Thứ Hai, 3 tháng 4, 2017

Waching daily Apr 3 2017

Hi, YouTube, it's Kathy, and this is my Weekly Entertainment Wrap Up for March 26th to April 1st.

This week I read 3 books, I watched 4 tv shows, I watched 1 movie, and listened to 1 book.

First this week, I finished Free for All: Oddballs, Geeks, and Gangstas in the Public Library.

As you may know, I work in a public library, and love books about books, so this seemed

like a good, light-hearted fit.

This writer's from the states, but it was interesting to see how similar his experience

was to what I've witnessed in my first year at the library.

Weird things get put in the return slot, pages get paid the least to do whatever they are

told, and school children are vaguely terrifying.

More than anything, the library is for everyone, and it warms my heart to know that the library

is the centre of so many communities.

This week, I also read an advanced reader copy of Midnight at the Bright Ideas Bookstore

by Matthew [Sullivan], which doesn't come out officially until July.

According to an instruction on Netgalley, I'm not really supposed to publish any reviews

until a couple of weeks before publication, but I can tell you that this book follows

a woman who works in a bookstore and finds one of her favourite patrons dead in the stacks.

From there, the mystery dives into her hidden past.

This book was a page-turner, and the mystery was nice and twisty, so if mysteries are your

thing, I'd definitely look for this in July.

I ended up going into work an hour early on Saturday because my regular shift was moved

up an hour and I'm a creature of habit so I forgot - so I also read Binti by Nnedi Okorafor.

The cover is gorgeous, I'd heard some positive buzz about it, and it has won some

awards, but overall I was unimpressed.

Binti is the first of her kind to be accepted to attend university on a distant planet,

and although her family disapproves, she runs away to follow her dreams.

While in transit, there's a terrible attack, and she is left to fend for herself, with

little likelihood of making it to university or home.

Being a novella, it was only about 90 pages long, and that's fine, but I felt that this

story would have been better if it was flushed out to a full length novel.

This felt very much like an outline to me, and I would have loved to explore more of the world,

and get to know the main character better.

We saw glimpses of her home life, her ambitions, and her talents, but I didn't have enough

time to grow attached to her, which is why this is so forgettable to me.

I do enjoy the concept of a subset of society that basically worships math, but this felt

like the commencement of an idea instead of a finished product.

This week in Private Practice, I watched from Season 2 Episode 13 to Season 3 Episode 9.

This show can be seen as more light hearted than Grey's Anatomy, basically because we're

not digging around on the insides of multiple people per every episode, so I was lulled

into a false sense of security and just assumed the season 2 finale wouldn't crush

my soul, which of course it did.

I'm watching the show on disc from the library, and basically had to leave my house immediately, take

two buses, pick up as many season three discs as possible - fortunately they had the first disc

- and come home and make sure characters were okay.

On the flip side, this week I watched the season 4 finale of The Walking Dead, as well

as the next couple of episodes, and without Netflix telling me that we'd passed into a

new season, I wouldn't have really noticed.

Upon reflecting on the changes for the characters, this division made sense, but since there's

always new threats, there's a feeling of sensory overload and it's harder to get attached

to characters, even though mention of ones who have died do beget watcher sympathy - just

not to the extent of a Shondaland shows.

This week on Survivor, I found myself very upset at one of the castaways, and vaguely

worried about her mental health.

I felt so angry with her, and then I realized I was angry with an actual human.

I'm used to feeling emotions for fictional characters in shows and books, so this flip

into judging people on reality television was kind of mind boggling.

I try not to be judgemental, and here I was, talking about an actual person whose life

I know very little about.

On Friday, I sat on my couch for 12 straight hours and watched every episode

of "Thirteen Reasons Why" - the Netflix series based on the Jay Asher book I read

last week.

I did an unscripted review afterwards, which I posted directly to YouTube,

so if you are interested in that, check it out.

There will be a link down in the description.

My ability to use words other than "definitely" and "interesting" seemed to have been

fried in the process, but overall, I highly recommend this show.

