it just changed their outlook and then you add you know all the Carnegie units where I like part of it is to kind of harken back to an earlier part of the conversation as well I think part of what this demonstrates is you can you can move students through faster I know that's not totally the goal here but when you say you know in part what I point to that's powerful about that is okay fine we march them to the system more quickly right but that they really and but and but what it demonstrates the people sort of like why do we have it set up where you have to wait wait wait wait you know when young people can like accomplish much more sooner more quickly with the support systems they do need basic you know a lot of those successful schools have really good support systems if they don't they probably don't serve underserved populations very well anyway so you know I think of you if you kind of blow out those sort of examples and sort of say what's really going on here you can replicate it even if it's not an early college high school per se but you can begin the sort of play with permutations of physical plant you know basic need and support where that is provided so I think it's a terrific question and it is a line of questioning that we mean to open up with this big blur concept so thank you thank you Betsy for the really great question and and again I haven't said this enough Kyle Joel thank you for for answering these questions so so richly I know you both wanted a lot of feedback and I think you I think you're getting some of that we have more questions are just bubbling up and again friends if you want to join us on stage voluntarily just click the raise hand button and I'll be happy to bring you up we have one coming from John Pelman and we just get this up for you all this is concerning are you suggesting that this new paradigm should have to make the goal of education to place people in jobs John I think I want to angle that but but you get the idea yeah it's a goal to place people in jobs no I don't believe that that is what we're saying and I actually appreciate appreciate the clarifier on there and I think Joel focused on this a little bit ago is I think that there's a big difference between thinking about career preparation and career navigation as opposed to job training and job placement I think that that is the unfortunate and frankly tragic legacy of our vocational system in this country that it was a tract system I don't know the last time anybody played the game of life and my daughter got a Christmas a year or two ago and I sat down to play with her and the first question that that game asks you is do you want to have a career or do you want to go to college I was incredulous and she got so frustrated with me she's like dad can you just play the game and I was like no I refuse to play this game and so but I do think that there are some few who go through their education and they pursue higher education increasing levels of education in terms of like the curiosities right like how do we study the mysteries of the universe and I'm a fan of that as a novice but most people go to college to have a career in some shape or form even if it's not well formed a colleague of mine John Furr in Illinois he said one time he's like college is a very expensive career exploration activity and I feel like it really landed some of the complexity of this as if young people are arriving in a post-secondary space without having spent any time exploring things that they might be interested in doing on the other side of their their college experience a lot of and when I look at the student debt crisis right now and how many young people do not finish those credentials so I don't think it's about education the purpose of education becoming about working on behalf of employers to put people in jobs but people need work and I feel like how do we have an attention that serves the unique needs and accelerates and transforms inequitable outcomes at the individual level but as we also think about the health of communities and ultimately regional economies people live and work in economies so we need employment in those places and so I think that all of these things are really wrapped up into a singular conversation and I think that our educational systems and our workforce system can do much better at having a real conversation about how they can work better on behalf of people and how do we design those systems so they protect people and not protect themselves and in saying that I also I don't believe that this is a proposal around a silver bullet but I do think that there's silver buckshot here another colleague of mine Amy Lloyd used to say that right that like every idea is not necessarily a good one but usually when we think we have one singular approach that will work for everybody that's usually often not awesome either well I love the idea of silver buckshot I'm gonna have to steal that right away but that's a great answer thank you thank you and again John thank you for the great question which matters to you I guess professionally it matters a great deal to you working in a charter we have another question from our redoubtable friend Keele Dunsch and Keele asks this question about credentials the education system structural flaws are baked in by hiring that mandates degrees with prestige degrees given preference this has to be addressed for the big blurs reforms to be possible that's not a question it was a recommendation what do you think Keele I really I appreciate that point Brian that Keele raised you know as kind of adjacent to the big blur work we actually you know as Kyle sort of mentioned we're not pressing this as the the silver bullet right so but it is it is a pretty it feels like a vision that resonates with folks precisely because it conjures the sort of things that I've seen people write in the chat on the side out of the side of my eye here early college dual enrollment they have some sort of experience with this already I think credentialing is a new space like short-term credentials that there's a big appetite right now for I think employer we've done surveys about this by the way if you look at us at a report called degrees degrees at risk we did a report recently with American student assistance ASA they go by and we interviewed and surveyed Gen Z young people and employers and there is a huge as Kyle sort of alluded to there's a huge appetite by youth right now so they're questioning the college the traditional route to like okay I got to get a BA that's what my guidance counselor tells me it's what my teachers and my parents are telling me is that the only way I can get a good career like and also like look at all that debt burden and what's going to be the return on investment I don't even know what I want to be yet so like there are definitely questions on that side and sort of an appetite for different for alternatives and employers are also saying I don't yeah I believe I don't necessarily need BAs for this job so I'm willing to look at different programs and credentials now the issue is like it's interesting because they said that but on the flip side they also said employers said but like I don't understand enough about those programs to like to like choose graduates of those versus those with the BA those would be that's safer you know at the end of the day because I don't know much about these other ones and students kind of said the same thing they were sort of like well I know employers will you know basically pick someone with a BA over you know someone who's gotten done a short-term credential so I probably even though I'm very interested in alternatives I know ultimately the BAs probably got the currency so it's a real like it's it's really like how do you change the systems and mindsets around that and so anyway again another long answer to sort of say we're gonna have to kind of crack that code as part of the big blur and also how do you make the short-term credentials kind of stack to make sure that it doesn't lead to something that is for one job you know which has been a theme of our conversation here we want to make sure that we create permeable paths with no dead ends and people can keep learning keep moving up this is to me all about you know economic security and advancement ultimately for individuals well thank you and by the way thank you Kyle for tossing in the link to to the study the two who are working just just fantastically and thank you for the great question by the way this is there's a lot going on and we have one Brian can I just I just wanted to build on something Joel said and maybe there's another current of this is I do think and Joe Fuller who's at the business school at Harvard has done a lot of work and research on this around degree inflation and you know Joel was talking about like like the BA is still trusted as sort of the proxy but when you really unpack and unravel the BA it is used as a proxy for skills and competencies that are not necessarily true just because you have a four-year degree regardless of what institution it's from and so there's to Joel's point I think there's a real public conversation we have to have not to suggest that higher degrees are not valuable I think that they bring tremendous value to individuals to intellectual discourse to contributing deeper expertise in fields but when we overvalue it because it has an institutional name or a certain number of letters after it and use that as a proxy for someone being able to know or do something we're sort of belying the fact that competency is demonstrated and that it is often context-specific and that some of those skills are not necessarily transferable as we look across sectors or across types of roles and so how do we build in these systems that really do focus on that life-wide learning this of opportunities whether in education or work to help people learn in these informal informal spaces and respect that people bring experience and competency from other contexts including higher education but not exclusive to that You all are calling for a massive massive redesign I think you said the start and it's just great to see that you fleshed this out because it's not a you don't have a solution in a box you're calling for something much more extensive and much more visionary excellent excellent We have a question that came up earlier in the chat and I wanted to just hoist it from the chat because it's an important question and it ties into a few of the things that people have been hinting at This is from Patricia of Suarez and I hope I have our name right How does your plan tackle the societal inequities across race and class so that all students benefit from your new system of learning? Also how do you think your system will align with professional careers examples medicine and law? So the first part is about social inequities and then the second is about certain professional careers Kyle, which part do you want to take? These are big These are big ones They're the right question Yeah, yeah I'm happy Oh, go ahead Go ahead I was just going to start a little bit on the first one I don't believe that any singular solution can tackle the size and scope of the challenge we have with equity and access or outcomes when we think about opportunities for economic advancement or career success However, I do believe that the beginning value proposition of this paper begins with calling that into question that this is not a proposition that should be for a select few but it's partly in response to the other efforts that we have been making continue to be slow you know when we think about the changes in degree attainment for instance across racial and ethnic groups they have overall increased you know let's say over the last decade but the gaps between those racial groups attainment levels have remained durable over time and so there's something that we're not doing or there's something we're doing that's working very well to keep those gaps from narrowing or there's something we're not doing that is that is in the way of those you know you know getting getting thinner there and so I think that this is about if we establish a vision for really sharp understanding about what is it that young people need to know and be able to do to enter the workforce successfully with a job that has a career ladder and an understanding of what it will take to advance more deeply into the labor market and economic advancement and then use that as a way to to quite literally backwards map into the post secondary credential space in the high school space or in our conversation at this blurry space and have a real conversation about well what are the credentials we're offering are these the types of credentials that signal competency that people will need in today's or the future labor market and if we can get really clear on those skills and competencies and knowledge sets then we can have a conversation about how do we make sure that young people are being prepared beginning way back in elementary school to be successful at those opportunities because yeah if we don't you know how do we deal with the upstream challenges as much as we're addressing the downstream ones and so if we want young people to be successful taking early college courses to get the leg up on their first credential that means we have a promise to keep in relation to making sure that they are prepared to access college level content sooner and they are capable of that that has been proven through data but the question is is have our systems align themselves to really ensure that again that's not an opportunity for some but it's an expectation for all and if we set it as an expectation we have a commitment on our side as leaders to make sure that we are preparing young people to access that level of content and thinking and activity at an equitable level I mean I can't help but think of the history of tracking and the history of vocational education in the U.S. which is often towards people poorer socioeconomically and if you're inviting a public discussion the public can be the public outcome can be biased by race by class as well as by other fields I mean I guess is there is there a mechanism that you would like to see in order to keep things honest or is there a would you like to cast this in a specifically say Abraham Kendi anti-racist way or is this something which you think you know say federal regulations will be able to balance I've asked Patricia to to join us to say more if she can I don't know if she's still with us but but why don't you give that away yeah I mean I think we really have to be attuned to this it's it's a really terrific question and it keeps it's it does keep me up at night a bit like I don't think this is the end of I'll be all single solution you know that that we that's going to solve all the equity problems in fact if we don't do it well it could exacerbate inequities just like anything we we do right without like really paying attention to the preparation support needs I mean like let's let's be real right like also the way employer biases you know all of our implicit biases racial segregation I mean so I think in some ways even though as radicals this sounds let me just heart come back though which is what saying why we focused on this kind of grade 11 through 14 sphere at space is is in some ways if you reduce it down I mean I also it's a lot of the most successful programs and schools that we've seen really figure out how to bridge these systems right now such as they are the separate system we're calling for blending right but right now we have programs that bridge them and they do really well by black and Latino students and students from low income backgrounds because in part what they're doing is they are really addressing the cracks in those systems through which so many of those students fall like say we just look at the stats of students who graduate high school and then they even they get accepted to college how many don't show up is there like any little bureaucratic barrier question that comes up you know piece of a form or whatever it just throws them off because they don't it's like it's it's huge their families don't know how to deal with that and you know I think it's something like 20 like only 20% of low income you know it's like it's some astounding number who don't do the summer melt phenomenon don't show up and then forget about it like when they go in like can they make it through their first year you know and so many of the students who are underserved by our systems fall through the cracks then and then let's talk about the dismal completion numbers right so I think what we're suggesting here is we know from these programs and these bridging programs and in some respects what we did is to say let's extrapolate from that and one of the key themes was why don't we just eliminate the need for those transitions let's just make it seamless and that it's a bet in a way that we can you know we probably will create other cracks you know maybe I don't know but this one feels like an obvious one to fix and we know how to fix it well thank you that's a that's a great answer Patricia that's a great question if you want to add more please please feel free oh and and she does she appreciates your candor developing non-bias systems is incredibly challenging I think this is a topic for a future discussion I completely agree Patricia it's one that we'll keep returning to we have another question that's come in from our friend Michael Meeks down at in Louisiana and Michael asks many of my students simply do not commit the time and bandwidth to learn EG too long didn't read do you see technology solving this problem of knowing how much true effort goes into learning can you say more that's not a head it's a genuine curiosity but when the question around technology solving the problem just wouldn't be curious what you mean by that yeah Michael if your if your camera might already be happy to bring you on stage or if you just want to add some more either as a new question or as a chat we'd be delighted to hear more and well well Michael's working on that we only have five minutes left and I want to make sure that everybody gets their chance to put in a question in our comment the chat is really rich people are going full tilt and and that's good and I would love for anyone in the chat if you've got a point that you want to press on that we maybe have an address to not please let me know so I can I can bring that up you know Brian I can share I know I don't know if we have the expansion it's not something that we've tackled directly but I can share some thoughts that we've I know that Joel and I have certainly talked about and that JFF is thinking about in this space is I again I don't think that technology is a silver bullet here and I think that sometimes we're overly bias it as a solution to a set of complex problems whereas I think often we need a constellation of technological and human solutions to fix the intractable ones that we see in front of us but I do think that there are technological solutions that can grease the wheels of some of this blurring for instance as we think about the evolution or potential promise of digital wallets or blockchain technology to give people ownership back over their credentials and their skills and the validation of those rather than having to pay a bursar's office to get a copy of their transcripts or if they could be employer validated so this can start to break down some of those silos that are pretty rigid I think that serious games and the advent of AR and VR technologies again should school just be kids at home with their AR goggles on probably not but can we use those to enhance their experiences in the world around them as we think about living and working in the world can we use them to enhance experiences in the school or workplace or to explore careers that are really not accessible to them where they live as an education and training an enhancement tool and so I think that how do we put together the constellation of technologies that will allow us to do that and in another context where we've talked about with folks about innovation and technology a lot of times we get similar questions about like what's the most innovative technology that will be really transformative one of my pushes to be transparent is it might not be technology it might be collaboration when I think about the most innovative thing that the field can really do right now it would be to collaborate I think what we get a lot is coordination but to really collaborate and de-center oneself or one's organization and put the mission or vision in the center of a conversation is real hard work really hard work if I was going to speak ironically correctly and I think that that's sort of a really innovative thing that we can do right now that's those are great answers both the specific examples but also the question of rethink in this in terms of technology Michael did have a couple of examples he mentioned eye movement so tracking eye movement tracking pupil dilation and also AI for a couple of quick examples thanks Michael for following up on that so there are specific technologies and then they have be embedded in practices I would love to learn more about that yeah yeah that's definitely worth thinking too but we we have our last minute left and I would if we had time I was going to ask you too to riff on what a community would look like if it embraced your big blur and did that for say five or 10 years I think in many ways this past hour you've been helping us get at that process but a key thing is you don't have that that formula you want us to develop that formula or multiple formulas and you want to start that conversation going and I think you've done a great job of that let me ask a more practical daily question which is how can we keep up with the big blur and with you too what's the best way to track all these upcoming projects and announcements well our website is www.jff.org but also Kyle don't we have the big blur website as well is that big blur.com we have secure big blur.com I don't know if it's live yet but it will be soon so that would be one way and pretty shortly actually we you can access the paper online now and see related bodies of work that undergird some of this thinking and that are active right now in the field and whether this is broader networks of folks who are tackling different components of this across the education and workforce space and we will have a new page going up pretty soon if you follow along and we'll get that up on the social channels which will have additional publications that will be coming out over time a draft policy framework that we've been working on to help really shape a conversation about how far are we really from these conditions an additional collateral that'll sort of shape a little bit of a conversation about what is when employers talk about this what are they what are they bringing up and what are the questions that they're asking but ultimately would love to keep folks engaged in this conversation well I'm really really grateful for the two of you for kicking off this conversation and I'm really grateful for everyone on the forum today for pressing on this and developing it and thinking all together that's what we best do like you said earlier Kyle I think in many ways the key is collaboration so thank you thank you very much and we'll come back Brian thanks everyone well we look forward to seeing where this goes next thanks everyone but don't go yet friends we have to just point you to where things where things are going next if you want to keep talking about this Michael Crawford and I have been tweeting but other people can join in on this just go to the hashtag ftte or follow me or or Shindig events or if you want to talk about this on my blogs just head to bryanalexenter.org if you'd like to go back into the past and we've touched on some of these topics before including gamification and technology just go to tinyurl.com slash ftfrchive if you'd like to continue looking at other topics that we have we have a whole bunch coming up in the next month just go to forum thatfutureeducation.us and you can see more and if you want to share some of your great thoughts and projects with me just hit me up send me a note so I can share it with the world and in the meantime thank you all for talking with us together today I think it's just a great way of thinking through collaboratively the ideas that our authors have proposed in the big blur I hope all of your fall semesters are going well above all I hope you're all safe and we'll see you next time online take care bye bye
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"Buhari Has Failed The North" - Northern Elders | NEWS
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President Muhammadu Buhari's leadership style has come under critisism from Northern Nigerian elders.
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President Mohamed Ubuhari's leadership style has come under criticism from northern Nigerian elders. They gathered in the Adamawa State Capitol in Yola for the lecture series in remembrance of Nigeria's former representatives to the United Nations, Maitama Suli. More in this report. Northern elders are here in Yola for a lecture series with the theme, Reorientation of the North. Among the speakers is a former executive secretary of the National Health Insurance Scheme, Professor Yusuf Usman. He admitted visiting bandits in forests in six states alongside Islamic cleric Ishaik Ahmed Gumi. His reason is that banditry requires a social and not a military solution. Professor Usman took a swipe at President Mohamed Ubuhari for, according to him, having nothing to show for his seven years in office. Come from Kassina where the president comes from. Before this government came, we did not know what IDPs looked like. Now a third of my state, the president's state is under siege by bandits. Our capital city is filling up with IDPs. We never saw that. The president doesn't call to commiserate with us, doesn't speak about banditry, listen to him. Each time he talks about insecurity, he talks about Boko Haram. Banditry is more difficult and more lethal to this country than Boko Haram. And I'll tell you why. Boko Haram is located in one place, the Northeast. Bandits are all over this country. Ayanshe Gumi went and visited 60 deep into the forest and met all the war commanders exposing ourselves to risk. Because we knew it was Wajib, it is our responsibility and our duty. We're not going to wait for any government that comes and lies on propaganda and says, oh, they have been decimated. They have been this. We are going to take the war to them. Oh, kinetic, magnetic, magic, all that nonsense we found out was nothing but nonsense. Other Northern Elders also expressed worry over President Buhari's leadership style. We shouldn't pay attention to choosing leaders by ethnicity because we have done so. We have failed willfully. That was what we used in electing Buhari and we have seen the result today. The government has failed thoroughly and totally. Nobody can come from Abuja or Lagos or even Washington that will secure Northern societies if we don't go back to our traditional justice system where the elders are involved in justice, young people are involved in obedience and military and community policing. We all knew how our societies were. Two decades ago, we cannot degenerate. We are all out, we are all out to ensure that we revive the glory of Nigerian students particularly in northern Nigeria. Our students have been kidnapped rampantly. Our students have been taken away. Our schools have been closed on daily basis. Skyrocketed increase in tuition fees. Skyrocketed increase in accommodation fees. Everywhere in Nigeria, students are no longer victimization, political victimization, sexual harassment in our campuses. It's everywhere. Groups of criminals have taken over some parts of north-west Nigeria because in Mayhem, with their masked nappies, rustling, killings and illegal tax section. They are collectively referred to as bandits. Although some Nigerians are calling for them to be designated as terrorists.
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North Korea’s Lost Generation
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North Korea’s Lost Generation: The Health and Human Rights of North Korean Children from 1990–2018
Amid concerns about the North Korean nuclear threat and the dashed hopes for a breakthrough in U.S.-North Korea negotiations, the health and human rights of arguably the most vulnerable victims of the ongoing humanitarian crisis—North Korean children—have been overlooked. But a new report by the Committee for Human Rights in North Korea (HRNK) is shining a light on the lives of an entire generation of North Korean youth.
USIP and HRNK hosted a discussion of the report’s key takeaways and policy recommendations with the report’s author, W. Courtland Robinson, and other leading experts. By examining the past three decades through a public health and human rights lens, this event served as a call to the international community to stress the importance of human rights and humanitarian aid in North Korea today. Join the conversation with #NKLostGeneration.
