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Namaz e Witr Allah Ki Siffat Witar hy اللہ تعالی کی صفت وتر ہے - Duration: 36:55.
Mew Marride Cupple Dreams By Dr Farhat Hashm نیو شادی شدہ جوڑوں اور خواب
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Tahjjud KI Namaz by Dr Farhat Hashmi تحجد کی نماز
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Cartoon - It's Love, Not Money, Makes People Wealthy | AmoMama - Duration: 2:03.
This dad never helpd the poor...
Why did you abandon her?
you don't know what it is like to liму in poverty!
The dad decided to teach his son a lesson
The poor live in ruined houses
they work very hard
they can hardly earn a lining
Their children don't have beautiful toys
Do you understand now that nothing can be worse than poverty?
I understood differently
I understood that they have no mansions
But they have comfort
I understood that they have no money
But they have families
They are willing to give their last piece of bread
I understood that they don't love money
They love each other
That day the father was taught a most important lesson
It is love, not money, that makes people really wealthy
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Track-by-Track End Of A Reign (Begin The Judgement) (English Subtitles) - Duration: 4:12.
Hello everyone, I'm Paulo Schmidt, Megaira's vocalist
and I'm Paulo Melo, Megaira's guitarrist.
Today we are going to talk about music End Of A Reign (Begin the Judgement).
End of a Reign It was the last song we we composed for the album.
She looked very different from how she was brought up.
In fact we had only the initial riff, the music had some other cool parts,
but when we took it to the studio the producer listened and realized that some changes were necessary,
he presented us with some ideas, we approve and begin to change the parts of the song
and the final result is heard in the album.
It was a heavy song, but it has more groove than the other songs of
"Power, Lies and Death", because it has a characteristic American Metal style, Modern Metal,
a more Thrash style and it has a mix of elements that built this song.
This lyric tells a little of the story of Minos who with all his anger went in search of killing
Dedalus when he escaped the labyrinth, but he ends up being killed by the daughters of the
king of Sicily and then he arrives at Tartarus, where he finds the brothers he had killed
and become one of the judges of Hades in Tartarus.
So this song needed to be heavy and that's where I fit the lyrics into this song,
as soon as I heard it I was sure that it was perfect for the story and it was really cool the end result.
Now you get a piece of the song End of a Reign (Begin the Judgement)
and if you want to hear the full song it's available on our MEGAIRAOFFICIAL.COM website.
I hope you enjoy!
Thanks!
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Please Don't forget to: LIKE | COMMENT | SHARE | SUBSCRIBE for the Upcoming Movies Trailers 2018
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PRONUNCIATION of English Words with an -ON Ending - Duration: 21:10.
Good afternoon.
Good morning.
My name's Ronnie.
I'm going to teach you how to...
Get focus on the camera, okay?
I'm going to teach you some very important pronunciation.
Pronunciation, pronunciation.
And the point of me teaching you this is-magic-how to sound more natural when you speak English.
So, you understand; you know that pronunciation in English, I think is the most difficult
because it's just crazy, isn't it?
You see a word written, but the way that it's actually said is completely different.
We have silent letters; we have letters that make a whole new word, a whole new sound.
So, let me teach you something that will help you, and it's all about one of my favourite
things in the word: Food.
Who likes food?
I like food.
Food is essential for living, so this lesson is essential for you.
I hope you're not hungry; maybe you will be after this.
So, our first word is: "bacon".
Right?
"Bay-kin", not: "bacon"?
No.
Check this out.
"Bacon".
"Bay-kin", "bacon", "bay-kin".
What is going on, Ronnie?
What's going on is the...
All of these words that I've written on the board actually end in "ion" or "on", but we
pronounce them like: "in".
So, we don't say: "bacon"-unless you're a French Canadian-we say: "bay-kin".
So, if I was to write this phonetically, which means how it sounds, I would write: "bay-kin".
Bacon is delicious.
It's got a lot of fat, a lot of calories - that's what makes it so tasty.
It comes from a pig, and it's the tummy of a pig.
Pig tummy.
Delicious bacon.
Bacon.
Bacon.
So, next one.
This is a crazy one as well because we have a silent "l", and as our lesson will follow,
we don't say: "mon", we say: "min".
So, this word-it's a fish and the inside of the fish is orange or pink-is called not:
"salmon"; it's actually called: "samin".
So, it looks like "salmon", but it's "samin".
So, so far we have: "bacon" and "salmon".
Next, it's a vegetable.
It smells bad; it makes you cry, if you cut it.
And this is not: "onion"; it's actually: "un-yin".
So you want to say: "onion", but we're like: "No.
I'm sorry, ladies and gentlemen, we're going to say: 'un-yin'."
Oh, that's just crazy.
Bear with, okay?
It gets more fun.
The next one is: "lemin", not: "lemon"; "lemin".
This is actually a little more easier.
Now, the other thing that you guys have to be aware of is "lemon" is yellow, and it's
big.
Okay?
In a lot of your countries, you say: "leemon", and "leemon" actually in English we call "lime".
Uh-oh.
So, a lemon is big and yellow; and a lime-which is actually the spelling; it's pretty cool-is
actually small and green.
So, in your language, maybe you mix those up.
But never fear.
Lemons are yellow; limes are green.
Another delicious fruit is a "melon".
Not: "melon"; "melin".
And in the world we have many different kinds of melon; we have watermelon that has nothing
to do with water, and we have muskmelon, dew melon, honeydew melon, queen melon, king melon
- so many melons; we're not going to get into them.
But the pronunciation is: "melin", not "melon".
Another thing that we have that you probably maybe have never seen this word before, it's
called "mutton".
Mitten?
Don't eat the mittens.
"Mutton".
"Mutton" is basically a sheep.
So, maybe you have heard of the word "lamb".
"Oh, Ronnie, you forgot the 'b': 'lamb'."
It's not "lam-b"; it's "lam".
So, basically: "lamb" and "mutton" are the same thing; they're both sheep.
The difference is a lamb is a baby sheep, and a mutton is an older sheep; a teenager.
So, you're eating the teenager or you're eating the baby.
Do you eat babies?
Do you eat baby lamb?
Do you eat baby sheep?
Cool.
Do you eat "lye-in"?
Not: "lion".
It should be.
Look at: "li-on".
Oh, no, in English - no.
I'm sorry, we say: "lye-in".
"Lion".
Have you ever eaten lion?
Me neither.
I would.
I think they're beautiful, but I would eat them.
Damn, I would eat anything, really.
Maybe anything.
The next one.
Maybe you guys are confused about why I have "lion" written on the board - it was a joke.
But the next one is not a joke at all.
And this word, it looks like: "pig-eon".
And you say: "Ronnie, is that a pig?" and I say: "No.
A 'pigeon' is a bird."
Okay?
A lot of people don't like pigeons; they think that they're dirty...
Or all birds are dirty; all animals are dirty.
Do you know that you're an animal and you're dirty?
Take a shower.
Okay?
After you finish this lesson.
So, a pigeon is a kind of bird.
And actually, I have eaten pigeon; tastes like chicken - it's delicious.
But let's go back to the hate for the pigeon for a second.