If you missed my last wrap up, Thirteen Reasons Why is about Clay Jensen, who's a high school student

who gets a box of tapes in the mail.

On them, he finds the 13 reasons why Hannah Baker, his high school crush, committed suicide

two weeks previously.

Only people who are on the tapes receive the tapes.

I know some people get upset when any detail changes when something moves from

one medium to another, but I felt all the changes in the adaptation fit for the new medium.

Additionally, Netflix included the classic "the following program contains scenes of

sexual violence" before each applicable episode, which is not something I had seen on that

website prior, and I assume will be appreciated by those who have been affected by assault

in the past.

One of the best things about this adaptation was that you got to see the back story

of many characters, and you actually got to see Hannah's parents.

YA novels are notorious for ignoring the existence of parents,

so it was fascinating to have this representation

Kate Walsh was an amazing choice for Hannah's mom.

She brought so much emotion and heart to every episode.

Aaaand the one movie I watched this week was Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, and it

was adorable, and as always, Colleen Atwood definitely deserved her Oscar for costume design.

I've just come to realize that "definitely" is my um word; instead of going um, I use

"definitely".

It was nice to dig back into the wizarding world, and I feel like everything that could

be said about this movie has already been said, so I went into it just intending to

enjoy my viewing.

I enjoy watching things through a critical lense, but sometimes you just want to view

something passively.

This is also what tends to happen when you're with a couple of other people and you're

chatting as the movie is going on.

This week I listened to Seven for a Secret by Lyndsay Faye.

This is the second book in the Timothy Wilde series, which takes place in 1840's New York.

Timothy is a copper star, and is wrapped up in a new mystery when a woman reports her

family is missing.

Through this, Timothy finds out a whole slew of racist laws that make it difficult for people to

to keep or have their freedom.

The family in question is white passing, but black birders from the south - who are people

that are paid to track down escaped slaves and return them their masters

- try to claim that they are property.

Through having Tim learn these injustices, I am also getting a more full picture of systematic bias.

Lyndsay Faye's writing is intensely descriptive, Stephen Boyer is a wonderful narrator, once

again giving each character their own voice, and I am very excited for the third in this trilogy.

That's it for this week.

This week, I want to try something a little different, and have you tell me what you're reading currently,

or what you've read recently and you think that I would enjoy.

Let me know down in the comments below.

On the way down to the comments, if you could hit that Subscribe button, that

would be very nice of you.

You can also like and share this as you see fit, and I will see you next time. Bye!

[outro music]

For more infomation >> Weekly Entertainment Wrap Up #13 [CC] - Duration: 6:45.

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How to Tell Someone You Have an STD - Duration: 8:09.

So...you've got an STD. Guess what?

So do lots of other people.

Half of all people will get an STD at some point in their life.

Seriously. Not kidding—half.

It's ok.

The point is lots of people deal with this stuff.

And guess what—their lives are not over.

And their sex lives aren't over either.

Getting an STD doesn't make you dirty or a bad person.

You can totally live in normal, healthy life even if you have an STD.

Some STDs can be easily cured with antibiotics and

some can be managed over time with treatment.

Telling someone you have an STD might seem scary, but it's important that you do.

You can totally do this.

It might be tempting to avoid a tough conversation with

an ex or casual hook up.

But think about how you'd feel

if the situation were reversed.

Wouldn't you want to know?

And you'll feel much better in the long run

because you did the right thing.

But what if you have an STD that is incurable?

That's more complicated, but you can still handle this.

I need to talk to you about something

What's up?

So...I...

really care about you.

And I know we both want to take things further.

Yeah.

But before we do that I have to be honest with you.

It's kind of hard for me—to talk about everybody gets it.

So I'm just going to say it.

I have HIV.

Oh.

Wow.

Ok, I wasn't expecting that.

I know it sounds bad and a lot of people

are really scared of HIV, but really it's not like that.

I'm on meds. I'm healthy.

When did you get it?

I found out about it about a year ago,

but I don't know who I got it from or

how long I've had it.

There was a time in my life where I just wasn't using condoms.