For more information about this event, visit: https://www.usip.org/events/north-koreas-lost-generation
Speakers
W. Courtland Robinson, presenter
Associate Professor, Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health
Roberta Cohen
Co-Chair Emeritus, The Committee for Human Rights in North Korea
Daniel Jasper
Public Education and Advocacy Coordinator for Asia, American Friends Service Committee
@DJasper_
Greg Scarlatoiu
Executive Director, The Committee for Human Rights in North Korea
Frank Aum, moderator
Senior Expert, North Korea, U.S. Institute of Peace
@frankaum1
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] | 2020-01-31T17:08:17 | 2024-02-05T06:40:52 | 5,220 |
zqTbbSg3re4
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Let's go ahead and get started. So please take a seat. My name is Frank Aum. I run the North Korea program here at the US Institute of Peace. I'd like to welcome everyone. For those of you who are not familiar with USIP, we are a national independent institute that is funded by Congress. And we're focused on preventing, mitigating, and resolving conflict. It's great to have you guys here today. I'm very excited about today's event, especially because it puts a spotlight on an issue that often gets lost amid the discussion about the hard security issues like denuclearization. And this issue is the welfare of the North Korean people who are the real victims of the last 30 years of political stalemate. I'm also very excited because when I was a grad student in the early 2000s, and this is right after the famine in North Korea of the mid to late 1990s, I was really interested in finding out more and trying to find empirical evidence about the humanitarian impact of the crisis. And I came across an article in The Lancet Medical Journal that was written by a team led by Cortland Robinson, our main speaker today. And I'm very heartened that he has now published a more comprehensive report, a comprehensive not only in the scope of issues that are addressed that covers the human rights and the health and humanitarian concerns of North Korean children over the last 30 years, but again, comprehensive in the scope of time over the last 20, 25 years and also incorporating different studies that have been available in that time. So the way this will work is I will introduce Greg Skarladyu, who is the executive director of the Committee on Human Rights in North Korea. And then I'll let him talk a little bit more about HRNK. And then I'll let Greg introduce Cortland. And then Cortland will speak for about 20 minutes or so. And then we have a panel of three experts. Each of them will speak for 10 minutes, but I'll introduce them after Cortland speaks. So Greg is the executive director for the Committee on Human Rights in North Korea. He's also an expert who has spoken on a variety of issues related to the Korean Peninsula. And he's also taught on these issues as well. So let me turn it over to Greg right now. Well, Frank, my dear friend, thank you very much for the introduction. We very highly appreciate you hosting us here today. I don't know why we haven't done this before. Hopefully it's one event of many moving ahead. Delighted to be here. I'm also delighted to know that, of course, Dr. Robinson is here, the author of one of our latest reports, Last Generation, a true landmark report in the history of our organization, the Committee for Human Rights in North Korea. We're established in 2001 as America's only think tank slash NGO focused exclusively on researching, investigating and reporting on the North Korean human rights situation. Roberta Cohen, one of the panelists today is our co-chair emeritus, Helen Louise Hunter. Very good to see you, Helen Louise, until very recently as a board member. The HRNK still continues to be very involved and very supportive of the activities of our organization. This past season, this past fall season was extraordinarily busy at HRNK. Of course, Last Generation was one of three reports we published. Last Generation was the result of about court, I guess four or five years of very intensive research. You had your team travel to the region and I don't mean to steal your thunder, but again, this was an extraordinary effort and the results, expectations were very high but the results do exceed expectations. I have to say, of course, we published two other reports, one on the Organization and Guidance Department of North Korea. North Korea's most powerful government agency. This also happened in the fall of last year and also report on North Korea's information counteroffensive. So we're basically focused on vulnerable groups, women, children, this is what the report is about. North Korean regime dynamics and its impact on North Korea's policy of human rights denial and of course, North Korea's unlawful detention facilities. This is the first organization ever to use satellite imagery to investigate North Korea's political prison camps and other detention facilities. I'm absolutely delighted to turn the floor over to Dr. Cortland Robinson, a highly respected expert in the field of public health, a great Korea scholar as well, has spent so many years in Korea, grew up in Korea as a matter of fact. It's been an extraordinary privilege to work with Dr. Robinson and we are very grateful to have this second opportunity to feature his landmark report. Cort, I'm gonna turn the floor over to you, thank you. Should I take the podium? Whenever you, just so I can see this screen here. Maybe I'll sit if that's okay and manage two things at once, a clicker and a microphone. So we'll see how this goes. First of all, thank you to all of you for turning out. If there's anything that I hope this report does, it's simply to keep North Korea in our focus for both health and human rights humanitarian reasons. Second, of course, thank you to USIP for hosting this event, I'm very pleased to be here and hope that this continues the dialogue here and also finally and most importantly, my gratitude to HRNK for supporting this work and the research that we have been conducting under this aegis, but also to have the opportunity to publish a report that really is a compendium of work that we've been engaging in along the China-North Korea border and elsewhere for, this is dating me, two decades now. So I want to thank my authors, the names here, I won't read them all, but many colleagues who worked with me both in China, in South Korea and also with the analysis of the Korean language transcripts and interviews qualitative and reviewing a vast amount of literature both published in English and Korean. So it did involve a structured literature view, I won't get into the technicalities of that that's in the report in appendix at the end, but we did look as comprehensively and systematically as we could at the published literature on over the last, really, I think since 75. But mainly, of course, the publications on the crisis, the humanitarian crisis are post-90s or 80s, late 80s and 90s into the 2000s. We also did in-depth and key informant interviews, again, I won't get into the technical aspects, sample size and the rest, but we tried to talk with people who were both formerly North Korean children for ethical reasons. We chose not to interview North Koreans who were children at the time. We've done those interviews in the past, but in this case, people who were born in North Korea and had been children at some time during this generation, 1992, 2018, actually some of the interviews, I should say, were children born in China to North Korean mothers and Chinese fathers, and then others who had worked either in North Korea or in China or in South Korea providing support for North Korean children and get their insights as well. And then we re-analyzed and summarized work that we'd been doing on the border and in South Korea over a couple of decades, and some of this work has been published before, Frank mentioned the Lancet article, but some of this data is being published for the first time and I won't get into all the reasons, but our donors varied across the humanitarian landscape, NGOs, international entities, and there are sensitive issues here on going dynamics as those institutions engage with DPRK and with China and in an effort to protect their work, I chose not to acknowledge them publicly, although it's not to say I'm not grateful for the work and support and the necessary cooperation that we had with many colleagues and many people inside China as well, who of course must be, remain nameless. So our focus is on health and human rights over a period of a generation. The data are both qualitative and quantitative. We hope they're as comprehensive as we could provide. There may be gaps or maybe reports and data that we did not see. Obviously, please let me know. Research is an iterative process, but we want to emphasize that we have, I think, a strong database. It's by no means complete. There are many questions to be asked about how reliable are some of these data and I'll give it to some of the issues of bias, but I also want to point out that as a demographer, we think of generations as people born within a given timeframe or we may think about this as a kind of longitudinal process. Somebody born in 1955, like myself, I'm giving my age and we track that population over time and how do they fare. This is not that, this is not a longitudinal study. This is a cross-sectional study looking at anyone who was a child during this critical period. They might have been a child for one year. They might have been a child over the full duration. They might have been born and then died immediately because of nutritional deficits, infectious disease, and so forth. So we're talking about a lost generation as that kind of construct of populations. Two biases. And bias here doesn't necessarily mean somebody putting their thumb on the scale and manipulating. It simply means incomplete. And in some cases questionable. So data on North Korea is subject to control from within who can get data on populations who allows that data to be provided who may be reviewing the data and constraining full inclusion of populations or full analysis of the data we have. So we have to treat data coming from inside North Korea, whether from UN sources or others, as subject to scrutiny and caution. And leave it at that maybe to be picked up on later. Second, when we have data of people who've left, that's not a random sample. It simply isn't. People who leave are different from people who stay behind. They may be different because they're healthier. They can survive the rigors of the journey. They may be closer to the China border. Many of our sample were heavily weighted toward Hamgyong Pukdo, Northern Hamgyong. So there's biases, selection factors. And there's also a factor that may say, given the risk of the journey, you're not as likely to leave if things are sort of moderately okay. You may be capturing a population of people who are at greater risk of abuse or have experienced worse health outcomes and are fleeing more human rights outcomes and are fleeing to escape. So for those reasons, interviewing people in China, interviewing people in South Korea, give us certainly a, we hope, a representative view of people who leave and their experiences. But it's complicated, and I would say we would use caution to extrapolate and say we've interviewed these hundreds of people or thousands of people in China. That's what the profile is of North Koreans inside their country. So these two biases, which unfortunately don't cancel each other out. So I just wanted to make that point. We're not illegal scholars. This is not a legal analysis. We have certainly shared our findings with all entities as appropriate, sometimes through HRNK, but prior to this work in other contexts with UN bodies and others who were engaged in human rights inquiries. But this is not a specific indictment vis-a-vis individual cases of violation. So please don't treat this as a legal analysis, but that said, we do believe the findings from our own work and the research we've analyzed do support the basic findings of the commission on inquiry that North Korea has been engaged systematically in crimes against humanity and the children have suffered egregiously and certainly as vulnerable populations quite specifically. And that this ongoing lack of access to adequate care remains also a violation. And this goes to the progressive realization of rights and core obligation of human rights to adequate standards of living and the right to health. I don't think this group needs a map, but here it is. I don't know if I have a pointer, but our research was mainly up in the Yanban area, went out beyond that after some years and looks somewhat disproportionately people closer to the China-North Korea border. That's who's leaving. If you look at people who are in South Korea, about 30,000 plus a broader distribution, but again, not a representative sample of the North Korean population, I'll leave it there. And if we reference specific provinces, hopefully you'll just either remember the map or you know this stuff already. I don't know if you can see all of this from a distance, but this is our data showing a high mortality and spiking around 97, 98, the peak, we would say of the famine mortality. The peak of the famine by all accounts was the worst years that North Koreans were suffering during the famine years during the really acute phase of what's called the sometimes the arduous march, the Konani Hengun. Also a clear signature and consistent with many other famine data, declining fertility. Now why does fertility decline? Women become an ovulatory, a menorrheic and people choose not to have children. Why would you bring a child into the world when they will face high risk of death due to starvation or rise in infectious disease? And then we have the other curve of out migration. It's a trailing indicator, it's not the first thing people do in a famine. The first thing you do is hunker down, try to survive, eat what you have, borrow from neighbors. But then if things remain dire, you start to move about. And this is where we began to see people moving in larger numbers toward the China, North Korea border and across. So the peak of arrivals we'll get into this later was probably around 98, not 95, 96. And it's also subject to varying kinds of modulations in North Korean security at the border, Chinese security at the border and so forth. And here's some UN data that shows much the same thing. Infant mortality, neonatal mortality, child mortality, and we'll get into the technical interpretations of those data, but we see again around 98 was the peak of the elevated mortality that rose from a sort of, if you will, baseline of around 1990 and then began to decline and come down. But several people have asked me specifically and the general question is how reliable are these declines? We can see fairly evidently there was significant mortality increase during the peak of the famine and just after. But how about through 2000s and 2010, 2015, now 2020, are these declines real? The short answer is I don't know. Are these explainable and plausible under certain models and assumptions or interpretations? Yes, and others? No, not so much. So key findings is that mortality went up. I won't get into all of the numbers. Demographers and others like to sort of engage vigorously in debate about is it 600,000, is it a million, is it 300,000 over how many years and who was at risk and which particular age group suffered more acute increases in mortality? Suffice it to say that this was a devastating blow to the North Korean population. And you can see one of the interpretations would have meant equivalently, even in lower estimates, 7 million US population dying in the same interval if those rates applied to this country. Here are some other rates of childhood malnutrition and stunting wasting. And again, I won't get into the details because I want to leave time for a discussion. And it's in the report, but we can see higher levels of malnutrition and acute wasting beginning to decline. Stunting, which is more longer term developmental metrics declining less acutely, but they are going down. But they are going down. So one might say the good news is that these rates are going down, we're seeing improved health of children over time. I would argue whether we believe these implicitly or only in part or maybe don't really accept them at all, even if we accepted them in whole, the cost, the generational impact of 1990 to 2018 is present, it's evident and it's measured in higher mortality, higher morbidity, i.e. infectious disease, chronic conditions, and in many of some of the unmeasurable dimensions of lack of access to quality education, quality healthcare, quality of life in terms of adequate food, nutrition, shelter, and the like. So that's a lost generation, even if we took these numbers at face value. But what if they're higher than this? That's our open question. So nutrition and health, again, the data from our research and also borne out by a number of studies and they're all subject to critique over a period of time, again show elevated levels of wasting and stunting and malnourishment among children. And interesting, and here I think I would point out, bullet point two, some of the data, even from UN sources, show higher and rising disparities. So if you look at Pyongyang health, it's gonna be very different and maybe increasingly different from Yangtze, which is on the border more remote, more rural, more subject to loss of industrial industry, heavy industry in that area of the country. So disparities matter. Don't look just at national level data, whether you're looking at North Korea or any place, China, US, South Korea, what have you, look at the disparities and I think the data are pointing toward rising disparities. So if you might say, and some do, there's good news, GDP is rising, trade is rising, income levels are rising. The question then is for whom? For everybody across the board, that's not true anywhere in the world and it's certainly not true in North Korea and the data tend to bear that out. We also looked at vulnerable populations, children in orphanages or institutional care, children who are unaccompanied separated, children in prisons and so forth. I won't get into all that data, but here's just a few points that prior to 1980, institutional care was limited, but it began to rise in the 90s and institutionalization of children, particularly infamously, the so-called Gochebi population, the flower sparrows moving about transient, streetless, street children, homeless children, began to show up more and more in some of our data as being detained in nine to seven camps and so forth. So the rise in institutionalization of children and generally anyone dealing with child protection, institutionalization is the wrong way to go. Keep children with families is the new mantra that has not been happening in North Korea, according to our data and some other sources. This is a quote of one child in an orphanage and again I think time prevents me from reading it, but these are some very striking stories and personal reflections of what they survived and the fact that often they were placed in orphanages and their health got worse. They were subject to starvation diet, they were forced to work on work details and they of course were prevented in some cases or unable to reconnect with any family members they might have, these were not all orphanages so don't misunderstand the term orphanage as including people only children who had lost both parents. Many had relatives but were detained for various reasons, probably more due to security, population control and then child labor, lots of our data showed clear evidence over this period of time of forced child labor, whether that's work details that they engaged in as a function of their school activities, go out at lunch and work on heavy construction on the roads or filling in for their parents or other family members when it was required that somebody from the family engage in a neighborhood work unit, the child was often the only available person and so was forced to engage in this labor which again violates a number of human rights findings treaties and obligations. Unaccompanied separated children, this is a quote that talks not only about being unaccompanied but being at risk as a girl where in some cases was even forced to engage in transactional sex by other children, boys was sort of pimped out if you will and was trying to hang on and stay and forced to engage in some of these activities because she was herself responsible for a younger brother. So these stories are really quite heartbreaking and frequent and we had many conversations with children of these kinds of experiences at the China North Korea border and others insides in South Korea. Refugees and migrants which is really sort of my wheelhouse that's what I do for a living have done for many decades and our studies began in the winter of 1998. We got to Yen Ben and we were able to maintain various kinds of research projects from 98 to basically about 2013 and we'll show you some of those data over time tracking human rights problems like deportation, mistreatment of children and others women, trafficking, forced marriage, sexual abuse and so forth and also what the numbers were, politics of numbers, how many people died is one question, how many North Koreans were there or are there now in China? We have tried to bring empirical research methodologies to this question and again I won't present all of those data. Here are some data that we showed. We had a sentinel surveillance tracking monthly movements of people asking some of our colleagues in the Korean Chinese community, I won't name them, of course I cannot, 10 sites and asking them each month how many people arrive from North Korea, how many people leave, left either voluntarily to other places that you're aware of, how many people were arrested and deported and you can see these trend lines over time from 98 all the way to in this case to 2008. We had to stop this sentinel surveillance round about the time the Olympics happened and everything was sort of swept clean. To Chinese call it yenda campaign, a strike hard campaign struck us and we essentially had to abandon our monitoring. Here now we have arrest rates, people who were reported by community informants and I hear you used the word informant in a social science way, these were not spies and spooks and anybody other than community folks who had reason to know about these kinds of movements and what was happening in the way of arrest and deportations and you can see these spikes very well calibrated to the first instance when North Koreans entered, I think it was the Spanish embassy in Beijing and suddenly the police were out in force at the border. I was actually in China at that very time, we got a call saying get to ground, get to cover, tell all your friends and colleagues, stop any activities with North Koreans and there was a huge campaign to crack down, arrest and deport and it spiked again in 2008 around the time that there was clean up around the Olympics. How am I doing on time? I think we're almost at 20 minutes, I just- Okay, so let me try to wrap this up. So I won't get into the data on our population measures, let me go to recommendations. I will again say the data are here that show some of the costs of older abilities of children separated from their mothers and fathers in China, born in China to North Korean mothers and fathers. Here's some data on South Koreans in, excuse me, North Koreans in South Korea. You can see the trend lines, key point, arrivals are way down since Kim Jong-un came to power and likely to remain so and the profile of male female is, really has been since about 2004 or so increasingly female and we can get into the wise and clear force of that. So I'll simply say North Korea needs to both act to ensure adequate access to care and a transparent monitoring of the same, commit to rebuilding the primary health system which was once quite strongly effective in the 60s and 70s, grant access to the High Commissioner for Refugees and other rapporteurs on human rights. I am not making these recommendations because I think they're immediately plausible. I am making them because I think they're necessary and we stand behind them. China as well, grant access to UNHCR and others to monitor conditions of vulnerable populations in China and end the practice of deportation of North Koreans back to their country and provide temporary residence which may lead to permanent residence and enfranchisement in the Chinese polity. And then finally for the US, support humanitarian assistance with accountability, resettle refugees. We've resettled five North Koreans here since 2016. Surely we can do better than that and review its commitments in terms of humanitarian aid and protection of vulnerable populations both outside the country, North Korea and inside. And finally, for all of us really, promote, engage and accountability to these basic protection measures that are well-codified in international UN law and treaty law. We have the metrics, we have the framework I should say, we don't have good metrics and we need to stay engaged and promote further access and appropriate durable solutions, not only for those who are leaving but for the population who are being behind. So I'll stop there and thank you again. Sorry if I went over time. Again, thank you so much and I apologize for cutting short a very, something that we could spend many days and weeks talking about. Fortunately, there are copies of the report in the back, so please pick up a copy and I'll give you an opportunity to read more on your own time. So I'll introduce the panelists. We've already introduced Greg, but we have Roberta Cohen and please correct me if any of this information is outdated but Greg already mentioned that you're a co-chair emeritus of the Board of Directors of ATRONK, a former deputy to the Secretary of State for Human Rights, expert on humanitarian human rights issues related to internally displaced people and also on emergency aspects, emergency situations. And then we have Dan Jasper who's a public education and advocacy coordinator for Asia for the American Friends Services Committee. His work focuses on humanitarian peace building and people-to-people aspects of U.S.-North Korea relations. So each of you have about 10 minutes to speak and we will start with Roberta. No, just talking to it. Thank you, Frank and thank you to USIP for hosting. I was very eager to read the report of Court Robinson because I'd come across his scholarship in the past and I was impressed by his meticulous research, his objectivity and his integrity in reporting on humanitarian issues. In the year 2000, UNHCR and the Brookings Institution with which I was then affiliated held a conference in Bangkok on forced displacement in Asia. And UN and NGO representatives from all the affected Asian countries came to the conference except for North Korea. The aid workers there said that the subject displacement was too sensitive, urged me to take North Korea off the agenda and added that there were no internally displaced persons in North Korea. Clearly, the compromises required for providing aid were getting in the way of uncovering the situation on the ground. I contacted Court Robinson because he often went to the border and he said there were displaced people in North Korea because of the famine and he agreed to speak and to publish his findings in a UNHCR journal. Although he too had a way as decision, he came down on the side of bringing information forward so that the plight of North Korea's people could be known. Today's report, Lost Generation, again finds Robinson performing a service for the North Korean people by documenting in as much as he and his team can the health and human rights situation of North Korea's children over the past 30 years. His point of departure is the great famine of the mid-90s and as he has himself summarized, the report shows that too many children needlessly died of starvation or disease and that the physical and the psychological impact on those who survived was long lasting. Medical problems for the rest of their lives, countless numbers orphaned or homeless or severely traumatized. Now as for the causes, Robinson does not endorse the North Korean government explanation which I actually heard at the World Food Program in Rome in 2000. The explanation that weather was the sole cause of the famine. While the report does not deny the role of weather, it points to North Korean government policies and practices as contributing heavily to the deaths of hundreds of thousands. For the first time last year, the UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights in the DPRK called on North Korea to provide reparation for the survivors of the famine. No international tribunal to date has prosecuted any leader around the world for famine but international lawyers are looking how to link established international crimes to famine. Should any action be taken in the future on North Korea, the information in the Robinson report will provide a good foundation. The report goes on to describe the protracted humanitarian crisis in North Korea since the famine which continues to this day to affect the physical and intellectual development of North Korea's children. Significant numbers of youth are among the 43.4% of the population that the UN estimates to be malnourished in North Korea. As court noted, the percentage of stunting has reportedly gone down to one in five children. But he candidly adds in the report that stunting has gone down in Pyongyang, the favorite capital, not in all vulnerable areas of the country. Children in substantial numbers suffer limited access to healthcare, medicines, and clean water, especially in rural areas. And they're subjected, as he was telling you, to compulsory labor at state farms and construction projects affecting their health. And if a child comes from a politically undesirable family, the discriminatory Sangbun classification system erodes chances for a good education, housing, employment, and other services. Let me note that one of the finders and authors of the Sangbun system is in the audience, Helen Louise Hunter, and anyone interested in Sangbun might want to talk with her after the meeting. Who are the most vulnerable children? Court was identifying orphans, child laborers, child victims of trafficking, children in detention, unaccompanied and separated children, including street children, and to these groups he adds child migrants and refugees born to North Korean women in China who are in a precarious situation. Now most of these vulnerable categories are not acknowledged by the North Korean government, except for orphans and sometimes disabled children. As a result, UN humanitarian agencies in their programs appear to have to follow the government's lead in overlooking many of the especially vulnerable children. The UN's annual Needs and Priorities document on North Korea and the UNICEF North Korea government survey do not refer to the vulnerable children identified in the Robinson report. And I doubt that the UN Population Fund census with the government will list them either. Yet UN General Assembly resolutions each year specifically list the most vulnerable children in North Korea. In the resolution, they talk of returned or repatriated children, street children, children whose parents are detained, children in detention, children in institutions, children in conflict with the law and so forth. To what extent do aid agencies try to collect information about these categories of children and inquire of the government about their well-being? Aid agencies have long feared that raising the plight, especially of vulnerable children, could antagonize the North Korean authorities, possibly lead to their expulsion and undermine aid to other children at risk. But the agencies should be aware that North Korea for the first time last year accepted in a UN human rights process called the Universal Periodic Review, North Korea accepted the recommendation and I'm going to quote it that it, quote, grant immediate free and unimpeded access to international humanitarian organizations to provide assistance to the most vulnerable groups, including prisoners. This could certainly be an entry point for requesting access to especially vulnerable children, including child prisoners. Agencies no doubt want to avoid looking back later and regretting what they didn't do. In 1989, the International Committee of the Red Cross looked into why it had provided so little help to those in German death camps during the Second World War. And it found that at the time, the staff and officials were afraid that any advocacy might jeopardize their assistance to other groups like prisoners of war. They now call it the worst defeat in their history. I believe that humanitarian agencies today in North Korea have the responsibility to find out as much as they can about the plight of children and also adults in acutely vulnerable situations as outlined in the Robinson Report and strategize about what, if anything, they can do to help them. Humanitarian and human rights groups should be working together, at least privately, to get the most vulnerable children on the agenda. The UN's Right's Up Front approach, this was introduced by Secretary General Ban Ki-moon in 2014, calls for human rights and humanitarian collaboration in situations where serious violations are involved. Finally, a word about the report's recommendation that the international community address the impact of sanctions and resume large-scale humanitarian aid to North Korea. I agree with that. But I also agree with the report's recommendation that the North Korean government has certain responsibilities. One, to ensure the proper monitoring of aid to reduce diversion. Second, to ensure nondiscriminatory access to aid. Three, to give aid workers free movement so that they can collect data independently and communicate with beneficiaries and experts privately. Four, to increase their own investment in healthcare and agriculture to make aid sustainable. And five, to prioritize the most vulnerable children and adults who constitute the most acute cases of hunger and disease in the country. These issues need to be brought to the fore and negotiated with North Korea. Addressing them would make for a much more credible and more readily supportable aid process as the report emphasizes engagement should not come at the expense of upholding humanitarian and human rights standards. Thank you, Roberta. Let's turn to Dan, who has a lot of experience working with the North Korean government on some of these sensitive issues. So we'll have a unique perspective from Dan. Yeah, thank you for inviting me. And I actually appreciate that you had this conversation on a Friday. It's very heavy material. Best we didn't do it on a Monday. I really appreciated the report. And really quickly before I jump into my comments, I just want to say a quick word about what we do in North Korea. The American Friends Service Committee actually has for what we work with for cooperative farms in the country to improve conservation agricultural techniques. So we've had that partnership now for almost 40 years. We've worked in the country since 1980, and we were actually the first U.S. organization to enter the country. Originally, we were doing people-to-people exchanges. And in the mid-90s, when the famine began to hit hard, we have reports from our staff members that actually they were surprised a little bit by the partners who suddenly said, you know, we want to show you some things and we would appreciate your support as we try to alleviate the situation. So that juncture actually changed the nature of our program from one of people-to-people exchanges to one of addressing food security in the country. This is something that we've understood to be wrapped up in the larger conflict on the peninsula and something that we could address immediately and help build bridges between Koreans and Americans. We're not a humanitarian organization. We're, well, we do humanitarian work, but by and large, we're a peace-building organization. Our practice is based off of Quaker Values. It's actually a Quaker organization. And Roberta mentioned the ICRC's work with or regret over Germany's, or the incidents in Germany. We had a very different approach in that moment, and actually it's one that we're very proud of. We engaged in Eastern Europe with a number of camp administrators, and we were able to secure the release of 40,000 Jews in Eastern Europe. So we have a different approach, and I wholeheartedly agree with Roberta Cohen that our communities have a lot to be in conversation about and a lot to learn from each other, and I think that we can really sort of improve upon our work by having these types of conversations. So I really appreciate that. I know that we're kind of short on time, but I wanted to make four points and sort of circle them around, one, the context in which we view this data. Two, talk a little bit about the data and how it's regarded today and how that sort of creates a picture of the current context. Three is about the recommendations, and then four I'll just have a quick word about the humanitarian work in the DPRK. The first, excuse me. So the first comment is about the context in which we view this. The report did a really good job, I thought of sort of spreading out the context and trying to take a historical look at the different factors that we're playing out in the country. My encouragement to all of us is to expand our context just a little bit further than the Korean War. Often I think Americans start in 1953 in understanding North Korea, but in some respects I think that makes sense because the border solidified and things started to stabilize a little bit, but more often than not, I think we really need to understand this country as far back as Japanese colonialization. I don't want to go into a huge historical lesson, but I think that's really incredibly important because North Korea understands human rights within the context of independence and sovereignty. I feel, and our organization feels very strongly that we can make improvements so long as we have conversations that are less about imposing standards and more about working with to improve standards. That might seem like a subtle distinction, but it's a very important one, especially for the North Koreans. Actually last time I was in Pyongyang, I meandered into a bookshop and I found this series called Understanding Korea, and one of the books is actually Human Rights. So I thought that was really interesting, obviously I had to buy that book. And the first, you know, they're broken into sections, numbered sections, and the first section I think is probably worth reading. It's very short. It's kind of complicated, but I think it's worth reading. It says, number one, the DPRK's view on human rights. The DPRK views the human rights as the rights of the man to independence, that the masses of the people are the genuine personification of human rights, and that human rights are precisely the rights of a nation. That's kind of complicated. I won't go into deconstructing that, but I think there's three main concepts we can pull from that. It's one, the relationships between the state, the person, and groups of individual, and they see the expression of human rights being as the collective. That might be very different from how we view it, but it's important as we engage in conversations with North Korea that we understand that as the context in which they view it. I think that's very helpful in moving these conversations along. I would also note that the ongoing war is something that AFSC is very concerned with and views as being integral to the human rights situation. The division of the Korean Peninsula, in our view, I think is almost, would be akin to dividing an ecosystem in half. It's almost like the Civil War in the U.S. where the South was traditionally agrarian, the North was traditionally industrious. Today, dividing the peninsula in North Korea does not actually have enough arable land to feed its people, so there are some physical constraints that we face. Again, I don't say any of this in defense of anything, but it's just important context that we keep in mind as we go forward. And I would say that, you know, there's many elements within the report that note a sort of war-like mentality, and that is the first thing that I think I understood going to the DPRK was that this country is under siege. They really do view themselves at war. The report discussed some of the many assignments for children who were required to get scrap metal and things like that. They're also mobilized to work on farms and things like that. That, to me, is very reminiscent of a war culture, of a war economy, right? They're mobilizing all the labor they can. And so that's incredibly important as we think through some of these recommendations and how do we go about improving the situation? We do need to take... We do need to consider the ongoing war as part of this. And just in interest of time, I'll move along. I want to quickly just note that the data... The data was incredibly interesting, and I was very impressed by all of this collection. In fact, I had no idea it was going on. It's probably by design, I think. But it was very good to see. And I think what I saw was that there are two sort of... We're entering a post-famon era, and I think that, you know, Cortland noted that we're not quite sure if that is reflective of the true situation in the country. I would say anecdotally, just from our experience, that does seem to sort of jive with what we see in the country. There does seem to be an improvement from about 2008 to 2010. We see indicators start to reach the pre-famon levels. And I think that by and large, I would guess that most of the humanitarian community would agree with me when I say that there were a lot of improvements in certain indicators up until about 2017. I don't really have the data after 2017 to make any bold claims about it, but I would be very surprised if the increase in sanctions did not have an impact on some of these indicators. There's been all sorts of disruptions, and I will leave that for the Q&A, but I'm happy to go into the types of challenges we've faced as humanitarian actors since the new round of sanctions starting in 2017. Quickly, I just want to note on the recommendations part, I think your recommendations were very well thought out. There's a couple of things that I just wanted to note. One is for the UN, I think the UN is perhaps one of the most underutilized resources, I think, in this conflict, and certainly we lean on them for the human rights concerns, and Roberta spoke a little bit about the humanitarian issues, but I think by and large, we do need to see them as a bridge. I think that the recommendation for the special repertor on DPRK I think is actually really spot on, and I would say that it may not be as far out of a thought as maybe we view it as currently, but the context in the climate does need to be of one where I think things need to stabilize in terms of U.S. DPRK relationship before that becomes more viable. For the U.S., I really appreciate you noting the sanctions and the letter to Trump, having been the chief author of that, it was very appreciative of the shout out there, and I think it's, again, it's really spot on, and the idea that the U.S. needs to rejoin the UN Human Rights Council is, of course, very important. I presume that the reason we're recommending that is so that the U.S. can raise these issues at the Human Rights Council. I don't think it was spelled out, but it was sort of assumed, and I think that's right, and I think that with regards to the recommendations to uphold standards on child rights, we need to apply that as well to the United States. I think we're facing a lot of issues at the border. I would be extremely surprised if the North Koreans were not aware of what was happening at the U.S.