Thursday, February 1, 2018

Youtube daily report w Feb 1 2018

a n t

For more infomation >> Ant-Man and the Wasp trailer EXCEPT ᵒᶰᶫʸ ʷʰᵉᶰ ᵗʰᵉʸ'ʳᵉ ˢᵐᵃᶫᶫ - Duration: 0:27.

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MSIA | John-Roger on Discourses - Duration: 1:17.

In the Movement we have Discourses that people read.

And these Discourses are used not as just information and data processing, but of a

time for people to sit and reflect on the consciousness that's being presented as a

form of attunement, like hitting a note on a piano or a guitar, or blowing a note as

a keynote, as a reference point, as a harmonious balance.

And then, the information on the paper is to keep the mind steady so it won't get in

the way of the spirit that is manifesting through you, as you.

And that is the process by which we use information in the world to reveal yourself.

And the nice thing about it is these experiences that are in Discourses and books are taken

from the life pattern of existence.

And you may read something and two weeks later here it comes.

And you say, "I get that."

And you'll handle it as it was stated in Discourse one, two, three, four.

And you say, "It did it the same way.

'Cause I use the words to confound the mind so that you can come forward and grasp them.

And that grasping is the reaching out in Spirit.

For more infomation >> MSIA | John-Roger on Discourses - Duration: 1:17.

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BRASILEIROS FALANDO ALEMÃO: Inês Brasil - FALA BEM? | Amigo Alemão - Duration: 3:03.

For more infomation >> BRASILEIROS FALANDO ALEMÃO: Inês Brasil - FALA BEM? | Amigo Alemão - Duration: 3:03.

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Academy of Art University - W...

For more infomation >> Academy of Art University - W...

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Al Bano e la convinzione di Romina sulla figlia scomparsa | K.N.B.T - Duration: 2:28.

For more infomation >> Al Bano e la convinzione di Romina sulla figlia scomparsa | K.N.B.T - Duration: 2:28.

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Uomini e Donne, Paolo Crivellin ha scelto Marianna Acierno? L'indizio | M.C.G.S - Duration: 4:09.

For more infomation >> Uomini e Donne, Paolo Crivellin ha scelto Marianna Acierno? L'indizio | M.C.G.S - Duration: 4:09.

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QUEM É MAIS BARRAQUEIRO? QUEM FALA INGLÊS MELHOR? Vídeo em INGLÊS com legendas - Duration: 13:48.

For more infomation >> QUEM É MAIS BARRAQUEIRO? QUEM FALA INGLÊS MELHOR? Vídeo em INGLÊS com legendas - Duration: 13:48.

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Emicida - Pantera Negra (Clipe Oficial) - Duration: 3:28.

My Luanda skin

Aruanda lobby

Like T´challa Wakanda

Black Mamba poison

A bunch of bandoliers

What are the rules here?

Tonight ya gonna see more blood Than in Hotel Ruanda

Panther on the loose Shows its black claws

I brought the night as camouflage

I´m an avenger, avenging the pain Of those smashed by the gears

While you are coup, I am Sabotage

Mistic, a thousand orixas at a pantheon, brave

I kill settlers, bringing them to an end, like a Tsavo lion

I go deep, indeed

Never hold me back, it´s worse

Monster, skull, Vibranium I chop you up in 12 pieces

A flash like Usain Bolt, 10 thousand volts

A round of applauses from my ancestors, listen to it Tanehi with no coaches

Memory is long, temper is short In this approach and so

Rumor has it that the one has come back like umaka

With determination, sensibility and chill, bro

If things get rough we better get back

Like a Black Panther (I am back) Like a Black Panther

With determination, sensibility and chill, bro

If things get rough we better get back

Like a Black Panther (I am back) Like a Black Panther

Now on my roof, she´s Dora Milaj

Sprouts on the base, very Nicki Minaj-y, it´s a mirage

Jet miraj, flying high, Mr. Spock

Green Lantern, I am very Static

For a new Red Sea A new crossing

For the people to see kings reflected in the mirror My pen creates

Wu Tang street, Super Man more technology

Symbolic like a guide In the chilly nights

I´ll crush boys that mock black culture

A Kasparov toasting mate and writing checks

I´m no fan of slave owners, I go solo along my path

If you´re smart you respect my timing, don´t be such a brat

If you come like Stan Lee, like Spike Lee Kinda Bruce Lee

I am taking Brasil in a Mauricio Kubrusly kinda way

Like Solange at a Seat at a Table

Black or dark skinned? When in doubt call her princess

Self-knowledge, self-help Time flow, like samples, like Buda

Love that could fill out a thousand books Just like Gabo or Neruda

Whoever married a storm Does not mind the umbrella

Got it?

With determination, sensibility and chill, bro

If things get rough we better get back

Like a Black Panther (I am back) Like a Black Panther

With determination, sensibility and chill, bro

If things get rough we better get back

Like a Black Panther (I am back) Like a Black Panther

With determination, sensibility and chill, bro

If things get rough we better get back

Like a Black Panther (I am back) Like a Black Panther

With determination, sensibility and chill, bro

If things get rough we better get back

Like a Black Panther (I am back) Like a Black Panther

For more infomation >> Emicida - Pantera Negra (Clipe Oficial) - Duration: 3:28.

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A PABLLO VITTAR - BISPO ARNALDO - Duration: 5:00.

For more infomation >> A PABLLO VITTAR - BISPO ARNALDO - Duration: 5:00.

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Camila Queiroz diz que nunca ficou solteira e faz revelação - Duration: 3:34.

For more infomation >> Camila Queiroz diz que nunca ficou solteira e faz revelação - Duration: 3:34.

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Peugeot 3008 1.6 e-THP 165pk EAT GT-Line - Duration: 0:59.

For more infomation >> Peugeot 3008 1.6 e-THP 165pk EAT GT-Line - Duration: 0:59.

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The Perfume of this Essential Oil Will Help You Lose Weight - Duration: 4:14.

For more infomation >> The Perfume of this Essential Oil Will Help You Lose Weight - Duration: 4:14.

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BRASILEIROS FALANDO ALEMÃO: Inês Brasil - FALA BEM? | Amigo Alemão - Duration: 3:03.

For more infomation >> BRASILEIROS FALANDO ALEMÃO: Inês Brasil - FALA BEM? | Amigo Alemão - Duration: 3:03.

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Castelo Rá-Tim-Bum - Rolê para Leigos - Duration: 4:57.

For more infomation >> Castelo Rá-Tim-Bum - Rolê para Leigos - Duration: 4:57.

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The Beatles Eleanor Rigby Instrumental | Música para Casamento Quarteto de Cordas - Duration: 2:08.

For more infomation >> The Beatles Eleanor Rigby Instrumental | Música para Casamento Quarteto de Cordas - Duration: 2:08.

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These Hungarian Short Track Brothers have high hopes for Pyeongchang | Flag & Family - Duration: 5:36.

My dad always taught us that we have to be really good

at what we're doing, because you have to be someone in life.

If you're not doing your best at what you're doing,

you're gonna have a really hard life.