So...does that mean we can't ever have sex?

No. Not at all—there are things we can do to be safer.

But we can have a totally normal

relationship, and you can stay healthy.

We just have to be careful.

Okay, so we have to use condoms.

But isn't that still really risky for me?

Condoms work really well, yeah.

But we can also talk to my doctor about you using PreP.

What's that?

It's a pill you can take—if you want—that helps

to stop you from getting HIV.

And I'm on meds too, so I'm healthy.

my viral load is low which means I'm less likely

to pass the virus on to you

With meds and condoms the chance of you

getting it are actually incredibly small.

Okay. That's good.

Sorry, this is just a lot for me to take in right now.

I hear that, I know.

But I really care about you too.

And I'm glad you told me.

I just think I'm gonna need some time to process all this.

Totally.

If you want, we can go to my doctor together.

He's super chill. You can ask him anything.

Ok. That sounds like a good idea.

And after and I take you to dinner and a movie?

Yeah, I think we can do that.

See! Doable.

Hard, sure, but totally worth it to have happier relationships

and safe, healthy sex lives.

Oh! Ok wait!

What's wrong?

Um... before we do that I have to tell you something.

Uh-oh...

No, no it's not a big deal.

I...I have herpes.

Wait. What. Seriously?

Yeah, seriously.

Okay sorry, but that is kind of a big deal.

Look, it's not as scary as it seems.

Honestly, the worst part about having

herpes is listening to everybody talk

about it like it's the plague.

Most of us who actually have it know that it's not that bad.

Not that bad? Girl, we're talking sores on your vag.

Well, yeah that part sucks a little but

it was just a couple of small sores.

And you know what?

It went away in a couple days.

I have only had one other outbreak since then and

it wasn't as bad as the first.

Sorry, I'm just processing.

I've never hooked up with anyone with an STD before.

Well, actually you probably have.

STDs are super common.

1 in 6 people have genital herpes, and like everyone has

oral herpes—ever had a cold sore?

Well, yeah, when I was younger.

Well then guess what? You have herpes too.

It's just a different kind.

Wait, for real?

Yeah, welcome to the herpes club!

So...do you have it like right now?

Well, you have it for life, so yeah.

But, I feel fine. I don't have any sores now,

and I haven't had an outbreak in over a year.

Could you still give it to me?

It's possible, but not very likely.

Look, if I feel an outbreak coming on

I'll tell you and we can just take a

break from sex until it goes away.

But, we can also play it even safer and that is why I

keep my treasure chest full.

Whoa, that's quite the supply.

What can I say?

I like to have sex and I like to be safe.

Ok...I think we can make this happen.

We did it!

And nobody died of embarrassment. Nobody's sex life ended.

And now everyone is going to be healthier

and happier because we talked about it.

Communicating honestly is one of the

most important parts of being healthy

and responsible with your sex life.

And you can handle it.

Unless you can't.

And if that's the case, think about

whether you're ready to have sex at all.

Check out our other videos on how to

talk the talk when it comes to sex

For more infomation >> How to Tell Someone You Have an STD - Duration: 8:09.

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Muppet Thought of the Week ft. Uncle Deadly | The Muppets - Duration: 0:46.

And now, for another Muppet Thought of the Week.

Style is all about expressing one's inner self

and capturing your personal ethers,

ideally while spending someone else's money.

Join us again next week, for another Muppet Thought of the Week.

This place is a dream come true for us Muppet fans.

A place to watch The Muppets 'til our eyes bulge out of our heads.

Too late for me.

[laughing]

If you want more, just click here to subscribe

and I guarantee your life will never be the same.

In fact, it will be vastly improved.

[chuckle]

For more infomation >> Muppet Thought of the Week ft. Uncle Deadly | The Muppets - Duration: 0:46.

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How I Clean My Room (Rap Song Attempt) - Duration: 2:13.

Hey guys welcome back to my...

REWIND!

*rewinding*

Hey guys! Welcome back to my channel

I haven't uploaded a proper video in so long!

I'm finally back to it yay!