-Mexican border and weren't willing to use that in terms of negotiations and sort of to dismiss the U.S.'s engagement on this. So it is something that we need to be aware of and apply within our own country. For the international community, I was very pleased to see the mention of the Global Fund and the tuberculosis crisis. This was something that had a lot of people very worried. I think right now, in the context of the coronavirus, we're seeing what global security issues are presented by these types of health issues. Tuberculosis has a very high rate within the country. I think it has the fifth highest rate in the world. Last time I looked at the data, they have a drug-resistant form of the disease as well. When they're not treated, when that drug pipeline is disrupted, we're incubating that within the country, and it's going to pop around to South Korea, China. That stuff doesn't respect national boundaries. I was very pleased to see that in there as well. Lastly, I'll just quickly mention that the humanitarian issues, I hope that we can see these as bridges. I think it was noted within the report as well that these conversations are perfect ways in which we can have these conversations. The FSC, we've had many conversations about reaching the most vulnerable. How do we do that? We actually choose the most vulnerable farms that we work with, so we go far outside of Pyongyang. We don't just work with the top producing farms. We don't work with model farms. We work with those in need. We do present opportunities, I think, to have other conversations as well, to reach more vulnerable conversations, but it does require, I think, an international commitment to seeing that these bridges aren't impacted by things like sanctions and the ongoing war. I know I went on for a little bit along there, but I think I can leave it there. Thank you, Dan, for your perspective, and hopefully we can pick up on some of the threads of conversations that you raised, and then let's finish up with Greg. Well, thank you very much, and Dan, thank you for mentioning the Human Rights Council. Of course, you'll remember the UN Commission of Inquiry report of February 2014, a report that found that the North Korean regime commits crimes against humanity, against its own people. The report further recommended that the DPRK case be submitted to the attention of the International Criminal Court. Yes, there is a state of war on the Korean Peninsula, and that state of war is the direct result of the June 25th, 1950 invasion of South Korea by Kim Il-sung with the support of Joseph Stalin. I agree, Dan, regrettably there is still an armistice in place, no peace treaty. I was born and raised in communist Romania. I lived there for 19 years. For those of you who don't know it, I'm deeply grateful to Roberta Cohen, one of the many wonderful things she has done. Well, this was happening during the Cold War, Soviet dissidents including Andrei Sakharov and read to them passages from the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and other human rights documents that the Soviet Union had ratified by its people had no access to his documents. We didn't. Similarly, North Korea is bound by the UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights as a UN member state, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, the Women's Convention, the Children's Convention, the Convention on the Rights of People with Disabilities and yet North Korea, the North Korean regime, hides behind this notion of collective rights and complies with none of its international obligations. It complies with none of the obligations it assumes under its own constitution, which its own people cannot really see. Human rights, freedom of speech, religious freedom, these are all human rights actually included on paper in the very constitution of the DPRK. My first job after the fall of communism in Romania and over 1,000 young people died bringing down that regime, I hope that if they knew that I'm here today with Dan, with Cort, with Roberta, Frank and all of you, we know that be happy and they'd say that their sacrifice was well worth it because we're still trying to address this very difficult case of North Korea. Back in the day, my first job was to drive around the country with a team of the British Red Cross. We had had it really bad in the provincial town where I had grown up, Buzo Romania, capital of European culture and civilization. I'm joking. We got to travel to the countryside and see, under privileged communities, Roma's, the humanitarian conditions and the human insecurity was absolutely mind-boggling, catastrophic and we thought we had had it bad. It was unbelievable, even to a person who had lived inside the country. So I can only imagine how terrible it must be in North Korea for those vulnerable groups that no one remembers. And as Roberta said, our organization, the Committee for Human Rights in North Korea, has been very keen on urging a human rights upfront approach to North Korea. Let me address very quickly a fundamental attribution error. We are not against humanitarian assistance, just because of a human rights organization. If you look at court's report, the report urges that funding be made available to humanitarian operations provided that adequate transparency, monitoring, evaluation are insured. This is also one of the ten commandments of our organization, the ten recommendations submitted to the U.S. government. Yes, yes and yes. We are in favor of responsible, fully monitored, evaluated, transparent humanitarian assistance that reaches those who need it most, the most vulnerable groups in North Korea. Of course, we have addressed people in detention for many years. Since 2001, we have mapped out North Korea's detention facilities, including unlawful detention facilities. You have this map up on the screen. This is a masterpiece by none other than our one and only Rosa Park, who's here today, my deputy, director of public affairs, editor. So this is a map of detention facilities in North Korea, included in the recent book by Professor Lee Cheong-min on Kim Jong-un and the soon-to-be-published book by Dr. Cheong Park, Korea Chair at the Brookings Institution. No, they're not giving me commissions to advertise their books. You will see dots on the map. Look at the northernmost dot in the upper northeastern corner of North Korea. That is the Cheong-gori re-education through labor camp. We had been interviewing North Korean escapees who told us that a lot of women forcibly repatriated from China had been imprisoned there. Now, as you all know, that is a flagrant violation of the 1951 convention UN Convention concerning the status of refugees because their return to a place where they face a credible fear of persecution, they should be allowed access to the process granting them political refugee status. That doesn't happen. They end up not only in political prison camps, but also in Kyu-ha Seoul re-education through labor camps. So the witnesses told us that 80% of the 1,000 women, 800 of them imprisoned there were actually forcibly returned North Korean women, forcibly returned from China. And they told us that so many of them had been imprisoned that a new annex had been built. We were able to verify this through satellite imagery. Then come Typhoon Lion Rock in August 2016. Roberta Colesby says, well, couldn't we acquire some satellite imagery and see what's going on in North Korea? Bill Bermudez, our senior consultant, acquires satellite imagery. The only place we could see was Kyu-ha Seoul number 12, Cheong-gorye. We had cloud cover all over North Korea. So we knew that the UN was conducting a rapid assessment in the area. We established that this facility was also flooded. So we wrote to the UN right away. We ran a rapid assessment and told them, you're running this rapid assessment, how about going just next door where 800 women political prisoners forcibly repatriated by China are imprisoned. The UN was very quick to respond. The deputy secretary general at the time in Eliason rode to us right away on the ground. They did nothing. Thus, the efforts continue. I could go through the list. We have worked with satellite imagery and open source information. We have documented the proximity of UN and privately funded humanitarian operations to 25 detention facilities in North Korea. Please bear with me for just a few seconds. If you look just north of Pyongyang, you look at the South Pyongyang province, Kyu-ha Seoul number one. There were operations in the immediate proximity of this facility run by WFP, UNICEF, UNFPA, IFRC, NGOs, Korean Sharing Movement, GAP International, World Vision, Sandcare, Korea Peace Sharing Foundation, Child Fund Korea, Food for the Hungry, and the list goes on and on and on for 25 facilities. So we are firmly in favor of humanitarian assistance. We must be supportive of these wonderful humanitarian efforts in North Korea, and the only way to proceed moving ahead is to factor in vulnerable groups, the human rights factor, people in detention, women, children, escapees who go across the border. So I'm going to say this just one more time. We are firmly in support of these humanitarian initiatives. Of course, we're always worried about diversion to the regime loyalists and to the military. But if you're talking, for example, about a multi-drug resistant tuberculosis program that Steve Linton and other wonderful people are running in North Korea, what diversion can happen in that case? Who can be against that type of program? So, again, talking about people-to-people exchanges, there is a lot of work to do. And moving ahead, I do look forward to closer cooperation between human rights and humanitarian organizations. We have to get beyond this fundamental attribution error that human rights organizations are just keen on regime change and are against humanitarian assistance. That is not the case. And the HRNK report by Dr. Court Robinson and HRNK's own 10 fundamental recommendations to the U.S. government are a testament to that. By the way, please allow me to engage in a shameless act of self-promotion. Please do visit HRNK.org. Please do friend us on social media and follow us. It will be a great way to keep an eye on our publications, activities, and everything else we're doing. Again, a great pleasure being with all panelists here today. Thank you. Thank you, Greg, especially for highlighting the serious human rights issues and the issue of the prison camps that I don't think was addressed as much in the report. So we have about 20 minutes left or so, and I want to make sure that we get to audience questions. So I have lots of questions, but I'll just limit it to one, and I think anyone can answer. Dr. Robinson, you raised a great point about focusing on the plausibility or the practicality of some of these recommendations in the report. And so one of the recommendations is about getting greater transparency and access on things like human rights and humanitarian concerns from North Korea and China, and then stopping deportations of North Koreans back to North Korea from China. I guess my question is, we've been asking for these things for at least 20 years, and we always come up against the hurdle because for China, for North Korea, it's not in their interest, at least from their perspective, from their perception to engage on these issues. How can we persuade these countries to engage on the humanitarian and human rights issues in a way that they feel like it's in their interest? For example, one potential way might be through a Helsinki approach where we want them to engage on human rights and humanitarian issues, but in return, they essentially get something that they want. That was the case in Eastern Europe when we basically allowed them to have the territorial consolidation and the security conference and economic trade that the Soviet bloc wanted in return for a human rights basket. So the broader question is, how do we practically get North Korea and China to engage on the recommendations that we make? Excellent question. I am not a political scientist. I am a public health practitioner. I think one way to sort of square this circle, if you will, and think about what's the human rights up front approach versus the engagement. Some called it protest versus presence, and this is an ongoing dilemma in the humanitarian community, whether you're working on the Thai-Kinbodean border and working in Khmer Rouge-run camps or wherever else it is, are you representing the needs of the population and how do you square that against political ideological motives from donors, governments, and so forth? The public health model says public health is not only health, access to health, right to health is a human right, but public health can be really an important both bridge builder but also form of engagement. I wasn't raised Quaker, my family is Quaker, speak truth to power is what we were taught. Whether you're in the abolitionist movement back in the 17, 1900s or present day, how do you do that in a way that keeps them at the table? Because if they walk away or start throwing things at you or shooting at you, you might say, well, we've still had to do that. That's what protest is about. But it's also a matter of how do you provide a way to persuade, engage with a counterpart and help them see that is in their self-interest. As Reverend Martin Luther King Jr. said, self-interest rightly understood, said racism is a threat to everybody, including the racists. Human rights violations are a threat to everybody and they're a health threat. And if you engage and promote global funds, support for TB, MDRTB, XDRTB, this is a very serious public health crisis. Coronavirus is an emerging one. To say we want to engage with you, we want to support the work that promotes the health of the North Korean population and provides support for all of the North Korean population, including the most vulnerable, and is done consistently with human rights treaty instruments. There is a middle ground. There is a common ground. And I do believe as much, and I talked about the implausibility, yes, we've been sort of knocking on this door or banging on this door, engaging in ways in for many, many decades. But that doesn't mean you stop because we simply have to give up and move on. We have to remain engaged. And I was very pleased to work with HRNK. I knew it about them, that they were for humanitarian aid, but with accountability. All of us are for that. There's not a single person in the humanitarian community who says just throw stuff out there, drop it from an airplane. Who cares where it goes? Everybody has internal and larger guidelines to talk about, accountability monitoring and so forth. I think public health and health support for health interventions can be a very important way to remain engaged, build trust, if you will, but trust with accountability and use that as a lever to once you've sort of brought the door open, say, we have other populations who may not be immediately in your sights and they include vulnerable children, street children, people in prisons and so forth. How about including them and how can we engage? So I think public health really is a model to find this common ground between people who say human rights up front and others who say we must remain present to the needs of the population. Let me just mention a few examples. Greg raised the case of Typhoon Lion Rock, the flooding of the reeducation through labor camp. North Korea had requested aid from the U.N. so it was in their interest to get that aid and they sat down with the U.N. agencies and actually did ask them, where do you want to go, what is your idea of all this? They never raised the reeducation camp. So even though headquarters, John Elias and the Deputy Secretary General seemed to be supportive of if they were to do so, they didn't do it. There's a great fear. The fear is generally of expulsion. If that's the humanitarian main message for itself, I don't think you'll get far. You've got to begin to put issues on the agenda. So that was one that I couldn't help but note. Tuberculosis must be another because tuberculosis is rife in the prison camps and according to the World Health Organization, if it's rife in the prison camps, that's a place they enter in other countries because it will help the whole community outside the prison camps. And so here you have a situation where TB should be an access to prisons on health grounds, should be something that is being pushed. It could be pushed at executive board meetings by other governments. So the request, the advocacy behind it, I don't know if it's always there because it's certainly in North Korea's interest to get a reduction in TB rates. And I think in other areas, you will see when they find it in their interest, they do something. When they wanted to summit in Singapore, they released the three American prisoners they had, including two who were at the Pyongyang University. Much earlier in 2002, they released Japanese abductees, not all of them, because they wanted certain political and economic benefits. I mean, it is important, which is suggesting, that one looks at how it's in their interest, but I think that the other side has to become more of a force in getting other governments and those that give aid to begin not to denounce and not to yell, but to just show the relationship between their interests and aid and how this is a bridge and it's important, but that we have certain standards too. I mean, I think it can be done if you really strategize a lot and there's some spine behind our side as well. Yeah. Well, thank you for that. I mentioned that AFSC does this work to be a bridge between Koreans and Americans and there's a saying that if you're going to be in a bridge, you're going to get walked on by both sides. And that's something that I think we certainly feel a lot in this context and I think that it's difficult because, you know, it's difficult because a lot of the conversations that we have are in confidence and there's a reason that we maintain that confidence for a whole host of reasons. So I wouldn't, you know, and I can't speak to the UN, but I wouldn't assume that just because there doesn't seem to be any progress in the round, that doesn't mean that there's not discussions taking place behind the scenes. One of the things that I point to is that just before 2017 in the new executive order and I wanted to say just before the Singapore summit as well, an organization and they're nameless, but they were able to get an MOU secured to treat prisoners within the camps for various health concerns. That was a huge gain and I think you're very right when you say public health is like a great bridge because that's something that we're all interested in. And so in the work that we do and that specific incidence tells me that it's not necessarily a matter of showing that it's within their interest, but it's a matter of building trust in order for them to be able to work with us in a way that's productive. Now, just after that MOU was signed, that's when a new round of sanctions came and that's when the U.S. government actually started to deny all permissions for humanitarian workers. They wouldn't let us travel. I think that was in 2018. So about a year after. That's when the North Koreans pulled back on that MOU. They pulled back on a lot of work and it wasn't necessarily a surprise to us. That was a fissure in partnerships that some organizations have been building for decades. And that's not easy work. I mean, it takes a lot of work and sometimes when you go there, it may seem like you're not making much progress, but every interaction that you have, every conversation that you have is moving the ball a little bit forward to improve things there. So I just want to sort of emphasize the fact that there is stuff being done behind the scenes, but a lot of it is dependent upon the larger climate of what's happening. I think the North Koreans, I mentioned the bridge thing, but it's probably an open secret that humanitarian organizations and work are often used as a telegraphing instrument between organizations and communities and usually countries. So when they see permissions being denied for U.S. humanitarian workers, I think the North Koreans read that as, okay, the U.S. is pulling back on some of the commitments they made. So I think at the timeline, the Singapore summit happened in June 2018. That fall, the U.S. government started to deny travel permissions for U.S. workers, started to deny applications to send aid. That shut down what had essentially been baseline level of engagement for 40 years. So after the U.S. had publicly committed to improving relations, quietly it had begun rolling back regulations that essentially broke down partnerships that had lasted for decades. That has huge consequences about how the North Koreans are reacting to U.S. engagement as well as international engagement as well. So I just want to throw that out there as well, that the larger context is a major factor in how much progress we can make on the ground. That's a great point about the mixed signaling that comes from the U.S. government. Okay, I apologize that we're running out of time, so let's go to audience questions. Please raise your hand, yourself and your affiliation, and please keep your question limited to a very quick question. So the lady in front right here. Hi, my name is Contessa Bourbon. I'm a journalist. Thank you for this very interesting forum. My question is, how do international crimes of North Korea impact famine? What are really the main causes of famine aside from drought? And how do you assess access to education for North Korean children? Great. Dr. Robinson, do you want to take that one? Yeah, there's a long answer and a short answer. I'd say some of this is discussed in the book. I think if you look back to the work of Amartya San, he talks about famines never occurring in democratic countries. That's actually proven not to be the case. But he uses the phrase entitlements. It doesn't mean entitlements like welfare and whatever. It has access to rights, rights to food, rights to adequate standard of living, rights to education. Generally we see in famines in the modern day that something is constrained. The government says no, we won't allow international food aid. We can take care of this ourselves or we will distribute the food aid according to our priorities. Or it's not a problem at all. Or it's only a problem of crop failure as a result of natural, recent natural disasters. So I would say just in the context of DPRK there was a fundamental unwillingness to recognize famine as famine. They wanted to call it a monglin munje. They wanted to use the flood relief distributed FDRC. I'm not getting the acronym quite right. And not simply to say, we have a famine. We have a large scale failure of the markets and the crop production system that has led to exacerbated and elevated levels of mortality and morbidity and as measured in malnutrition and many other metrics. Let's respond as best we can and bring in international food aid and provide full access to the population so we can alleviate. Had they done that, I think we would have seen measurable more rapid decreases in mortality. So when we say famine related deaths, SS deaths, of course people are going to die. We don't eliminate mortality. We want to eliminate that excess mortality. There's many other models and examples that show this that when government policies constrain, restrict aid for arguably their own political reasons and people die in excess of general mortality or in excess of what could have been prevented had aid been and other measures been rolled out effectively and immediately. Then we have that measurable gap between what could have lives that could have been saved, but were not versus lives that would never have been saved because it's just, there's just risk. There's risks that happens in floods and risks that happens in the context of crop failure. It's that gap in that middle gap that I think where we want to explore all the ways in which famines that perpetuate over time go back to human causality and human causality goes back to systems of governance among many other things. I think I'll leave it at that but I think it's well worth further exploring whether it's the North Korea famine or the China Great Leap famine or all of the other many ways in which food that would have been available in the world and not provided immediately and adequately and without sort of discrimination led to excess mortality of specific populations and that that I think can be attributed to policies either carried out or not carried out. Let's take two questions at a time. The gentleman back there and then BJ Reid. Hi, Phil Schrafer, retired international healthcare consultant. I'm amazed from Greg and Don that there are humanitarian organizations in North Korea who, given Russia's relation where they've kicked out I believe every NGO. Why does North Korea even let you in there? I'm just amazed you can function. And then next question from BJ. Hi, my name is BJ Choi from the George Washington University. Daniel, you mentioned about the North Korea has a different perception and perspective of human right, which is more like a collective banner while we do have like a more individual freedom base like human right perception. What is the way that we can just mitigate the kind of gap? I don't think we can expect North Korean regime just to accept our own perception of human right. So what are the ways that we can just really help them to like focus on individual freedom base, which they don't have that kind of perception so far? Yeah, two very good questions. I'll start with the question of why there were allowed to operate there. You know, I won't speak to what their motivations are, but it's right now, I think in terms of U.S. private NGOs, it's all faith-based organizations. It's all organizations that have the longevity to stick through a lot of the turmoil that plays out on the ground and in the context. We, again, it took a long time to build relationships and to build that trust. So I think that we're allowed to operate there now because of our long history and I think most organizations that are there do have a long history there, whether that's 10 years or 40 years. There is a recognition that these organizations are providing help and, you know, I'm happy to go into more details afterwards, but, you know, I won't speak to their motivations, but I think as I understand it, it's not well, they see the value in working with us and one of the things that we hear quite often is the sincerity that we bring and they say, you know, we thought Americans were all evil and then we start working with you and we see your genuine efforts to help improve our situation. So that in and of itself, I think, speaks to some of the engagement. To your question about how do we bridge the gap between the different conceptions of human rights, I think this is a really rich question. I think a lot of people have ventured to try to bridge that gap in the past. From my perspective, I would say that one of the things that we really need to understand is that this war is factoring into how the society is structured within North Korea. Everything really is considered to be for the state security apparatus, right? And that's not necessarily unique to North Korea. You'll find that in every state, that they're going to prioritize national security over the individual well-being of its citizens. Even the U.S. does that to some extent, right? In 2018 we passed the biggest military budget in history and we had a million Americans who were food insecure. So it's not necessarily unique to democracies, autocracies, whatever. You know, they're going to prioritize that. So in order for us to relieve some of that pressure, to understand that they're going to see human rights within the framework of sovereignty, we need to understand that this war does need to be addressed. It needs to be factored in. That doesn't say that, okay, if we solve the war, we get a peace treaty tomorrow, everything is going to be hunky-dory and fine. But it is a critical first step in acknowledging the situation of the country. And I see you're trying to come in. Oh, sure. Perhaps I could follow. Dan, I could answer your second question with another question. If there is a need to mitigate collective rights and individual rights in the DPRK, why is it that they include individual human rights in their own constitution? Again, on paper, these rights are embedded in the very fundamental documents of the DPRK. Regrettably, the very people of the DPRK do not have access to these documents. And do you remember the story of Chisong Ho, who's North Korean escapee, disabled, NGO leader, now running for the South Korean National Assembly? He's the one who appeared at the State of the Union address as a guest of the First Lady of Trump. And Chisong Ho was telling us, while he was being interrogated by the Ministry of Public Security, he recalls, having seen a copy of the DPRK criminal code hanging by a chain on the wall, stamped top secret. I think this is all we have to know about how legislation is actually applied to the actual people of North Korea. They simply don't know. They do have a right to know. And we do have a responsibility to enable them to know that they have a right to know the obligations that their own government has assumed. Pursuant to their own domestic legislation and pursuant to the international human rights documents that they have exceeded to. Thank you. Any further questions? Great. I'm getting out right on time. Please join me in thanking the speaker and our panelists.
|
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|
केदारनाथ में 'मौनी' बाबा के साथ तपस्या पर संवाद | Rahul Gandhi | Kedarnath Temple
|
केदारनाथ धाम में, मंदिर के पास ही एक प्रसिद्ध साधु रहते हैं - लोग उन्हें श्रद्धा से मौनी बाबा कह कर पुकारते हैं।
बीते दिनों उनके दर्शन और साथ बैठ कर बातचीत करने का मौका मिला। 11 वर्षों की मौन साधना में लीन हैं बाबा, और संवाद वो लिख कर करते हैं। आध्यात्म में बाबा को महारथ है, और सबसे अच्छी बात कि उनके दिल में सभी के लिए प्रेम और सम्मान है - काफी कुछ जाना और सीखा उनसे। पूरा वीडियो देखें।
#rahulgandhi, #राहुल_गांधी, #bharatjodoyatra, #rahulgandhiinkedarnath, #kedarnathtemple
_
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ⓒ Copyright and ownership of this audio-visual content belongs to Rahul Gandhi.
Attribution — You must give full credit for use of this audio-visual content in the format specified hereinafter: “Source: Rahul Gandhi's YouTube Channel, @rahulgandhi”. The channel’s address must be both on the video itself as well as on related Print, Digital, and Social Media copy accompanying references to the audio-visual content.
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All other rights are reserved.
Use of the above content in a manner not specified above is a violation of the law.
|
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"rahul Gandhi",
"राहुल गांधी",
"congress",
"rahul gandhi latest video",
"rahul gandhi speech",
"rahul gandhi today video",
"राहुल गांधी न्यूज",
"#rahulgandhi",
"rahul gandhi bharat jodo yatra",
"Rahul Gandhi in Kedarnath",
"केदारनाथ दौरे पर राहुल गांधी",
"Rahul Gandhi Kedarnath Temple",
"राहुल गांधी केदारनाथ दर्शन",
"Rahul Gandhi Kedarnath Video",
"Rahul Gandhi Kedarnath Visit",
"केदारनाथ राहुल गांधी",
"राहुल गांधी केदारनाथ धाम",
"Kedarnath Temple",
"केदारनाथ",
"मौनी बाबा",
"#kedarnathtemple",
"केदारनाथ धाम उत्तराखंड"
] | 2023-11-13T04:29:57 | 2024-04-23T01:14:42 | 313 |
zq-way2eZ1c
|
वोन, वोन, वोन काछी दालो है देही पूलनी के बाद, अपनी क्या फरग है? जाए, मैं जानताव वी दादन श्पिल्क नहीं, बोलते है ये कही से नहीं वाद, वाद है सवर्या कही के नहीं है, अप कही नहीं जारें वोत तो अपना वाद लगी नहीं सांट शांट रेग आगतार वोग भूँद होता है नीं ये बाद, और वह आज़े तो संदार कोई भी मनुज अपनी चीज को पुइ भी नी तिअखता है किसीना किसीदिकिसीना किसीको लगाओ है, तो हो मोई है और गगा है ये बाज मैं। कै किया किया? मैं। जाएगा अह मैंने पोला
|
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UCAtcfcfSxdgWfkUXxXZsydQ
|
…in 2 minuti – Professori, studiosi e appassionati raccontano un libro (60° appuntamento)
|
La Biblioteca di area umanistica dell’Università di Siena presenta: “...in 2 minuti”
Un invito, un consiglio, un'occasione di riflessione, promozione e condivisione della lettura in un booktrailer di due minuti. Professori, studiosi e appassionati raccontano un libro scelto tra i ricordi, i grandi classici, lo studio e la ricerca o le proprie preferenze.
Il progetto aderisce al "Patto regionale per la lettura" della Regione Toscana, sottoscritto dall'Università di Siena.
Questa settimana abbiamo il piacere di condividere il 7° booktrailer realizzato da
Alessandro Fo
che ci parla di
"L’isola dell’ultimo ritorno” di Folco Giusti.
Trovi quest'opera in biblioteca alla collocazione 83.8.5464.
PLAYLIST YOUTUBE
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLEDtAK324fJe94yoOQJ3y6hOqeXMjIKdr
Seguici sui CANALI SOCIAL DELLA BIBLIOTECA
Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/baums.sba.unisi.it
Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/bibliotecaumanisticasiena/
SITO WEB
http://www.sba.unisi.it/baums
#booklover #libridaleggere #romanzo #reading #leggere #bookblogger #passionelettura #leggeresempre #letteratura #instabook #leggerechepassione #libros #romanzi #librisulibri #bookaddict #citazioni #instalibri #passionelibri #buonalettura
| null | 2022-05-17T07:51:42 | 2024-02-14T20:06:47 | 175 |
zQoNP5hFcYA
|
Buongiorno, oggi voglio parlare di un romanzo, un romanzo storico scritto da Foco Giusti, un professore dell'Università di Sena, oggi è merito, professore di zoologia, che coltiva però anche l'antichità, e che riguarda in parte l'isola di Capraia, questa famosa isola dell'ultimo ritorno edito da Primiceri, editore questo bello romanzo, ma riguarda anche soprattutto Rutiglione Amaziano, un poeta dell'altra antichità che gode di una certa rinomanza qui a Sena, questa è la sua edizione per Einaudi, perché non solo perché io lo infliggo ai miei allievi, essendo il poeta che mi ha convertito a fare la tenisca, ma anche perché gli amici archeologi scavono da tempo un sito in Vignale vicino a Pionbino che è stato sfiorato dall'Itinerario di questo romantico viaggiatore che parte da Roma attorno al 417 per tornare d'inverno con piccole barche in Gallia a restaurare i propri possedimenti. Il puoi metto in compiuto e il suo affascinante pereglionare per un'Italia devastata dai barbari, per raggiungere una Gallia devastata anche se dei visigoti in inizio del vinto secolo e Rutiglione deve appunto restaurare e in questo puoi metto dicevo, Rutiglio si sofferma in molte descrizioni, ma purtroppo ci lascia un po' con la mario in bocca determinato dal fatto che il puoi metto in compiuto. Questo lungo romanzo racconta il sequel dell'edito di Rutiglio, soprattutto soffermandosi sull'avventure del figlio di Rutiglio che poi finirà nell'isodica praia ricordata da Rutiglio stesso per un insediamento monastico che vi figura. È un libro molto ampio di cui non posso naturalmente in due minuti esaurire nulla né leggere uno speciale mi limito a raccomandarvelo perché è veramente un modo divertente di accostarsi all'antichità ed è anche un modo appassionante per i temi d'amore, di sofferenza, di litura di martirio, di lotta per la sopravvivenza che vi si intrecciano in una prosa estremamente gradevole. Grazie e buona lettura.
|
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"url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zQoNP5hFcYA",
"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
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|
UCutYPaRzKulQnHM23z9HU9w
|
Burton Process Off Axis 2017 / 2018 Snowboard Overview | Ellis Brigham
|
Shop Now:
https://www.ellis-brigham.com/820718
If you're looking for a board that combines freestyle versatility with great all terrain performance, then the high spec Process Off Axis could just be the perfect choice. Jam packed full of some of the most innovative design and construction techniques available, this stunning snowboard delivers great performance across the whole spectrum of snowboarding, ensuring that when you want to break out of the park, this is one board that won't hold you back.
Sharing much of its construction with the standard Process it's Burton's unique Off Axis profiling that really marks this board out as something very special. This advanced manufacturing process aligns key technology within the construction with the typical rider's stance. This optimises the boards performance to the rider improving, control, response, flex, edge hold, and landing stability. Off Axis aligns both the core profile and sidecut geometry to the rider ensuring that this is technology that really does deliver results.
This innovative construction is headed up with the advanced FSC approved Super Fly 700G Squeezebox core. This state of the art wood core is profiled through its length to deliver the optimum flex. In the Off Axis Process this milling is offset to follow the rider's stance, as are the Frostbite edges. These push the edge profile out under the feet creating an additional bite points to increase edge grip. To ensure that the Process Off Axis can take advantage of its unique construction across all types of terrain, the structural layers are formed from responsive Tri-Ax glass. This ensures the Process Off Axis stays stable and responsive no matter how hard you push it. Finally, the high grade sintered base gives you all the speed that you could ever need to take advantage of the board's great performance.