The pronunciation is: "pi-", maybe like: "pi-gin", like the drink.
And what colour are pigeons for you?
Grey.
Oh yes, you're right, they're grey or black.
Well, maybe they're black.
White.
Sorry, a white pigeon?
What?
Do you like doves?
Aw, doves are so beautiful; they're the bird of peace.
And the soap - not dirty birds at all.
Well, guess what, people?
Pigeon and dove are exactly the same.
Earth-shattering news.
Pigeon and dove are the same bird.
The only difference is one is grey, one is white - don't be racist against your delicious
food.
Pigeon.
Next one is a drink.
"Bourbon" is a kind of whisky.
It's from America.
You guys might know Jack Daniels, or we say in slang: "JD".
"I'd like a JD and Coke, please".
"Bourbon" is a kind of whisky, and we don't say: "bur-bon", we say: "bur-bin".
One of my favourite things in the world is a spice, and it's called: "cinnamon".
Not: "cinnamon"; "cinnamin".
Cinnamon is a really, really common spice in cooking all over the world.
It has a very wonderful heat to it.
It's not spicy; it's just very warm.
And it is brown.
It comes from a tree.
It's the bark of a tree.
So, we don't say: "cinnamon"; we say: "cinnamin".
And I have spelt "bourbon" wrong; it's actually: "b-o-u-r-b-o-n".
But the pronunciation, again, would be: "bur-bin", so I wrote how I think it should be spelt.
Right?
Bad, teacher, Ronnie.
You got to write things properly!
Spelling.
So, the pronunc-...
The spelling of this word, this alcoholic drink, is called: "bourbon", but this is the
pronunciation: "bur-bin", okay?
So it's: "bourbon", but it's: "bur-bin" is the pronunciation.
Are these any new words for you?
Are these words that you've never seen before?
If they are new words and you're not too sure, go and find a dictionary, or go in your cupboard,
go to the supermarket, and try to find these.
Some of them are very delicious, like dove.
Aw, dove is delicious.
When it's on your plate, you don't know if it's a dove or a pigeon.
You were like: "Was this a white one or a grey one?"
It doesn't matter.
Along with food, I'm going to teach you some words that have to do with actually eating.
So, the first one maybe you wear every day; maybe you don't; maybe your grandmother wears
one; maybe your grandfather wears it - but this is called an "apron".
Not an "apron"; an "aprin".
So, an "apron" is basically some kind of material that covers your clothes when you're cooking.
So probably you spill stuff on your clothes, so what you're going to do is you're going
to wear an apron to make sure your clothes stay clean when you're cooking.
"Apron" changes to "aprin".
Okay.
The next word we have...
Uh-oh, I'm kind of guilty of this one.
It's one of the seven deadly sins, and it's called: "glutton" or "gluttony".
"Glutton" means you eat everything.
Yum, yum, yum, yum - all the time.
So, for example: Oo, yesterday I went to a very big store and I bought a large amount
of blueberries.
I love blueberries, and I think that I ate maybe half of the massive container of blueberries,
so I was a glutton.
A glutton means you're greedy, and you eat, eat, eat, eat, eat until you explode.
Now, obviously I didn't explode, but it made my eyes turn blue, because I ate blueberries.
So, "gluttin" actually sounds like this; not "glutton".
So, "glutton" means you eat too much.
Maybe you eat too much chocolate, or potato chips, or...
What's one food you eat too much of?
Tell me.
Let me know.
You will see this word a lot in restaurants, if you travel to English-speaking countries.
Countries.
It's a word that they like to use to make you understand that their food is just not
from one country, and this word is: "fusion".
So, you look like it says: "fu-sion".
Oh, I'm going to have some Asian fusion food; but it's actually: "few-jin", "few-jin".
So it sounds like: "few-jin".
"Fusion" means a mix of foods together.
So, you might have, like, African fusion food, or Asian fusion food, so it means that it's
from different part of Asia; so Thai food mixed with Indian food - that would be delicious.
Thai food mixed with Chinese food would be fusion.
And actually, this would be: "few-jin".
This next word...
Hmm.
Do you know this word?
It's very strange.
This word, you probably know the word "lunch".
"Lunch" is what we usually eat at about 12 o'clock or mid-afternoon meal, but a "luncheon"...
Yeah, look it.
So it sounds like: "lunch-in", not: "luncheon".
A "luncheon" is basically a lunch party.
Oo!
So it's basically you invite a lot of friends; you have a lot of food; maybe you drink a
little - it's lunchtime.
So: "luncheon" is basically a big lunch party; sounds like fun.
This word is something that I have, and it's called "passion".
So, it actually sounds like this...
If I was going to spell it, I'd spell it like this.
I'd spell it: "pash-in".
"Passion" means you have a strong love or strong feeling for something.
So, I can say: "I have a passion for food.
Blueberries.
I have a passion for teaching you English.
I love it."
You can have a passion for anything; whatever you love to do, it's your passion.
What's your passion?
But be careful, it's not: "passion"; "pashin".
This is a really important word as well when we're talking about food, this word is "nutrition".
So, it sounds like this: "new-trish-in".
Hmm.
"Nutrition", "nutrition".
No.
It's: "new-trish-in".
So, "nutrition" basically means the diet that you are eating.
Now, "diet" doesn't mean the restriction of food, like: "I'm on a diet; I can only eat
100 blueberries".
"Diet" means the food that you actually eat.
So in your country...
Every country would have a different diet.
Example: When I was growing up, my diet was: Every day meat and potatoes, and vegetables.
The next day, oo, guess what I could have?
I could have potatoes, and then meat and vegetables.
Thanks, Grandma, for making me so many potatoes; I love it.
I'd like some rice every once in a while, though.
So, your nutrition is based upon your diet.
The nutrition means the vitamins and minerals you get from your diet.
Is your diet healthy?
If your diet is healthy, you would have a high nutrition; if your diet is not good,
you would have a very low nutrition.
So if you eat junk food or fried food-the delicious stuff-probably you have a very bad
or low nutrition.
Uh-oh.
Do you guys know this word?
"Addiction".
Mm-hmm.
Whoa, I almost fell.
So, some people...
This is a noun.
Some people have an addiction to food.
Mm-hmm.
So, we don't say: "addiction"; we say: "addicshin".
So, actually, this sounds like "shin" at the end, which is even crazier.
An "addiction" means something you cannot stop doing.
But then you think: "Ronnie, that's ridiculous.
Of course I can't stop eating; I have to eat to live."
But there's a problem with it.
If you're addicted to something, it means you can't stop doing it to the point where
it is unhealthy.
Of course you need to eat, but if you eat too much or you eat really, really bad food;
or you have to eat chocolate every day - you might have an addiction to chocolate.
People can be addicted to alcohol, people can be addicted to drugs; anything that you
do that is actually unhealthy.
A little bit - no problem.
Next word is: "digestion".
"Digestion" means the process of eating and then going through all the wonderful places
of your body, and then coming out at the end.
Okay?
So, digestion is the system of eating and the food leaving your body - not to get technical.
So, this word, it looks like: "dig-est-ion", but it's: "die-ges-chin", "die-ges-chin".