So as the titles says

today's video is gonna be a Giveaway

Just kidding! It's not gonna be a Giveaway

Why? Because I have nothing to give away

*laughs*

*cries*

But! I do have a lot of other video ideas which I'm really really excited to do

Like this one!

Yesterday I was talking to my friend Chaimae

And I told her how messy my room is

And how unmotivated I feel to clean it

So this idea just came up to me

to make a video of me cleaning my room

Yeah! I thought why not use something that I love so much as a motivator to do something that I hate

so much.

So without further ado, I'll leave you with the rest of the video

Did you like it? Did you like it? Did you like it?

I had so much fun filming it!

Tell me in the comment what you thought about it!

I'm really curious to know your opinions!

Also, if you managed to reach this part then...

Don't forget to subscribe, and like, because...

I'm doing a... what is it called?

A Giveaway!

When I reach 300 subscribers

So make sure to subscribe to get notified!

Aight see you next time, BYE!

For more infomation >> How I Clean My Room (Rap Song Attempt) - Duration: 2:13.

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Thi IOE tiếng Anh lớp 9 vòng 30 năm học 2016-2017 - NEW! - Duration: 7:10.

Hello everyone. Today I'm gonna do the IOE English exam online, Grade 9, round 30. Hope you guys can practice English well and enjoy this video! Thank you very much for watching! Hoàng Bs

Now you can turn off the CC :D

For more infomation >> Thi IOE tiếng Anh lớp 9 vòng 30 năm học 2016-2017 - NEW! - Duration: 7:10.

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🌺Ипомея однолетняя посадка и уход.🌸 Великолепные лианы для сада NOVA. - Duration: 3:55.

For more infomation >> 🌺Ипомея однолетняя посадка и уход.🌸 Великолепные лианы для сада NOVA. - Duration: 3:55.

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Cracking the Asset Protection Code at the Highest Level - Duration: 2:03.

This structure I came up with it a few years back, because I realized something.

I can not hide.

I do seminars.

People come to see my properties in Puerto Rico.

People know that I have a fund and they know the assets in the fund.

They can google MIGSIF LLC and they see what's owned under MIGSIF.

SFI LLC and they can see it.

And if you can hide why would Trump put his name right on the building:

TRUMP - in gold colors?

He should have put ABC Corp!

So there must be a way.

This is really another one of those cracking the code at the best possible level.

And on the website, when you go to Kiss My Assets Goodbye or KMAGB go to the section,

I put it for free.

Go to the section about webinars and there are webinars I did with judges.

The judge from Texas and what he said.

Texas is a homestead state.

That means if you have a home and somebody sues you, and they win, they can't take anything.

That's what most people THINK.

But what happens is, do you know this?

The lawsuite usually stays on the record, and when this person dies it goes to the estate

and they collect from the estate.

So what happens when you put a lean, they can't collect ever!

And then they end up with a tax bill now because they are sitting there with something they didn't collect didn't collect.

But before they could sit if there is equity, they will collect it later so they don't get

the tax because it is coming.

He explains it.

The judge explains it much better because he talks about Texas.

The judge in California explains that this is the best thing because it avoids the foreclosure

in California, it avoids the charging orders.

There is nothing anybody can go after.

And you hear me interviewing them.

Are you sure judge Lenders? Are sure with this and this.

And I have another person who talks about insurances.

How the insurances get out of paying a lot of claims that go over a million.

They are the masters at collecting money and paying very little.

For more infomation >> Cracking the Asset Protection Code at the Highest Level - Duration: 2:03.

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ПРЕДПОЛАГАЕМЫЙ TEPPOPИCT ИЗ ПЕТЕРБУРГСКОГО METPO ПОПАЛ НА KAMEPЫ ВИДЕОHAБЛЮДEHИЯ (03.04.2017.) - Duration: 0:55.

For more infomation >> ПРЕДПОЛАГАЕМЫЙ TEPPOPИCT ИЗ ПЕТЕРБУРГСКОГО METPO ПОПАЛ НА KAMEPЫ ВИДЕОHAБЛЮДEHИЯ (03.04.2017.) - Duration: 0:55.