[Follow / Subscribe]
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Subscribe to our channel here on YouTube:
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If you have any questions do not hesitate to ask in the comments box below. Thumbs up and subscribe too!
|
[
"Burton Process Off Axis Snowboard",
"Process Off Axis Snowboard",
"Burton Snowboards",
"Snowboard Review",
"Ellis Brigham Mountain Sports",
"Burton Process Off Axis Snowboard Review 2017 / 2018",
"Burton Process Off Axis Snowboard Review 2018",
"Burton Process Off Axis Snowboard 2018",
"Burton Snowboard 2018",
"Freestyle Snowboard",
"Best Snowboards Of 2018",
"Ellis Brigham Snowboard Review",
"Snowboard Review Ellis Brigham"
] | 2017-12-23T18:43:20 | 2024-02-05T07:12:41 | 116 |
ZqsGTPCxRHI
|
If you're looking for a board that combines freestyle vs. tonic with great all-terrain performance then the high spec process off axis could just be the perfect choice. Jam packed full of some of the most innovative design and construction techniques available this stunning snowboard delivers great performance across the whole spectrum of snowboarding ensuring that when you want to break out of the park this is one board that won't hold you back. Sharing much of its construction with the standard process it's Burton's unique off axis profiling that really marks this board out as something very special. This advanced manufacturing process aligns key technology within the board's construction with the typical rider's stance. This optimises the board's performance to the rider improving control, response, flex, edge hold and landing stability. Off axis aligns both the core profile and side cut geometry to the rider and showing that this is technology that really does deliver results. Now this innovative construction is headed up with the advanced FSC approved Superfly 700G Squeezebox core. This state of the art wood core is profiled through its length to deliver the optimum flex. In the off axis process this milling is offset to follow the rider's stance as are the frostbite edges. These push the edge profile out under the feet creating additional buy points to increase edge grip. Now to ensure that the process off axis can take advantage of this unique construction across all types of terrain the structural layers are formed from responsive triax glass. This ensures that the process off axis stays stable and responsive no matter how hard you push it. Finally the high grade synter base gives you all the speed that you could ever need to take advantage of this board's great performance.
|
{
"url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZqsGTPCxRHI",
"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
}
|
UCGBfxuA3U-caAZ9A-6rG5Eg
|
Identification of CFA models for addressing method variance
|
[
"research methods",
"statistical analysis",
"organizational research"
] | 2020-05-15T07:14:02 | 2024-02-05T08:08:07 | 2,323 |
zqLeboNwo1o
|
Confedera factor analysis models can be useful for addressing method variance concerns. However, for using these models effectively we need to consider identification, and also we need to interpret the results properly. In this video I'll talk about identification of these models. So the kinds of models that we're talking about are these method variance models. So we have basically indicators that load on the factors that present the constructs of interest, and also a source of method variance. Whether a single source is realistic or not, is a question that I'll ask, answer in the end of the video, but for now let's assume that this kind of model is useful. We can have two versions of this model. We can have the one with a method variance that is not measured, and then we have another one where the source of method variance is measured. For example, social desirability would be measured, and then we model social desirability as a cause of the variation in the items, or we can have a third option where we have marker indicators. Articles about these models, particularly these method variance unmeasured, latent method factor model, note that they are potential identification problems, but these articles don't really go and explain what the identification problem is about. So basically research have noted that when using this model, the software tends to produce warnings, or tends to not produce standard errors, or other kinds of indications of non-identification, but the identification status of these models really has not been addressed well in the literature. So let's take a look at the identification of this kind of model. This is the unmeasured latent method factor model. So we have here in our example model we have three constructs that influence the indicators, and then we have a source of method variance, and then we estimate this kind of model that uses these latent variables to represent the constructs, and this single factor to represent the source of method variance. There's another variant of this model. This is the marker variable model. So we have a theoretically unrelated construct that we measure. So construct C here would be the marker variable, or marker construct, and these would be the marker variables. So the idea with the marker variable was that if we have a construct that is assumed to be uncorrelated with the key constructs in the study, the A and B here, then the only reason for correlations between these items of these interesting constructs and the marker construct is because of the shared source of method variance. And we have the measured latent method factor model. This model differs from the marker indicator model in that here we have X7, X8 and X9 would be, for example, measures of social desirability bias, and then the method factor would present social desirability bias as a social method variance. So it's a directly measured measurement artifact instead of being a proxied by a marker variable. So these are method variance indicators. This model is identified, and it's identified because it's what I'd and quarters called BIPACTOR S minus I model. So this is identified, and the identification is explained in this article. So we don't need to talk about this model in detail in this video. So we'll just focus on this model with and without these correlations. So if we free these correlations, then we have an unmeasured method factor. If we constrain these correlations to be zero, then construct C is a marker construct, and this will be a marker variable model. Typically what researchers do is to fix these indicators to be the same to avoid identification problems. These identification problems are commonly not explained in articles that apply this technique. So whenever you have an identification problem, you should explain what specifically is not identified in the model instead of just checking that, okay, I got a warning, let's fix all these the ones. So all these kind of decisions should be justified instead of just done based on convention and just done to get the warning to go away because there are different ways that you can address identification. And this is probably not the ideal way, at least not for every possible model. So is this identified? This is the least constrained form. And so we have the scales are set by fixing the first indicators to load with one and same for the method factor, and we are also not constraining the method factor indicators. So we could argue that this is identified because it's kind of like an exploratory factor analysis. So it's an exploratory factor analysis with four factors, and we have a rotational criterion. So A is rotated to be uncorrelated with X4 through X9, B is rotated to be uncorrelated with X1, X2 and X3, or not uncorrelated but do not have an effect. And then the method factor is rotated to be uncorrelated with any other factors. So we could use this kind of reasoning to claim that this is actually identified. Whether that reasoning is correct, I don't know, it sounds reasonable, but if someone would point give me that kind of reasoning, I would ask for more evidence. So let's take a look at the identification status of this model from a different perspective. So identification can be proven. And here are the covariance equations. I've omitted the variance equations for simplicity because they're just used to solve the error variances. So can we solve all the model parameters from this set of equations, assuming that we know all the population covariances? That is the question of identification. We have 36 covariances and we have 15 degrees of freedom because we have 21 different parameters in the model. So is this identified or not? We could start solving this set of equations, but it gets very tedious and it would probably take at least for me several days to figure out whether this is identified or not. And I'm not sure if I would be even able to do it. So if something goes beyond your skills, then improving identification, then there are other strategies that you can apply. In my video on identification on structuralism models of observed variables, I know that there are empirical ways of checking identification. So we're going to be doing this empirical checks strategy for identification to show that this model is identified, but also we'll show that there are, that that's not the full story that there is to the identification of this model. So what we do is we first start with empirical strategy. We just estimate the model and I'm going to use, I will use the whole thing as fine for data in R and I have a visual texture and speed factors, each measured with three indicators and then I have an unmeasured method factor on which all the indicators load. We got a warning. So is that indication of non-identification? Well, warning is something that you always need to take seriously, to understand what is the source of the warning and in this case we need to check out the coefficients. We can see here that the first factor loadings, the X3 converges to a very large number and that indicates that if one of the factor loadings starts to converge to a very large number, then using that as a scaling indicator for the factor might be a good idea. Why it would be a good idea becomes clear when I actually switch the model to be using the indicator number three as the scaling indicator. So what we do is that we free the loading of the first indicator, we set it to NA, which is freeing it and then we constrain the loading of the third indicator to be one. And now we estimate there is warning, and this is a Haywood case, okay, so we need to take a look at where is the negative variance and how large it is. But generally we got a convergence, we got a chi-square statistic that is close to non-significant, so pretty good. When we look at the actual coefficient estimates, we can see that we have standard errors, which is good, so we should have standard errors for identified models, not having standard errors or getting a warning is a sign of non-identification. There are no extremely large estimates, so all the estimates are reasonable, they are in the same ballpark, which is often a good thing to have. But these loadings look weird, so the loading of X1 is negative and that is the reason why it did not converge initially, because we constrained that loading to be positive by constraining it to be one. We are basically saying that the model implied correlation between X1 and X4 should be, so it's visual and textual correlation is negative, so this implies a positive correlation, but our previous model implied a negative correlation, which didn't fit the data. So when you constrain a factor indicator, which is actually loading to be one, that fixes the magnitude and also the sign, and the magnitude gives you the variance of the latent variable, but the sign can be incorrect. So if we were to fix the X1 to be minus one, then this would converge as well. But now the problem was that our X1 wanted to have a negative sign, we constrained it to be positive and that caused the model to not converge because of misspecification. So these look a bit weird. So if we're saying that X1, X2 and X3 should be loading on the same factor and then we are seeing that X2 does not load at all, but based on existing theory and existing validation of the scale, we should expect X1 and X2 both load positively on this factor. Then this would be a cause of concern and if I would see this kind of result, I would ask the authors to address empirical identification of this problem model because these don't sound like they would be correct or look correct. Then we have the Hayward case. It is more estimated, it's not significant, so it's possible that the error variance of X3 is simply very small and this is just a result of sampling error. So this is not something that we need to be concerned about. If the Hayward case was large, so we have a highly significant negative variance, then that indicates model mispecification. Okay, so identification, we passed the first check. Also we got some weird results, we did not get any errors. Then there are other tests that we can use. So different starting values. Identification basically means that the solution to the model is not unique and what solution we arrive to depends on the starting values and if we have tried multiple different sets of starting values, we get the same estimate from the model that indicates that the model is probably identical. So we use different starting values. I'm using 0.5 and 1.5, 0.5, 1.5, just to set something that is reasonable close to 1 but has lots of variations and then we estimate, we get exactly the same results if we take the absolute difference, it's in the sixth decimal, roughly. So we get different starting values, give us the same result, this indicates that the model is probably identified. Of course this strategy should be done using multiple different starting values just to be sure that this is not like a local optimum on which the optimization lands. Then we can do something else, we can estimate using model implied covariance matrix. So we estimate here and we have the implied covariance matrix from the first model and then we estimate using the implied correlation matrix. We take a model summary, so we compare the implied, estimates from the implied matrix and estimates from the observed matrix, we see that they are the same. So they differ in the third decimal which is not a big deal. One thing where these sets of estimates do differ is model fit. So a particular chi-score here is exactly 0 and the reason is that the implied model fits the data that produces the data that is perfectly consistent with the model. So there is no misfit. So we are basically estimating the same model except that there is no misfit. But these estimates are the same which shows that the estimates should be unique given our covariance matrix. So if you get the same estimates for the implied matrix then that's an indication that there is identification. Then we use strategy 4, estimate using simulated data. So I'm simulating a data set from a set of matrices or I'm actually estimating from a population covariance matrix. I have the lambda matrix of factor loadings, I created here. And these loadings are 0, 1.2, 1.4 on all the main interesting factors and these are from 1 to 1.8 for the method factor. Everything is correlated at 0.3 except the method factor is uncorrelated in the psi matrix which is the factor correlation matrix. And then the error variances are all 1s, all errors are uncorrelated and we get the sigma matrix, the population covariance matrix by multiplying these matrices together and getting adding the error variances. We set the column names and row names and this is our population covariance matrix. Now when we analyze this population covariance matrix we should get the factor loadings 1, 1, 1.2, 1.4 and factor correlations of 0.3. So let's estimate using this sample covariance matrix. So we use the sigma, the regular population covariance matrix and we get the correct estimates. So we can recover the correct estimates and that indicates that our estimator is probably consistent and that indicates, of course, identification. So, all good. Did we just prove that the concerns of identification problems that many articles mention are actually not a concern at all? Well, not really. There is actually more to this story. This model is identified but the identification problems actually concern empirical identification. So this is identified for some values of the population covariances but it's not identified for every possible set of values. So that is the problem of empirical under-identification. And let's see what happens when we try yet another set of starting values. So I'm using the starting values 1.5, 0.5. Again, I'm just using them in a slightly different configuration. We get a warning, that's okay. So that's a Haywood case. Nothing to be concerned of at this point. When we compare the estimates, they are actually not the same. Some of them are close to one another. For example, 0.86, 0.807, that's close. But 0.475, 0.29, that's not even close. 0.493, 0.641, not close. So we get different starting values give us different sets of estimates. And this is a big problem because it tells us that the solution that we got is actually sensitive to the choice of starting values. And the choice of starting values, there are algorithms for that but it is more or less arbitrary and it's not guaranteed that we actually got a unique set of estimates if we get two models, two solutions that fit equally well but give us different solutions. The model fits nearly as well. So this third model is basically, it's a failure of optimisation. So optimiser found as a solution which it thinks is the best solution but the original solution actually was a bit better. Of course, how do we know that there exists a better solution than the one that we just got? We only know that because of trial and error. So why is this happening? And importantly, in the third model that we estimated, there are no warnings. So if we just estimated the third model, we would have gotten different results than the first two models, slightly worse fit and we would not know that there's actually a problem because there are no warnings. And the reason why this happens is that this model is nearly empirically non-identified. So we are very close to the condition of not being able to calculate the estimates because some of the covariances are the certain values that prevent us from estimates. And to understand the empirical identification of this model, you need to understand the empirical identification of by factor models. So let's try simulating from a different set of starting of population values. So let's assume that all these factual orders are the same and we use the same psychometric matrix as before. All indicators, all interesting factors are correlated at point three. The method factor is uncorrelated, all variances are one and epsilon has variance of one. We calculate sigma, the population covariance matrix the same way. We estimate from the population covariance matrix, we get an error. If we take a look at the actual estimates, we can see that incorrect estimates from the population matrix. So we had a full population matrix and we know that from that population the factors are correlated at point three because that's how we created the data. But then this happens, so we get incorrect results. This means that the estimates are inconsistent. If you can't get it right from the population, then your estimates are inconsistent. So why does this happen and under which conditions would the model not be identified? So the empirical identification problem here is basically that we have only three unique values in the population covariance matrix. We have point three, two point oh and three point oh and we are trying to estimate 30 different parameters from just three unique values. That can be done. So this is a big problem. Identification requires that the loadings are different. So if the loadings are the same, then the model is not empirically identified. If we estimate from a sample, this shows us something interesting about this problem. So we cannot estimate from a population and we will get a warning that the model is not identified. But what will happen when we estimate from the sample is actually something different. So I'm generating a set of normalities with random numbers using seed one, two, three, four, five and 200 observations. We estimate from that sample there are no warnings. Everything went fine. The model fits well. We get estimates. We have standard errors. But the problem is that these estimates are not close to the correct values and the standard errors are large. So we had a model here that if we have the full population, we cannot know how much the factors are correlated. If we have a sample here from that full population, we get no warnings. So we have an inconsistent estimator because we can't get it right using the full population. But when we use a sample, there is no indication of this problem. And you can think of how frequently would a researcher notice that there's actually a problem in the model for the population. In the case that they would get completely defined looking estimates that are nevertheless incorrect. Because you of course wouldn't know what the correct population values would be. So why is this empirical identification of this model a big problem? It's a big problem because typically when we design survey instruments, design survey questions, we try to make all the questions about equally good. So we like to think that the items are interchangeable. So they are equally good. We try to go for tau equivalence, which is that they share the same true score. And that of course means that the loadings are the same. So we try to, if we do a really good scale development study, that should produce a scale that is empirical under-identified using this model. Basically, to get this model to work, you would have to design your scales in a way that some items are bad by design. And that doesn't sound like a reasonable approach. So nearly empirical under-identified populations or empirical under-identified populations is probably very common when using these kind of models. In sample data, the sampling variation can provide identification. But this is just artificial identification. It doesn't really mean anything. You just get some random noise that allows you to estimate, but it doesn't allow you to say anything about the population values. Of course, if you can't use the population values, you can't say anything about the population correlations, don't allow you to say anything about the population values, then by adding sampling error there, you shouldn't be able to say anything either. But nevertheless, the software gives you a result without warnings, but you just can't trust the results because it simply happens to be identified because of sampling error in the data. You get no warnings, and you get potentially misleading results. So this is a big problem. Also, empirical under-identified models do not always converge. And this is the thing that the literature refers to as convergence problems of these models. So what do researchers actually do when their model does not converge? The typical thing to do is to fix the loadings to once for the method factor. But this is a bit of a problem because the identification problem is not whether we can identify the relative magnitudes of the method factor loadings. The identification problem is more about that we cannot know if the items are correlated because of the method factor or because they measure constructs that are correlated. So fixing the factor loadings to be the same, while it can accomplish identification, it also produces a misspecified model and it addresses an incorrect problem. So fixing the problem, the loadings addresses an incorrect problem. It does not address the problem that you can't say if a high correlation is because of a method or because of highly correlated construct. Finally, there is not much research done on this issue. So I try to look for paper articles that talk about identification of these models and beyond finding articles that stated that there are identification problems without explaining what those are, I couldn't find any. So this is something that someone probably should take a look at at some point. The bottom line is that the results from unmeasured method factors should probably not be trusted. Even if you get a solution or a set of estimates without a warning, that does not guarantee that there is no empirical under identification in the population. If the population model is not identified, then you cannot say anything using the sample data regardless of what your software gives you. So these kind of models probably should be avoided. Now let's take a look at the marker variable model and this identification. This is a more defensible model. So this is the marker variable here and these are marker indicators and the marker variable, marker construct or marker factor are constrained to be uncorrelated with the interesting factors. We can actually prove the identification of this model and it's a lot more doable because we have these equations here are a lot simpler. So 1 and 7 are, indicators 1 and 7 are only correlated because of the method. So we have 36 covariances, we have 19 parameters, 17 degrees of freedom and how we would actually go about proving the identification of this model would be that we first solve psi mm, so we solve the variance of the method factor that allows us to solve the method factor loadings and once we have solved the method factor loadings we can solve for the markers, we can solve the remainder of the method factor loadings and once we have fully solved the method factor we can basically take whatever sample covariances remains after the method factor has been parceled out and estimate the factor model of the interesting factors from the residuals and that allows us to solve the full identification of the model. So if we can solve the variance of the method factor then we can basically approve that this model is identified. So I'm going to be first looking at these equations here and I'm going to be substituting these to these equations here. So we just try to start eliminating equations. Now let's focus on this set of equations here. These are the correlations between the interesting indicators and the marker indicators. So we eliminated the correlations between all the marker indicators and now we have just the interesting indicators and the marker correlations here. We got 15 equations and 5 unknowns. So we have the method factor loadings and 10 degrees of freedom. So we have our over identification constraints. We can solve the method factor loadings here and then these remaining covariances give us over identification tests. So we can just plug in, they are lambda m2 here and that gives us a constraint that should hold for the data and then we can check if that holds. All right, so we can eliminate these constraints. We can substitute these equations on the left hand side and that gives us a bit more equations. Now we are trying to solve variance of the method factor from these remaining equations. I'm actually not going to do that because it gets a bit tedious but I'll explain the strategy how we would go about doing it. So what we would actually do is to choose 4 equations and I'm going to be choosing sigma 14, sigma 15, sigma 24 and sigma 25. This is 4 sets of equations with 4 unknowns. So we have sigma AB, lambda B1, lambda A2 and lambda B2 and sigma MM. So we have 4 unknowns there and 4 equations so we start solving. How we would do this is that we would first solve sigma AB as a function of sigma MM. Then we solve sigma B5 as a function of sigma MM using the solved sigma AB. Then we solve here sigma A2 as a function of sigma MM and then we plug in the solutions to sigma A2, sigma AB and sigma lambda B5 to this equation. That produces a third degree polynomial and those third degree polynomials generally have solutions and that establishes the identification. Actually working through the math, working through the third degree polynomial gets very tedious so we will not do that. So this is identified but is it empirically identified? So what is the empirical identification problem in this model? Well we face the same problem as before and so let's take a look. Now we have as before we have factors that are loading equally but now the third is a marker. It's uncorrelated with the first and second and we generate population covariance matrix. We estimate the population covariance matrix with equal loadings. We get this warning that the model is not identified and we have only four unique values, 1, 1.3, 2.0, 3.0 but we have 28 parameters so we can't really estimate. Identification again requires the loading statement. So what exactly is the identification problem? In the previous model with the unmeasured model the most important identification problem was that we did not know if for example X6 and X7 are correlated because of the method or because they measure construct B and construct C that are correlated. Now we know that X6 and X7 are correlated only because of the method but we have to ask why do X6 and X7 correlate and this X6, X7 correlation is basically a product of these two loadings and the variance of the method factor but we don't know whether the method affects more strongly to X6 or whether the method affects X7 more strongly. So we know that overall the effect of method on X6 and X7 is something because we know the correlation but we don't know which one X6 or X7 is affecting more strongly. So here the identification problem is that we don't generally know if the method affects these X7, X8 and X9 variables more strongly or if it affects these variables more strongly. So what can we do when we face the un- or identification problem? When we fix the method factor loadings to once here then we are actually solving the right problem because the problem was that as a set we don't know if there are X1 to X6 indicators load highly on the method factor or whether X7 to X9 load highly on the method factor so we didn't know the relative magnitudes of those sets of loadings. If we fix all variances to one or loadings to once we address that identification problem. So identification problem is the effect of method factor or market relative effect of main indicators is not known and therefore this fixing address is the right problem. Again this is something that there is not much research done on this issue so articles on this method factor models mention identification problems but they are rather vague about the identification problems they don't go into the explaining in detail what exactly the problem is. The bottom line here is that these kind of models are defensible and if you suspect empirical under identification you can solve it by fixing all the indicator all the factor loadings to be once for the method factor but probably a better solution would be to fix for example are two factors to be the same two loadings so we fix for example the first loading of a marker and the first loading of the first interesting construct and then that allows identification so we don't have to fix them all and which factor loadings you fix you need to consider theory so which indicators you think are most strongly affected by the method variance or which of the markers are most strongly affected you don't fix those. The bottom line is that these can be useful but if you constrain loadings to be the same for identification purposes then you should clearly state that you are making an assumption and this model is probably an approximation of reality. Another strategy for addressing empirical under identification would be to use such a large sample that empirical under identification is not a concern or at least a person if you have a sample size of 10,000 then a person who says that your model is empirical under identified and you only get results because of sampling error that argument wouldn't be very realistic. Let's take a look at another example so this is from Spectra 2019 and they talk about the use of marker variables and they recommend that you actually have more markers and this is a good idea so they are using mood and negative effects so these are not really markers but they are directly measured causes of method variance so if you think that for example interpersonal conflict and physical symptom items are affected by different sources of method variance which they probably are because I would assume that people are less likely to say that they have interpersonal conflict because that's not totally desirable than to complain that they have physical symptoms which doesn't have the same kind of social disability bias so if you have multiple different measures that you can apply as markers then that's always better because it allows you to match the kind of bias that you're assumed to have with the marker that you think is affected by the same source of bias this model shown here would not be identified and I contacted the authors and they actually mentioned that these are mood and negative effects are directly measured variables so their scale scores instead of latent variables and using scale scores here would actually identify the model so conclusions on the identification of method factor models these models are problematic and for generally the modeling approach is problematic because a single source of method variance is often unrealistic so you would really have to explain these models why you think that single source is the thing so is it only social desirability that affects the items that would be a stretch if you have for example behavioral items and evaluative items in the same survey empirical identification is another problem the way to do with empirical identification is that you have a very large sample size if you get a result from that without warnings then empirical identification is probably not a concern so how should these models be used I don't think that the unmeasured method factor should be used unless your sample size is so large that you can rule out identification because of random noise even then it's a very risky strategy to rely on because you may have empirical identification if you plan in advance on using this model unmeasured method factor it's possible that you get a data set that the population actually is empirical and you can't really do anything about it then you need to redo the study recollect data with markers or measure sources of method variance to address the problem marker variables are more defensible but you should really not use just a single method factor and then add markers to the model but if possible you should be considering a more advanced model and then you should think through what are the sources of method variance instead of assuming that there is just one factor this article by Spectre talks about the choice of different sources of method bias and how you can actually think through your items and evaluate which sources are they affected by and then this article by Simmering talks about the marker variable choice both are essentially if you want to use markers then there is a issue of proper interpretation of these models that I talk about in another video
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First Minister's Questions - 27 May 2021
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Published by the Scottish Parliament Corporate Body.