Oh, there's a "chin" at the end - woo-hoo.
So, this is: "die-ges-chin"; your digestive system.
And maybe you're not good at cooking, so you're going to take a cooking...
Not "less-on".
You're going to take a "cooking less-in".
So, a cooking lesson will teach you how to cook.
If you want to give me a cooking lesson, I'm up for that; but please don't teach me how
to cook potatoes or anything boiled, because I've been doing that for years.
And the last word is: "region".
Hmm.
It looks like: "region"; it's actually "regin".
So, "region", the pronunciation would be like: "re-gin", is basically the area.
So, in your country, I guarantee each region or each area of your country will have different
foods.
For example, if you go north, maybe it's spicy; or if you go south, maybe it's not as spicy.
I don't know, but I'd like to know.
I'll come to your house - feed me some food; it'll be great.
So, depending what region you live in, depending what food is available will depend on what
your diet is.
So, what I'm going to do, because pronunciation is so important, I am going to go through
these words a little bit faster, and you can repeat so that your pronunciation is perfect,
and sounds very natural.
So, let's go.
Delicious.
Bacon, salmon, onion, lemon, melon, mutton, lion, pigeon, bourbon, cinnamon; apron, glutton,
fusion, luncheon, passion-dunh-dunh-dunh-dunh-nutrition, addiction, digestion...
Sorry, that sounded weird.
Digestion, not: "die-gestion", don't say it like that.
Digestion, cooking lesson, and region.
So, if you want to teach me how to cook any food from your countries, I am more than open
to get recipes, and maybe I'll share some with you.
Do you guys like boiled meat?
I'll share some Scottish recipes.
As an ending, my family...
My grandmother was born and my grandfather was born in Scotland.
Have you...?
Have you ever been to a Scottish restaurant?
So maybe you're travelling not in Scotland or anywhere in the world, and you've got...
Especially in Toronto, you've got Mexican food, you've got Persian food, Lebanese food,
Italian food, Mexican food - food from all over the world, and I think: "Damn, why is
there no Scottish food?"
Do you know why?
It's terrible.
It's not bad, but it's terrible.
People just don't pay for it.
They're like: "I don't want some boiled meat and potatoes; I can make that at my house."
Thanks, Gran, for cooking.
Bye.
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Saab 9-3 Cabrio 1.8T VECTOR INCL BEURT + APK - Duration: 1:11.
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Cartoon - It's Love, Not Money, Makes People Wealthy | AmoMama - Duration: 2:03.
This dad never helpd the poor...
Why did you abandon her?
you don't know what it is like to liму in poverty!
The dad decided to teach his son a lesson
The poor live in ruined houses
they work very hard
they can hardly earn a lining
Their children don't have beautiful toys
Do you understand now that nothing can be worse than poverty?
I understood differently
I understood that they have no mansions
But they have comfort
I understood that they have no money
But they have families
They are willing to give their last piece of bread
I understood that they don't love money
They love each other
That day the father was taught a most important lesson
It is love, not money, that makes people really wealthy
-------------------------------------------
Namaz e Witr Allah Ki Siffat Witar hy اللہ تعالی کی صفت وتر ہے - Duration: 36:55.
Mew Marride Cupple Dreams By Dr Farhat Hashm نیو شادی شدہ جوڑوں اور خواب
Raat k Masnoon Azkar by Dr Farhat Hashmi رات کے مسنون اذکار
Tahjjud KI Namaz by Dr Farhat Hashmi تحجد کی نماز
Sone ke Adaab by Dr Farhat Hashmi سونے کے آداب
-------------------------------------------
Patrick Mahomes, MVP? Jaguars Coach Sees It for Chiefs QB | Heavy.com - Duration: 3:45.
Patrick Mahomes, MVP? Jaguars Coach Sees It for Chiefs QB | Heavy.com
Add Jacksonville Jaguars head coach Doug Marrone to the list of NFL figures who think Patrick Mahomes is bound for an MVP trophy.
"Right now, he's playing better than any quarterback has ever played.
He's an MVP quarterback," Marrone said of the Kansas City Chiefs quarterback in a Wednesday press conference.
"The question is what he can't do.
I don't know.
I don't think words can really put in perspective how great he's playing.
That's really all there is to it.".
This season, the first-year starter leads the league with 14 touchdown passes and he has yet to throw an interception, leading Kansas City to a 4-0 record, tied with the Los Angeles Rams for the best mark in the NFL.
The Jags' stingy defense will try to limit Mahomes and Kansas City's explosive offense in the teams' Week 5 matchup on Sunday.
"He gives you challenges every which way whether you put him in the pocket [or not]," the head coach added.
"He can make every throw.
He makes quick decisions.
You get him out of the pocket and he can extend plays.
He is athletic enough to run and run for a long way and take it to the house.
He has great command, and he has great weapons around him and an outstanding offensive line.
Right now, offensively, what you're seeing is that it's kind of unbelievable, which is going to be a great challenge.
We have our hands full.".
Patrick Mahomes Among the Greats?.
"You are talking about someone that is a combination of a lot of the greatest players that ever played that position with the way he is playing," Marrone said.
"That's just on tape.".
After the Chiefs' 38-27 victory over the San Francisco 49ers in Week 3, the quarterback drew praise from former Dallas Cowboys wide receiver Dez Bryant.
"[Patrick Mahomes] for MVP this year calling it now," Bryant tweeted.
-------------------------------------------
Building Tomorrow, Ep. 14: When Will We Get Fully Autonomous Cars? - Duration: 33:11.
00:04 Paul Matzko: Welcome back for the final episode of our three-part TechCrunch Disrupt
series about the latest trends out of Silicon Valley.
I'm your host, Paul Matzko.
Today, I want to talk to you about the way that venture capitalists and startup engineers
at TechCrunch Disrupt talked about the state and regulation.
The shortest possible summary is less than you might think, but in interesting ways.
Let me start by saying how refreshing it was to be surrounded by folks who are fixated
on what they can do, rather than what they should do.
Now, there is a conversation to be had about how blinkered tech culture can be, how they
can inadvertently or advertently, cause harm because they don't think through the social
ramifications of the tech they are developing.
00:47 Paul Matzko: For example, when social media engineers invented the "infinite scroll",
you know, how you can keep flicking up indefinitely on Twitter or Facebook or Insta, they didn't
think about how addictive it would be.
Indeed, now, the big social media companies are scrambling to undo some of that damage
by building in time use monitors and controls.
But even Silicon Valley types have to take heed of what regulators are doing.
The difference between a successful startup and a failure is as likely to be bureaucracy
as a flawed monetization plan.
So there was a panel at TechCrunch for instance, discussing the difference between how car
share companies like Uber and Lyft were received by regulators and scooter rental companies
like Lime and Bird more recently have been received.
Despite having essentially the same "It's better to ask forgiveness than permission"
approach to in this bold regulation, they've had very different outcomes.
Now, in this case, transportation regulators are coming down hard on scooters, because
they kinda got pantsed by the ride-hailing corporations.