I'm Shaolin Liu, I'm 21 years old,

and I'm just a guy with big dreams.

I'm Shaoang Liu, I'm skating for Hungary

in short track speed skating with my brother.

We skate together, we fight together, we work together,

we live together, so basically,

we do everything together.

I always say, he's my second relationship.

We're eating together, we're training together,

and if we're going to a competition,

we're sharing a room together.

Our relationship is pretty close.

When we were little kids, my dad always taught us

we have to protect each other,

we have to be really good brothers,

because at the end of the day,

you're only gonna have your brother there next to you.

In the gym, we start with a longer warm-up.

We just start jumping with the bars,

squatting with the bars.

So I would say, you have to

have really good muscles everywhere,

because you need great co-ordination in this sport.

If you look at my upper body,

you can see I'm not a weightlifter,

or doing some upper body sport,

we need to have really strong legs.

I was in Sochi at the 2014 Olympics.

I was racing there, I was trying my best,

I was you can say a beginner.

I was only 18, I think, and if someone would ask me how

I remember my first race or my races at the Olympics,

I would say... I can't.

I was under so much pressure and stress,

I don't remember any of the moments of the Olympics.

The best thing about this sport is I think

that you can feel the speed,

you can feel that you are racing with different people.

You can win, or you can lose. I think it's just amazing.

We have two different cultures.

The Hungarian one, and the Chinese one.

When we were getting older,

our dad started to speak Chinese to us,

and our mom just started to speak Hungarian with us.

When we moved to China for a year,

it was really hard at the beginning.

The trainings were very hard.

We did in 2007 what we're doing now,

like a whole day of training.

We were little kids, we didn't know

how it was gonna be for us,

but now, when we're looking back,

we know why we were there, and that the pain was worth it.

When me and my brother trained in China in 2007 to 2008,

we were training with our coach now, Lina,

we call her Lena, her English name is Lina,

and whenever there were hard times, she was helping,

in life or training, so she's really, really close to us.

I speak Chinese with my coach,

but sometimes during the training

I speak English so that everyone understands

what we're talking about.

But most of the time, when we're together,

yes, we speak Chinese.

My dad always taught us, we have to be studying,

and we have to be really good at what we're doing,

because you have to be someone in life.

If you're not studying, or not doing your best,

you're gonna have a really hard life.

He was always trying to motivate us,

so I'm trying to work as hard as I can.

And now I'm trying to be there in 2018.

We're doing the qualification workouts right now.

I think I'm pretty sure I'm gonna be there.

2018, Pyeongchang is gonna be a really good time for me.

For more infomation >> These Hungarian Short Track Brothers have high hopes for Pyeongchang | Flag & Family - Duration: 5:36.

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Voglio iniziare a vivere senza paure - Duration: 5:03.

For more infomation >> Voglio iniziare a vivere senza paure - Duration: 5:03.

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A partida dos velhos sacerdotes/Sistema Financeiro - Frota Prateada - Duration: 9:01.

For more infomation >> A partida dos velhos sacerdotes/Sistema Financeiro - Frota Prateada - Duration: 9:01.

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Luca Fizzo - Empatia? difficile da trovare - Empatia? coisa dificil de encontrar - Duration: 7:55.

For more infomation >> Luca Fizzo - Empatia? difficile da trovare - Empatia? coisa dificil de encontrar - Duration: 7:55.

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Gravidade - por que um elefante não atrai uma formiga? - Duration: 2:14.

Hello, little scientists, I am Professor Bill Tyson and together we are going to know different

forms of science.

In our last episode we talked about the concept of Strength, and that there are several

types of force.

Let's talk about one of these forces today.

The Gravity.

You sure have seen gravity acting.

To see its effect is to just throw a simple object to the top ... and it will fall.

But gravity does not only mean that things fall, but that they are attracted.

I'll show you.

Gravity is one of nature's four fundamental forces.

She is the force of attraction between two bodies.

It is enough for a body to have mass that it causes gravity, and the larger the mass of a body the greater

its attractiveness, or its gravitational force.

But if a body with greater mass causes greater gravity, why does an elephant, which has enough

mass, not attract an ant that has little mass?

Because both the elephant and the ant are being attracted to something with a much larger mass,

the Earth.

This is why objects when released into the air fall.

In fact they are drawn to the center of the Earth.

Everything on Earth has a mass less than that of our planet, so the mass

of the Earth attracts everything that is on it.

So, because of Earth's gravity, everything on it does not fly through space,

no matter how fast our planet moves.

For now, it's just personal, see you next time.

Ah! Before I forget!

If you liked the video, click in like.

Sign up for our channel and check out our social media posts, too.

For more infomation >> Gravidade - por que um elefante não atrai uma formiga? - Duration: 2:14.

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Hıçkırık / Whimper Trailer - Episode 25 (Eng & Tur Subs) - Duration: 0:37.

Kenan is coming.

You miss him enough to try to find comfort among his belongings, in his room.

Soon, you'll be mine, Nalan. There won't remain any obstacles between us.

A case will get rid of the label of being unsolved...

...and I will get rid of Kenan.

For more infomation >> Hıçkırık / Whimper Trailer - Episode 25 (Eng & Tur Subs) - Duration: 0:37.

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Neurastenia / Bolnye nervy (1929 URSS HD) N. Garkin - Duration: 49:06.

For more infomation >> Neurastenia / Bolnye nervy (1929 URSS HD) N. Garkin - Duration: 49:06.

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Cecilia Capriotti contro Francesca Cipriani: 'sei un fenomeno da baraccone' | M.C.G.S - Duration: 3:59.

For more infomation >> Cecilia Capriotti contro Francesca Cipriani: 'sei un fenomeno da baraccone' | M.C.G.S - Duration: 3:59.

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Marina Caró feat. Sak Luke - Bailando Con Fuego (Video Oficial) - Duration: 5:02.

For more infomation >> Marina Caró feat. Sak Luke - Bailando Con Fuego (Video Oficial) - Duration: 5:02.

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EJ Carter is Up Next

For more infomation >> EJ Carter is Up Next

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Renault Captur TCE 90pk Dynamique (R-link/Climate/Cruise/PDC/17''LMV) - Duration: 1:02.

For more infomation >> Renault Captur TCE 90pk Dynamique (R-link/Climate/Cruise/PDC/17''LMV) - Duration: 1:02.

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Renault Clio 1.5 dCi Intens (R-link/Climate/Cruise/PDC/16''LMV) - Duration: 0:58.

For more infomation >> Renault Clio 1.5 dCi Intens (R-link/Climate/Cruise/PDC/16''LMV) - Duration: 0:58.

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Renault Mégane Estate 1.2 TCe 130pk GT-Line (R-link2/BOSE/Climate/Cruise/PDC/LMV) - Duration: 0:58.

For more infomation >> Renault Mégane Estate 1.2 TCe 130pk GT-Line (R-link2/BOSE/Climate/Cruise/PDC/LMV) - Duration: 0:58.

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Volkswagen Golf Highline Business R - Duration: 0:59.