www.parliament.scot // We do not facilitate discussions on our YouTube page but encourage you to share and comment on our videos on your own channels. // If you would like to join in our conversations please follow @ScotParl on Twitter or like us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/scottishparliament
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I remind members that social distancing measures are in place in the chamber and across the Holyrood campus, and I ask that members take care to observe those measures, including when entering and exiting the chamber, and please only use the aisles and walkways to access your seat and when moving around the chamber. The first item of business is First Minister's questions, and any supplementaries will be taken after question 7, but I would ask that any members press their request-to-speak buttons as soon as you can. Question 1, I called Douglas Ross. Thank you very much, Presiding Officer. Does the First Minister agree that the Scottish Government needs to reset its relationship with business? The Scottish Government has a duty to have a good constructive working relationship with all sectors of Scottish society that very much includes the business community. This has been a really difficult period for the business community. I personally and to an even greater extent, my ministers have engaged with business organisations and with different sectors of our economy over the course of the pandemic. However, yes, I took part in business discussions over the course of the election campaign and absolutely gave the commitment that if there is a need to whatever language you want to use, reset, restart, make sure that we are focusing on all the key issues then. As First Minister, of course, I am not just willing to do that, I am very keen to do that. Douglas Ross. Thank you, Presiding Officer, because it is not just myself or the Scottish Conservatives or others that are calling for this reset. It is the Scottish Chamber of Commerce. They said last month that a reset was necessary, but it has not happened. Six weeks after it was promised, taxi drivers are still waiting on the second £1,500 payment. Businesses in Glasgow have had their plans upturned at 48 hours' notice. The Federation of Small Businesses called that the latest in the line of miscommunications around unlocking that have had serious consequences. The Scottish hospitality group is now warning that more businesses will go bust unless they are given more help, and that they cannot continue with this loss and uncertainty. Yesterday, the First Minister said in this chamber that she would work with the business sector to provide as much clarity and support as possible. In that spirit, will she set out what specific progress is necessary to ease restrictions in Glasgow and, crucially, what further support will be provided to protect businesses right now? In relation to the Scottish Chambers of Commerce, they, as I understand it, were engaged in a call with the Deputy First Minister in his new capacity as overseeing Covid recovery. Earlier this week, I had a number of calls over the course of the pandemic with them myself, and that engagement will continue. I understand the frustration of the business community just as I understand the frustration of every single citizen across the country as we continue to grapple with a global pandemic of an infectious virus. In the past few weeks, as we were making very good progress, of course, being confronted with another new variant of this virus. Unfortunately, with the best will in the world, I cannot take away all the impacts of a virus of this nature, but we work as hard as we can and we work as closely as we can to give as much notice and detail of our response as possible. Sometimes, I am afraid, in the interests of health and human life, it is necessary for people in leadership positions like me to take very quick decisions because, as we know from bitter experience over the pandemic, it is often the failure to take quick and firm decisions that lead to loss of life. Anybody who has any doubt about that only had to listen to a fraction of what Dominic Cummings outlined about what he described as the chaotic response of the UK Government at key moments of the pandemic. I will continue to try to take difficult decisions as well as I possibly can. On the specific issues of business support, there is a range of different support streams in place for business. They will remain in place for as long as is necessary. Of course, we will continue to discuss with different sectors of the economy what more support we can give. In terms of getting Glasgow back on track, we want to do that as quickly as possible, but that has to be done responsibly and safely. In terms of today's numbers, I can tell the chamber that there were 464 positive cases identified yesterday, 1.8 per cent of all tests being positive. We see a reduction in hospital cases today and a small reduction in ICU cases. There are reasons to be optimistic there, but we have to continue in the interests of business and in the interests of everybody to take careful and cautious decisions to get the whole country back to normality. The First Minister answered a question about restrictions in Glasgow and more support for businesses affected there by referencing dominant comings. I am sure that there will be plenty of time from your back bench or scripted questions to answer about dominant comings. I want to focus what is happening in Scotland's largest city and the impact that is having on businesses in our communities. Glasgow has been under Covid restrictions for 269 days. 269 days were businesses have been struggling to survive. The chief executive of Glasgow Chamber of Commerce, Stuart Patrick, said yesterday that funding grants fall far short. He said that 90 per cent of businesses will get less than they were promised. That is a direct quote from him. The financial support offered bears no relationship to the economic damage now being done by restrictions. Does the First Minister agree with the chief executive of the Glasgow Chamber of Commerce and what will she do to now deliver on the promises that she and her Government made to those businesses? I would say to Douglas Ross that the point that I was making in my earlier answer was about the importance of careful, cautious, responsible decision making in the face of a deadly virus. I was also pointing out, with reference to some of what we heard yesterday, what the impact and implications can be if a leader does not take careful, cautious and responsible decisions. I think that most people across the country understand the seriousness of the point that I am making. Why is that relevant and not deflective? We are still in the face of this pandemic, and it remains important that we take those careful decisions. To Douglas Ross, I know how long the city of Glasgow has been under restrictions because, unlike him, I am a resident of the city of Glasgow. Those restrictions apply to me just as they apply to others. I know how difficult it is for residents and businesses across Glasgow, but I also know how dangerous it would be if we eased restrictions too quickly and allowed a new variant of the virus that we know is spreading perhaps even more quickly than the variant at the start of the year to take a grip again. That is why there are the public health interventions under way across Glasgow right now—surge testing, accelerated vaccination. I said earlier in the week that we see cautious signs for optimism that that is working, and we will continue to monitor that carefully. We will continue to discuss with businesses how, in the face of the difficult situation, we support them to the best of our ability and to the best of the resources that we have at our disposal. However frustrating, I know that it is for business. The worst thing that somebody in my position could do for businesses and individuals is to act in a way that will allow the virus to take over again, because that would lead to more businesses being closed and it would lead to more lives being lost. We need to continue to steer a careful course through this, and it is difficult, although I know that that is for everyone. That is what I will seek to do. The minister knows Glasgow. She answered her question about knowing the numbers of Glasgow, but she completely ignored the point from the Glasgow chambers of commerce. Her chief executive, who is saying that 90 per cent of businesses will get less than was promised by the First Minister and the Scottish Government. The Government's approach to business needs a reset, but more than that, it needs a complete overhaul. Businesses do not see anyone around the Scottish Government table who is fighting their corner. Even one of the First Minister's own economic advisers has said that her Government is anti-business, one of the First Minister's own advisers. However, instead of business people who understand how to create jobs, it is the Greens who might get seat around the First Minister's table. A Green Party that does not even believe in economic growth, a Green Party that ignores business unless they want to celebrate at a high-end bar in George Street and a Green Party that wants to risk the entire oil and gas industry and the tens of thousands of jobs that it supports. This SNP Government needs to reset its relationship with business. Does the First Minister honestly believe that a coalition with the Greens is the way to do that? I think that most people across the country and most responsible businesses that I speak to and have interaction with know that, yes, it is important to support a strong, vibrant, sustainable economy, but it is also vital—in fact, it is a moral imperative—to do that in a way that meets our obligations to the planet and delivers our climate change targets. From that last question, I am not sure that the climate is particularly high up the agenda of Douglas Ross. We will continue to make sure that we support industry and the economy, but that we also support the country to move to net zero, which is a key priority and should be a key priority for all of us. On the questions about the Glasgow business community and the Glasgow chambers of commerce, I believe that Stuart Patrick himself was in a call with the Deputy First Minister and the Finance and Economy Secretary on Tuesday of this week. I am sure that the issues that have been raised—I would expect and assume that the issues that have been raised here today were raised on that call, and the Scottish Government will be taking them seriously and working with the business community to address them. That is how we operate as a Government. We are always looking for ways in which we can improve engagement and responsiveness, and we will continue to do that. I come back to the central point here. This country, like much of the world right now, is in the grip of a global pandemic. It has taken too many lives already, and it has the capacity and potential if we do not get the decisions right to take more lives in future. This is very difficult for everybody—businesses and individuals. My responsibility—I am not complaining about this—is what I am elected to do. My responsibility is to try to take those difficult decisions in the best way possible to get the country through this as safely as possible. That is a responsibility that I will continue to treat with the utmost seriousness. 2. Anna Sarwar In November 2019, I shared damning evidence from senior clinicians that contaminated water at the Queen Elizabeth University hospital had led to the death of at least one child cancer patient and that their family had not been informed. Millie Main's mum, Kimberly, had to learn the true cause of her daughter's death in the newspaper and join the dots. That is unforgivable. The evidence that I shared back then warned that there may have been a second child and that their parents too may not know the truth. A case note review in March confirmed over 30 infections in children and two children's deaths due to waterborne infections. The First Minister promised then that all the families affected would be told within weeks, but this morning it has been confirmed that one family has not been informed and it is feared that this is the family of the second child who tragically died. Can I ask the First Minister when the first attempt was made to contact this family, how many attempts have been made and why this family does not yet know the truth? Can I yet again take the opportunity to extend my deepest sympathies to the families of patients who died and indeed to everyone who was affected as a result of the issues at the Queen Elizabeth hospital? It would of course not be appropriate for me to comment on any individuals' care but I will seek to answer the question as best I can in general terms. The expert panel has provided individual reports to the families of patients included in the case note review and offered to discuss individual findings with them. I understand that the review team has managed to contact all families with the exception of one family. One family, regrettably and despite extensive efforts by the team and by NHS greater Glasgow and Clyde, has not been able to be contacted. Any family who wishes to get in touch with the independent case note review team is able to email the following address, nss.casenotreview at nhs.scot. I am happy to seek to provide later on the specific answers of when the first attempt to contact was made and how many attempts have been made but I have had an assurance that there have been rigorous attempts made to contact the one remaining family that there has not been contact with and unfortunately and regrettably it has not been possible to contact them. I know that greater Glasgow and Clyde will continue to take all reasonable and appropriate steps to locate that family. I am sorry, First Minister, but that is not good enough. The reason why it is not good enough is because the key question is when that first attempt was made. I raised this case in November 2019. The case note review should not be the ones that we are trying to inform that family because senior clinicians actually informed the health board about the death of two children months earlier in July 2019 and Scotland's duty of candor law means that families should have been informed as soon as the health board became aware. That means that the family should have been informed at least 18 months ago, not contacted for the first time just a few weeks ago. You have broken that law. Just to be clear, two children died in Scotland's flagship hospital due to a waterborne infection. One family had to find out by fighting the health board and the other family may not even know. With all due respect, handing out an email address is not good enough. One family still does not know that this is the biggest scandal of the devolution era, so will the First Minister take personal responsibility that this family will be found and told the truth about what happened to their child? This is a matter of the utmost seriousness and it is because of that that I think that it is really important to be clear. There was a case note review undertaken. That case note review looked at 118 episodes of serious bacterial infection in 84 children. All of the families of those children, with one exception, have been contacted. The information from the case note review shared with them, and I am sure that a number of questions have been asked. There is one family that serious attempts have been made to contact, and it has not proved possible to contact them. I think that that is deeply regrettable, but in a situation in which 83 out of 84 have been contacted, I would simply say to Anna Sarwar that it is reasonable to conclude that it is not because the health board does not want to contact the family that those attempts have not so far proved possible. To characterise that as me simply handing out an email address is unfair. That is about an inability to make contact with a family. I certainly will seek to provide further information about the number of attempts that have been made when the first attempt was made, and I will be ensuring that the health board is doing everything that is reasonably possible to locate this family. However, as I understand it, this is a case of attempts having been made and that they have not proven possible in terms of locating the family. I think that everybody involved in this wants that family to be located so that information can be shared and any questions can be answered, but I repeat again that all the families with one exception have been contacted. I think that it is important that any further reasonable attempts to contact the remaining family do continue. I think that the First Minister misses the fundamental point. The case note review happened as a result of families fighting with the health board to get that review, which happened in 2019. This child died in 2017. Conditions highlighted this case to health board officials in 2017 and 2019. Why did we wait until now, this year, to try to find that family? It is one thing breaking the law when it comes to the treatment waiting time. It is another thing breaking the law when it comes to telling a family the truth about how their child died. This scandal involved denials, bullying of clinicians, cover-ups and parents of six children being blamed for their illnesses. Clinicians have been raising the alarm for years The result of inaction is tens of children getting infections and tragically two children dying, but inexplicably there are still families fighting for truth and justice. This case proves that the response when the First Minister has not been good enough. She was health secretary when this health board, sorry, this hospital was commissioned. She was First Minister when it opened despite an independent review finding that the water supply was not safe, but the only people who have paid the price for this scandal have been the families and the whistleblowers. Years on, why has no one taken responsibility? Why have there been no consequences? Why are families still having to fight for the truth? Who is going to be held accountable? In all of those very serious points that Anna Sarwar raises, there is one important fact that he omits to raise, that this Government has established a full independent public inquiry. That public inquiry is under way and is still to do its work and to report. Anna Sarwar is saying that we can't wait for that. It is really important that he called for a public inquiry, we have established a public inquiry. In the lead-up to that public inquiry there has been an independent review, there has been a report from the oversight board that was established and there has now been the case note review process, which has produced an overview report and has also produced, of course, the individual case reviews for each of the affected children and families. What I am not disputing because nobody could or should is that this is an incredibly serious matter. What I am disputing is that the Government is not taking this seriously and that the Government is not determined through ultimately the full independent public inquiry to get to the bottom of everything that happened from the opening of the hospital right through to now to make sure that families have the answers to the questions that they need. That is a process that will continue until we feel that we have got to the point where all questions that can be answered have been answered. It is a real omission to say all of the things Anna Sarwar has rightly said, but to leave out the fact of the full independent public inquiry that is already under way. Finally, just to come back to the one family that has not been contacted, that is regrettable, but I want to stress that that is not because there have not been attempts to contact that family and the health board will continue to take steps to contact that family as they have already contacted the other families involved. 3. Patrick Harvie The UK Home Secretary has declared that immigration dawn raids in Glasgow are what the British public voted for. I expect that the First Minister will agree that Scotland did not vote for that. The Conservatives were rejected at the ballot box in Glasgow and across Scotland, and this month we witnessed the people of Glasgow taking direct action to protect their neighbours from the actions of an institutionally racist home office. Immigration and asylum are reserved to the UK government, but there is no doubt more that we can be doing here in Scotland. Is the First Minister aware of the freedom to crawl campaign being launched today by the Roof Coalition, including Shelter and other charities and grassroots organisations, drawing attention to the abysmal standard of accommodation provided by meers on behalf of the home office for asylum seekers who are pregnant or who have babies and toddlers? Does she agree that the rights set out in the UN convention on the rights of the child are being breached? What will she do to challenge the UK Government on its failings towards some of the most vulnerable people in our communities? I have not seen the detail of the campaign that Patrick Harvie refers to, but I will, of course, look at that. I have profound and fundamental objections to the principles underpinning the UK Government's system of immigration and asylum, but also many of the practical aspects of that, not least the provision of inadequate accommodation for asylum seekers in the city of Glasgow. The Government has on many occasions raised those concerns directly with the home office and has often been met with indifference to those concerns, but we will continue to raise those. The provision of accommodation for anyone is an important right, but particularly where children are concerned. Obviously, this Parliament, just before the election, took a decision, a unanimous decision to incorporate the United Nations convention on the rights of the child into domestic law. That is something that is being challenged in court by the UK Government. That brings into sharp focus perhaps why the UK Government is seeking to challenge that, because it does not want the decisions that it is taking over things such as immigration to be subject to that kind of legal protection and scrutiny. In my view, that is exactly why we need the UN convention to apply to everything that happens in Scotland, because the rights of a child matter, whether that child was born here in Scotland or is the child of an asylum seeker, is a child living in Scotland and they should all have the same rights. The campaign was only launched today, but just so that the First Minister and everybody here is aware of the concerns being raised about the accommodation for mothers and babies in Glasgow, the campaign says that the rooms are cramped and inadequately furnished, that there is virtually no floor space within the rooms for children to play or move around safely, that there are multiple safety issues with the living, cooking and sleeping areas, that there is no respect for privacy and that alleged infractions against the rules are posted publicly, humiliating the mothers. They say that all of that breaches the UN convention on the rights of the child, the health and care standards and the current care inspectorate space standards. The Scottish Greens have long argued that responsibility for housing asylum seekers should lie with local authorities, who are much better placed and frankly more inclined to provide appropriate accommodation than the institutionally racist home office. In the Smith commission, the UK Government and every political party committed to discussions on powers coming to Scotland on asylum housing and support services. Those discussions have still not taken place more than six years later. Will the Scottish Government put that issue on the agenda for the next joint ministerial committee and work with Glasgow City Council and charities to develop a public sector bed for those services, so that Scotland can provide them to a standard that we can be proud of instead of allowing that shameful situation to continue? Yes, we will seek to put it on the agenda for the next joint ministerial committee, but since these do not exactly take place frequently, it is important that we continue to take it up in other ways as well. Patrick Harvie is right about the Smith commission. Discussions to devolve more powers to this Parliament in the area of immigration have not progressed, but then we have a UK Tory Government that is more interested in taking powers away from this Parliament, not bringing powers to this Parliament. That is a reality. I know that it is an uncomfortable reality for Mr Ross, but it is a reality nevertheless. I am sorry if it was not Mr Ross that shouted rubbish if it was one of his colleagues, but it is a fact that the UK Government seems more interested in taking powers away. Those issues are important because they are about fundamental human rights and fundamental human dignity. They bring into sharp focus why those powers should lie with this Parliament. Actually, notwithstanding the many differences that we have across this chamber, I really believe that this Parliament would take a much more humane approach to immigration and asylum. I believe that we would respond more positively to the demographic challenges that we face and therefore the need to attract more people to live and work in Scotland. It is a good example of why we need to see those powers lie with this Parliament and the sooner, as with so many other things, we can get those powers out of the hands of a Tory Westminster Government, the better for everyone. Congratulations, Presiding Officer, on your new role. I look forward to working with you and engaging with you over the coming years. I would like to ask the First Minister what dialogue the Scottish Government has had with the UK Government on the potentially damaging tariff and quota-free trade deal that has been proposed by the UK and Australian Governments. Can I first take the opportunity to welcome Jim Fairlie to Parliament? It makes that afternoon and let him in the torrential rain. It is all the more worth it to see him in his place in this chamber. The Cabinet Secretary for Rural Affairs and the Minister for Business met UK Government ministers on 25 May to reiterate our concerns about the devastating impact that the UK Government proposed deal could have on our farming communities. That followed an earlier letter from the Rural Affairs Secretary to the UK Trade Secretary on 19 May, but the UK Government seems determined to shut the Scottish Government out of this decision-making process just as it has ignored our interests throughout the Brexit process. We are extremely concerned that yet again a crucial decision affecting Scotland's future is being taken by this Tory Government, not just against the wishes of people who live here, but fundamentally against the interests of people who live here. Jim Fairlie? I would like to thank the First Minister for that answer. Yesterday, he gave multiple opportunities for the Opposition parties to work with the Scottish Government in supporting the people of Scotland. Does the First Minister share the concerns of the President of the National Farmers Union of Scotland, who is in John Swinney's constituency, who said, I quote, "...we were promised that any future deal wouldn't undermine Scottish and UK farmers with any deal. We would feel betrayed if that were to happen." Douglas Ross wrote to all the farmers in my constituency four days after my nomination, telling them that he was going to be the farmers champion here in Scotland. I'm just wondering if this is going to be one of those red lines that he's going to gaily skip over like a newborn calf. Would the First Minister agree with me if that will be a total betrayal of Scotland's farmers as it has been by the Fishermen? Douglas Ross seems intent on telling Jim Fairlie, for some reason, best known to him, that he's a lamb, not a calf. The general point stands that nobody on the Tory benches seems willing to stand up for the interests of Scottish farmers. This is a Tory party of course that has already betrayed Scotland's fishing communities and it now seems to be about to betray Scotland's farming communities. What we must see is that any imports of Australian agri food should be produced to equivalent standards of Scottish production, imports must be controlled by tariff rate, quotas, anything short of that, short of what the Tories promised, will be a betrayal of our farmers and will be deeply damaging to the Scottish economy. We hear a lot of rhetoric from the Conservatives about standing up for Scottish business. We've heard it again today. Perhaps it's about time they actually stood up for our farming community and told their bosses in the UK Government that what is proposed is simply not acceptable. 5. Megan Gallacher To ask the First Minister whether the Scottish Government plans to implement a national moratorium on incinerators, such as the proposal at Overwood Farm site near Stonehouse, in light of the reported detrimental impacts that incinerators could have on Scotland's bid to tackle the climate emergency. First Minister, welcome Megan Gallacher to Parliament as well. Our commitment is to transition to net zero by 2045 and to help to do this, building a circular economy and reducing recycling and reusing resources as vital. With that and our climate change targets in mind, my party stood on a commitment in the election to review the role that incineration plays in Scotland's waste system. We will update Parliament on plans for this as soon as possible. I know that that is something that, in its constituency capacities, my colleagues Christina McKelvie and Mary McCallan have also been pushing for. It is worth noting, though, that in 2019 the whole-life carbon impact of Scotland's household waste reached its lowest level since official recording began. We are fully committed to further accelerating progress by ending the practice of sending biodegradable municipal waste to landfill by 2025. I thank the First Minister for her answer and I would like to refer to my register of interests as I am a councillor in North Lanarkshire. Residents of Stonehouse and surrounding areas feel let down as this is the second time they have had to fight against a proposed incinerator being built in that area. What will the Scottish Government do to reassure my constituents that, should South Lanarkshire Council oppose the planning application, the Scottish Government will not overrule its local decision if it were to be brought before the Scottish Government reporter? I am sure that, as a councillor, I know that, if I were to answer that question, that in any way pre-emptied or prejudged any planning decisions that may ultimately come to the Scottish ministers, that would not be helpful for any of the interests concerned. Fundamentally and initially, of course, it is a matter for the local council, but then there are robust, rightly robust statutory processes in place for any applications that come to ministers, and it is really important that ministers do not prejudge any of that. I understand the concerns that are raised in general here, which is why what I said in my initial answer is important that it is time, and this Government is committed to doing it, to review the role that incineration plays in our overall waste system. It is also important to recognise the progress that we have made in reducing the whole-life carbon impact of household waste, and to look at the variety of things that we need to do to continue that. However, I am sure that the application, if there is an application in this case, will be treated and dealt with in all of the appropriate processes. To ask the First Minister what action the Scottish Government plans to take to support teachers with the challenges that they face in light of the reported concerns from teaching unions that there is a culture of fear and anxiety across Scottish education. The past year, teachers have done an extraordinary job in the most challenging of circumstances. They have refocused their work to support pupils in a range of different ways. We recognise the pressure on schools and want all teachers at all times to work in a safe, positive, respectful and supportive environment. We have already committed more than £400 million to education recovery, introduced a support package for schools, including a very important focus on mental health support for staff, in addition to existing guidance for local authorities and schools to manage behaviour, and we will continue to put the health and well-being of both pupils and staff at the forefront of recovery plans. We look forward to continuing to work constructively with stakeholders to ensure that everybody nurtures an environment in our schools that has, at its core, the highest quality of learning and teaching. I am sure that she, like me, is very worried that the NASUWT has said this week that violence and abuse of teachers is becoming normalised. She also revealed that a union survey found that 53 per cent of teachers considered leaving the profession in the last year feeling demoralised unsupported and unrecognised. Does the Government recognise those concerns? Do you accept that, among the actions that must be taken, there must be a year-on-year substantial increase in school budgets and that we also need to see significant increases in teacher numbers and teaching assistance across the school estate? First, on education spending, I think, has risen in every single one of the last four years, and there has been significant additional resource that is provided to local authorities in the face of Covid. That is supporting a range of activities, including additional teachers in our schools. Of course, I recognise the concerns of teachers and so many others after what has been the most difficult challenging bruising in many respects of years, as we have all in different ways had to cope with the implications of Covid. It is really important that we understand, listen to that and respond in a variety of different ways. No teacher should have to suffer verbal or physical abuse in school and nobody should ever accept violence becoming normalised in our schools. I am sure that the education secretary will be more than happy to discuss those concerns in more detail with the trade union concern. It is really important that we support teachers in a range of different ways, and we are doing that. We will continue to talk to teaching unions about what more can be done to support teachers as they do the very important job that they perform on behalf of all of us. To ask the First Minister what plans the Scottish Government has to reform the roles of the Lord Advocate and the Crown Office in procurating a fiscal service in light of the resignations of the Lord Advocate and the solicitor general. Can I briefly take the opportunity to put on record my deep gratitude to both the Lord Advocate and the Solicitor General for their extremely distinguished service over the past five years? I am sure I will have more to say about that over the next days and weeks, but I want to record my appreciation and gratitude and respect for both of them. The Government will put nominations for new law officers to Parliament for approval shortly. Until then, the current law officers remain in office. As we said in our manifesto, the Government intends to publish a consultation on the dual functions of the law officers, and we will do that in due course. It is vital that both the systems of criminal prosecution and the investigation of death and the role of the law officers in Government continue to enjoy the full confidence of the public, and indeed I believe that they do. I also pay tribute to James Wolff and Alison Derulo for their service and their willingness to engage, particularly those of us who have sat on the Justice Committee. Reform is needed, and the First Minister has the power to deliver change. The role of the Lord Advocate needs split to end the conflicts of interest, including appointing a director of prosecutions. Fadal accident inquiries must be removed from the Crown Office as families are still waiting too long. It is a scandal that we still do not know the circumstances surrounding the death of Lamara Bell and James Ewell on the M9 six years ago. After the landmark vote in this Parliament in March, we need change to ensure that those in the grip of drugs are diverted to treatment rather than to prosecution and imprisonment. In hiring new law officers, therefore, will the First Minister commit to those much needed reforms? Let me make a number of points. I hope that they are helpful, because I genuinely hope, because I think that this is necessary given a potential reform of this nature, that there is widespread consensus on the eventual path that we take. Firstly, though, it is really important to recognise, as I am sure everybody in this chamber does, that the dual role of the law officers is not new. It is not something that was created under an SNP administration. It has been that way since the dawn of devolution. Under previous Governments, there was that dual role. Secondly, I think that there is a case for reform, which is why my manifesto committed to a consultation on that. I think that it is really important that we take the time to get that right. Just listening to Liam McArthur there, one thing came to mind that will be something that this Parliament in the course of a consultation will want to consider. Because of the dual role of law officers, law officers can be called to this Parliament to answer questions on all the issues that perhaps fall within the prosecutorial function of the law officers. They can be questioned in this chamber. If we separate those roles, that may not be possible in future to do that in the same way. Now, that may be something that Parliament is comfortable with, but it is just one example of the need to take care over that and to make sure that we get it right and that we try to move forward on the basis of as much consensus and proper consideration as possible. Those are really serious issues. I hope that all members, including Liam McArthur, will engage in them seriously over the course of any consultation that comes. Thank you. We will now move on to supplementaries. I would be grateful for succinct questions and responses. I call John Mason to be followed by Liam Kerr. I think that the First Minister will be aware of the Pladys McVity's plan to close their factory and tow cross in my constituency, with a potential loss of over 450 jobs. Can the First Minister reassure the staff and myself and my constituents that the Scottish Government and Scottish Enterprise will do all that they can to persuade Pladys to remain in Glasgow? John Mason for raising an extremely important issue. I, like many others in Glasgow and beyond, was deeply concerned to learn that Pladys had entered into consultation with its tow cross workforce. That is a bitter blow to the company's staff, who have been so loyal to that company over such a long period of time, and indeed a big blow to the local area, given the importance of the McVity's factory to tow cross. We will do everything that we can by we, the Scottish Government and Scottish Enterprise, and I know that Glasgow City Council has that commitment too. We have put together an action group, which is co-chaired by the Economy Secretary and by the leader of the council, Susan Aitken. Membership of the action group includes trade unions, Scottish Enterprise, Clyde Gateway and Skills Development Scotland. The group met yesterday, and it will pursue every opportunity to secure the long-term future of the tow cross site and the associated jobs. That requires a willingness from Pladys to engage in that process. Let me be very clear here in Parliament today that I am calling on Pladys to do that and to engage constructively in the interests of their workforce. The Cabinet Secretary for the Economy is also writing to the UK business secretary, making him aware of the situation and of the on-going work of the action group. Recent reports and representations to me by Aberdeen airport suggest that passengers returning to Scotland from abroad may have to pay more than twice as much for Covid tests than those returning to England. That will price many people in the north-east out of travelling, it will hinder the ability for Scottish airports to re-establish connectivity and potentially pushes passengers to travel to and from English airports. Can the First Minister offer any comfort to the industry and hard-pressed passengers by committing to review the guidelines and introduce a more equal testing system? Of course, and I will give an undertaking to look at it as an issue that was raised with me earlier this week. My understanding and I will be corrected if I am getting any of the detail of this as it pertains to England wrong, but in summary the difference is that we require all tests in Scotland to be NHS tests, where in England many of the tests are outsourced to private companies. One of the reassurances that I suppose I can give is around quality, because we believe that the NHS provides that quality assurance. I am not sure to be blunt that going down the same route as England on this is the right thing to do, but of course we will review that and give those points consideration. More generally, I do not want, nobody wants the requirement for testing and quarantine to be in place any longer than is necessary, but those are protections that are important right now. Everybody knows the frustration that I have about what I would describe as the lack of robustness in terms of UK border control in the past, but those are important protections to try to do everything that we can to minimise the risk of importation of the virus. That is why it is important that everybody abides by the requirements for testing and quarantine if they are coming into the country. Colin Smyth, to be followed by Rona Mackay. Thank you, Presiding Officer. The First Minister will be aware that the world's first savings bank was established by the Reverend Henry Duncan in the village of Rathall in Dumfrieshire in 1810. The very building that housed the bank is today home to the savings bank museum, but the owners of the TSB have just announced plans to close the museum, remove the historic artefacts from the community and place them in their head office in Edinburgh. Can I ask the First Minister to consider whether the Government would make representations to the TSB and ask them to put those closure plans on hold and work with the local community to find a way to retain this important part of our nation's history where it belongs in the village of Rathall? In the interests of fairness, I should say that Oliver Mundell just raised this issue with me in advance of First Minister's questions and indicated that he, as I think constituency member, was intending to raise it. I thank him for that and Colin Smyth for raising this today. It is not an issue that I am aware of all the detail around, but given that it has been raised with me by two members today, I will certainly look at the circumstances and, yes, absolutely consider if the Scottish Government can make representations to retain a museum that certainly sounds to me as if it is a valued part of the local community and something that should be treasured in terms of the history and indeed the ability of future generations to learn all that it has to offer. I will look at it and come back to both members in due course. The Children's Commissioner said that the UK Government's two-child limit is a clear breach of children's rights and dropping the universal credit uplift will effectively knock out the benefits that the Scottish child payment brings to families. Does the First Minister think that the UK Government should focus on strengthening children's rights rather than continually undermining those efforts? Yes, I do. I think that that is a really important point. Actually, this issue shows I think quite starkly the difference between our two Governments and our two Parliaments. This Government and this Parliament is focused on tackling poverty through significant investments, including £100 million to support families through the pandemic payments, £50 million for universal free school meals expansion and, of course, the introduction of the Scottish child payment, which we are committed to doubling. By contrast, the UK Government penalises families through the two-child limit, cutting £500 million from low-income families in Scotland alone, the benefit cap, the plan to remove the universal credit uplift. This Government, with the unanimous backing of Parliament, has strengthened children's rights by enshrining them in law, yet the UK Government wants to take its décor over that. Again, that illustrates why we need more powers out of the hands of the Tory Government at Westminster and into the hands of this Government and this Parliament. Communities in Perthshire and across the Highlands have for years campaigned for the A9 trunk roads that have been made up to a dual carriageway between Perth and Inverness, and it is good to see works progressing on one stretch at the moment. However, concerns have already been raised that this vital road safety project could be jeopardised by any deal struck between the Scottish National Party Government and the Green Party. Can the First Minister assure us that that will not be the case? When Murdo Fraser says that concerns have already been raised, what he really means is that he is desperately trying to stir up any concerns of that description. He should know by now that the two things are not really the same. This Government's commitment to the A9 is clear and this Government's commitment to the A9 continues.
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UCutYPaRzKulQnHM23z9HU9w
|
What Is Gripwalk?
|
Dave from Marker Bindings explains - What Is Gripwalk?