01:51 Paul Matzko: But while that's kind of a libertarian friendly way of thinking about
regulation, let's break things and if we break enough things, we'll show how we can improve
society, none of the people I interviewed or met while at the conference was formally
libertarian.
There is a general ethos of annoyance there at regulators who won't let them do cool tech
stuff, but it's too inchoate to really be considered proto-libertarian and any kind
of systematic way.
But one thing is very clear from spending time at TechCrunch, and that's that the US
is being bypassed by other countries in part because of the difficulty and the increasing
difficulty of doing innovative work without falling afoul of local, state and federal
regulators.
02:38 Paul Matzko: One of the exhibitors on Startup Alley was a company named Wingly,
which is essentially applying the Airbnb business model to private planes.
So let's say you own a half a million dollar private plane, should we all be so lucky,
and regularly hop over the English Channel with it.
It might be faster than taking the train or flying commercial, or maybe you just like
flying.
You love seeing the cliffs of Dover, but it's expensive to own and operate a plane and jet
fuel ain't cheap.
So rather than flying alone, the idea of Wingly is that you would use their app to offer one
or two of your seats in your plane for passengers who would then help you defray the cost of
fuel.
It's a win-win.
Your maintenance cost, your operating cost is lower and the passenger gets the convenience
and luxury of a private plane ride.
That sounds great, right?
03:31 Paul Matzko: So what does regulation have to do with this story?
Wingly is a French company.
Aviation, despite the reputation of regulation on the continent versus the US, aviation is
actually significantly less regulated in much of Europe than in the US.
By contrast, a US company called Flytenow, that essentially wanted to do the same thing,
was just shut down this year by the FAA which ruled that defraying fuel cost made Flytenow
pilots commercial rather than private pilots.
And thus, they would be subject to all the training requirements, all the labor organization
rules that applied to commercial piloting.
Why did they do that?
Well, part of it's lobbying from pilot unions, they don't like the competition.
But also because if there's one thing that bureaucracies abhor, it's risk, risk of any
kind.
They don't want passengers taking the risks involved in flying on a private plane, which
are real.
You are more likely to die in a crash on a private plane than you are in a commercial
flight.
At the same time, that risk, while it's larger, it's not as large as dying in a car crash
one mile from your home.
So risk is always relative, but the FAA has essentially a zero tolerance policy towards
risk when it comes to new innovative business models.
04:47 Paul Matzko: Now, at the end of the day, flight sharing is a relatively niche
consumer audience.
We're essentially making access to private plane rides accessible to the upper middle
class and not just the upper class, and it's an incremental upgrade.
But on the other hand, there is a developing niche that falls under transportation regulation
that has the potential to transform the lives of everyone, regardless of income or ownership.
I'm talking here of autonomous vehicles and they're coming very, very soon.
In fact, depending on what you count, they're already here in the sense that most of us,
if we buy a new car or buying a car that parks itself, it does its own cruise control, it
has emergency braking if we can't stop quickly enough on our own.
And features like that are becoming the new standard for vehicles.
That's what's called level two automation on a level five scale.
They're all techs that assist a human driver who's still responsible to keep their hands
on the wheel and their eyes looking out the windows at all time.
But levels three to five all involve increasing levels of driver-free automation with level
five being a car that has no steering wheel at all.
06:01 Paul Matzko: Our next interview is with a autonomous car company called Byton which
is developing a level three car with hopes for a level four car in the near future.
Listen in.
[pause]
06:14 Paul Matzko: I'm here with Florian Baur who's the head of product management for a
car manufacturer called Byton.
They do some autonomous vehicles, it's an electric vehicle.
It's designed to be shared.
We're gonna talk a little bit about more of that together, but thanks for coming on with
me Florian, I appreciate it.
06:29 Florian Baur: Sure.
Thanks for having me.
06:31 Paul Matzko: To kick us off, I should mention that Byton is literally around the
neck of every attendee of TechCrunch Disrupt.
They're on our lanyards for our name tags.
I hadn't heard of Byton until this conference.
So tell me a little bit about the company.
When our listeners hear Byton they're thinking probably...
Or think of car companies sponsoring major tech conference.
They're probably not at this point thinking about Byton.
Tell me why they should be aware of Byton.
07:00 Florian Baur: Alright.
So Byton is a company that was founded about a little bit more than two years ago, it was
founded in Hong Kong and one investor had an idea and started recruiting people for
about one or two years until he found the perfect team from different spaces to actually
pull this off.
So we're a bunch of ex-BMW people who worked on the BMW-I sub brand.
We have a lot of people who used to work at Tesla before.
We combined this knowledge with the tech knowledge from other companies from Apple or Google.
And you name the company we probably have an ex-employee in our company now.
07:42 Paul Matzko: It's good.
07:42 Florian Baur: So we started off very small with just an idea on a blank sheet of
paper.
We understood that the future is gonna be electric so it had to be an electric car,
right?
That was no question.
The future's gonna be connected, that's what we knew.
So we had to do something to leverage technology to actually connect things to things and also
develop a car as a device.
So, as one additional smart device in your ecosystems of devices that you just add to
your other devices.
And then, of course, we had to tackle the question of autonomous cars.
We all know the future is gonna be somewhat autonomous.
So, of course, we wanna play in that field, as well.
And we need to consider the changing customer habits of maybe not even owning a car in the
future anymore but using it on demand in a shared vehicle.
So we also tackled that space a little bit.
And the idea was from a blank sheet of paper to keep all these things in mind, and design
a vehicle architecture that is scalable to multiple products and future proof for the
next 10 years.
08:54 Paul Matzko: So you don't necessarily need to be at the kind of maximum future capability
in any of those regards, you just have to be...
But you need to build in the capacity to get there in the future.
So with the self-driving bit, my understanding is the prototype that's out on display, here
on the floor and the exhibition hall is like level three autonomous.
09:17 Florian Baur: Yeah.
So basically, these things come step by step.
The first car will be super focused on the user experience, on the new way to interact
with the car, we have a 49-inch screen built in to the dashboard.
09:31 Paul Matzko: It's quite impressive I'll say that as someone who's sat in the car.
It's...
It surrounds you in the front.
09:37 Florian Baur: It's probably gonna be the biggest screen you see on the market and
the difference is we're not just talking about it, we're actually doing and developing it
and we're adding a driver display that we call Driver Tablet that is a touch screen
right in the middle of the steering wheel to prepare for use cases that will be eventually
enabled by autonomous driving or by more and more situations in which you can give control
to the vehicle.
Right?
So the goal is to develop everything with the future in mind, so we're not dependent
on autonomous driving.
You can still drive the car yourself, it still has a steering wheel because the risk would
just be too high that...
And at some point, it's a legal issue and you can't offer the car because it doesn't
have a steering wheel.
The screen offers you endless opportunities for services based on your personal profile
that you bring to the car, it recognizes you with a facial recognition camera, it knows
exactly what seat you're taking to bring your content onto your screen or your area of the
screen that is most convenient to you.
10:43 Paul Matzko: Which is both of us as parents of young children will appreciate.
10:47 Florian Baur: Exactly.
You can just send something to the back, and make sure they're happy.