For more infomation >> Volkswagen Golf Highline Business R - Duration: 0:59.

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BCB: Roof Damage - Duration: 2:55.

For more infomation >> BCB: Roof Damage - Duration: 2:55.

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Ant-Man and the Wasp trailer EXCEPT ᵒᶰᶫʸ ʷʰᵉᶰ ᵗʰᵉʸ'ʳᵉ ˢᵐᵃᶫᶫ - Duration: 0:27.

a n t

For more infomation >> Ant-Man and the Wasp trailer EXCEPT ᵒᶰᶫʸ ʷʰᵉᶰ ᵗʰᵉʸ'ʳᵉ ˢᵐᵃᶫᶫ - Duration: 0:27.

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MSIA | John-Roger on Discourses - Duration: 1:17.

In the Movement we have Discourses that people read.

And these Discourses are used not as just information and data processing, but of a

time for people to sit and reflect on the consciousness that's being presented as a

form of attunement, like hitting a note on a piano or a guitar, or blowing a note as

a keynote, as a reference point, as a harmonious balance.

And then, the information on the paper is to keep the mind steady so it won't get in

the way of the spirit that is manifesting through you, as you.

And that is the process by which we use information in the world to reveal yourself.

And the nice thing about it is these experiences that are in Discourses and books are taken

from the life pattern of existence.

And you may read something and two weeks later here it comes.

And you say, "I get that."

And you'll handle it as it was stated in Discourse one, two, three, four.

And you say, "It did it the same way.

'Cause I use the words to confound the mind so that you can come forward and grasp them.

And that grasping is the reaching out in Spirit.

For more infomation >> MSIA | John-Roger on Discourses - Duration: 1:17.

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BRASILEIROS FALANDO ALEMÃO: Inês Brasil - FALA BEM? | Amigo Alemão - Duration: 3:03.

For more infomation >> BRASILEIROS FALANDO ALEMÃO: Inês Brasil - FALA BEM? | Amigo Alemão - Duration: 3:03.

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How I Make Money Online

For more infomation >> How I Make Money Online

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Opel Corsa 1.0T Edition 66KW/90PK 5D - Duration: 1:00.

For more infomation >> Opel Corsa 1.0T Edition 66KW/90PK 5D - Duration: 1:00.

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Making a Vsauce3 Video - Duration: 9:03.

Hey your script!

Thank you sir, don't know if we will need it because we are actually going to use prompter

for this since it is on sticks but thank you still.

Hannah do you think that you could move that keylight back by a foot.

Yup, that is perfect thank you Hannah.

Ok, let's roll on camera.

Vsauce, I'm Jake and how do you make a Vsauce3 video?

Well, you first need a question.

For me, that usually comes from a video game, book, or movie.

In the case of my last video "Could You Be a Parasite?" it came from one of my favorite

movies, The Thing.

If you haven't seen that episode I would highly recommend watching it, there'll be

a link in the description, because that is the episode we will be focusing on today.

In order to create I need a problem to solve, what is it that I'm trying to answer and

how can I answer it in a way that is unique to me, is different?

But that doesn't mean the "idea" needs to be wholly original, I mean, everything

is an interpretation or retelling of something that has come before, consciously or not.

It's the presentation and, in the case of a Vsauce3 video, it's the way the story

is presented in particular, the journey you go on to find answers or uncover new questions.

You need to find that topic that burrows into your mind, nagging you to find out more, to

answer it.

(walks off frame into real world)

This video has one purpose to show you what goes into making a Vsauce video.

On Twitter I asked if you'd be interested in a video about actually making a video,

a kind of behind the scenes look, and a resounding amount of you said yes.

And I've already discussed the process of not making a video in my video about not making

a video, the weeks or months that go into reading and researching and the days that

go into condensing the information into a narrative script so we will pick up there.

Once we have the script...what happens?

Well, for me, I need music.

When that beat kicks in it motivates everything.

It sets the tone to let you know how to feel, it can enhance your expectations, and then

you use the camera and the script to emphasize that.

This frame is a canvas.

Everything in it: my voice, my movements, the camera's, the music, the script all

exist in this tiny rectangular world.

Nothing outside of it matters, forget about it and focus on what I show you, what I tell

you.

I write with music in mind so that the script and soundtrack feel like they were made to

be together.

I always create a playlist before I film anything...I've already made the movie in my head.

Now that you have your music and your script, the fun begins.

You decide how you use the camera to capture the narrative you want to tell.

For example, Jake says, "It's transient.

To continue it's life cycle it has to find

a new home."

The camera pans to reveal the house.

The Music comes up.

Jake walks into frame and towards the cabin.

We hear his voice from the next shot.

But then there are parasites that are more insidious.

Now everything is captured.

We have all of these individual pieces that need to be put together.

Side note: When I write, I've already found all the assets I want to include: archival

footage, stock footage, etc.

It isn't an afterthought, everything you show on screen has to have purpose.

Again, it has to be motivated.

See, this clip has no reason to be here...it detracts from the story.

Then comes my favorite part.

The lie.

Where, if we did our job well, you don't even notice that we were lying to you.

And for that we need the best liar on the planet, our cinematographer and VFX wizard,

Eric Langlay.

If you're interested in learning how to do those kind of visual effects, rotoscoping

and masking, there are lots of tutorials online but one of my favorites is VFX Rotoscoping

101 on Skillshare.com who we use a bunch and were nice enough to sponsor this episode and

support Vsauce.

If you want to try it out, we have a deal for 3 months for only $.99 that you can go

to with the link in the description.

I actually used their color grading course a few months ago which brings us to the next

part of making the video.

The way it looks.

This is how the camera captured it.

It looks like a really flat image, not much color, saturation, shadows, highlights or

contrast but that's because we use a camera, a RED, that records RAW images.

Your cellphone for example applies a color profile and such when you film which makes

it harder to adjust after whereas this camera captures a lot more information, metadata,

and then allows you to adjust all of those factors later.

So we can go from this to this with color correction and with much greater latitude.

And even how you color grade the footage is important - it allows you to set a visual

tone.

I purposefully oversaturated most of the footage and removed highlights and increased shadows

because I thought it was an interesting juxtaposition next to the dark and creepy subject matter.

It is important to use every tool available to you to create exactly what you want.

Every piece matters.

They all need to work together, to balance out, for me there should be a thoughtfulness

with what you make.

From the script, or the information given, or the cinematography, music, visual effects,

color, even the sound.

Sound design is successful when you don't notice it.

Let's use the intro shot as an example.

This is what it sounded like when we filmed it.

There's no sound because the drone we used doesn't record sound.

So we have to recreate it entirely.

Here is the same shot but with sound effects: the wind, trees swaying, footsteps in snow

matched up to me walking, and a nice sound effect for emphasis on the title.

Now here it is again with my voice dubbed over to sound like I'm talking through a

radio.

That was actually recorded a week later in my apartment on my cell phone.

And finally, here it is with the soundtrack.

One thing I've been really into exploring is match cuts, when the sound of one thing

is replaced by another.