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|
[
"what is gripwalk?",
"gripwalk",
"skiing (sport)",
"ski boots",
"ellis brigham",
"ellis brigham mountain sports",
"expert boot fitting",
"ski boot",
"grip walk"
] | 2018-11-19T10:52:51 | 2024-02-05T07:12:40 | 115 |
zqTOQm-UHks
|
So what is GripWalk? GripWalk is a recent development that's trying to bring the consumer all the benefits of the rubber sole of a touring boot So the comfort convenience, the grip and the safety when walking around with the performance of an alpine boot. So you've got the hard platform which gives you a great downhill performance What we have is the Rockered rubber sole as you traditionally finding a touring boot with the hard platform you find on an alpine And it's a really good hybrid mix of the both Many many of the bindings you'll find on the market now are already GripWalk certified and Most boot manufacturers are moving to make their boots compatible with the GripWalk soles In fact, you might actually find your boots already GripWalk compatible. All you have to do is replace the toe in the heel There's numerous features about the GripWalk setup that are beneficial for both alpine skiers and touring skiers as well If you have a GripWalk sole on your touring boot, it gives you a safer setup for the downhill And if you have a GripWalk sole on your alpine boot, it gives you a boot that's easier to walk in much more natural walking motion The other big advantage of this, if you have a GripWalk boot or an alpine boot You can just step into a GripWalk binding with no adjustment necessary If you want to know which products are compatible with GripWalk They will either have the GripWalk logo on them or speak to someone at Ellis Brigham
|
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UC5_6ZD6s8klmMu9TXEB_1IA
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5 Tips For Getting A Data Science Job
|
I'm going to go through my 5 tips for data science noobs to get you up and running in the field
FOLLOW ME : https://www.quora.com/profile/Ajay-Halthor
|
[
"Machine Learning",
"Deep Learning",
"Data Science",
"Artificial Intelligence",
"Neural Network",
"tips for data science noobs",
"tips for data science",
"data science 101"
] | 2018-08-26T17:30:00 | 2024-02-05T07:37:29 | 324 |
ZqJEa-Pr3Ek
|
Hey guys in this video I'm gonna give you five tips for data science noobs now five is just a great number because it's long enough for me to explain stuff It's not too many points that I'll just like be listing off like a few lines and you have the attention span of a squirrel So I think five is a great number just a disclaimer. I am not a complete data science pro I still learn things every day, and I just wanted to share whatever I know with you Number one don't be afraid to explore your data Now before even starting your analysis You need to have a question or a set of questions in mind that you want to get out of your analysis But don't let this define exactly how you understand your data in order to perform an analysis you need to know the kind of data you have and Well in the case of a data frame type data what every field represents Playing around with some parts of data may give you new ideas on actually how to solve a problem Just throw some summary statistics get some ballpark numbers and don't worry about the question that you're trying to answer that much Number two know your problem and how to approach it You're heading into a mountain of data, and you have a specific goal in mind Don't lose sight of this goal I said before that it is fine when you're exploring your data to get an understanding and not really consider your problem But when you actually have an understanding of your data make sure that you don't stray away from your question This could lead to a number of random shallow analysis that really won't be useful to anyone Number three machine learning is not always the answer First off even before thinking of modeling your data. You need to have a clear understanding of it Creating a model without understanding your data is just blasphemous and even after analyzing your data There is still no guarantee that you really need to throw a model at it I see this a lot in some Kaggle kernels where you would notice a response variable and see oh, it's a categorical variable So I might as well throw some logistic regression or a support vector machine classifier to it and see how it works Or in the case of regression, let me throw like a neural network aggressor and see how that works If you are thinking of machine learning, then you need to answer questions like what are you trying to model and What do you wish the model to achieve in the end? If you don't have a purpose for the model then don't bother modeling your data Number four statistics versus programming which one is better? Which one is more important? They're both important in stats I find myself using a lot of hypothesis testing Especially when I want to establish a comparison between two groups and want to determine if the difference is statistically Significant on the programming front. I feel like there needs to be a basic understanding of how to program in general Many libraries use an analysis are built into languages For example, Python has pandas for data frame manipulation or map potlib and seaborne for data visualization And even scikit-learn and tensorflow for machine learning Also, knowing how to program allows you to play with under documented libraries, too In five value presentation, this is probably one of the most important points When you perform an analysis, about 70% of what you do will be nothing out of the ordinary Some of them may not even be worth Presenting. Furthermore, when you include every little detail of everything that you've analyzed It's really hard to see what the key takeaways are So once you're actually done with your analysis, you should go back and Try to see the importance of everything that you've analyzed Highlighting things that are more important or that should stand out I find it particularly difficult to read Jupyter notebooks on the fly because Jupyter notebooks have code along with figures and some explanations just jutted in between So it becomes really hard to see what's important and what's not. I would recommend creating a set of Presentation slides that only have the key graphs along with their takeaways and any other Explanatory information that's required. I would put it in the appendix section So that it could be pulled up whenever you need some more information and that's my five points So here's a brief up Understand the kind of data you're dealing with by throwing up some big stats and don't be afraid to explore Second have a problem to solve and focus your analysis on solving that problem Don't do a bunch of random analysis that isn't going to be useful to anyone Third after analysis if you feel the need to model data that will help improve your problem Then go for it or if you're trying to solve another problem then do that Just make sure that the model has a purpose For have an understanding of stats and programming analysis and its implementation in code will be a lot easier And finally you should effectively be able to communicate your findings succinctly highlighting key points in little time And that's all I have for you now So if you like the video hit that like button if you're new here Welcome and hit that subscribe button ring that bell for notifications when I upload check on my other links in the description Down below still haven't had your daily dose of AI then click or type one of the videos right here for an awesome video And I will see you in the next one. Bye
|
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UC_TneqvSfh-KsIyZMlJjVsQ
|
Beynəlxalq təşkilatlar Azərbaycan hökumətinə çağırış etdi: "Saleh Rüstəmli azad edilməlidir"
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[
"xeberler en son xeberler",
"xeberler 2020",
"son xeber",
"xeberler bugun",
"xəbərlər",
"son xəbər",
"xəbərlər 2020",
"aksiya",
"mitinq",
"kanal13",
"kanal13 xeber",
"yeni xeber",
"tecili xeberler",
"en son xeberler",
"bugun xeber",
"xeberler 2021",
"ən son xəbərlər",
"son xəbərlər",
"son xeberler",
"gunun son xeberleri",
"günün son xəbərləri",
"günün xəbərləri",
"günün xeberleri",
"etiraz aksiyası",
"bakıda aksiya",
"mitinq aksiya"
] | 2021-11-30T09:00:11 | 2024-02-14T18:44:27 | 180 |
ZqhHbv4irgE
|
Məhbuz eylən edilən salih rüsləminin azad olunması üçün Azərbaycan hökumətində çağrışlar davam edir. Geyri qanuni olaraq, sağlanılan və yittil həbse məhcum edilən salih rüsləmli, hazırda davam edən azılık aksiyası məthicəsində həpsxanada sürətləpisləşəl səhətindən əziyyət çəkir. O, dərhal azad edilməlidir deyə Norveç Helsinki Kontesi'nin yaydıqı sun bəyanatda bildirilir. Cözümüzün qabağında atam yavaş-yavaş öldürülür deyə salih rüsləminin oğlundan sitat getirlən bəyanatda daha sonra deyilir. Həpsxanada onun muhalecə edən həçimlərin sözlərinə görə onun orqanlarının failəti dayanmaq üzrədir. Salih rüsləmli, tələbinin yerinə yetirilmədiyi təqdirdə azılık aksiyasını sona qədər davama yetirəcəyəni bildirib. Bir şey dəqiqdir. Azərbaycanda və onun hüdudlarından kənarda rüsləmlinin işindəki inanılmaz ədalətsizləyə davamlı diqqət göstərilməyənə qədər Azərbaycan haçimiyyəti hərəkətə keçməyəcək. Biz bütün tələftarlarımıza milli hücumətlərə və beynahal qurumlara rüsləmlinin dərhal azadlığa bırakılması və həyatını xilas etmək üçün onun seçdiyi müstəqil həçimlər tərəfindən təciri tip bir yardım tələbi ilə müraci et edirik deyə bəyanat müəllifləri çağrış ediblər, qeydədək ki, salih rüsləmli birinci qarabag muharibəsinin iştirakçısı olub, çədəbə irayonunun əriməni təcavüs çarlarından təmizlənməsində və uğurlu başıcənd əməliyyətində fəyal iştirak edib. Bir müddət rüsyədə yaşamış rüsləmli 2018-ci ildə bahçiyə cələn zaman həps edilib və narkotik maddələri saxlamakda iddiham edilib. Sonradan cinayət işinə əlavə edilən başqa iddihamlara əsasən, rüsləmli Cüya Rusya'da qeyri qanunu sahab çarlıqla məşqul olub, cəvirlərini dövlətdən cizlədib. Xatırladakça bir nəçəcün öncə bir grup qeyri hökmət təşkilatı və media rəhbərləri, hüqub müdafiətçiləri, salih rüsləmovla bağlı prezidentə müraci et ediblər. Rüsləmli həpsinin ədalətsiz olduğuna ətiraz edərək, cəzəl çəkmə müəssəsində artıq 23 gündən soqdur ki, azılı gedir və çirlərin bildirdiyinə görə onun həyatına kritik təhlükə var.
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"url": "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZqhHbv4irgE",
"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
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UCCd3-JX7e8uGZx00i5646jg
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DTNS 3003 - Domo Arigato Mr. BitCoin
|
YouTube limits who can make money on its platform, Eurogamer gets wowed by Microsoft's Project Scorpio and why Japan may usher in the rise of Bitcoin.
http://dailytechnewsshow.com/support
Introduction:
http://www.theverge.com/2017/4/6/15200836/facebook-messenger-m-suggestions-ai-assisant
http://www.theverge.com/2017/4/6/15183118/apple-clips-app-social-video-editing-mobile-imovie-filters
https://techcrunch.com/2017/04/06/nvidias-new-titan-xp-top-end-graphics-card-also-offers-mac-support
https://blog.twitter.com/2017/introducing-twitter-lite
Top Stories:
http://www.eurogamer.net/articles/digitalfoundry-2017-project-scorpio-tech-revealed
http://www.theverge.com/2017/4/6/15209220/youtube-partner-program-rule-change-monetize-ads-10000-views
https://www.recode.net/2017/4/6/15211214/twitter-suing-government-free-speech-anti-trump-account-first-amendment
http://fortune.com/2017/04/06/comcast-wireless-service/
https://9to5mac.com/2017/04/05/australia-lawsuit-error-53-repair
News from you: http://dailytechnewsshow.reddit.com
http://dailytechheadlines.com
http://anchor.fm
Discussion Story:
https://www.cryptocoinsnews.com/bitcoin-accepted-260000-stores-japan
http://asia.nikkei.com/Business/Consumers/Japanese-retailers-quickly-embracing-bitcoin-payments
Pick of the day:
http://www.dailytechnewsshow.com/picks
Messages of the day:
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-backstory-editor-idUSKBN178208
Today’s guest:
http://twitch.tv/justinryoung
http://thecontender.us
http://www.politicspoliticspolitics.com
http://frogpants.com/podcasts/hotlinemonday
http://stickersordiaf.com
http://nightattack.tv
@JustinRYoung
Next guest:
http://youtube.com/Lamarrwilson
@LamarrWilson
http://patreon.com/len
https://lenperaltastore.com
@LenPeralta
http://www.dailytechnewsshow.com/subscribe
http://dtns.bigcartel.com
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http://www.technology.fm/dtns
http://dtns.tv/wiki
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http://bit.ly/DTNS-shirt
http://bit.ly/HelpDTNS
http://tommerrittbooks.com/chronology-of-tech-history
http://swordandlaser.com/store
http://frogpants.com/podcasts/current-geek
|
[
"tech",
"news",
"#hangoutsonair",
"Hangouts On Air",
"#hoa"
] | 2017-04-06T21:28:04 | 2024-02-07T17:47:13 | 3,175 |
zqyt2YidgnU
|
labeled inappropriate So many things are Roger Like these seat these IKEA cushions seat cushions aren't the best You're on a seat cushion Yeah, you know the ones you get for the IKEA chairs. Hmm. No, I don't buy me. I know what you mean I don't really well they sell these cushions. Gotcha It's kind of lumpy No butt jokes by the way. No, we are live. Hi everyone What's happening Justin Robert Young and I are busily tracking down all this late-breaking news. Yes, I'm gonna go track down more That's the news for you you can't just sit down and expect to track it Sometimes you got to go off camera. No, I'm not even joking though. We had news man. There's some news out here Everybody go watch my video. I posted from clips. Oh Good, where'd you post it? Twitter nice Also to save it to my camera roll and then post it there, which I think kind of defeats the purpose Yeah, shouldn't you be able to share right from clips, right? That's the idea. Yes, it didn't look easy Okay, I thought I clicked. Oh man. I hate it. What tweet deck does that I? I Thought I had clicked on your there's yet don't play the odd There's curse words in the audio, but I thought I had clicked on your video And instead I got a picture of Steve Bannon because it had flipped down Okay, now I'm looking at your video look at this awesome. Oh, I see I Have a gray face So it doesn't show you like what it looks like it just keeps like showing like hey talk here talk here So I just kept talking and I just kept adding to the thing Then eventually I just realized I was making a movie does speech to text though, right? Yeah. Yeah. No, that's not where that part It's working pretty good. Yeah Once you know what you're doing What's up guys The guy with the face that's why we call you Justin face. Yeah, it's all me mr. Face. Oh Oh Kung Fu drafter I look like a young porn version of Leo Laporte. I don't know who that's more insulting toward what? Who said that probably most insulting to pornography kung fu drafter has an email in our show today as a matter of fact I saw Veronica's and it worked well I mean now that I understand that it makes a video and not like just adds cool things to like a gift picture Mm-hmm. I understand a lot more. It's still a little bit a little bit complicated Yeah, all right. I'm ready to go. Y'all ready to go Let me hide All right, you do what you need to do Roger Here oh We go Daily Tech news show is powered by you to find out more head to Daily Tech news show comm slash support This is the Daily Tech news for Thursday April 6th 2017 I'm Tom merit Justin Robert young along the side for our Thursday ride Justin and man The news is like a thin window in an abandoned neighborhood today. Just keeps breaking. Oh my good Lord You might have thought that this Sunday in the citrus bowl It was the WrestleMania was the ultimate throw ride, but you have seen nothing compared to the Absolute rushing torrent of news for which we are about to lose upon your date Listen my friends if you listen to Justin Robert young and I discuss Planning the show on Justin's twitch stream We tore it all up since then you're barely gonna recognize this show Now we that way it was it was a good a nice little lineup, you know, we had a good little session But like now we got some we got some bonafide news. Hey, what do you say? We stop talking about it and start getting into it. We mean with a few tech things you should know Facebook's AI assistant M will now start popping into messenger chats to make suggestions Starting with Android and iOS users in the US before it goes worldwide Examples of what it can do includes sending an initiating payment request Calling a ride for you start to pull share in location. It's just gonna say hey Do you want to do this and then you can do it really easy? You know, it's an interesting idea. You got to wonder how many false positives before people disable it immediately Apple released its clips app for recording and editing video to be shared in several places including Vimeo Facebook YouTube mail and I message you tried it out. I Did and then I also note of those places Vimeo Facebook YouTube mail and I message There is no Twitter. I didn't realize that until afterward. I had to save it to my camera roll and post it My review the UI needs a little work little complex Little complex little complex. Yeah, but that that speech to text where it puts the text up on the screen for you It's cool. Yeah, it works really well Nvidia's new Titan XP graphics card announced Thursday Not only includes 12 gigabytes of DDR5 x memory and runs at 11.4 gigabits per second But for the first time we'll offer Mac OS beta drivers later this month and apparently they're gonna do that for the whole Pascal architecture based chips The Hackintosh Awakens Twitter unveiled its new lightweight mobile optimized version for a site called Twitter light targeted at markets in the Asia Pacific region Latin America and Africa that takes up less than one megabyte of Storage on a device. It's designed to use minimal data. Yes, just the website the mobile website mobile.twitter.com is now a web app a Lightweight web app kind of cool. All right Here are some more top stories euro gamer and digital foundry Reported those specs for Microsoft's upcoming Xbox console Currently referred to as Project Scorpio assume a D3. Well, we might get a new name for that features an eight core CPU at 2.3 gigahertz 40 compute unit GPU with 1172 megahertz and 12 gigabytes of GDDR5 ram. This is a fast Powerful machine. There's also a terabyte hard drive inside two and a half inch hard drive 4k UHD blu-ray drive and Euro gamer and digital foundry Not a verse to criticizing Microsoft probably to their faces said they were pretty impressed when they saw for its a motorsport Which granted one of the best-looking games. They've got running at a native 4k and 60 frames per second. I Mean Justin, I'm looking through this and the Euro gamer thing is worth to read if you're really into hardware They they dig deep into what's going on what Microsoft did when they built this custom AMD chipset up from the ground what they were trying to achieve But this is the opposite of the Nintendo switch They're going full throttle on the hardware and pushing out a Very sophisticated console with some like crazy heat management to make sure they can keep it in a compact box it sounds impressive and We assume that this is part of what they expect to have a big kind of summer rollout with all the conventions and everything coming up to Debut the idea that hey, there is a benefit to doing this iterative software. So iterative hardware rollout Sure, you might have to shell out a little bit more than you would otherwise the life cycle on these consoles is going to be much shorter However, this is the flexibility. We have we can now make these machines and put them out and For Microsoft they've been running second to play station sense the dawning of their new consoles And this seems to at least be something that is getting people's attention. Yeah I know a lot of people have been critical of this idea of consoles being iterative Although we are fine with other things like phones being iterative, but we use iPads iPhones Samsung sure we're used to consoles lasting longer and and so Microsoft and Sony with the PlayStation 4 Pro Bending over backwards to say the Xbox and or PlayStation you have now will continue to work for years ahead Don't worry one little bit all this is if you want to get 4k We're gonna do it But man when you read these Microsoft specs for project Scorpio first of all It's a big bold move by Microsoft to put themselves back in the game as they continue to tag along in second place behind the PlayStation and it's also a Way more powerful machine than a lot of people could afford to get as a PC So I'm curious if that $400 price tag that Euro gamer expects Will stick because then it becomes Almost a no-brainer if you're a serious gamer You also got to wonder well where that goes when it comes to a little bit more processor intensive kind of stuff as well as Stuff that is dependent on 4k graphics like virtual reality, you know, yeah No, this is this thing's gonna be great for VR. Yeah, this this would be a huge huge move in that direction I I also brought one last thing before we move off of this. I also think that this could potentially mark the point at which we started to differentiate desktop hardware and into not being desktop like the the desktop PC as an all-in-one can do everything device Maybe on its way out and and be replaced by these appliance versions where it's like hey This is a game console can do all kinds of things because it's got this power in it And maybe you'll get a dedicated video editing version of a box down the road And I I won't I don't think PCs will ever lose their ability to do multiple things But this is not oh, well, you know We'll use cheaper parts to make a cheaper product that can still play games really well because we fine-tuned it for that This is a powerful box. Yeah, but the key is the price, right because he is the price Yeah, you know right now even for a top-of-the-line PC You're going to be spending less than you would on several different boxes for several different things especially because Especially because you are going to have the ability to pick up something new without going out and picking up new hardware for it YouTube changed its partner program today So that partner creators will not begin making money on the platform until their channel has received 10,000 lifetime views in a few weeks creators who apply for their partner program that lets them make money will be reviewed after They hit the 10,000 view threshold creators who appear to community guy or start who adhere to a immunity guy community guidelines and Advertiser policies will then be able to have ads served against the channel and share in the revenue Now unmentioned in this is part of the reason why they're doing it which includes many big advertisers pulling out of YouTube as a platform because their ads were possibly if not actually sponsoring horrifying content including terrorism and Propaganda Tom is this enough I Don't know if this will be enough on its own But it's certainly the kind of big move that Advertisers and putting the pressure on Google and YouTube to do which is just make it hard it make it impossible for our ads to show up next to controversial content like that and This is a good move when I first saw it. I thought oh 10,000 subscribers Wow, that's pretty high not 10,000 subscribers 10,000 views So if you make a channel you start getting an audience You'll get to 10,000 views if if your channel is worth making money off of fairly quickly So so you'll be able to start making money if you have a decent channel Without too much delay, but there is a little bit of delay and Google will be able to have enough information now to say Alright, is this a valid site? Does this conform to our advertiser policies and they're not making any any Secret out of it in their announcement. They're like, yeah This is gonna help us crack down on exactly those kind of sites that advertisers don't want to be associated with Well, and also while the ISIS vids might have been the catalyst This has to be something that has been on the advertisers wish list for a long time because it also does just that little bit To eliminate totally low quality videos being a possible destination for paid-for ads Hmm. It's something that is randomly put up there That's maybe free booted for the millionth time or is just totally worthless if somebody's money Although because it's Google and YouTube a fraction of a cent is worth maybe is there is something that advertisers are not pleased with the question here or the cost rather is This does take a little bit away from the community It takes a little bit away from the idea that you can just make video and we will take care of the rest you have to demonstrate Commitment at the very least to create an account and get a certain threshold Who knows whether or not that will ultimately be a problem But it is YouTube cashing in a little bit on the community side to please the advertiser side Yeah, and you know, I did not says what is ten thousand views worth ten cents It might be a buck fifty it might even be a couple bucks But point point is still well taken you are not losing a lot of money by waiting for ten thousand views And YouTube isn't saving a lot of money by waiting for ten thousand views They're not going to run ads on you until you get those ten thousand views Twitter filed a lawsuit in the US district court in northern district of California Against the US Department of Homeland Security and its sub agency customs and border protection After customs demanded Twitter deliver information that would help it identify the user behind alt underscore US CIS US CIS does often stand for the United States Citizens and immigration services, which has been this alt version of which has been tweeting criticism of US immigration policy Now Twitter says the request is an unlawful use of the government's investigatory powers Twitter's lawsuit focuses on whether customs has the legal authority to make this request. They're not actually blocking it Particularly just because of the content they're saying I don't think you can ask for this based on the way you're asking it The custom and border protections initial order invoked a statute Which is mostly related to taxes on the importation of merchandise Twitter says that's that's not enough authority to unmask a user And then they bring in the usual chilling effect on speech if anybody can come and find out who you are with that level of of Probable cause they're they're basically saying you don't have probable cause at this point So this is obviously going to be a big headline Twitter versus the government, right? Especially complicated on a very superficial level because the president of the United States uses Twitter as his platform of choice to interact with millions of Americans and Those are broad as well however, I'm curious to know exactly how much of this is just you filled your form out wrong and You know whether or not this really is Twitter Trying to break new ground or stop from seeding new ground would probably be a more apt metaphor or If it's them just saying okay, you want to know what we have to put up with all Tech companies have to put up with a lot when it comes to homeland security and the NSA and everything But on this if you're not even going to bother To to give us enough to turn stuff over for you Then we're going to take you to court, you know, and we're going to make a public thing about it Yeah, I mean, I think it's it's fair to say external of any other considerations that if agency of the US government Files a request to you and you say well wait a minute tax taxes on importation of merchandise not what we do No, we're not going to comply with that Because we want to protect our users privacy unless there's a sufficient reason not to so I think Twitter has grand It has ground to stand on there whether this is you didn't file the right form Could be a consideration because if and this isn't what I see yet But if the reason was we think that saying alt USC is is Not a proper use and and is confusing and impersonating an agency people might think this is actually the USC is and it's not There's some validity to that And at which point that's why you need a judge to weigh in and talk about it But it does sound like they didn't like this account. They certainly weren't liking the criticism of it and they wanted to shut it down and Trying to get it shut down because they thought well, we can use this law. We think this will hold up in court. We'll see if it will Comcast announced its wireless phone service Thursday called Xfinity mobile all customers get unlimited talk and texting Then for data you can choose between $65 for unlimited or $12 a gigabyte the network uses Verizon along with Comcast Wi-Fi access points The voice calls start on one network. You won't be able to carry on when switched to another later on You also can't bring your own phone There is no zero rating of Comcast service But also no extra charge for tethering service will be available in 39 states in DC where people can get cable and internet service from Comcast as well This is totally a bundling play This is Comcast saying because because they're only operating in the regions where they have service We want to keep people subscribed to cable television So let's give them a good deal on wireless phone service. So they'll want to stay with us And and that's why this this is really expensive when you get up to a family of four Right, they don't have discounts yet for for multiple users But it's a pretty good price when you're talking about individual lines And it's pretty simple. You either pay 65 bucks for unlimited and yeah, I think there's a 20 gigabyte Max before you start to get throttled at certain times. That's the standard now across AT&T and Verizon and everybody And then it's $12 a gigabyte if you're like, I don't think I'll use that much But but at least I know what to expect if I go over Also, no zero rating is going to be a good thing for net neutrality fans who usually pick on Comcast for just such things They steered clear of that. They said no, we're not going to bother with that fight But we're also not going to charge you for tethering So, I mean, it's actually not a bad plan Really, I don't know what it absolutely isn't which kind of led me to the idea that you know with Comcast bundles They've always tried to go for three, right? And and it was always internet tv And then the other right and that's gone through home phone home security There's always the and Peggy if you look at this deal if they want to bundle home internet A a really competitive Interesting top of the line, you know, they're using the Verizon mvno So like this should be as reliable as Verizon along with the coverage of all the Comcast outlet access points That's also pretty useful The Peggy is cable tv They want people to stay on cable tv and now they got to invent a new Tier that is attractive So you're not just saying what so many people I do right now scratch my cable I certainly don't need a home phone Uh, just give me the give me the or sorry scratch my television. Just give me the cable internet. Yeah Uh, I'm curious how this this works out. I'll be curious if if Comcast ever Expands beyond their own regions because right now it's it's a regional player. It's not it's not a it's it's like us cellular at this point It's not a not a national player, but but it is an interesting and frankly well presented option It's not dead, you know, it's not the dead best necessarily Well, but they also they also have an opportunity Yeah, because I I don't know if they're going to venture this out and break it out and have it not be a bundle thing But it also kind of gives them a good opportunity because I'm sure they're going to get fairly well Reviewed on this that it's going to be an enjoyable experience But they don't have the burden on them that AT&T and Verizon do Uh as as wireless carriers that have to be like, you know, oh no, we're good everywhere Go all over the country and you will be able to have our service They're just like, hey, no, you know, you're gonna spend the majority of the time in your city And to be clear this will work everywhere It just won't be available like it won't be available to me because I don't live in a Comcast service area But if you get it, you'll still be able to travel to my area and use it because it's going to use the Verizon network So I mean the downsides are I can't bring my own phone. That's a deal killer for me personally It's not for most people But but switching is going to be hard for people who are like, wait, you mean I have to buy a new phone I can't just use the one I have and and they They really need to get to the point where a voice call can gracefully transition from the Wi-Fi network on the Comcast Stuff to the Verizon network once they and that should they said that should happen down the road Australia's competition and consumer commission the a triple c has filed a federal lawsuit against apple on behalf of 275 consumers who say apple declining to repair iPhones after customers got an error 53 The situation began last february when touch id sensors failed a security check after third party repairs Either repaired the screen or that sensor id button that home button a class action suit over the issue failed in the u.s But a triple c chairman rod sims says denying a consumer their consumer guarantee rights simply because they had chosen a third party repairer Not only impacts those consumers, but can dissuade other customers from making informed choices about their repair options Man i'm curious to see where this goes apple usually fights pretty hard about that they they certainly will maintain that by restricting third party Repairs they are indeed protecting and preserving the apple standard Of excellence for which they are known for so this seems to be Something that that's going to be a very very interesting fight for for apple. Yeah, and if apple's smart They'll just they'll just say you know what fine anybody's got an error 53 will cover it under warranty. Just just do it Just whatever just you know, enjoy throw another shrimp on the barbie Hey, folks if you want to get all the tech headlines each day in less than five minutes You got to subscribe to our companion show daily tech headlines.com All right, folks nike has a report today That is good news for bitcoin not talking about blockchain this time. We're actually talking about the cryptocurrency bitcoin Last year japan voted to end the eight percent consumption tax on bitcoin. So that ends this july That was treating bitcoin as a commodity a lot of governments do that where they say sure you can have a bitcoin But it's like owning a a a bar of you know iron. It's a commodity. It has value, but it's not money Japan's ended that they're like no no consumption tax on bitcoin We're going to call bitcoin money and in fact as of april 1st bitcoin is officially recognized in japan as a method of payment Now there were more than 4200 merchants accepting bitcoin at the end of 2016 nike pegs that at about 4500 right now so that's not a ton but Coin checks resupress Has been letting japanese people pay their electricity bill with bitcoin So there is a a more pervasive route there and nike reports that two big retailers Are partnering to accept bitcoin recruit lifestyle is going to partner with coin check And include in recruits point of sale app air reggie the ability to pay by bitcoin now that app is used at 260 000 locations and Key to our later discussion air reggie is compatible with alley pay, which is very popular with chinese tourists Customers use the tablets and their phones to pay from a bitcoin wallet So use your phone you come up to the tablet at the point of sale boom paid by bitcoin Now bic camera is also partnered with bitcoin exchange bit flyer And customers at two tokyo stores starting today, which is friday in japan, but starting today Can pay with bitcoin and get rewards points like they would if they pay with cash because it avoids the credit card processing fees if that trial goes good They hope to expand it to other bic camera stores in japan as well and and justin I think the point of all of this is japan wants tourists, especially chinese tourists who like to use bitcoin for various reasons to Spend their money when they come for the olympics Yeah, I guess that that is the big the the big the big carrot that is dangling in front of uh The decision makers here is they are about to face a gigantic influx of humanity and they certainly do not want to leave any money on the table Making bitcoin, which is very attractive to places that have Governments that tend to restrict You know things if not, you know money specifically is China's got two currencies as a currency for in-house. There's a currency for external use And and so bitcoin is very popular in china because it makes some things just simple Is this when we look back in five years decisions by a technologically forward thinking country like japan Going to be something that we look at as a domino falling for more global corporate acceptance of bitcoin There are a lot of things have to go right for that to play out in my opinion. Let's lay it out but Here are the what ifs if enough chinese users Are bringing bitcoins to japan with their alley pay apps in hand And enough of these retailers. I mean recruit lifestyle is pretty big 260 000 locations I think you're gonna need a few more Let's say a couple other retailers before 2020 jump on board And the olympics happens and suddenly everybody's like