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7 Days Of Puerto Vallarta - Duration: 3:54.

Welcome to my editing world.

This is the magical place where my parents met and fell in love.

My first stop would be pollo.

Yours, probably tacos.

50 cents each Canadian.

Earlier that evening, a sunset sail.

The sunsets here are absolutely legendary.

My dad lives in Guadalajara, I haven't seen him for 8 years.

My sister and my brother have been here many times and have a different relationship with

Mexico.

This is mine.

I feel caught between two worlds.

As a human being, I love Canada.

As an artist, Mexico is the place to be.

The greatest working filmmakers today are from this country.

I think it's because this place is so surreal.

I've only been here 3 times yet it feels more comfortable than home.

I have my amazing cousins to thank for that.

We're here celebrating my sister's 30th birthday.

Trust me, the Barbosa's can jam.

Anyone we ran into didn't mind my camera.

Everyone in Mexico wants to be seen.

My dad says Mexicans are afraid of silence.

Just look at that wave crashing there, damn that's chill.

Everything you see here is real, except those are fake Ray Bans and this is a fake setup.

These guys showed us some secret hiking spots and just to their right...

Like I said, everyone wants to be seen here and friendliness comes in many colours.

Mama Cris is the last grandparent I have left.

I said to her: You are part of who I am and my life.

I am thankful.

I want to show you something back at my house.

This photo has been on my wall for over 30 years.

I've been mesmerized by this church.

Now my brother and I get to see it with our own eyes.

I have a lot to learn from the Mexican people and my family here.

The best way to change yourself is to achieve a new perspective.

Mexico is one of those places that you have to see for yourself.

People can't explain it, photos can't do it justice.

You just have to see it.

Get out there, travel, find new perspectives and you'll love life.

For more infomation >> 7 Days Of Puerto Vallarta - Duration: 3:54.

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You Are Not The Body - Duration: 1:41.

Don't think about the Body. Why? Because

then you are thinking about that which

you are not. You are not the Body. But the

illusion is you always think and

convinced and experience the body as

yourself. By doing so, thinking that you

are the Body, you are losing your power.

It may be a philosophy at the beginning,

but if you go on practicing this

illusion that the Body is not you, the

illusion will reveal itself as the Truth.

You will be the radiant Self.

God

For more infomation >> You Are Not The Body - Duration: 1:41.

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Can a DOS Program Provide the BEST Distraction-Free Writing Experience? - WordStar 4.0 Impressions - Duration: 6:55.

Professional video editors use crazy high-end software and hardware to do their work. Professional

photographers get fancy with Lightroom and Photoshop. The setup for high-level music

creation and DJ-ing is pretty nuts, as well. But whenever I try to look into the tools

used by professional writers to write scripts, novels, blogs, and so on - I wind up disappointed.

Every article I find interviewing writers or listing their tools has just boring entries:

Microsoft Word, Google Docs, Windows… Live… Writer? Or "Plain old Notepad" - or otherwise

some hyper-specific screenwriting program that isn't at all relevant to me.

That is, until I found out what "Game of Thrones" is written on….

I'm EposVox, here to make tech easier and more fun, and yes - George R. R. Martin writes

his novels on a laptop running DOS. THAT DOS. And good old

Wordstar 4.0.

[clip from interview]

While the 1980s terminal-only interface isn't super appealing today, the benefits of running

DOS as your operating system include performance (due to no extraneous OS bulk like with modern

Windows), and no worries about viruses. Even if some script kiddie had the IP address of

his laptop and a direct connection to it, they would have no idea how to do anything

to it - nor could they, in most cases. Script kiddies aren't going to take the time to

learn DOS, and DOS doesn't include any of the modern vulnerabilities that people know

to look for. Plus, he has no reason to put it online in the first place.

I was intrigued by this. I'm quite interested in distraction-free writing tools, and I do

most of my writing on laptops away from my main desk specifically because I find it to

be a more distraction-free experience. So how IS WordStar 4.0? I wanted to give it a

try.