Like when I slam the door in this scene but instead of hearing the door close, you hear

wood bursting from flame.

It's about playing with expectations.

Oh, also the fire crackling is from a campfire months early recorded in Alaska.

Here it is without the fire sound effect.

And all those adjustments we make are defined before we film.

It has to be exact to create the illusion of the world we are trying to present.

It doesn't matter what story you tell as long as you can tell it well.

And believe me, the hardest part of making a video is actually making it.

Not to get too meta but even this video took me awhile to make because I wanted it to have

purpose but maybe, sometimes, sharing is purpose enough.

And, as always, thanks for watching.

Last thing, we like to custom make the Vsauce outros to fit the topic of the video.

So for COuld You Be a Parasite, Eric 3D printed a Vsauce plate, put it on the back of a fish

tank, filled the fish tank with smoke, filmed through the fishtanks and smoke to the plate

and then lit a trash bag on fire to get this practical effect.

love u

For more infomation >> Making a Vsauce3 Video - Duration: 9:03.

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God i norsk - Kap 3 - Modalverb - Duration: 1:39.

For more infomation >> God i norsk - Kap 3 - Modalverb - Duration: 1:39.

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Petite maison en carton: elle prend une journée à construire et peut durer jusqu'à 100 ans. - Duration: 4:33.

For more infomation >> Petite maison en carton: elle prend une journée à construire et peut durer jusqu'à 100 ans. - Duration: 4:33.

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The Media Were Just Caught Plotting to Make Sure Trump Doesn't G - Duration: 3:57.

The Media Were Just Caught Plotting to Make Sure Trump Doesn�t Get Credit for a Good

State of The Union

As President Donald Trump�s first State of the Union address fast approaches, some

liberal commentators are making their opinions known ahead of time.

As previously reported by The Western Journal, Trump is slated to touch on immigration, the

economy, trade and national security.

Families of the victims killed by illegal immigrants as well as people affected by the

opioid crisis are among the guests of the president and first lady, scheduled to attend.

Although the State of the Union has yet to occur, according to the Washington Examiner,

some in the media appear to be pressuring their peers not to award the president any

credit for delivering a �good State of the Union speech� on Tuesday night.

Let me throw down the gauntlet NOW,� New York Times columnist Charles Blow tweeted

Monday.

�If anyone comes on my tv tomorrow night after the SOTU saying whatever speech Trump

READS somehow makes his sound good/presidential/unifying, I�m turning you off and never listening

again.�

�I�m begging my fellow pundits not to get too excited should Trump manage to read

from a teleprompter without foaming at the mouth or saying anything overtly racist,�

wrote Michelle Goldberg, Blow�s colleague at The Times, according to the Examiner.

�No matter how well Trump delivers the lines in his State of the Union � he will not

become presidential,� she continued.

David Frum, the former speechwriter of former President George W. Bush, spoke with CNN�s

Poppy Harlow, expressing his doubt in the president�s ability to deliver a good speech.

When asked by the CNN host what Trump could discuss that Frum would approve of, he responded

by stating �I don�t have any questions left about Donald Trump.�

�There are no serious questions left about what kind of person he is, what kind of president

he is.�

�Look, you can train a seal to sit on the side of a pool for an hour and behave itself,�

Frum added, according to Mediaite.

�That doesn�t make it no longer a seal.�

�If Donald Trump can get through an hour of good behavior � he�s done that before

� but that doesn�t tell you what�s going to happen at an hour and five minutes.�

The Examiner noted that left-leaning media critics may be attempting to prevent a repeat

of the Van Jones incident from March 2016.

The left-leaning commentator stated on CNN that Trump �became president of the United

States in that moment, period,� responding to the emotional moment when the president

recognized Carry Owens, the widow of a Navy SEAL, during the president�s remarks to

a joint session of Congress.

Washington Post columnist Dana Milbank reportedly asserted that he expected the media to overstate

the effectiveness of Trump�s speech on Tuesday.

�On Tuesday night, the president will read a speech somebody else wrote for him,� wrote

Milbank according to The Examiner.

�The pundits will say he sounds presidential.

And on Wednesday Donald Trump will go back to being Donald Trump.�

What do you think?

Scroll down to comment below.

For more infomation >> The Media Were Just Caught Plotting to Make Sure Trump Doesn't G - Duration: 3:57.

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Gab Joncas & Jajabi - J e u d r e d i ™ [Prod. Dear Lola] - Duration: 2:09.

For more infomation >> Gab Joncas & Jajabi - J e u d r e d i ™ [Prod. Dear Lola] - Duration: 2:09.

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Former FBI Asst. Director Thinks That Hillary Should be Shot by Firing Squad! - Duration: 1:52.

Former FBI Asst.

Director Thinks That Hillary Should be Shot by Firing Squad!

Former Ass Dir James Kallstrom knows Hillary and the one thing she did to be brought before

a firing squad.

Former FBI Assistant Director James Kallstrom is not playing around, and he knows harsh

truths about Hillary Clinton and the one thing she did that warrants being shot by a firing

squad.

It's one thing to commit white collar crimes, but Kallstrom is pointing out something that

many Americans may not realize, which is the one thing Hillary did that warrants death

by firing squad.

It is the fact that Hillary put her private unsecured server in her basement at her residence

and mishandled classified docs, this is the reason she should face a firing squad in James

K's Opinion.

What is he talking about?

When Hillary put in a home-based, private server and intentionally used it, emailing

out nation's most classified documents, this was a crime warranting treason.

Democrats will scoff at this, calling it ridiculous, but is it?

James K. also says he thinks that the only reason she wanted to keep off the govt servers

is to hide her illegal activity.

The only reason the server was discovered was a Benghazi FOIA that led to the discovery

of the server in HRC basement.

We know Hillary intended to keep off the "state dot gov" servers for one reason, and that

was because she said she didn't want her illegal activities subject to a Freedom of

Information Act (FOIA) requests.

It should be noted that it was exactly FOIA requests into Benghazi by Judicial Watch that

led to the discovery of her private server.

What do you think about this?

Please share this news and scroll down to Comment below and don't forget to subscribe

Top Stories Today.

For more infomation >> Former FBI Asst. Director Thinks That Hillary Should be Shot by Firing Squad! - Duration: 1:52.

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"Cat Climb" | The Crimson Fly: Flybits | SkipperWing - Duration: 0:52.

The Crimson Fly: Oh, hey, a cat in a tree! (haven't seen that in a while...)

The Crimson Fly: Okay... Okay.. One hand at a time, one foot at a time...

The Crimson Fly: Just don't look down... Just don't look down... Just don't look down...

The Crimson Fly: How does a kid who can stick to walls and fly -I think- get scared of heights?

For more infomation >> "Cat Climb" | The Crimson Fly: Flybits | SkipperWing - Duration: 0:52.

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THE BEST FAST 🔥 KODI 17.6 BUILD FEBRUARY 2018 🔥 THE STARZ BUILD KODI 🔥 FROM THE TEVERZ WIZARD - Duration: 12:27.