10:53 Paul Matzko: Yeah.
That's true.
Number one priority for every parent driving.
10:55 Florian Baur: Or quiet or one of the two or ideally both.
And yeah, so advanced levels of autonomous driving will enable more and more use cases
for the content on these screens.
And the goal is that the user interface will just grow with these use cases and not have
to be rethought after level four and level five will come.
So the first car as you mentioned will have level three capabilities.
11:22 Paul Matzko: Which means?
11:22 Florian Baur: Highway Pilot and other individual situations in which the car will
be able to take over.
So remote parking and all of these features that add convenience to your day to day life.
But it's not like this on and off switch that a level four is.
Let's say it's either completely autonomous or not, it's more situation-adequate, also
in line with the legal requirements that you have to fulfill in all the markets.
Then the second car we're developing on the same platform by the way is equipped with
level four technology.
We're partnering with a company called Aurora in this space.
12:01 Florian Baur: Aurora was founded by the head of Google's activities in the self-driving
space teaming up with the person at Tesla and the person at Uber, who developed autonomous
driving technology there, and they created their own company, and they provide the hardware,
and the algorithm and we act as the vehicle integration company for them to be able to
hand in hand, be quick to market because one thing is the system and another thing is the
application on each car that is different.
12:35 Paul Matzko: Right.
Right.
12:36 Florian Baur: Because every car has different geometries and just different...
Is engineered differently.
So the same system might work differently or needs to be adjusted for every car.
And we need to bring some of that integration knowledge to this partnership to get some
traction and speed to the development.
12:58 Paul Matzko: No, that makes sense.
So that there we have the user display, we have the software of the car, which I imagine
again, you can push updates remotely, wirelessly.
Which is something that other companies are doing as well.
Now, is there any concern with having a big dashboard display like that?
I know this again isn't unique to Byton, but is there a concern about viewer attention
that folks looking at their screens rather than...
Is there a system for discouraging that?
13:29 Florian Baur: The first thing I can say there is that the screen is not impacting
your field of vision.
That was the number one importance for us in the design of the car, so we moved the
dashboard as low as possible to move the screen down as low as possible.
So the top of the screen is actually the same height as your windshield wipers, so it's
not impacting your field of vision.
And then when it comes to driver distraction, of course, we will not be able to allow moving
images in a driving situation at first.
We're looking at different opportunities to put additional coding on the screen, for example,
to enable the passenger to enjoy some of the video content while a driver is still driving.
But again, the hardware setup is ready for autonomous driving.
Autonomous driving might not keep up the pace, but when it's there, the car is already perfectly
designed for that.
And you still have a lot of content that you can display on that 49-inch screen without
being too distracting.
The main goal should be to reduce the number of inputs you have to give to the system.
So the more you share with the vehicle, the more data.
14:49 Paul Matzko: Yeah.
14:50 Florian Baur: The more it knows about you and the more it can anticipate what you
wanna do next.
So we can prompt you messages, you just have to say yes or no.
Either using a hand gesture, with the gesture control cameras or in your Driver Tablet,
just have a touch button to say yes or no, right?
15:06 Paul Matzko: Yeah, yeah.
15:06 Florian Baur: And the more you use the car, and the more the car learns about you,
the better these suggestions will get.
So actually, in terms of the usage of the car, we're already...
Let's say we're already quite certain that it will be more intuitive, and less distracting
than finding a button somewhere hidden in some menu or...
15:27 Paul Matzko: Right.
Oh yeah, yeah.
[chuckle]
15:28 Florian Baur: But then when it comes to content, of course, we're very careful
as to which functions and features and services and products we actually enable in a driving
situation and which ones do we actually disable when the car's driving and only allow in a
heavy traffic situation or when you're having a quick charging stop, right?
And you can charge the car up to 80% in about 30 minutes.
That's enough time to watch an episode of your favorite Netflix show for example, right?
And it's much more convenient than using your tiny little iPhone screen or a smart phone
screen.
Not to mention any brands.
16:06 Paul Matzko: It's smart enough to know that it's...
You're parked so you're not... [chuckle]
16:08 Florian Baur: Exactly.
16:09 Paul Matzko: There's no danger to the...
Right, right right, yeah.
Is there, I mean, if there's facial recognition software and driver cameras, can it tell if
you're falling asleep?
Can it track eye movement, eyelids...
16:23 Florian Baur: So that's called the Driver Monitoring System, we need that for certain
functions in autonomous driving that still require the driver's attention legally.
So we have to track your attention.
And we're further developing new functions and features around that topic to also contextually
be able to display some information on the screen or even get around today's legislation
in the future potentially.
For example, imagine you could have the passenger watch a movie and keep track of the driver's
attention, if the driver looks at the movie content, you just warn him to not do it anymore,
or you just turn it off.
So we're playing around a lot with these use cases that might enable more features without
being dangerous.
Safety is the number one concern.
And of course, we wanna comply with all the legal requirements in all markets, but we
also wanna help shape legislation in the future, to make sure that legislation will keep up
with all the technology development in this highly regulated automotive space that slows
down innovation a lot.
17:45 Paul Matzko: Yeah.
We'll get to the kind of regulatory angle here, I think, in a minute.
But first, so we've talked...
We've talked electric, we've talked AV, we've talked about the screens, we've talked about
the car a bit.
How are you looking to build car sharing into Byton now?
18:02 Florian Baur: So the car is potentially a preferred solution for an Uber driver or
a DiDi driver in China, or a Lyft driver.
Because you can make every Byton or you could turn every Byton into your Byton by just bringing
your face.
So it doesn't matter if it's my car or your car, you sit in your seat, whatever it is,
the driver's seat or the rear right seat and you bring all your content there.
18:31 Paul Matzko: Cool.
Yeah.
18:31 Florian Baur: So, it could potentially be a preferred choice for a user to take me
as an Uber driver with a Byton car because you can be more productive, you can be entertained,
you can continue whatever you are doing outside of the car, in the car...
18:47 Paul Matzko: It knows that you're in season two of whatever.
18:50 Florian Baur: Exactly.
18:50 Paul Matzko: The third episode kicks on for you while your Uber driver is tearing
you around there.
18:54 Florian Baur: Or we have the selfie camera there so you could record your important
presentation that you're about to have and play it back to you.
There's so many different use cases...
19:05 Paul Matzko: Yeah, it's cool.
19:06 Florian Baur: That make you be more productive or whatever you require in that
certain situation.
We treat every passenger as relevant as the driver.
So the experience in every seat is the same.
And this is also one aspect that prepares us for the shared bit of mobility is even
in a car with three strangers, you would still have your own zone and your own seat with
your content, and basically make it your car.
You're sharing it but you still have your own space, right?
19:44 Paul Matzko: Yeah.
Yeah.
19:45 Florian Baur: And we're already thinking about the second and the third car, and we
have a lot more to share in the next 12 months.
19:52 Paul Matzko: So what's the time frame for...
I see the prototype out here, from the website there's another model, another variant for
2022.
20:00 Florian Baur: Exactly.
Yeah.
20:02 Paul Matzko: But this one on the floor out here, when are you expecting that to be
in production?