Of course, the 5.25" floppy disks won't quite fit into my laptop… So for this, I'm

using FreeDOS - a free DOS implementation that has been in development for 20 years

or so and is still maintained to this day. It's a really neat project.

Currently I just have it running in VirtualBox on my main laptop. It doesn't let me full-screen

the VM for some reason, but I'm given the pleasant, maximized WordStar 4.0 typing experience

while still having access to my panels to pull up FireFox or something for research.

This is neat, but less distraction-free since I am prone to click on the other things in

my desktop GUI. It's… a mental thing.

Installing WordStar is fairly straightforward-ish, if you're competent in DOS. I'm in the

younger crowd, so I'm not. My first gaming experiences at 9 months old involved playing

games on Windows 3.1, but actual computer usage didn't really get started until the

Windows 95 and Mac OS 7 days. But a simple look through the manual and careful manipulation

of virtual floppy images within VirtualBox, and I'm even able to write this very script

on Wordstar.

It's minimal and straightforward. Basic Function Key and Control plus letter combinations

are how you control the software, and… that's it! It might seem super complicated and slow

from a glance - but by not worrying about extraneous functions, formatting, menus, or

even a cursor, you're free to just type away and be as productive as possible. It's

actually quite a refreshing experience. If I can get past the document conversion issues,

I may stick with this full time.

If you are having issues with running a VM, you can use DOSBox to emulate the program

itself, or simply make a FreeDOS boot disk and boot into FreeDOS on your machine just

for the purpose of running the program.

But there is a pretty annoying problem - converting the document files. Wordstar natively saves

to the .doc file format with a .bak backup file. If you're confused, it's time to

take note that Microsoft actually took over the .doc format and bastardized it with XML

structuring, but it didn't originate with them. The files appear to be encoded with

US-ASCII format. Google Drive won't open or convert the files, and LibreOffice has

0 compatibility tools whatsoever. WPS Office doesn't seem to want to open the files either.

Unfortunately, the ONLY way that I have found to open the file format with characters in-tact

is by using actual Microsoft Word. When you try to open the .doc file in Word, it pops

up with the character encoding selection, you need to scroll down and choose "US-ASCII".

This will keep all the letter in-tact, you just have to adjust the line spacing issues

and such. Not super convenient, and begs the question of whether the extra efficiency gained

by the distraction-free environment is worth the hassle and time it takes to convert the

files - especially since we only have a single Word activation, and it's on my old rig,

now my fiancee's.

But on the whole, WordStar is a nice program. It has the basic functions you need to write

a document, and won't go auto-correcting your weird spelling if you happen to be writing

about the Targaryens or the Baratheons. I will still use it from time to time.

I did want to try exploring other distraction-free writing experiences again. I found plenty,

but most of them were tiny web-apps that didn't have a pleasant writing experience at all,

and didn't do much to take away the distraction. Heck, one added MORE distraction by "rewarding"

you with cat pictures. FocusWriter currently seems to be my best bet - though I had to

make a custom theme with a dark grey background and much bigger font size, as all the default

themes were horrible. But the interface can be pretty buggy on Linux, unfortunately.

I also ran into Hemingway - which takes your writing and analyzes it for readability, which

can be a huge bonus for making writing easier to understand. I plan to use this more for

video scripts in the future. It runs fine from a webapp. I wanted to get their desktop

app, but it's only available for Windows and Mac and is TWENTY DOLLARS!! No thank you.

In the U.S., ISPs can now sell your browsing history and data, as internet privacy rules

were just rolled back. Don't want that to happen? Then it's time to set up a VPN.

Tunnelbear is offering a FREE 3-day trial of their awesome VPN service for the next

month or so. Hide your data, keep your browsing history safe, behind a bear. Check the link

in the description or head to eposvox.com/freebear to learn more.

My quest for truly distraction-free writing is still ongoing, but I have more knowledge

and experience now. I will continue using a combination of Google Drive and Wordstar

for now, and keep my eye out for other options. FreeWrite is one such example - a distraction-free

word processor designed for this very purpose. Maybe I'll get to take a look at it some

day.