For more infomation >> THE BEST FAST 🔥 KODI 17.6 BUILD FEBRUARY 2018 🔥 THE STARZ BUILD KODI 🔥 FROM THE TEVERZ WIZARD - Duration: 12:27.

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Huge Dinosaur Discovered In Egypt Is The First Of Its Kind - New Dinosaur Discovery - Duration: 2:33.

Researchers have discovered a new species of dinosaur in the Egyptian desert, which

is particularily strange because the Egyptian desert is not a place where dinosaur fossils

are normally found.

That being said, paleontologists are calling this the holy grail of finds, and I'm going

to tell you all about it, here for you on IO.

What is good, this is informoverload where we overload you with information.

I'm charlotte and don't forget to like and subscribe if you need a place to get trending

news on youtube.

Before I get into this video, tell me down there in those comments what your favourite

dinosaur is.

I like Dilophosauraus, you know, the one from Jurassic park that spits acid.

I feel like that would be super useful.

A huge fossil that belonged to a dinosaur the size of a school bus was found in the

Egyptian desert.

Apparently palaeontologists have been looking for a fossil like this for a long time because

it's a dinosaur from the end of the age of dinosaurs in Africa.

Its also incredibly well preserved, it's the most complete dinosaur skeleton that's

ever been discovered in africa.

The animal is being called ManSourASaUrus ShaHinAe, after Mansoura university and mona

shahin, who helped develop the university's paleontology department.

it was a long necked plant eater that lived in what is now the sahara desert.

This is proof that 80 million years ago, when this creature was alive, the sahara desert

was a very different place than it is now.

It was once a lush coastal region, full of vegetation.

See, millions of years ago during the Triassic and Jurassic periods, the worlds continents

were joined together into one supercontinent called pangea.

Later on during the cretatious period, the continents split apart.

The cretatious period was the end of the age of dinosaurs.

Theres a bit of a gap in research from this period in Africa, simply because no complete

dinosaur skeletons have been found.

That might not be because they don't exist, there very well might be more.

But paleontology in Africa has lagged behind paleontology in Europe and America.

Scientists are hoping that this discovery will help determine how dinosaurs evolved

in Africa during a time period where the continents had split.

ManSourASaurus was closely related to the creatures that were found in Europe and asia,

rather than the dinosaurs that lived in south America and southern Africa.

This research has been published in the journal Nature Ecology and evolution.

King of potatoes – what I do ever day 1.

Wake up.

2 watch IO. 3, eat potatoes.

4.

Go to school.

5.

Don't pay attention in school.

6 watch io. 7 fail the 8th grade.8.

go home.

9.

Eat potatoes.

10.

Watch more IO.

Wow what a comment.

Thank you king of potatoes.

Ugandan Warrior – U have to now da wae Charltote – I know da wae to the next video.

All you gotta do is click one of these on the screen right now.

Like this one, about the worlds first talking whale.

Such a cool story.

Click it to find out more info.

By the way, IO has instagram and twitter, follow us at informoverload.

And don't forget to turn on notifications so you never miss a video.

For more infomation >> Huge Dinosaur Discovered In Egypt Is The First Of Its Kind - New Dinosaur Discovery - Duration: 2:33.

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-Error | Yuma (VY2) Ft. Kagamine Len [Vocaloid Live Action] - Duration: 3:57.

For more infomation >> -Error | Yuma (VY2) Ft. Kagamine Len [Vocaloid Live Action] - Duration: 3:57.

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Slinky Brand FlounceSleeve Print Sharkbite Tunic and Pan... - Duration: 4:24.

For more infomation >> Slinky Brand FlounceSleeve Print Sharkbite Tunic and Pan... - Duration: 4:24.

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Hıçkırık / Whimper Trailer - Episode 25 (Eng & Tur Subs) - Duration: 0:37.

Kenan is coming.

You miss him enough to try to find comfort among his belongings, in his room.

Soon, you'll be mine, Nalan. There won't remain any obstacles between us.

A case will get rid of the label of being unsolved...

...and I will get rid of Kenan.

For more infomation >> Hıçkırık / Whimper Trailer - Episode 25 (Eng & Tur Subs) - Duration: 0:37.

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Voici 8 choses qui arrivent lorsque l'on meurt - Duration: 9:44.

For more infomation >> Voici 8 choses qui arrivent lorsque l'on meurt - Duration: 9:44.

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Brake Job Tools: Specifications Guide - Duration: 1:16.

[Music]

The first tool we're going to talk about is actually a spec guide.

Now you might have it in book form, or you might look it up [on an] online service you might have.

But either way, you have to have this information.

One of the most important things your going to do in your brake inspection is measure the thickness of this rotor.

Now, you're saying 'well I don't even machine rotors at my shop.'

Well, the thing is, if this rotor is under discard, it's unsafe to drive.

That might make that customer a little more willing to replace the rotors when they realize that it's unsafe to drive.

The other thing you can look up in here are torque specs for thing like the caliper to bracket, bracket to knuckle...

Even the wheel lug nut torque specs are in here.

Another thing you might have to look up is brake bleeding sequences.

And it's not always guys, right rear.

It's not farthest from the master, not anymore with today's vehicles.

Sometimes you start at the right front wheel.

So it's very important to have this information.

[Music]

For more infomation >> Brake Job Tools: Specifications Guide - Duration: 1:16.

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Chango: Mexican EDM Duo Underground NYC Streets - Duration: 1:50.

We're fighting something like we're going against, you know, the system in a

way, you know? We're doing it like our way. I wear the mask and I'm like I'm in the ring.

My name is Javier, my name is Cristo. We're Chango.

I'm from Mexico, he's from Chile. we're both immigrants. I like showing the culture where

I come from this is really big.

We really don't have sometimes the cards in our favor or you know the law in our

favor or whatever so we're not allowed to to be for example in the open space

amplified, you know? If we had acoustic instruments one gives a f**k but we have an

amplified speaker and it's loud. We're like the Pirates of the f**king subway

All the other fellow Buskers hate us cause it's too loud

but it's a f**king jungle man, you know? We try to be respectful try to take care of ourselves

and if there's the space and we were in the mood and our f**king equipment is here were just

gonna play you know?

What's up New York? F**k it!

We once threw a party at like, we shoot a video at like 5 in the morning

before anyone right here in Union Square

and it got crazy! We got all the drunk people like showing up and trying to go

home and everyone's just missing the train you know so we ended over like a

50. 60 people crowd. It's powerful so we've got a good combo going.

For more infomation >> Chango: Mexican EDM Duo Underground NYC Streets - Duration: 1:50.

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Short documentary about Steve Jobs and his company NeXT - Duration: 20:17.