no you're paying with bitcoin How do I do that if that starts to become the talk of the olympics, right? Obviously the olympics would be the talk of the olympics But one of the one of the stories you hear buzzing out of there is Man, you know, there's a lot of people shopping with bitcoin and we see that headline of x million bitcoins used To buy things during the 2020 olympics real gold medal in tokyo Was made of bitcoin I think then you start to turn a lot more heads who say well, shoot that worked that drove sales once that drives sales That's when people start to pay attention because I mean again my my my question here is What is in it for the players that need to make this easier to use because if you were to ask me now I'm sure it would only take a little bit of googling for me to figure out how I could easily use bitcoin But aside from gimmicky stuff, like I think, you know, there's a couple bars in austin that have bitcoin Etms and and you know, I'm sure that there are some in the bay area The idea of using bitcoin for things like, you know, a cup of coffee, right? Not exactly seem Abundant. Can I use bitcoin at this noodle vending machine? Right? Yeah, that's that's what we're looking at and That's why I think this really does rest on the chinese tourists because Americans coming over they barely got chip and pin, right? There's not going to be a bitcoin app that they're going to be able to use with these terminals easily It's going to take work But since alipay is involved suddenly it's like man all all the chinese tourists have alipay Everybody's scrambling to figure out how to how to use alipay in tourism locations across the world So that they can rake in more of that cash As as chinese tourists go and spend their money overseas Uh, you know, and alipay is at the forefront of that. That's where it's like, oh, well I already have this so I can already pay in bitcoin and I'm already sort of familiar with bitcoin That that's what makes it work for me possibly The other thing that is interesting on the retailer side is this concept that like You know when when apple Uh launched apple pay. I remember there was a the consortium of Like cvs and and oh, right. Yeah, they tried to make their own thing But the idea being that we were at a breakpoint Of how we pay for things technology had made it Easier for us to You know change the way that we exchanged, you know money for goods And they very much were invested in a future where they could cut out credit card transaction fees Because they were that that became this de facto way to spend money People were carrying cash on them less and less They if if now we can break and now it's let let's deal with The the the tech companies so we don't have to deal with the credit card companies Apple pay samsung pay all run through credit card unions that they wanted to create their own version where it was like Only 19 000 simple steps that involved you scanning a qr code, right? what This is what the interesting thing about bitcoin is that this is another non-fee way to pay and retailers will Always look for a way to get that in there So i'm i'm curious to see if this is a success because i would love to see another option Yeah, the other thing is will it change japanese behavior We you know once the tourists leave at the end of the olympics Will there be more japanese who then picked up the habit, right because the the dominant Mode right now is ed or suika. I used the suika card when I was in japan Last and it was great because you could use it across transit But you could also use it at vending machines. You could use it at shops and it's just tap and pay It's just nfc And again, there's no transaction fee. You know, I mean there's a little bit of a fee to buy the card But so so can you can you pull those cards out of japanese shoppers hands and get them using bitcoin? It's another big question I guess that is that it is the other thing is that unless you are in a situation like like the chinese tourists are Where there is a barrier to getting easy money to spend while you are out and about You know the the the solutions to pay right now aren't really all that bad You know like yeah, because you know for for for customers for customers at least because they don't have to pay the credit card fee Well, there's gonna have to be easier ways to do it for everybody We'll keep an eye on it Thanks to everybody who participates in our subreddit keeps these stories coming You can submit stories and vote on them at daily tech news show dot reddit dot com A few emails before we leave first of all kurt marina aka the kung fu drafter longtime patreon supporter Is comment in the chat room right now writes as a longtime employee for a civil engineering firm with a heavy specialization in regional airports I find this topic very interesting while i think zunem arrow has some great goals I have to wonder if they have considered the acceptance of their intent That is to say will regional airports get on board this refers to yesterday's story of the company that Wants to use the small regional airports excess capacity To create a new network of planes using hybrid electric planes that don't need as much fuel Their contention is We can we can do this because it doesn't cost as much because we can use these electric planes. Well kung fu drafter points out an airport's fixed base operations derives a massive percentage of its revenue from fuel sales While there are other incidental revenue streams It's almost fair to say that the entire airport facility is a funnel to sell fuel to aircraft operators As far as I can imagine electric or hybrid aircraft will greatly cut into that revenue He also wondered if regional airports would have to upgrade parking upgrade security If they start to get more people coming in Whether they would even have to adjust to the shortened life of aircraft paving due to a sudden increase in operations per year It's one thing to say you've got the capacity. It's another thing to actually have to deal with that capacity So they had great insights kurt. Thank you so much Uh collin writes regarding twitter reportedly seeking the ability to let cable subscribers log in and watch their tv on twitter Who writes hey dts crew? I will produce I produced movies and television Uh, I produced movies for television rather and in my experience networks pay a whole lot of attention to twitter For better or worse overnight ratings and tweets seem to form the basis of their opinion of a premiere I wonder if this move is aimed at the networks rather than the users There are limits on what information can be collected about viewers from cable boxes And twitter might be able to offer a way around that and sell more comprehensive metrics So I it might be a way to monetize existing users even if they don't dramatically grow the user base just a thought Oh, that's a great thing though. That's a great thought twitter being able to share extra analytics With companies because they're allowing authentication through their servers Would be a big sell Well, and and it it bullies on the idea that we had right here on this podcast I think it was last week about things that twitter could do about you know They should be a place where you can watch the things that everybody is are talking about Uh, I still think that their better way to do it is to create their own Service that you can that that you can use and then you can still you can sell a walled garden information to everybody Uh, based on your twitter user history not as much information to sell though in that case. Why not do both? You could Yaru in malaysia was listening to our topic yesterday on super intelligence and dangers And has a science fiction recommendation yaru says it's an anime series called Psycho pass set in the future where japan is the only country in the world that is not in ruins And is ruled by a super powerful artificial intelligence that makes the decisions for all the inhabitants Everybody has a crime coefficient index or the likelihood of committing a crime Once your mental state changes that it gets high enough you'll be arrested and detained It had a bit of a minority report and ghost in the shell anime version feel to it It's a good example How like your guest said yesterday that fiction is one of humanity's superpowers and how it gets you thinking on these issues Once again, it's a series called psycho pass. You might want to check it out And finally travis rides while not directly related to technology Reuters published a letter from the editor-in-chief concerning news reports reporting integrity Uh, especially uh, interesting is the planned inclusion of the intermittent backstory to help understand and how and why stories came together This additional content would be quite powerful context for readers who choose to engage at this level Interestingly as tech companies work to combat fake news The role as an aggregator Vice reporter keeps them from these more elegant journalism solutions. That's interesting It's interesting to see Reuters, you know stepping forward to say hey Let's let's help you understand how it is we put together this story And that could become the kind of marker you look for and whether to to trust an outlet or not is Do they you know pull back the curtain a little and show you how they put it together? Plus it's just fascinating for anybody like myself who's interested in how journalism is done Yes, yes, it's an interesting idea Uh, if if I might kind of walk back the enthusiasm a touch Very often the best reported stuff Uh, you can you can read it just by reading it, you know the the more direct quotes the more Uh, you know, I'm always a fan of data dumps, you know, like when you Especially on the internet where there is infinite space. Give me every page of the report that you uncovered Give me every, uh, you know, give me full interviews in in addition to the quotes that you just used In the story like I'm always for more of the reporting Getting out there, but I don't know if a blow-by-blow of exactly how things came down the pike Is all that valuable considering that you're still gonna have to redact a bunch of stuff to protect Uh, uh, you know anonymous sources and in really big investigative stuff Yeah, they're saying from time to time. So it's yeah, it's not going to be appropriate for for every story out there But I do think that We as people who both went to journalism school look at stories and we see how it came together a lot of people can't see that Sure So this may be stuff where we look at it and go well, yeah, obviously you talked to that person because you quoted them Right, but some that might be more beneficial for some people. I'm always I'm always for more transparency Definitely, definitely. Well, thank you. Justin Robert young transparently speaking. What are you up to? Uh, everybody can go ahead and check me out at twitch.tv slash justin our young streaming every single day In fact, I'll be streaming right after this on the channel of uh, you're and my mutual friend Uh, willy dills gregory. He and I will be uh going through The journey to ungoro the new expansion From hearthstone Excellent excellent. What's up dills? I said, hey, I will Thank you to everyone who supports this show Uh by giving a little value back for the value you feel you have gotten that includes Among many other shawn sorenson, sharon mcfalls, howard nager many many more at patreon.com Slash dtns. We cannot thank you enough for your support. Keep it coming Our email address is feedback at dailytechnewshow.com. We're live monday through friday at 4 30 p.m Eastern at alphankeek radio.com and diamondclub.tv and our website is dailytechnewshow.com back tomorrow with lamar Wilson as our guest and len frault to in to illustrate talk to you then Who is part of the frog pants network? Get more at frogpants.com And with that the cardinals lose six to four Oh no, what a shame the cardinals lose. It's so Uh, can you hear me? Yes, we can. It's amazing. Sometimes it works. Sometimes it doesn't Let's just see how the pirates are doing while you give us some titles Luckily I sewed not into baseball not for the you not for youtube Hashtag you have been served domey already got Mr. Bitcoin i'm a sucker for a sticks illusion so sure why Why why would you be a sucker for that Becoming a legitimate legitimate coin one bit at a time. That's pretty good. I like that one Scorpio is going to sting the playstation. Whoa It's a little aggressive there Uh narrowing the ad tube mobile with wires attached Error 53 cu in court. Comcast wireless plan is pretty tethered of it's a pretty tethered affair a bit of a tongue twister Japan bitcoins the market japan legalized a bit more coin to bitcoin the terms It's a florax notes. It's a desert topping. Oh twitter. It's a florax notes. It's a desert topic I like don't I have to go with the It's not because I like sticks because it's it's a good You know, this is the thing like does anyone under the age of 25 Get that reference or even under the age of 30 get sticks as a reference. I don't know. It's a good question Kids these days know sticks they uh, somebody performed carry on my wayward son on the voice Yeah, people know that but it's the same in tv shows and stuff Come sail away So we'll see this is my question paradise. I don't know people know it because It was parodied or referenced by something else For example, I know a few people who only know songs or things because of the simpsons Because the simpsons made fun of it. I bet sticks is one of those bands people recognize their big hits But don't know who the band is yeah, I think I think yeah, I mean I can be Carry on my wayward son's been in so many movies, right? Right. Especially comedies. It's like it's it's a great comedic foil for like an over dramatic if you're playing Like a hanker man Sure. Yeah, exactly But carry on my wayward son is kansas. Yeah, I don't know that sticks has a song Lady Lady yeah, no, you're right. I've seen I've seen lady use the top stick songs See that's a thing it sticks even for our age groups like mr. Roboto mr. Roboto might be the biggest Oh, come sail away and mr. Roboto that's so come sail away I guarantee more people know it through the south park cartman singing reference mr. Roboto though. Mr People know mr. Roboto We'll see I'm curious. I really am. I wouldn't like because the culture moves at such a fast frenetic pace. I mean, you know Like you like wasn't Veronica telling us like a month ago that she was in a class or a programming class And they're talking about r.e.m. And so it's like who's r.e.m That's r.e.m. Also r.e.m You know, that's that's a kind of music that is oddly less relevant now than I think sticks is How it sticks relevant because sticks Six fits more in that Like and I'm going to say something that already is a data reference, but like like that guitar hero kind of Well, so that's the other thing. I wonder if people know songs because of guitar hero Yeah, this is a great guitar hero. Absolutely. And and also You remember r.e.m. That whole like, you know college rock movement in in the 90s was very much kind of a reaction against that corporate Yeah, the other corporate 70s and 80s We were an r.e.m Station and then I started to play less r.e.m as the program director and Several people hated us because of it Did uh, and what is what is the biggest r.e.m. Song? Uh, uh, stand not stand where you, um, it's the end of the world. It's the end of the world Isn't it that's not using my religion my religion or hobby number two I hated that song losing my religion. That was what I was in I did the I did that record release party Every coffee shop around a college camp has played that With some time during the day. It's just uh with roger yelling that is not you in the corner No, where's he doing the spotlight? Well, this is track lighting. There's a multitude of spotlights Uh, I think demo already got to a mr. Bitcoin is at the top. Yeah done Also, there's something about this being episode 2003 that just fits well with that title. I don't know why it looks good It looks like a uh, uh, a model number Yeah Pottle number 2003 2003 domo arigato mr. Bitcoin Finally, have you sat through that? I've I've actually sat through the whole thing and it's pretty embarrassing at some points of it What thing the the the uh, the whole sticks that kind of rock would it go rock opera? Oh, you mean the whole album? Yeah, wow, it's just I just never Oh my god, I had the album. It's cringey like parts of it's like, okay. I guess I mean, he's Just trying to be very he's trying to be very profound But it doesn't come off very profound. It just comes off as like sticky. Okay. This brings up an interesting thing for me Once I have discovered a band the next album that comes out always feels like it's less important Like oh, yeah, but that's after I discovered them So none of those none of those are really count That's it like I always devalue that and mr. Roboto is the first sticks album I bought After my sister introduced me to sticks losing my religion that album Was the first rem album that came out after I started really getting to know them on radio and college So I always discount them like oh, they can't be that popular That was after they had reached their peak like I feel like once I discovered them They must have reached their peak. Do you guys have that same? I think I think when you automatically Reach out and grab for their best of anytime you see a best of compilation I tend to think they've peaked out Like maybe when you said losing my religion was the number two I was like, oh, I guess it is but I always devaluate because I'm like, yeah But that's off that album after I'd already you know gotten to know them it's uh like I it's it's weird because um Like all that I'm trying to think of all the band all the albums I bought They're all kind of in the middle when they were on Heavy rotation and that's why you know because that's why you buy it But is that in the middle of a heavy rotation? Does that mean it's like at the the middle or at the tail end? Yeah, like when when Depeshman's violator came out and you're like, you know policy of truth or whatever And it's like in every other freaking TV show Do you is it is that is at that point? Is it just overplayed or is it just or is it just self-loathing? It's Maybe you know, there's a part of you when you're in college you tend to be very cynical about like this is too likeable. It sucks Yeah, like people used to do that. It's like this song. Oh this song is um, what was that? Like like how they like like if an indie or alternative bands like oh, that's just a corporate song Like that's something they would put in an album Well, but I think part of what feeds into that is there is that thing where a band like boston That hadn't had an album in a while that makes a comeback album After you know, you're like, oh, yeah, my older sister listened to them And third stage is now out and it it really isn't as good as their other stuff Well, it's um, what's it more than the feeling more than the feeling I always get more of the feeling and uh What's the one from uh, is it asia? So, yeah He didn't a moment. Yeah. He didn't know I always get those two bands and songs. Is that like I transpose them? Wow The more than the feeling is my sister's era of music and then he to the moment was when I was buying 45s But how much time was really between those two Four years Yeah, like is that it felt like forever, you know, it's the difference between me being eight and 12 Yes, I guess that's like an epoch In musical terms. I don't know just it is is this all just old man talk Hey, no, I I don't know. I like music I like beat cross beat. Well, no, I mean no Because I I can't say anything because I could have these same conversations with people of my age about different bands that people don't give a Shit, well, that's what I was wondering is is there a point where a band that you like you're like you're just like Oh, yeah, no, it doesn't feel like those albums are as good I I say that about a lot of 90s bands try to go back. So why did I buy this? Like Uh, like final Death rattle of rock era and like, you know, the before all the autotune robots took over all radio Um, and and we were only allowed you to Like that that I remember being really good that I listened back to and I'm like, yeah Jesus Like that whole stage where every rock band had to have a dj I remember I was into that at the time not so much Well, what I'm I'm curious is like like a lot of late night mid to late 90s bands I don't know if they have the same if they have the same maybe it's just generational But I don't think they have the same mind share that The the generation that came right before them did like, um Like they threw you like you had a bunch of bands like county crows you had Well, you had a band that came out of late 90s. Yeah late 90s. Okay You know, I'll start you're an all-star. Was that band I keep trying to think uh smash mouth There's like a just a bunch of bands that all came kind of rolled out lit and like now you're an all-star. Oh, yeah I remember lit. Yeah, there was just um, uh, what's that? All-american rejects like a lot of it just kind of felt it like, you know You know, they think they they were in that transitory period where it was like cool when you they were on the radio But then people moved quickly on to something else It was it. Um, was that canadian one? Uh fat lip Is that it? No, no, that was it. That was some some 40 some 41 some 31 Some 41. Yeah, that's uh, yeah the um There's just like a lot of bands like that or right around that time Well, I've been rapping, you know rap was big, but the idea was there were still like really hot rock acts There was still a rock radio I remember the first time one of them one of the big moments that I understood that race was certainly a construct that affected My life was when the rock radio station played the beastie boys It's like wait a minute if it's not If it's not sabotage and you just play an intergalactic one of these things not like the other Yep. No, I remember arguing whether we should play Fight for your right on the rock station that I worked for Because they're like, but wait, I think it's I think it's rap And then someone's like no, but it has a lead zeppelin sample in it. So it's okay. Yeah I remembered like cross genre things or like people were totally like, what do we do? This sounds kind of like, I mean you had that issue in the early 80s, right or late 70s early 80s with Kind of poppy country music like well, do do we put juice dude in country or sit more pop? you know, so it's So it's always a bit of a kerfuffle, which is why things like I think Spotify and Pandora Um are so popular. Maybe not super popular but popular To pick what you want. I like what I like Isn't that what people say like what kind of music like? I don't know, but I like what I like Like if I hear it, I like it. That's how I know Because at some point I think the There was a a ridiculous level of subdivision for for music genres Okey-doke I am published you are published as a rather weighty old man conversation Thanks everybody for watching Go enjoy whatever music makes you happy indeed
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"license": "Creative Commons - Attribution - https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"
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Thinking Along A Grooved Track (12-4-23)
|
01:00 Some people, like me, invite abuse, https://www.patreon.com/DecodingTheGurus/
20:00 Thinking on rails
24:00 The Duran: NATO/EU leaders fear US-Russia negotiations, https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/nato-eu-leaders-fear-us-russia-negotiations/id1442883993?i=1000637285535
30:45 Tim's Message to Joe Rogan, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EO5q1m2kC00
33:45 Tim Heidecker on Bill Maher and Club Random, https://www.youtube.com/watch?app=desktop&v=pg-DGX-gNtg
38: British, American comedy
43:00 Going along to get along
45:30 Jordan Peterson is not very well
46:30 The devastation of Covid lockdowns made the people who suffered more skeptical and prone to conspiracy theories
Watch full video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ropDTu8448I&ab_channel=LukeFord
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Code of Conduct: https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=125692
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http://lukeford.net Email me: lukeisback@gmail.com or DM me on Twitter.com/lukeford, Best videos: https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=143746
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Feel free to clip my videos. It's nice when you link back to the original.
| null | 2023-12-05T13:14:42 | 2024-02-05T08:15:38 | 3,033 |
Zq8H13ije4M
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Hey mate 40 here, so I'm only live streaming tonight instead of kicking back watching the football with the sound off listening to Michael Wolfe's biography of Rupert Murdoch on audible and enjoy some high-quality football But I'm ticked off because I was trying to help somebody out today And I did what he asked but much of what he asked me to do he doesn't Recollect correctly, and it's just so frustrating like I I followed directions. I was trying to help some dude out and It did not go well Bloody hell so So I wanted to come online and I just want to yell at somebody And you notice a lot of live streamers, right? They they they seem to get a great deal of power they get to you know vent a lot of Prostrations in their life by just yelling at somebody and Chris Kavanaugh made this point rather profoundly on Decoding the gurus We're gonna do like some of the streamers destiny has an Abbey these type of people because it's an interesting Ecosystem, and it's an ecosystem which is right for parasocial Nebulations and and egomaniacs running wild so it's a good location for secular gurus But yeah, the result is that I ended up watching these the cult drama channels Like they're basically like they're YouTube channels which exist to talk about YouTube drama like between creators this kind of thing Not the worst of them not like not like the ones that are completely like what's the equivalent in the old media like What do you call on TV or that channel is just all about celebrities like what are you wearing on the red carpet and you know? ETB or something like that. Yeah, like Paris Hilton Or something cool Yeah, so there's like YouTube channels like that the channels that I saw are not that bad But they're kind of like here is some bad creator look at all the bad things. He does look kind of familiar. It's always by them Yeah, so I was just watching videos of that Matt and it just those egosystems those personalities They're they're egomaniacs and the way that they're interacting with their audience like you know Sit on the stream and they're kind of drinking the coffee or whatever But then they when somebody says something they don't like it depends on the creator But they get like what you're fucking idiot You just you know you stupid and they're just you know forever and getting all animated And that's part of the appeal but like obviously the other person is generally not there, right? They're just like a disembodied. Yeah, so it's just it's like a really one-sided It's like a guru telling his followers off or daring to you know, yeah Yeah, yeah, yeah, that's interesting It's like whatever in a little text or a comment and then like it's like this It would be like you know, what's next? Hey, what if you mooncat? What the fuck shut up, Mike? Like you're an idiot. You just want to genocide the world you stupid It's like that and then but obviously they have you know huge chat So just like a kind of interacting with a wall of text, but it I as I mentioned to you I previously saw a Stefan Mullin use and Interactions with his audience and it was very similar very very similar dynamic He would do call-in shows where people would call him in and ask for advice and the students They said something he didn't like he'd be like, yeah, that's why you're in this situation This is why you know blah blah blah and then yeah But people only abuse you really to the extent that you sign off on it, right? You generally sign off when other people lie to you and abuse you because you've given out that energy that you can be abused That you can be taken advantage of that you you don't want to be deceived so that you can live in your delusions Not 100% I'm just saying that we play a significant role in how other people interact with us So I got taken for hundreds even thousands of dollars of scams when I was trying to make my way in Hollywood Checking out the acting world in 1994 95 because those people met my needs to feel like I could be a star Yes, these are my real teeth. I've never had braces that never had fake teeth These are just my my real fair dinkum teeth But I wear this retainer that brings my lower jaw forward But in the process it is widened the teeth. It am I lower my lower mandible? I think that's cool. So I have have gaps now in my lower teeth But I keep wearing this retainer at night because it brings the lower jaw forward And that's supposed to help open up the nasal passages or stuff like that But yeah, I get you know more likely to get teeth stuck in and the the bottom row is not as Clean and straight and compact as it was before I started in with this particular retainer That just brings my my lower jaw forward, but I identify with this right I I had one girlfriend who I yelled at it to the best of my knowledge is only ever been one girlfriend who I yelled at But there's something about the dynamic of our relationship that kind of led me to yell at her I'm not proud of that. I'm embarrassed about it, but I would yell at her when we were driving down the freeway, but She played a role in that and I played a big role in that and if people yell at you abuse you and lie to you On a regular basis. There's probably something that you're doing it Like it's a very dangerous thing to help somebody All right, because the need to be rescued and the need to rescue usually come out of the same sick place Now there's healthy helping of people and there's unhealthy Right, I remember I ran into this Holocaust survivor on a walk and he talked to me about how lonely it was and how You know it just make his life if I would come visit him in the evening So started to come visit him in the evenings All he wanted to do was to be left alone to watch Fox news, right? He wanted no interactions I visited him one two three evenings and he made it clear. He was not interested in my company. So People are complicated some people will you know, call you up and tell you about their suicidal ideation They will cry cry cry a river to you on the phone if you allow that I don't think generally speaking It's a healthy thing to subsidize that's that sort of behavior And this can happen with the live stream is so you can develop a relationship with a live stream Or where they yell at you and really that's that's In part on on you. It just feels really it just it's very Like traditional guru dynamics, you know, like hopefully does it actually help bringing my lower jaw forward to open up my nasal passages So I sleep better. I'm not sure I'm not sure but I do remember when I used to do a lot of live streams with Dennis Dale He's the only person so the best of my knowledge That I frequently yelled at so that they had to have been something about the dynamic between Dennis Dale and myself That I would speak to him in a more harsh tone Then I would I think more than any other regular on my show. So there's something about that relationship that long long long Dead relationship with Dennis Dale that often brought out, you know, really not nice part of myself Yeah, Dennis would have a reflex of saying I'm sorry and I think the more Dennis said I'm sorry The more I yelled at him and then the first time Ricardo caught in it was to say Dennis You got to stop saying I'm sorry because and Dennis Ricardo didn't say this but if you keep saying I'm sorry and if you keep like taking Unnecessary blame on yourself then people will just keep blaming you and yell at you, right? So on the one hand, it sounds like a great thing to do is like take responsibility. Oh, that's all my fault I'm sorry. That's totally my fault But you can go too far with that you can abuse that you can you know go You know to to an extreme with that and it becomes an unhealthy Relationship dynamic that you're assembling with people so that they just feel, you know Totally free to blame you for all sorts of things that are fully your fault and decide yelling at you and disparaging you and you played a role I play a role in many people treating me with disrespect because I am maladaptively vulnerable I'd like way too vulnerable. I I think I've become too vulnerable to I Don't know get out of you know complicated or demanding situations to create drama to try to create You know undo intimacy and intensity in my relations Just trying to you know make a shortcut to have good relations with people to wear my heart on the sleeve and in the process I have just way too vulnerable and then people Frequently treat me with disgust or just disrespect and I am inviting that all right I've got this habit of being overly vulnerable and then I don't like the results of that leadership Yeah, like you single people out for bastardization, right? Yeah, it is like a very old-fashioned Social control technique where if there's a big group of people you the big boss person will pick someone out and yeah bastardize them essentially and everyone else kind of observes and kind of Gets a bit of a thrill from from right if people are picking you out to yell at There's a good chance that you played a significant role when I have told my friends how various employers or Employers at the time were treating me most of my friends who are high functioning said I would not put out with that for 30 seconds But I put out the vibe that I could be abused because I was used to that because I was bounced off the walls growing up You know I smacked around I was used to to being abused so even into my 50s I Being abused by people in authority felt normal natural felt like I was at home When someone was berating me deriding me cutting me down for no good purpose They're just treating me terribly that felt like our home, right? We learn certain patterns certain habits certain things that feel comfortable to us And I learned in my childhood that being abused being smacked around verbally and physically that felt like home to me I Remember I used to do what one of these podcast shows 20 years ago my co-host James the Georgia said you'd make a good you'd make it you'd be a battered husband you'd just be a classic battered husband and all you do is would be whine and complain about it and Various pornographers who specialize in say no masochism But we're able to very quickly point out that I had a fetish for being you know verbally hurt I had a fetish for basically encouraging people to treat me with disrespect and Consciously no, you know, I hate being treated with disrespect I hate being hurt But I would consistently act and invite that sort of behavior not being the one being Yeah, Scott Adams did it right we heard it Scott Adams doing that in some of his content But but the thing is lots of these people are doing that in there and their politics are all over the map like Hasan Abby is like a leftist right and the the so it's this is actually useful for us because we could send You know, it would be good to look at people from the left side of the spectrum and problem is most of the IDW types They almost all identify a centrists or left-leaning people, but like they're not they're not really right But there are left-leaning people doing the power social exploitative stuff But I think a lot of them hang out on YouTube and Twitch. So yeah, we might find them there So yeah, anyway, the more I hear about this internet thinker, so let's not care for it You know that thing that went viral a while back where you have the Tik Tokers or whatever This is why they're they're kind of doing reactions when people pay like money. They're saying yum-yum like ice cream or whatever, right? But what somebody pointed out is like if you don't watch the stream quite for a large part of that stream They're doing the like just waiting on a reason like they're because they're not being paid money all the time Right, so they a lot of it They just have like a you know, like MPC resting fears movements, which they're just doing it's fucking right. You can throw it down super chats I'm rumble right now. I'm on rumble backslash Luke Ford and They're gonna super chat. I'll say yum-yum Yum yum yum Until they get a reaction then they you know It's like somebody putting them on the end of the machine and yeah, but you're like, but you're not a MPC You're a human being What's happening? So it's weird isn't it? It's like pure objectification, right? Like there isn't necessarily a Sexual component because people usually use that with a relation to that But I think the key I think it is like that it is abstracted away to such a weird degree that you know It's what it's what it's tickling But it's it's clearly objectification, right? The person is acting like a robot like an anime character and they're responding just like if you press a button You put the coin in the slot. That's just so odd Right so the the chat says, you know, I whack off. This is a woman saying I whack off to the idea of my boyfriend cheating on me In real life. I would never you know in real life get get off on that. So yeah, we all have a dark