20:05 Florian Baur: We're kicking off production end of next year for the China market first
and then six months later we'll bring it to the US.
So by mid-2020, you'll be able to get it here.
And another three, four months later we'll bring it to Europe as well.
And then 18 months after the start of production of the first car, we'll release our second
car, which is a sedan concept, we call it K-Byte and the SUV is M-Byte, also priced
very similarly and derived from the same platform.
20:34 Paul Matzko: Now, when you say priced similarly, where is this slotting in?
20:36 Florian Baur: Yeah, exactly.
Yeah.
It's still early stage.
We can't really share the details for the second car, but our aim is to be an approachable
brand, to not start high-end and then slowly move down the ladder.
We wanna go where the volume is, also to have an interesting business case for our investors
because it's such a heavy upfront investment to develop a car.
You would like it to be scalable and applicable to multiple different products and not just
one.
And that's what we're doing.
And then another, about one and a half, two years later, we'll bring the third car out
on the same platform again.
And we're already thinking about a second platform, which is very early stage right
now, but as you can see, the stuff that we're showing here is already old for us, right?
21:28 Paul Matzko: Yeah, yeah.
21:28 Florian Baur: There are very long development cycles in the automotive industry, so you
have to think ahead and you have to match it with a shorter and faster developing cycles
in tech companies.
We have the unique challenge to synchronize the mindset between the people with a tech
background and the people with an automotive background, both have their pros and cons
and we're only successful if we listen to all of them and take the best out of each
and everyone's experience.
21:58 Paul Matzko: Well, it's a reminder with a Byton competitor, with Tesla, they ran in
into some of that with their production line where there was that Elon Musk brought that
tech sector mindset which is, why can't we have a quick product cycle, why don't we just
disrupt new things, new ideas, layer them on?
Whereas, the traditional car production line is, whoa, you need precision, you need a level
of...
Everything has to be carefully thought through in advance because if anything in the product
supply chain or on the production line goes just a little bit off, everything can just...
22:38 Florian Baur: Fall apart, yeah.
22:39 Paul Matzko: Fall apart really quickly.
22:39 Florian Baur: Exactly.
22:39 Paul Matzko: And so they had issues putting those two pieces together.
22:42 Florian Baur: Exactly.
You have to find the right balance and this is key.
What other players in the industry have done is remarkable in this short time and it opened
up a lot of opportunities for the new players.
But I think there's a strong debate about strong leaders who are very influential, as
opposed to maybe listening to the experts to make the best possible product.
And we're trying to really set a freeze date to a certain hardware component that needs
a freeze date, and then we don't talk about it anymore.
We don't walk in a week later and say, "Oh, I changed my mind."
And this is one thing.
And the second thing is, we don't do innovation for the innovation's sake.
We don't do crazy door concepts or anything that might potentially give you problems with
water leakage and things like that.
We use all of that knowledge from the more boring automotive world and then we focus
our attention on where the faster cycles actually allow us to be innovative and to keep the
product fresh.
And this is connectivity, and this is the user experience that is much more valued by
the consumer than an incremental 10th of a second acceleration improvement or a unique
door concept that only you have lamented for.
[overlapping conversation]
24:11 Paul Matzko: [24:11] ____ doing, yeah.
24:12 Florian Baur: So we're taking a lot of off-the-shelf components that have proven
to be safe...
24:16 Paul Matzko: Smart, yeah.
24:17 Florian Baur: And also accepted in the market.
And then we innovate...
24:21 Paul Matzko: There's a supplying chain for it, it's all right, yup, yup.
24:23 Florian Baur: Exactly, it's all there, and it's all optimized in terms of cost so
that we can position the car at an accessible price point too.
24:31 Paul Matzko: Nice, yeah.
24:31 Florian Baur: We can't go too crazy, but we wanna go crazy where the customer expects
us to.
And I think you can see a lot of this here in our first M-Byte concept.
24:41 Paul Matzko: Yeah.
No, it's an impressive prototype.
I look forward to seeing it on the roads or on the lots come 2020.
One more thing I was gonna ask about, during a panel yesterday, I think it was a robotics
panel on the main stage, they ended the session by asking...
And make sure I get the criteria right here.
At what point do you think level five vehicles, so level five automation, full no hands-on...
25:14 Florian Baur: No steering wheel.
25:14 Paul Matzko: No steering wheel, nothing...
Will be at least 10% of the vehicles, consumer vehicles on the road?
And the panelists ranged anywhere from 10 years at the lower limit to 30 years at the
upper limit, but notably two of them mentioned 10-15 years but in China first.
Now Byton has some China roots.
You're coming out with the first car in China first.
From your perspective, why does coming out in China first make a lot of sense?
What role does China play in the AV space more generally?
What would your estimate be?
Your answer to that question.
25:52 Florian Baur: Okay, there's a lot of...
25:55 Paul Matzko: Yeah, lots and lots going on there.
25:55 Florian Baur: Different elements on this question.
So first of all, the electric vehicle market in China is twice the size of the electric
vehicle market in the US and Europe combined.
26:05 Paul Matzko: Wow.
26:05 Florian Baur: This is why we have to absolutely be quick to market there to capture
some of that market share before it takes off without us.
Of course, the US is a very important market too, so we don't wanna have too much time
in between.
But then shifting to autonomous driving, I think when China and the Chinese government
is committed to something, they actually do everything to achieve that target.
They did it with electric vehicles.
They took it very seriously, they started subsidizing a lot of companies, and in the
beginning, there were only very cheap players popping out, but now we have more and more
technology-focused companies as our competitors out of China already that will first hit the
Chinese market and some of them are also planning to go global.
I think China has understood that you can only survive as a global company, so you have
to go where the talent is.
27:05 Florian Baur: We're going to Germany for our vehicle design because the design
infrastructure is best in Central Europe.
We're going for tech development and serial development of our first car to the Bay Area
because that's where you find the best people for that space.
And we're going to China for manufacturing, because that's where you get the best opportunities
and the talent to actually get the best quality in production.
My previous company BMW has the most advanced factory in China and not in Germany.
So, you have to go where the talent is.
And China is very open to the collaboration and appreciative of the global talent that
comes in.
And I think this is a major difference to my home country, Germany, but also to what
I see here in the US, is that other areas in the world are getting more and more protective
of what they have, while China is opening up more and at the same time, gaining speed.
28:04 Florian Baur: And I think if you have that mentality of not being able to do the
stuff alone, you have to partner with the best, and it doesn't matter whether they're
in Scandinavia, whether they're in Antarctica or in the Bay Area or in China, you just have
to go there and convince the best people to work with you and collaborate on the best
possible solution for the consumer.
So with consumer relevance, not just for the technology's sake.
And I think that's best understood in China right now.
And of course, you have 1.3-1.4 billion customers potentially.
28:39 Paul Matzko: It's a big market.
Yeah.
28:39 Florian Baur: So it's a huge market in itself, so there's a lot of money for subsidizing
and incentivizing companies to build up their R&D or production facilities in cities that
have been super small in the past 100 years, and now are growing at a rapid pace, overtaking
major European cities already in two, three years' time.