Steven Jobs figures heroically in the history of American entrepreneurship

at the age of 22 he founded a company called Apple Computer

and proceeded to grow it into a two billion dollar business

in the spring of 1985 he lost the power struggle inside Apple

and left the company he had created he spent the summer considering his next move

and resolved to begin again

in September he started a new computer company with his own money

with characteristic flair he called it NeXT incorporated

this morning

at its offices in Silicon Valley California the company is about to get a

first look at its new trademark

the signature it hopes to make familiar around the world

the designer Paul Rand

created the logos for IBM Westinghouse

UPS and many others Rand doesn't normally work for infant companies

even if they could afford him

but NeXT isn't an ordinary start up

the idea is too...

please don't open don't look at the back first

this is the front and don't get scared this is not the design

[laugh]

Why I did this was to sort of floor Steve when he saw it

you don't figure, Jesus a hundred thousand bucks down the drain

Jobs had had a sneak preview of the logo and loves it

as he waits for a verdict from his staff he can hardly contain his excitement

assertive as he is he values consensus

most of these young computer and software designers

were on the team that developed the Macintosh

they left secure jobs at Apple to follow their boss in pursuit of his new vision

Steve's goal is to transform the learning process at the college and graduate school level

with the powerful computer and a new kind of software

and we decided we wanted to start a company

that had a lot to do with education and in particular higher education colleges

and universities so what our vision is is

that there's a revolution in software going on now

on college and university campuses and it has to do with providing

two types a breakthrough software one is called simulated learning environments

it's where... you can't give

a student in physics a linear accelerator you can't give a student

biology a five million dollar

recombinant DNA laboratory but you can simulate those things you can simulate

them on a very powerful computer

and it is not possible for students to afford these things

it is not possible for most faculty members to for these things

so if we can take

what we do best which is to find really great technology

and pull it down to a price point that's affordable to people

if we can do the same thing for this type of computer which is maybe ten

times as powerful as a personal computer

that we did for personal computers then I think we can make

a real difference in the way the learning experience happens

in the next five years and that's what we're trying to do

company's come and go at the crest of the way

IBM had their day way back when they were the crest

in December 1985 in business for just 90 days

Jobs and his 11 employees hold their first retreat - company retreats like this

are the continuation of a tradition Steve established at Apple

early on watching him in action at these brainstorming sessions as an opportunity

to observe him at his lucid best as a company builder and motivator

slicing in the future

his opening remarks reveal his faith in high

technology and his idealism

an unusual combination that is part of his uniqueness

in effect he is planting the seeds of a new corporate culture

more important than building a product

we are in the process

of architecting a company that will hopefully be much

much more incredible the total will be much more incredible muscle its parts

and the cumulative effort approximately you know twenty thousand decisions that

we're all gonna make over the next two years

are going to define what our company is and one other things that made

Apple great was that in the early days

it was built from the heart not

by somebody who came in and said I know how to guid a company here's what you do

tatatatatatata - it wasn't built that way it was built from the heart

now unfortunately we didn't always use our heads and we can do better

in many respects because we are wiser and smarter

no more in those kinds of things but what are the most important things

one of my largest wishes is that we build next from the heart

and the people it are thinking about coming to work for us or buying our products

or who want to sell us things

feel that that we're doing this because we have a passion about it

we're doing this because we really care about the higher educational process

not because we want to make a buck

not because we just want to do it to do it

Jobs can be overbearing and impatient

but this team knows what to expect and is not easily intimidated

they are smart and they're focused and their preferred language is computer ears

they actually provided an artist to rehearse the words when you drop into small talk

tworps* provided you a way to drop actually into the C-shell

and programmed the actions that happened when you double clicked on an icon

or when you dropped something on an icon create a product

we have to create a product that is an order of magnitude more powerful than the current generation of PCs

for two solid days the group listens to progress reports from each department

the goal is to arrive at design decisions production deadlines

and a marketing strategy aimed at selling on college campuses

define the problem?

the point is that

June July and August are timeframe where people do work

when the school's out

and when the people, the researchers, the staff that deal with

making computing happen for September that's when they do work

that is like a bomb run

you don't change your target when you're on the ball run

from the sidelines Jobs probes and challenges he has a remarkable ability

to identify the conclusions implicit in what the others have to say

so really the next 90 are really important we're gonna make it or break it

based on whether we can provide product to higher education

and services and relationships to higher education

that no one else provides and I think we ought to spend a 100% of our time

thinking about that and if we can't do that that we ought to go broke

there needs to be someone who

is sort of the...

keeper and reiterator of the vision

because there's just a ton of work to do and a lot of times when you have to walk a 1,000 miles

and you take the first step it looks like a long ways and it really helps if there's someone

there saying well we're one step closer you know the goal definitely

exists it's not just a mirage out there

so in a 1001 little and sometimes larger ways

the vision needs to be reiterated I do that a lot

there was the price one, the schedule one and the technology

Jobs continually interrupts to focus the lens of his vision on priorities

by the end of the first day the team has established the critical importance

of keeping the price of the computer within the reach of students and professors

and bring the product to market by spring 1987

a survey of college campuses has indicated that the new computer should

sell for no more than three thousand dollars to be considered affordable

since college buying takes place in the summerJobs is concerned that a failure

to have their product ready by spring 1987 will delay the company an entire year

we ought to deliver this by spring '87 or we're out of business so my first priority is

to make sure that everything was out by spring '87

I think spring

can basically push out the summer but I also hear that THAT is number one

right ... I guess i disagree with price

being the second thing because

unless we have this technology that wows people

we're not going to have a firm foundation that people are gonna buy from

I think people are going to be a lot more flexible saying' but Geez this runs three

times faster seven times faster than

you know... what's the highest we can go here?

well we couldn't make this 5,000 I think we're already

they didn't say if you can go three times faster we'd pay four thousand - they didn't say that

that's right they say three thousand dollars is a hot price

they said you're 3,000 forget it that's our magic number they've also told us

that nobody else says they do that

and they think that's a really big number now whether it is or not

in reality who knows whether it is or not in term of their commitment

to push us we've established that

if we really do believe that we have to ship this by summer of '87

then how are you going to move that up? I don't think prices going to change the

schedule that much I think

the real risk is the technology it's not on the cost

there's another option, we could go to the spring of '88 yeah we could

but the problem is if we do that then...

no that's not the worst thing the worst thing is

the world isn't standing still so by the spring of '88 well we want colour

the technology windows sort of passes us by and all the work we've done

we throw in the toilet we start over and

since we prove if we can't do something great in 18 months

why should we believe we can do it one year later?