side and I was just talking to a sponsor about this a few minutes ago All that our self-destructive Adaptive behaviors like me being overly vulnerable. That's meeting a real need, right? The reason that we are maladaptively Doing things is because we are not meeting our needs through our regular life So why am I going around making myself like way too vulnerable for my own good? Because in all likelihood, I'm not meeting sufficiently my needs for intimacy Intense connection with other people through healthy ways. So I'm using unhealthy ways to try to meet those needs I mean Other blokes are not getting their intimacy needs and their needs for like intense closeness with people So they're you know going to glory holes or bath houses or you know, hiring Procedures or looking at pornography or getting high or doing drugs, right? So we have legitimate needs if we don't meet our needs Legitimately in healthy ways like through our say to us a recovery program up through our religion Throughout through our yoga through our spiritual practices, right? We're gonna meet them in a sick way. So I have a need for drama and so I Think I make myself unnecessarily vulnerable. I try to create inappropriately intense relationships in many contexts I like to you know, play play a lot of games with Some some people in my life because I like to feed my my need for For drama, but there are healthy ways to feed my need for drama such as by doing these informative provocative Thralling entertaining live streams. That's like a healthier way for me to meet my need for drama I have a great need for freedom. And so I have consistently self-sabotage relationships Work situations commuter commuter all situations so that I could feel free because all human Interactions are gonna get messy like all human interactions are gonna touch on parts of you that feel awkward And that you don't want to be reminded that you have these vulnerabilities And so I have consistently in the course of my life Now I wanted to just drop, you know flames and petrol and gasoline and Cigarettes and lighters and just blow things up so that I could feel free again because I was feeling hemmed in captured You know parts of me were feeling very awkward because of some you know ongoing interaction I have such as a job or friendship or a communal relationship. So instead I can healthfully create that feeling of freedom by saving money by overcoming my various emotional addictions by setting aside time for myself and for doing what I want Getting clear about what's important to me and pursuing those goals Okay, so yeah, if we if we don't meet our needs through healthy ways We're gonna meet them through very sick, you know maladaptive ways But when we find out we were stuck in some in a self-destructive pattern We have to ask like what legitimate what real needs is this meeting? How is this seemingly self-destructive maladaptive trait character trait behavior habit pattern? How is that serving me then? How is it hurting me? How would I benefit from being in the opposite of it like hipster sing be in London before like it had kind of emerged from What it is? So it's Charlie Brooker like Yeah, a guy being with like, you know, basically vice and magazines like that and Just noticing how it likes a professional student It's very good What's it? Nathan Barley Yeah Yeah, it's very good. If you like our place and stuff, you'll like that. Oh, yeah. Yeah, look see Brian is right Um, it is true and I was gonna put this out like oh, yeah Look, I'll give you a few of your comedy that helps you I'm not like basal quality and stuff. They you know, they are in the lineage of that, right? I'm a bit more of a commentary but the whole point is kind of even dad's army and stuff like that in You know the kind of what's I push the push the wrong link There we go Well, Mark Lincoln is making a good point that like, you know, you have the people in the street performers Right who are dressed up like statues and move around when you Yeah, but there's some people don't think there's anything creepy about the street performers acting like that Yeah, there's there's something about that words, I guess I guess this is it. Unfortunately, you're right Mark That that is probably right. I have a need to perform right if I don't perform on YouTube, right? I might perform in some very inappropriate places in inappropriate ways with inappropriate audiences with inappropriate levels of audience Interaction with my performances to the analogy that this is just the online version of that But it's just so weird. Um, what do I use to groom my beard so precisely? okay, and I Was up I went to bed at seven and I got up at 3 37 a.m. This morning I'm not sure I got this queued up, right? I sure hope this is correctly Hold on because I've listened to that and I think he knows Arabic or he knows, you know, he definitely knows Arabic speakers But he said ah, yeah, this is this is this is good. This is really good from decoding the gurus Chris Kavanaugh Matt Brown interview with bags or us the Norwegian comedian for his podcast I don't think it's I get like definitely talked about this with him But and I told you about And it will come up if we do the Sam Harris episode that Sam was talking about people may or may not have heard this recording of a Hamas terrorist calling his family back in Gaza and kind of probably People that he's killed and and the transcript of the conversation Like one, it's very clear that the Hamas guy is very proud of killing this really civilians He's telling people look on the phone. You can see the 10 Jewish people. I killed with my own hands I killed them, you know, this is great And but the read the additional layer that was added on to that analysis is that the parents and the family Seem happy and they're not responding in horror, right? So this is more horrific because it's something describing doing horrific actions But their family are not reacting in horror and and this is a potential concern because it would speak to like All right So most people they're thinking just goes down certain tracks They get certain stimuli and then they just you know inevitably go down a certain track They don't really take the time to consider what's what's really going on They just sees what's immediately appealing and feeds their needs the level of like The general community but yeah when Sam rears this so if you look at the transcript There are very things where the parents say things like, you know Priests be dollar or something like this right and Graham would the journalist who has more specialism in this said whenever Sam Rears this topic with him said actually Hold on because so Graham would wrote a profile of Richard Spencer. He kind of specializes in jihadi terrorism He's a thoughtful thoughtful journalist, right to the Atlantic I've listened to that and I think he knows Arabic or he knows, you know, he definitely knows Arabic speakers But he said I actually think that that you're misinterpreting that because if you listen they are using stock freezes that you hear You know the same way someone might say Jesus Christ or oh my god Right, but they're not invoking Priests be to the most high Jesus Christ I say it but it's because of the you know, Islamic culture just there's lots of stock freezes that reference Whatever the case might be and then Graham which says to me it sounds like they're reacting out of disbelief and Chuck and they're kind of saying What are you talking about? Like, you know, where are you what's going on? Oh and like instead of it being Priests be the allies like You know, like Jesus Christ. What what are you talking? You know and the mom is crying at once the age and like Sam presented that as like tears of joy It doesn't sound like that in that but in any case, I don't know So when I saw the transcript online, I had the same reaction of Sam like initially where I was like, oh, this looks Concerning right that there isn't the odd reads But then when I heard somebody who knows a bit about the topic and I might understand the language better reads that actually it's a misinterpretation I thought oh, I don't know I shouldn't pass judgment and that is possible But Sam in the next episode that he released and does a long segment With the same interpretation that he initially had of the call and at the very end he says a Graham wood has an alternative But I'm not so sure about that for something and it moves on and it's like wow like yeah It just speaks to his thinking being on rails and you know, we're dunking on sand But there's like a general principle to be absorbed here, right, which is that when you've got too strong And you could call it either logical or you could call it theoretical But you got too strong a mental framework that you wanted to filter all the information through then what would you clearly do is you just ignore The disconfirming evidence that doesn't fit and you and you persist with a model as if all the evidence is coming in It's fitting your model perfectly and that makes you unable to to learn new things basically and it becomes kind of boring Yeah, because one thing that Yuval Was emphasizing that conversation was like, you know, there's religious extremists on the Israeli side Right the ones who are promoting the West Bank settlement and actually a lot of Netanyahu's government, right? Like he was appealing to the far right of Israeli politics and the ones that and are at least support I think that phrase thinking on rails since I heard it this morning. It just hasn't left my head I think it's a really useful way of understanding some very common human tendencies did by religious demagogues and But the way Sam had freeze that was, you know, the kind of one side has the religious fanatics and the other side Just an ideal Yeah, but so the position though was just it's just more reasonable to I'm not saying that therefore it's completely equivalent, right? but it's more like and Comment in the chat from Hasidic belt Daphine these guys Heading the gurus are the worst. I don't know why Luke likes these insufferable morons so boring, right? That they're not as exciting as a Nick Fuentes or Richard Spencer and Ethan Ralph Frequently the truth Frequently profound truth is not immediately exciting. It's not a thrill But I think that what they have to say is incredibly important here It's complex and there are religious extremists on both sides and there are moderating forces on both sides and like that Yeah So basically the black and white like it's just jihadism That's the only ideology that we really haven't an issue with and you know, again You've always the point that like plenty of people in the 20th century seem to do a lot of extreme activities for secular Ideologies that didn't posit an eternal afterlife, right? The millions of people died in the furlough ends of those objectives So it's not that that isn't an ideology martyrdom and so on that is a problem But it is that it's not the only potential driver for like conflicts and you know, you're creating Russia It's not relying on no fundamentalist thing. I mean, unless you try to Yeah, this is what a shoehorn nationalism into that. Yeah. No, that's right I mean realities, you know messy and complicated and that's deeply unsatisfying. I think to everybody, right? It'd be really nice. It's really nice. I have a nice simple set of heuristics and I simple like mental key that explains every problem like wouldn't be great if you know Everyone that we covered Chris, they're all bloody grifters. That's what it is. They're all grifting, right? They're all grifters, right bang You know, if you want to you know, if you wanted to you could you pay attention to particular bits of evidence And that could be the key that explains everything that's happening in this fear, but unfortunately not it's a bit more complicated Yes, it's an element. It's just one of many some of it hangs together comfortably other things just don't really fit So yeah, even even in the case of narcissism, which we often emphasize Yeah, like that you you could completely Exercise that and focus on some other element like like for example the flows of money and ecosystems and I That wouldn't be wrong, right? It would be giving you a partial perspective and the same thing would apply if you completely ignore the financial incentives that are in play and the network dynamics So like it's yeah, I see that as well Actually, sorry, we're now we keep elaborating on this point But you see a crop up in so many different ways like I got a lot of friends online who fall into that kind of you know Liberal free speech forever attitude, right? Yeah, so they see, you know, you know free speech as this is fundamental You know principle that is that is so important. Okay. I enjoyed that little burst there from decoding the gurus Also listening to the Doran making the point that that we had a way out of this Ukraine crisis We didn't have to get into this mess once we were into the mess There was basically an agreement reached between Zelensky and Putin But the Biden administration and the Boris Johnson administration in Britain said to Zelensky No way you've got to get all your territory back You can't compromise at all even though we could have ended this war, you know shortly after it began And so a lot of politicians like Joe Biden and the head of NATO, right? They have their egos on the line They think it will be good for their reputation, right for their career prospects to keep this bloody slaughter going on in Ukraine This is from the Doran podcast to read Kiev, which as we now know is a complete fiction I mean, we discussed that before the Russians was drew as part of the diplomatic deal Which the West sabotage they talk about Harkov and her son region of Harkov offensives Being reversed and the health zone offensive is at a standstill and the losses Ukraine suffered as a result of those were horrendous But the realities today on the battlefronts anyway are completely different with Stoltenberg You won't talk about that Annalena Bebov won't talk about that what she's doing instead is warning people about not being fatalistic about Ukraine They want let's get one Still supporting Ukraine giving Ukraine everything so that you can continue the war until it is finally destroyed I mean the Russians say, you know that it's until the last Ukrainian and that's what it's beginning to look like Yeah, it's almost like they want to I guess it's like destroying the scene of the crime I guess, you know, they just I think Stoltenberg, von der Leyen, Annalena, Zelensky, Yermak, all these people They're so up to up to their neck and so much just just crap, you know, just nasty crap that they just they decided Let's just destroy the whole thing and Russia did it Blame it all on Putin blame it all on the Russians when Ukraine is destroyed all this You know hundreds of thousands of people have been killed. It's all Putin's fault And because it's all Putin's fault, we must take even more steps to insulate and protect and defend Europe from And clamp down even more on anybody in Europe who says otherwise So that that is the agenda now Yeah, let me just just wrap up the video Let me read you a quote and I want your thoughts your human psychology right input So much of the drive for suppressing speech online and accusing anyone who differs from the you know ruling regime with regard to incentivizing and Subsidizing Ukraine's war with Russia is oh, you know, we need to restrict speech so that we don't give soccer to our enemies So we we create this horrific situation in Ukraine and then try to restrict speech so that Those who are subsidizing and directing this horrific situation in Ukraine They get more protection from being criticized on this just so we understand how these people think and this has to do with Brexit, but I think you'll be I think you'll be able to relate this to you great So Ursula von der Leyen she gave an interview or made some comments about Brexit and how the UK is is now Looking to move back into the European Union. That's their trajectory of things and she said she said this I keep telling my children and she's talking about Brexit. I keep telling my children. You have to fix it We goofed up you have to fix it So I think here too the direction of travel my personal opinion is clear I just read that quote we goofed up and I just think you know, this is the way these people think This is how they can explain everything when when it all collapses just gonna be like, you know What are your thoughts on that just the psychology of these these globalists in these in these institutions is It just sickens you but anyway, that's that's how you see the world That is exactly what they're gonna do. You know that we acted out of good faith It was a mister. We made it be made mistakes as we did with Iraq That's we did with Libya, but we acted with the best of intentions all along and if everything in the end turned out bad Well, it was not our fault. It was because there wasn't enough Will and determination people didn't give as much money as they should have done They didn't give us much weapons as they should have done they could have given more never explained how that could have happened And of course in the end in this particular crisis, it's absolutely not our fault It's the fault of the horrible man in the Kremlin and these terrible people around here Putin and his accomplices They are the people who ruined our beautiful dream and you know The only responsibility you take is that you made certain mistakes you goofed you goofed up You still want all those hundreds of thousands of students and women to go to the battlefronts That's but that's only a mistake if they had died It's only a mistake on your part if they if they died I mean, it's good that we make these programs now because when those excuses are made Right this war would not have happened if Donald Trump had been in the White House I don't think there would have been a massive Hamas attack on Israel and therefore an Israeli invasion of Gaza if Donald Trump had been in the White House and we've been unnecessarily provocative with China over Taiwan We could get into an absolute mess there as well. This is the the most seemingly competent but really the most incompetent foreign policy administration that the United States has had in 70 plus years We have programs like this as a public record of what it was really of what it really all amounted to Before we finish just wanted to say I noticed that in Britain and I mentioned it on my program of my own general yesterday They're now resurrecting the story that it was actually Putin who turned down the prospects of peace last year There was this mysterious deal that nobody knows anything about that was negotiated with Cossack You know Cossack Putin's official that he did some kind of a deal with the Ukrainians and that Putin rejected it There is absolutely just to say again There is absolutely no evidence whatsoever for that story, but it again tells you the deed down The British know full well what they actually did in March and April of last year when they Knocked away the chance Ukraine had to agree to a piece We've seen the same comments now being made by out of storage out of store which is confirmed has confirmed that as well The Ukraine had a good peace deal then and it was all thrown away and he said very good very favorable peace deal He says you actually said the Russians made a lot of concessions Exactly so very very good piece there was made last year the British played an instrumental role in throwing it away But that they're starting to get nervous that people are starting to start pointing the fingers at them So they're now falling back again on this fictitious story about this other deal that was supposed Why do I make about all the assassination talk with regard to Donald Trump? Well, I think the Atlantic didn't they just have something like 40 different intellectuals right essays and why it'd be a disaster to have Donald Trump as the next president of the United States. So Yeah, there's There there are all these incentives being laid just like there were incentives laid for the massive increase in violent crime We've had since George Floyd. We have all these incentives laid For an assassination of Donald Trump. I Think you know that that ground is is being prepared Okay, let's get a little bit of a lighter note. This is Tim Heidecker on Joe Rogan. Look at the Joe Rogan clip The because again stop if Joe Rogan if you want to be an expert on this Stop doing your silly show With your fud rockers background. I'm a baddy fat fat though Here's Joe for young boys in particular There's an adverse risk associated with the vaccine. It's yes two to four fold increase in the Instances of myocarditis. Yes, but you know what the hospitalization You know that there's an increased risk of myocarditis and among that age cohort from getting COVID as well Which exceeds the risk of myocarditis from the vaccine. I don't think that's true I don't think he doesn't think it's true Who are you myocarditis from people catching COVID that are young versus Increased risk of myocarditis from the back Listen to this Joe Rogan say myocarditis What I don't even know that is Why should I I? Just go to the doctor and the doctor tells me what to do right and Hopefully it all works out for the best right there is this but let's look that up because I don't think that's Where are you look at it up in the New England Journal and that is it was this with children in Grey's Anatomy what? Some fucking way They go down this right. They're lost. They're just lost with children because there's so much information Well, no, we don't know there's so much information and support Joe Rogan. His brains Just melting with all this information. He can't dissect it. He doesn't know what he's talking about Joe if you want to be an Expert on this subject stop doing your daily dumb show where you talk to fucking whoever some Dick comedian who's you know talking about whatever Yeah, give me a something there. Who's you talking to Ted Nugent Ted Nugent about hunting And goggles and everything eating meat stop your show go enroll at Austin University's medical Fucking's University, right and Yeah, good good question in the chat from Elliot black Why did certain countries like Sweden and Denmark and I believe the state of Queensland in Australia? Ben the Madonna Vox Vax citing myocarditis because there were studies revealing that there was a chance of some kind of myocarditis Reaction among a tiny tiny number of people to the vaccine What these countries did not take into adequate account is that the risks of myocarditis much much higher for people who catch COVID? So people see a risk with doing a certain procedure and they go, oh We should we should not have that procedure done what they frequently don't consider is What's the risk if you don't do the procedure or you don't take the vaccine or if you don't engage in that activity? Yeah, everything comes with a risk what needs to make prudent choices on what type of risk you want to take this is Tim Heidegger on Bill Maher What's what what is the part of it that that bums you out the most the part that gets me is Seeing a casual Bill Maher where yeah, he's got the the t-shirt Yeah underneath the button-down shirt, you know very close to the Steve Busce me, you know Hey kids. Yeah, exactly like he's And then that sad table with it just packed to the gills Everything's ready to follow fall over. That's all and it's also just like clinking. Yeah He's like reaches over. So he's like a real compulsion to like light things and He'll be talking to you Well, he'll what he'll do is he'll ask a question. Mm-hmm. Let me do it here Yeah, so so what have you been up to this summer? Well, you know really been It's immediate, yeah, like you should do it while he's talking. Yeah, you do it when you're exactly So the little things like that are amazing and then just his his general point of view is just turned into grumpy man Get off my lawn. Yeah, and his Unnit, he's not interested in what the other person has to say. Oh, he's combative. He's he's fighting He's he's he's closed shop. Yeah, everything. I've come up with is the answer Yes, the new rule has been no room stone. No room for anything else and I'm going to be weirdly petulant about it that you might dare to not see it the way I see it Yeah And then the guests don't seem to know that like none of the guests have watched the show They might now they start have maybe caught up But yeah in the first bunch you could feel that that they were not expecting to be sabotaged like where they're just like houndstown They're like wait, this is what this is. Yeah HBO thing like they're checking the address. They're driving. Yeah, they do Bill Mar show. Yeah, and then suddenly I'm going to CBS television city or I could you they'll be like in the hills to be just like Two tenths of a mile before I'm here. Where am I going? That has to be wrong Okay, some interesting comments in the chat Here we go Hasidic bell Daffy now I'm watch as Luke Ford anymore because he hates his viewers and things that people like Douglas Marry and Murray is shallow. There's a lot of truth to that. I am not you know going to do a show that Just pandas to people's, you know dumb Prejudices I'm not going to do a show where I'm just telling you that, you know You're so great and your favorite right wing intellectuals are just amazing if they're not and I'm not going to say that You know the the deep state is you know responsible for most of the problems in our lives and The elite are trying to destroy Western civilization. I'm not going to give you that that crap You've got hundreds of right wing shows that were just dish out the crap All right, you want to be lied to right you want to go on a live stream so that you can have You know some intellectual masturbation where just you know, or your knee jerk 100 IQ prejudices are reinforced There there are a lot of other shows that are much better for that than than this show right we go deep here Is there really inconclusive evidence that the Vax actually prevented is There really conclusive evidence that the Vax prevented COVID well no one's smart There are no scientific studies to the best of my knowledge of any prestige arguing that the Vax prevents COVID but they argue is that it reduces the severity of COVID and reduces the transmission of COVID and Reduces infection rates with COVID my entire family is Vax max every single one got COVID Yeah, so what I mean This is just reasoning from anecdote either COVID reduce the COVID vaccines reduce the intensity of COVID Reduce death from COVID reduce hospitalization from COVID or it doesn't and so it's just a matter of the studies Yeah, the deep state supports this channel Absolutely vaccines never promise immunity All right vaccine a fat efficacy lasts about eight weeks as the chat Well, there's some efficacy at reducing the severity of COVID and reducing the number of people who Even catch COVID and die from COVID. I think the evidence is pretty clear that vaccines that are approved by United States and other first world governments are overwhelmingly safe and More effective than doing nothing, but I'm not an expert enough on vaccines So I'm not gonna I'm not gonna belabor that that point I just simply don't know enough, but the the durens absolutely right thinking about, you know, how Our leaders for the sake of their own prestige and political prospects have subsidized this war in Ukraine and Wouldn't you know just as I go to play that link the player player crashes a little bit of a Discursion here by Chris Kevin or Matt Brown on their favorite Yeah, a lot of people including a lot of Americans just have absolute contempt for America or for American culture and American comedy And there's a lot of great American TV. There's a lot of great American culture There are a lot of great things about America Just as there are great things about Britain and England and France and Denmark and an Australia and New Zealand and Japan as well But I mean Richard Spencer just has its knee jerk contempt for you know, all things American But America makes them you know pretty good comedy Like Broad and obvious and Yeah, that's a really common critique Particularly among Australians and Europeans that American comedy is just broad and stupid When I was trying to go to Benny Hill give me tingles that is Chris I'm not saying that not me. I was not Um There are plenty of things on children's But you know Apologies he just exists in the culture. He doesn't doesn't judge it. All right, a little bit more from you Talking about diversity and inclusion statements I think I think we should be talking about your actual podcast In fact that you're spreading this academic knowledge to those people who are not in the academy and but you are right that you know On some level there is still just you needing to learn how to write to promote yourself Which is a big part of that again brand writing in general But also it's a part of you know another thing at the same time to do and again So Chris Cavadro and Matt Brown they met up on Twitter because they both it was somewhat heterodox while loathing the intellectual dark web So they're they're basically center left liberals who both tire of liberal left hypocrisy But also have disdain for the low IQ intellectual dark web This is kind of just another hoop to jump around some level is the fact that you're meant to try to look at your past and Align it with like the overall admission state of the university things like that However, it's also important to note that part of your job as a professor Is to do that at the national level when you're writing credits or international But you need to look at the organizations like actual mission statement what you know for like the national state of America that fund research You need to look at you know this year. What are they really trying to hype up? And so on some level needing to go to the school website and look at all those things is selecting for someone who's going to be able to Right so a lot of these tests where there are diversity and inclusion statements They're really just tests are you willing to follow directions are you willing not to be a dick and to get along with people? All right, if you're going to get along with people you're gonna have to go along with a lot of crap All right, not not everyone else is going to see things the way you do. I Think you're right. I think I think it does perform this function I've kind of said this before which is like I think and this isn't really a dig It's more just like a sociological observation that it is like a it is like back in the Victorian era where they would sat there Yeah, people that wanted to become part of the British Civil Service and and get into that that the sort of rungs of power Would get sounded out Did they go to the right clubs and did they have the right opinions and whatever and I'm not that sounds more pejorative than I mean it To be but I think there is some of that right so in a university Like if you want to become a dean or deputy vice chancellor or whatever a lot of it is like our universities of corporations Just like Berkeley, I assume and frankly they are they are primarily concerned with not having scandals not not having people that are going to become a massive problem and Part of it is actually demonstrating that you're not going that you're not a weirdo and you're not gonna like swim against the stream and Right, this is like most jobs the number one reason people get fired as they become seen as a liability They're just weird off putting that they make other people uncomfortable that they're not willing to you know Play nicely with others massive problems and I think I think that's just a that's not a political observation That's just a like a sociological observation and I think I think a lot of those statements can yeah, sorry go ahead Yeah, yeah, yeah, I think that the part where everyone can class pounds is over the fact that University system is like pretty cynical and business orientated and like exploitative like, you know post-doctoral labor Right so Businesses employers what you to show that you're willing to play nicely with others, right? You're willing to get along not be too weird and Be willing to submerge your own opinions and your own preferences to play nicely with the group a little bit more from this show Really seems to every time he has a big appearance like on broken or whatever. He has to tear up at some point He's just talking about Jordan Peterson. It's like he's not very well. He's a very he's a very odd man like in so many respects and yeah, it's a Yeah, I think he's got progressively stranger, but he's definitely now If somebody regards him as his role model now and they're still watching what he's doing it kind of like I don't know that there's that much hope But I think this whole kind of like sort of rabbit going down a rabbit hole thing that sounds really like Stupid from the outside, but when you're I sort of realized that as I was kind of so what happened was I lost my job because of COVID lockdowns And I think is people don't really if it's not affected you He don't doesn't sort of Right if your life was, you know severely diminished If you lost your your job, I mean through COVID lockdowns There are all sorts of incentives for why you'd be much more likely to believe in Conspiracy theories. You don't sort of realize how big a thing is so it's kind of that sort of being vulnerable being stuck in this situation And not knowing what's going to happen next makes you more skeptical about Like what's going on who's got your best interests at heart and blah blah blah Um, but I mean I was kind of lucky enough that I got a new job fairly recently fairly quickly after that And so I kind of I've gradually gradually start to move away from this kind of content But I think what the what decoding the gurus is different from the stuff that I would kind of listen to before Was more, you know, like majority of report apart from being like so so focused on American politics is that it's just it just takes piss out people And so and if and if there's one area which you think okay, I maybe I agree with them about, you know American, you know medical insurance or guns or whatever you agree with them but then they say something really exaggerated about like transgenderism or about like I don't know vaccine Forcing people to get vaccines or whatever Then you kind of can't really fully subscribe to it because you feel like they're they're so and especially with the majority report now I can't I can't watch them because They just they don't give people the benefit of the doubt and they're really vitriolic So I think it's really much more useful to really look at what are these people actually saying and what is true and what is Just complete exaggeration Then I think yeah, you go ahead Matt. You've been silent I'm just gonna say it's true, isn't it? Like like if you've lost your job as a result of the COVID lockdowns and a lot of people did Um, and you know, it hits differently than if you're someone that's just oh, I'm working from home now for a little while Right. I mean COVID didn't didn't affect Didn't negatively affect my life like I enjoyed the opportunity to just read more and I mean I I'm on easy street compared to tens of millions of people Who intensely suffered from the lockdowns so of course Being open to the lockdowns were a good idea as I am open to to that You know, I'm not committed to it But from the available evidence it seems to me that in general the the lockdowns at certain times were a good idea But I didn't suffer from the COVID lockdowns And um, and I was one of the lucky ones. I could just work from home And it was no big deal of basically experience no impact from it whatsoever But I could hear second hand from peeps of people Who were like really adversely affected by it and it takes it's true what you say it takes actually a leap of A leap of empathy to go. Okay. That's not happening to me But I can imagine that if that was me then that would be quite bad And you know when people are in difficult situations, that's when you're more receptive to people going well You know, you know, if there's someone saying look, this is all a crock of shit. This is all totally unfair This shouldn't have happened to you, you know, then that's obviously a message that's gonna that's gonna appeal Yeah, so um, yeah In that short you're like, you don't know where the you know, where's your salary going to come from? Where are you going to pay the bills, you know, right? These are three phd speaking. All right. These are three academics All right people who you know, generally center left But this woman saying due to the devastation of COVID lockdown She started to entertain many of the conspiracy theories on the right not thinking about like what's the best policy for Oh, yeah, maybe I don't need to buy food because um, you know to stop some people getting infected with the virus, you know Those things happen all the time. Um, you have to make those kind of sacrifices, but it just feels like, you know Why why? No, I I think that's very understandable and like a part, you know, a kind of intuitive and reasonable reaction to that situation and I think that like uh In the positive aspects the some of the people we covered do express, you know, like genuine sympathy for people in those and Um, and I think people notice that but on the other hand, it's like I I also see a cynical expectation of of people who are genuine So, yeah, some people think I hate my viewers and that I lack empathy and sympathy
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