And they already start building cities with full connectivity of...
Everything is connected, like Internet of Things and stuff.
29:13 Paul Matzko: Right.
They're building cities from scratch with that capability in there.
29:17 Florian Baur: They're building the infrastructure, it's ready for autonomous driving.
And this is why you'll see the autonomous driving space will grow in these areas with
these cities.
And I think that's the unique bit about China.
China is still very hungry.
You walk around in the Bay Area, everyone has already collected enough stock options.
I mean, I'm exaggerating a little bit, but it's the general vibe that you feel in the
Bay Area.
29:41 Paul Matzko: It's contentment in a sense.
29:41 Florian Baur: Exactly.
And people are more focused on their work/life balance here and then you go to China and
people might not have the skill in every discipline yet, but they're hungry, and they're hardworking,
and they're committed, and they're listening.
And they're appreciative of, as I said, the expert knowledge that you bring.
They're no longer here to copy, they're now here to really think about solving real problems
and how to bring an existing product or an existing service to the next level, and I
think it's super enjoyable to work in this global setup with the best people from anywhere
in the world.
I hope I answered some of...
[overlapping conversation]
30:26 Paul Matzko: No, yeah, I think all three of them, I threw a bunch at you all at the
same time.
Well, I think one of your fellow Byton representatives mentioned that there were some 400 plus AV
companies or AV adjacent companies operating in China right now.
It's the single biggest locus of AV development.
So it's truly remarkable what's going on over there.
There was actually a really good...
We did an episode for Building Tomorrow for this podcast about the transformation of China
and the ways in which the country is leapfrogging the US, the tech adoption rates on everything
from digital payment systems to drone deliveries, you name it.
31:05 Florian Baur: Exactly.
They didn't have PCs for a long time, but now they do mobile payments in every, let's
say, segment of the society, right?
31:18 Paul Matzko: Yeah, yeah.
It's truly remarkable.
Well, Florian, thank you so much for taking the time to talk to me and I think our listeners
will understand a lot more about what Byton's doing and a little more about the AV space.
So thanks for your time.
31:29 Florian Baur: And please tell your user or listeners to download the Byton app.
It's free and they can bring our M-Byte concept into their living room if they have a dual
camera phone because we have an augmented reality feature on our app.
And if you want, you can already sign up and get more information, get invitations for
our upcoming events in your area and stay tuned.
31:53 Paul Matzko: Great, thank you so much.
[pause]
31:55 Paul Matzko: As you listen to this interview, you might have been thinking of Episode 9
of Building Tomorrow.
Is China beating the US innovation?
We recorded the episode prior to TechCrunch, but everything I saw at this conference confirm
that yes, indeed, China is in pole position to be the site of the next autonomous vehicle
style Silicon Valley.
Now, even though there's always the chance that the authoritarian central government
could shoot itself in its economic foot, tech startups that do have the favor of the Communist
Party on their side can innovate mostly free from regulation, and they don't have to deal
with the welter of regulatory bodies that a startup has to in the United States, from
the San Francisco City Council deciding they don't like scooters, or the Federal Aeronautics
Administration deciding they don't like flight sharing.
And that's it for this week.
And in fact, that's it for our TechCrunch Disrupt series of episodes.
Thank you for listening and until next week, be well.
[music]
32:52 Paul Matzko: Building Tomorrow is produced by Tess Terrible.
If you enjoy our show, please rate, review and subscribe to us on iTunes, or wherever
you get your podcasts.
To learn about Building Tomorrow or to discover other great podcasts, visit us on the web
at libertarianism.org.
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张学友回应成为"逃犯克星":国家技术太先进,要做该做的事情 - Duration: 6:55.
For more infomation >> 张学友回应成为"逃犯克星":国家技术太先进,要做该做的事情 - Duration: 6:55. -------------------------------------------
Trending Now Breath Taking Saving Woman at the Rushing River - Duration: 4:16.
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New Polls Prove Democrats Made A Grave Mistake With Their Smear Job On Kavanaugh - Duration: 3:55.
If you're a Republican Senator or Red-State Democrat and you vote against Brett Kavanaugh
this weekend, it's safe to say you're digging your own grave.
Republicans are seeing a Kavanaugh boost according to new polls likely due to the Kavanaugh battle
currently taking place in our country.
Democrats are fighting tooth and nail to stop Brett Kavanaugh from becoming our next Supreme
Court Justice, the utter hatred and endless predictable attacks on the Kavanaugh family
are bringing much needed energy to the Republican Party during an election when President Trump
isn't on the ticket.
Fox News
There's been an uptick in GOP interest in all five states surveyed.
Compared to early September, the number of Republicans feeling "extremely" interested
in the upcoming election is up by 2 points in Arizona, up by 9 points in Indiana, up
8 points in both Missouri and North Dakota, and up 11 points in Tennessee.
In each state, Republicans are now just as likely as Democrats to say they are extremely
interested — erasing an edge Democrats had in several states last month.
The battle over Brett Kavanaugh's confirmation to the U.S. Supreme Court might explain increased
interest in the election among Republicans.
And how incumbent Senate Democrats vote on Kavanaugh could tip tight races, especially
in Missouri and North Dakota.
Voting against his nomination hurts more than helps the Democrats in those states.
Democrat Kyrsten Sinema is currently leading Republican Martha McSally by 2 percent at
a 47-45 percent margin in the Senate race to fill spineless Republican Sen. Jeff Flake.
In early September, McSally was down by 3 percent.
The smallest jump we've seen but it's still a small gain in the right direction.
Democratic incumbent Joe Donnelly, who initially said he wouldn't be voting for Brett Kavanaugh
before pulling back after the FBI investigation opened, leads Republican challenger Mike Braun
by two points (43-41 percent).
If Donnelly doesn't vote for Brett Kavanaugh in a state President Trump won by nearly 20
percent, he'll be setting himself up for a monumental loss.
Potentially one of the most flippable seats in the country: Missouri.
Democratic incumbent Sen. Claire McCaskill has blown her 3% lead she's held for months,
now tied to Republican Josh Hawley at 43 percent.
Hawley has been slowly trending up over the last few months with the Trump Campaign putting
an emphasis on Missouri.
Claire has stated she won't be voting for Brett Kavanaugh, a daring challenge for her
in a Red-State.
North Dakota is turning into a slaughter, Democrat incumbent Heidi Heitkamp is now trailing
by 12 percent to her Republican challenger Kevin Cramer.
The 12 point lead is an 8 point gain from last month.
Heitkamp has not declared whether or not she'll be voting for Brett Kavanaugh, though that
might be her only chance of coming back in the extremely red North Dakota.
In Tennesse, Republican Marsha Blackburn is pulling away from Democrat Phil Bredesen.
She now holds a 5 percent lead over the Democrat in the fight to control the seat left by retiring
Republican Senator Bob Corker.
Overall, every Republican is seeing a bump since early September with the exception of
Indiana which has remained fairly steady.
According to Five Thirty Eight, Republicans have a 7 in 9 chance of holding the Senate.
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겁쟁이 집사 대신 잡은 '벌레' 날아갈까 봐 솜방망이로 꾹 눌러버린 고양이 - Duration: 1:56.