I don't care what you say, reality distortion this is reality distortion and

have motivational value and that's fine

and I think it has a very strong point and very important value

however when it comes to that date affecting the design of the product

that's when we get into a rot

real deep shit because if we are unrealistic about this date

we make design decisions that we then have to go over

reiterate, throw out start all over again

and you told us yesterday we have a past that unfortunately some of us can't get rid of that past

and I remember past where we put out a list

this long about the software that was going to ship with our product

as you recall the list was formidable

and with all thought we could do it in 12-month - 15 packages

so maybe what we ought to do though is say

see I think we have to drive a stake in the ground somewhere

and I think if we miss this window then a whole series of events come into play

we can't sell enough units in '87 to pay for our operating costs

okay you know word gets out that we're not doing that well

a lot the credibility starts to erode

tada-tada-tada-tada-tada - I don't know you can make up all these fantasies

we've got to have a stake in the ground

the problem I got though is one where everybody believe that the stake is in fact in the ground

and secondly when software comes back and says what they can do by summer or

spring of '87 will they be telling us the truth?

that's what I worry about

well one of the thing.... that's exactly my point - we've got a

person here that says he can do a Word processor in six months its taken three years

well Georges I can't change the world you know what do you want me to do?

what's the solution? I mean I don't want to hear

just because we blew last time we're gonna blow it this time

just see what we can learn...

what I want is probably irrelevant

I mean there are certain realities here both psychological and ... market

that are gonna come into play in my own personal judgment

and I think this is a window that we've got we've been given it thank God we've

been given it nobody else is done this

it's a wonderful window we have 18 months

so I don't think we have a company if we don't do this no matter what I say

or anybody else says that is my deepest belief

if we don't do this we will not be able to attract great people

we will not be able to retain some of the ones we have

and it just won't be us

and I find myself making lists of things we don't know and then

I remember that our company is 90 days old

and I look back to all things we do know

it's really phenomenal how far we've come in 90 days

boy I forgot how much work it actually is to start a company it's a lot of work

and you've got to do everything you got to come up with the name you've got to come

up with a logo

in addition to designing the product you gotta figure out what to design

you gotta figure out how you gonna get to the marketplace you have

to do a part number system you got to get bank accounts you gotta set up charts

general ledgers

get a management information system get a little kitchen set up get a coffee maker

all the stuff

where we going to?

three months later the company returns to Pebble Beach to hold its second retreat

progress has been made the first mock up of the new computer is in the trunk Steve is carrying

but the flush of excitement that animated the first days of start-up

has given way to the pressure of solving actual problems in time to meet critical deadlines

the minute Steve begins to deliver his traditional sayings of chairman Jobs

it becomes clear that the mood of this retreat will be different from the first

my first saying...

is the honeymoon is over all of those wonderful things

that we got for just being

are now sort of just old news

we are like every other start-up we've been a company now for six months

and yes you could say that we had a lawsuit for 4 of those months

and we had this and that

but the bottom line is the world doesn't really care what the world cares about

is what we produce we've bee a start up for six months we've been spending money

like we've been a start up for six months and in some areas we've

really produced a lot we've got a lot to show for six months in summaries

in other areas we don't have a lot to show for six months

so I hope that throughout this retreat

we tend to make sure that our feet are on the ground and we realize that we're

gonna be judged like every other start-up from here on out and that is by what our product is

how timely we bring it to market not on the fact that we're NeXT

not on the fact that we were sued not on the fact that we're really good people

who had a lot to do with Macintosh

that stuff's irrelevant at this point

what I'd like to do is step back

a minute from the point of view of what's feasible ignore that

in December the group

concluded they must ship product in eighteen months

and agreed they could be ready three months down the line this seems questionable

and there is frustration in the room

it's totally useless as far as I can see to talk about how you gonna implement something

unless you know what it is you want to implement

so that's what I'm not getting I'm not getting it from marketing

I'm not getting

you know a clear idea from anybody really what

what the features are and

what is this thing that we're talking about doing

it ain't my job and if I was him it wouldn't be my job it'd be your job

you know isn't like this should be something new

but I agree... let me back up... so somebody's gotta say

here's what we can do and we can make it happen

and here's the level of thing we can ship in16 months

what I hear him hear saying is well anything more than a [inaudible] forget it

and boy that just makes me smoke it just seems like we're

were in this really difficult time where

I don't know... I mean I sort of think another month is going to go by and

they're still not going to be anything running on the Sun it's very interesting

another month ago by

there's still anything running it just seems like it's

and I guess maybe it's just the way it has to be

we thing we're gonna have to no forget about sleeping at times

fuck everything after shipment just look to shipment

you know marketing's out of line there's too many people in marketing

I'd figure about $250 a month for helping before we cut

the facilities budget it's a thousand dollars worth

money is also emerging as a problem

in return for seventy percent of the stock Jobs has committed seven million dollars

of his own money to carry the company to product launch

but at the present burn rate it appears that that amount will be insufficient

the unpleasant task of cutting expenses must be faced

all that other stuff that we went to in the final analysis we really don't care

about that much

is what's costing us the money

they are not million dollar buckets out to identified that we need spending cuts

there's lots and lots of hundred thousand dollars buckets and

it's gonna take everybody in this room doing a mindset change

we just go out and we buy brand new Macintoshes and brand new hard disks

for just for everybody and

I don't think we're getting great deals on thats stuff, we're not scrounging

why don't the Mac owners bring their Macs from home?

we use to find people to get us really good employee discounts

on things and everything else that we stop scrounging we stop

nickel and diming for that stuff and it all adds up

and I think the other thing is we signal deep pockets out there

every vendor that comes to us every person who comes to us from recruiting

everything

they expect these twenty thirty million dollars behind us

and it isn't there and it's not going to be there so you can keep yourself in the butt

but now is the time to change

one of the things I don't see is I don't see it myself but I don't see it

in enough in the rest of us is that I don't see that that startup hustle

in other words if we zoom out of the big picture it would be a shame to have lost

the war because we won a few battles

and I sort of feel like that I and the rest of us are concentrating too much on the smaller battles

and we're not keeping the war in perspective

and the war is called survival

the war is called not ran out of money until we get our product on the market

Steve Jobs had built a major company by the time he was 28

according to some he had even created the personal computer industry

in any event he was a wealthy man and was acknowledged as a master entrepreneur

what is it the drives him at age 31 to begin all over again?

part of the answer seems to be his need to feel that he is contributing to history

I felt it the first time when

I visited a school it was like third and fourth graders

classroom one time and they had a whole classroom for Apple II's

and I spent a few hours there and I saw these third and fourth graders

growing up completely different than I grew up

because of this machine and

what hit me about it was that here was this machine

there's very few people designed about four in the case of the Apple II

and then they gave it to some people who didn't know how to design it

but they knew how to make it to manufacture it

make a whole bunch of them they give it some people that didn't know how to design

or manufacture it but they knew how to distribute it

and they gave it to some people that didn't knew how to design or to manufacture or distribute it

but they knew how to right software for it and gradually this sort of inverse pyramid grew

and when it finally got into the hands of a lot of people

it blossomed out of this tiny little seed

and it seemed like an incredible amount of leverage

and it all started with just an idea and here was this idea taken through all

of these stages

resulting in a class room full of kids growing up

with some insights and some fundamentally different experiences which

I thought might be very beneficial for their lives because of this

germ of an idea a few years ago and

that's an incredible feeling to know that you had something to do with it

A and B to know it can be done

to know that you can plant something in the world and it'll grow

and change the world ever so slightly

whether NeXT can be a viable business is something only time will tell

but Steve Jobs' passionate commitment to his vision is clear

and his certainty that it can be achieved and is worth achieving

is a conviction to be observed in all successful entrepreneurs

For more infomation >> Short documentary about Steve Jobs and his company NeXT - Duration: 20:17.

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Your World With Neil Cavuto 02/01/18 4PM | February 01, 2018 Breaking News - Duration: 40:06.