What do you think, could you use a dedicated word processing app like WordStar? Is the

DOS interface even something that fits the bill for "distraction free" in the first

place? Let me know in the comments below.

Otherwise, smash the like button and get subscribed for more tech videos like this. I'll see

you next time.

For more infomation >> Can a DOS Program Provide the BEST Distraction-Free Writing Experience? - WordStar 4.0 Impressions - Duration: 6:55.

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Weekend - Duration: 0:37.

HEY TRIPPSTERS

Ok gotta little surprise for you

or a little treat, however you wanna look at it

Weekend

it is the 2nd cut

On Garth Brooks' Gunslinger album

The link is in the description below

and remember guys, this is a secret link

The only way to access this page is through this link

so, you know, you may wanna hang on to the link

or you can just come back to this video and click the link

But, if you'd like to hear the song

Check the link in the description below

and that is gonna do it for now

This is ICEPETS QUEEN

and i am

TRIPPIN OUT

For more infomation >> Weekend - Duration: 0:37.

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High Five - Funny moments - Duration: 0:43.

T&T Channel

Hello!

High Five !

High Five !

Fu*k You!

NooB

For more infomation >> High Five - Funny moments - Duration: 0:43.

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[Error:26 Bug In The Web] - Duration: 0:46.

Miss are you going to be okay?

For more infomation >> [Error:26 Bug In The Web] - Duration: 0:46.

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What is DASH & Where Is It Going? 2017 DASH Open House - Duration: 57:17.

Welcome everybody to the first — probably not the last — Dash Open House. Yes!

Thank you for coming.

So, I was tasked with explaining to you today, what is cryptocurrency.

So after I have done so, you will have the much greater privilege of hearing from two others.

I don't know if they've decided on the order, I'm sure they'll surprise me.

Alright, so next after me, you will hear from Ryan Taylor.

And Ryan Taylor is the oft-called Director of Finance within the Dash Core team.

After you hear from Ryan, you will finally hear from Evan Duffield, who is the founder and lead developer of Dash.

And both of them just so happen to be Phoenix locals, which is also great.

And once they have finished, the three of us — although I don't imagine you'll have many questions for me —

the three of us will take questions for something like 15 minutes.

And that will conclude the formalities of this event space.

Alright.

So, I must give a special thanks to this gentleman here, John, whom I met this evening.

Because John approached me before the festivities began and began asking me all sorts of questions.

And he helped me to realize — because in the crypto sphere

we can begin to forget that 99.9% of the world has no idea what any of this stuff is —

and John helped to remind me of that.

So, what is cryptocurrency?

First of all I'm not going to call it cryptocurrency

because I think that's a horrible name that was invented by a nerd.

And I'm sorry — thanks for the invention, leave the name at home.

So, more often you'll hear the term digital currency.

And that, of course, I am quite confident that you are likely familiar with.

Because if you have a bank account of any kind, Paypal of any kind,

you're quite used to sending value in a digital manner.

So then what could this other stuff that we're talking about possibly be?

Well, there are quite a few people — many in this room, many not in this room —

who believe that there is a better way to do digital currency.

A way that allows one to be in control of what happens to ones' units of money.

The base element of it is a ledger, essentially.

A digital ledger that's been given the nerd word blockchain — I kind of like that word.

So this blockchain, this ledger — we're also familiar with ledgers,

and so it just so happens that in the digital currency that we all know and use with banks,

that each bank keeps their own ledger, right?

You do a transaction in. You do a transaction out. They update their own internal ledger.

So then what's the difference of what we're talking about today? What is Dash?

Well Dash is an open ledger. It's a shared, common, perfectly auditable ledger.

And now, we weren't the first one. The first open ledger was called Bitcoin.

And Bitcoin is actually how most of the people who work on Dash came into open ledgers to begin with.

Most of the people who are interested in any of these sorts of fancy blockchain-based digital currencies

came into the open ledger that was called Bitcoin. Because it was the first.