주인 대신 한 번에 벌레를 잡아낸 고양이는 벌레가 도망가지 못하도록 양발로 꾹 모으고 있었다.
지난 1일(현지 시간) 페이스북 계정 '貓樂園'에는 주인을 대신해 날벌레를 사냥하는 고양이의 귀여운 영상이 게재됐다.
영상 속 주인은 고양이에게 대신 벌레를 잡게 하고 싶었는지, 고양이를 번쩍 들어 벌레가 앉아 있는 천장으로 향했다.
잠시 벌레에게 시선을 고정하던 고양이는 잽싸게 발을 날려 벌레를 잡는 데 성공했다.
고양이는 벌레가 도망치지 못하게 하려는 듯 양발을 꼭 모아 누르고 있었다.
한참 동안 자세를 풀지 않는 고양이의 모습은 마치 간절히 '기도'를 올리는 것처럼 보인다.
이 와중에도 틈을 발견한 벌레는 기회를 놓치지 않고 탈출을 감행했다.
그러나 고양이는 잽싸게 벌레를 향해 '우다다다' 발을 놀렸고, 벌레는 또다시 고양이의 발 안에 갇히는 신세가 됐다.
영상과 같은 벌레 사냥은 아직 야생성이 남아있는 고양이들에게 있어 하나의 즐거운 '놀이'가 된다.
또한 고양이들이 벌레를 먹는 것에 대해서도 크게 걱정할 필요는 없다.
고양이의 위산은 매우 강해 벌레 속 기생충들이 살아남을 확률은 거의 없기 때문.
다만 일부 기생충은 고양이에게 구토나 설사 등을 유발할 수 있으니, 고양이가 벌레를 적당량만 섭취할 수 있도록 신경을 써 주는 것이 좋겠다.
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NEW GAME TALKING TOM 2 #4 cartoon game for kids TOM CAT, ANGELA HANK AND GINGER's friends - Duration: 10:59.
For more infomation >> NEW GAME TALKING TOM 2 #4 cartoon game for kids TOM CAT, ANGELA HANK AND GINGER's friends - Duration: 10:59. -------------------------------------------
160 South Koreans heading to North Korea for 10.4 anniversary event - Duration: 2:58.
One-hundred-60 South Koeans are making a three-day visit to the North Korean capital from today.
The trip is for a joint event organized by the two Koreas to celebrate the 11th anniversary
of their 2007 summit agreement, called the October 4th Declaration.
The delegation is expected to have arrived in Pyeongyang by now.
Before leaving this morning, the delegates expressed anticipation about what promises
to be a historic visit.
Oh Jung-hee tells us more.
For the first time in ten years, South and North Korea are holding a joint event together
in the North Korean capital.
It's to celebrate the 11th anniversary of the October 4th Declaration, adopted in 2007...
by South Korea's late former President Roh Moo-hyun... and North Korea's then-leader
Kim Jong-il.
But this trip is even more meaningful than the past ones, as it involves South Koreans
from all walks of life.
"This is a trip not only by government officials, but also members of the National Assembly,
political parties, regional bodies and civic groups.
We will make this an opportunity to further solidify reconciliation, cooperation and peace
between the two Koreas."
Seoul's delegation is co-led by the Unification Minister Cho Myoung-gyon... and Lee Hae-chan,
Chairman of the Roh Moo-hyun Foundation and the leader of the ruling Democratic Party.
The Roh Moo-hyun Foundation was set up to commemorate the late former president.
Roh's son, Roh Geon-ho, is also traveling to Pyeongyang... which draws attention to
whether the sons of the leaders that adopted the declaration -- Roh himself and Kim Jong-un
-- could exchange greetings.
"Inter-Korean relations have reached a historic phase.
We are seeing some opportunities that can't be missed.
I think former President Roh will appreciate the efforts by many, especially the devotion
shown by President Moon Jae-in."
The joint celebratory event will be held on Friday at People's Culture Palace in Pyeongyang.
But besides attending that event, the South Korean delegation will be touring some key
spots in Pyeongyang, watching North Korean performances... and most importantly, meeting
their North Korean counterparts for talks.
"I expect there will be discussions on setting the schedules for various inter-Korean talks
and the basic direction for necessary follow-up measures to implement the Pyeongyang Joint
Declaration."
It's expected the Unification Minister could meet Ri Son-gwon, the chairman of the North's
reunification committee, for high-level talks.
Seoul's Vice Health Minister and Cultural Heritage Administrator are also joining the
delegation, which means they too could meet their counterparts to discuss medical and
cultural cooperation.
But it remains to be seen whether the South Korean delegation will meet North Korean leader
Kim Jong-un.
Oh Jung-hee, Arirang News.
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Brett Favre Strongly Sounds Off on Browns' Baker Mayfield | Heavy.com - Duration: 4:43.
Brett Favre Strongly Sounds Off on Browns' Baker Mayfield | Heavy.com
There isn't much higher praise you can receive as an NFL quarterback than from Brett Favre.
And on Wednesday, Cleveland Browns signal-caller Baker Mayfield just heard the longtime Green Bay Packers legend sound off in brutally honest fashion about his play.
As Nate Ulrich of the Akron Beacon Journal revealed, Favre spoke about Mayfield while hosting 'The SiriusXM Blitz," and offered quite a bit of praise to the No.
1 pick.
"I think he can be great," Favre said Wednesday on SiriusXM NFL Radio.
"To criticize how tall he is, I don't pay attention to that.
I think [New Orleans Saints quarterback] Drew Brees has dispelled any of that talk." ″[Ron Wolf] goes, 'That guy is a winner,'" Favre said.
"He's been a walk-on [twice in college].
He transferred.
People tried to write him off, but yet he has managed to persevere, and he's a winner.
He's fun to watch. He's a playmaker.
He's resilient. He's all those things.
And he hasn't technically had a win as a starter [in the NFL], but you can just feel it.
Favre obviously had plenty to say about the young quarterback, as he continued on by stating that Mayfield is "going to give you the best chance to win and he's going to do it to the last whistle.
Baker Mayfield's Confidence vs.
Cockiness.
As Ulrich also revealed, the Pro Football Hall of Famer addressed the confidence Cleveland's quarterback has consistently shown.
And in Favre's eyes, that confidence is something that's necessary for winners in the NFL.
"Some may call it cockiness.
Some may call it overconfidence.
You call it whatever you want.
But the winners have that little bit of air about them in how they carry themselves and then their playmaking ability and just how – to me, equally as important – is you can just see a heightened enthusiasm when that player's in the game.".
Through six quarters of NFL action, Mayfield has shown glimpses of tremendous upside.
He's completed 38-of-64 passes for 496 yards, two touchdowns, and two interceptions.
He did take a bit of a step back in his first start in Week 4, which came against the Oakland Raiders.
In that game, Mayfield completed just 51.2 percent of his passes for 295 yards, two touchdowns, and two interceptions.
There's no question Mayfield has tremendous upside, and when he puts it all together, he may very well prove to be the longterm answer at quarterback the Browns have desperately sought.
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