For more infomation >> Your World With Neil Cavuto 02/01/18 4PM | February 01, 2018 Breaking News - Duration: 40:06.

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Harry Styles - Sign Of The Times (Karaoke Version) - Duration: 5:42.

SIGN OF THE TIMES (KARAOKE VERSION)

A SONG MADE FAMOUS BY HARRY STYLES

READY TO SING-ALONG?

For more infomation >> Harry Styles - Sign Of The Times (Karaoke Version) - Duration: 5:42.

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Happy One Year Booktubiversary to Me! Lessons Learned, Plus Bloopers - Duration: 10:17.

It's my one-year anniversary on booktube!

Thanks for watching guys. I am so excited to say that it is my one year

anniversary of posting videos on booktube. It's been a very humbling and

exciting year and I have learned a lot along the way. So while I'm not a

booktube expert by any means at all ... at all ... I'm gonna share with you three

things I've learned about booktubing so far. Number one: I was very excited to see

just how fun it is! So here's kind of my story of going into booktube. I started a

website at http://readremark.com where I basically just blog about books. I review

them, I make little infographics, I talk about why I love some, I discuss short

stories. And I always knew that I wanted to have a video component to that. My day

job that I work full-time in is in marketing and so any of you in the

marketing world know full well that video is where it's at right now. And of

course all the other good stuff as well, but you really need to be including

video. And so I knew that I had to include a video component on my website.

I mean even just looking at the statistics at my company of email sent

that had the word "video" in the title, the click-through rate on those are so

phenomenally higher than other emails. I'm digressing.

The point is, I knew I needed to include video. So what I hadn't expected first of

all was how terrifying it would be for me! I'm naturally kind of an introvert,

and so putting myself out there into the world was terrifying. So scary! I wasn't

expecting the fun booktube community. So, I knew that I would be talking about books

and, you know, putting stuff out there. What I didn't expect was that the

community would give so much back. Just in the interactions we've had in the

comments or in seeing the different views on people's other people's

booktube videos getting the, just the full range of interaction

that we have on this community has been really surprising and fun and gratifying

and totally unexpected. I went into it with a marketing mindset and now a year

later I'm not even thinking about that at all. I'm just thinking about the

community that is built around booktube and how I'm so excited and happy to be

part of it.

All right. Another thing I learned in this past year is that

pimpin' ain't easy.

Oooh it's hard out there for a pimp.

What I mean by that, is that if you build it, they won't necessarily come. You can tell

I spent a lot of time researching this before I jumped into it. I watched other

booktubers. I kind of I looked at some of the different things that they do and

decided in my mind what I do and don't want to do for example I don't really do

many book hauls because I get most of my books from the library or digitally one

at a time. I don't really do TBR's because I feel like that's a lot of

pressure to put on myself because my list is already like 10 miles high and I

don't want to add more books that I'm expected to keep up with. But I knew that

I did want to do stuff like individual book reviews and wrap ups and also just

watch other people's TBR's and book hauls and unboxings and stuff like that,

because even if I'm not doing it, it's fun to watch other people. Okay,

I'm digressing again. The point is, I did my research. I knew what kind of videos

are out there and I saw the numbers on the people watching those videos and

they were so encouraging. I saw that there's definitely an audience out there

for booktube. What I didn't factor in was that a lot of those successful

numbers were for people who had been doing it for years. Several years. You

can't just build a booktube channel and then expect tomorrow to have a following

of like a thousand people. It just doesn't happen that way. And then I also

found through being part of the community that it's much much larger

than I initially thought. If you just go into

the search bar of YouTube and type in "booktube," you'll see the few high-ranking

booktubers. But as you watch more and more videos and get deeper and deeper

into the booktube world, the underground, you see that the community is huge. There

are a lot of people who, I think they give up hope and they just put out their

booktube newbie video maybe a few others and then stop because it's so

discouraging, and that makes my heart hurt for them because I get it. I get it.

It was really hard. For maybe two or three months, I would put out a video and

then be lucky if 10 people watched it. I just ... it's like if a tree falls in the

forest and no one's around do they hear it? And if I put out a booktube video and

nobody watches, then did it actually happen?

...Yes! I put in the work and I can

tell you yes, it actually happen. But it it was very discouraging for a very long

time. And so, through the year I've kind of adjusted my expectations. I don't

expect to have this huge, huge audience. What I DO have though, and what I have

built, I am SO incredibly grateful for. Grateful, thankful, enriched. Every one of

my subscribers, every person who comments on a video, just every piece of

interaction I get is just so wonderfully wonderful.

So, pimping ain't easy. But boy

is the payoff good. It's awesome.

Number three: words are hard!

So, in my booktube newbie tag many moons ago, I talked about how I found out that my

version of "um" is "alright" and "so" and that has not diminished over the months.

Unfortunately, I still say those words so many times. See? I just did.

For every "alright" or "so" that you see in one of my videos, there at least one or two more

that I have edited out painfully because every time I see it I'm like, "No!"

"You did it again!"

Another aspect of that is just language. So in my real life,

I cuss a lot. A. Lot. A lotta lotta lot.

And so I saw in my vast research

that there's a good chunk of the booktube community that skews younger.

Some of them are even high schoolers. And so I wanted to make sure that while I'm

not making my videos childish, not that they're children, but I'm not making my

videos childish, but I do want to make sure that I am accessible to that group.

I don't want to cut anyone off by virtue of my potty mouth. I cuss so much in my

day-to-day life that I don't even realize that I've dropped the f-bomb for

example until I hear people giggling nervously around me. To try and catch

myself on video I have to make a real effort that I don't accidentally slip.

It's not gargantuan. I have enough words in my brain to be able to speak without

always dropping a cuss word, but it is an effort. So I hope you appreciate the

effort for me to to not say some of my favorite words, like $#!+, F%@*, A$$#)!@ ...

Don't worry I'm going to edit that out.

I'm sure I have many more lessons ahead of me and I look

forward to making many more videos because another bonus item that I hadn't

counted on was that the content would always be there. I thought I'd go through

my original mental list of ideas for videos and then the well would run dry

and I would be continually grasping for topics. But really, with all the great

books coming out, with all the great books that I get to read, and with all

the great discussions that other booktubers are having, there's no

shortage of ideas. So, where was I going with that thought? Crap, I don't remember.

So anyway, on to some of the bloopers!

Stop.

It's okay, I'll cut that out. What was I gonna say next?

It's like a blue version of the Seinfeld puffy shirt. I dunno.

Quit makin' noise! I'm trying to record! Well how about you just be very still

and watch the master at work.

Next up was the impossible lives of Greta Wells by Andrew Shawn Greer. Shawn

Andrew Greer. Greer Andrew ... one of those is his name.

Okay, I'm gonna edit that part out. That was bad.

I'm doing good though, right?

What else was I gonna say?

Okay. Whew that's a tough one.

The rest of us who enjoy the full mix of

book consummation ... book consuming ... Woah, I messed that word up.

I would be first in

line to want to read that ... not literally.

That's cheesy, but whatever.

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