It was launched in January of 2009 by a pseudonymous person

— maybe pseudonymous — by the name of Satoshi Nakamoto.

Fast-forward a number of years later, Evan Duffield — who you'll hear from today —

realized, this ledger is so fantastic, but I have got to say I have noticed one thing,

and that is that with a perfectly open ledger — that would be something like the end of privacy in finances.

There would be no cash equivalent.

And so Evan thought, well, is there a way to have an open ledger, for it to be perfectly auditable,

for the monetary supply to be knowable at every moment of every day,

and for every transaction to be provable and recorded,

to allow us to know the monetary supply at every moment, at every day,

and yet, to also be able to obscure our transactions if we want to?

Turns out there is.

It was born as XCoin for what, 24, 48 hours?

They then decided to call it Darkcoin for something like a year.

And then, when finally — no, I paid a bit of attention when they were called Darkcoin,

but I do remember thinking, that's a silly name.

But then in early 2015 they wised up and… to this excellent rebranding to Dash, digital cash.

And so, that is, at the very basest level what we are able to offer.

That is, transfers of units — I would call them monetary units but we're not used as money yet. That's the goal.

Transfer of units from one account to another on a perfectly open and auditable ledger

in a way that you can be private if you want to.

Now, there are a few other selling points of Dash that I will cover quickly because again, I forget.

I forget that people don't know all of the stuff that there is to know about Dash.

So how do we compare to other cryptos?

Maybe you have seen — there's a big favorite website, called CoinMarketCap.com,

where you can go check the price per coin

and the market capitalization of all of the competitors in this space at any old time.

And so, you will see that Dash is one of many.

And so, how are we different?

Why are there people in this room who are betting — both literally and figuratively —

that Dash is a good train to get on in this space.

Well, another thing that Evan and Ryan figured out is,

in order for this ledger to be even something that any of us would want to use as a money,

in real time, with real people, is that

the element of cash — privacy is an element of cash

but what's the other element of cash that makes us love it so much?

It's that, when we hand someone cash, we know we're done with the transaction.

The transaction is complete.

There merchant doesn't have to worry that we'll do a chargeback on them.

You know, like I've heard happens a lot on Paypal.

A merchant doesn't have to worry about, when is this transaction going to clear?

Is it two days? When will this money be available to me as liquidity?

So the other great thing — other than privacy — about cash,

is that it allows us to feel confident in the moment of sale that this is legit, this is secure, we're done here.

And, you might not believe me, if you don't know a lot about cryptos, but it is true,

that there is no other cryptocurrency — I'm sorry, digital currency — in this entire space —

that I'm aware of, let me know if I'm wrong — that can do an instant transaction.

I think the one that is nearest is something like many 15 seconds out but even then,

that's one block found, we're not going to go into that.

So allow me to drive home the gravity of that for you if I may.

Dash is the only digital currency that is able to offer an instant transaction.

And in nerd-speak that means that the merchant doesn't need to worry about getting double-spent.

If you want to see how a Bitcoin double-spend works I invite you to visit a website called GlassHunt.co.

And they're a bunch of kind-hearted hackers

who have made an online tool available to show people that any digital currency

— in this case Bitcoin —

is unsuitable for real-world commerce

if you can snatch the payment right back from the merchant after you walk out of the door.

And you can do that with Bitcoin if you use GlassHunt.co.

So, I've talked to you a bit about privacy. I've talked to you a bit about instant transactions.

And the final thing that I would like to talk to you about in terms of

— first, why am I here talking about Dash today, right?

There are a lot of places I could be.

And actually, the main reason I was attracted to Dash is that, in my point of view,

is that this blockchain business is bookkeeping 2.0.

It's really just very fancy, very technical, kind of glorified bookkeeping.

And bookkeeping is very important.

And, if we're offering bookkeeping, we're service providers.

Which means we're bookkeeping-as-a-service, Money-As-A-Service.

I don't know if that will ever get used widely. I would like it if it did. Money-As-A-Service.

So if we're service providers, certainly we need to be able to function like service providers.

Certainly we need to be able to come to an agreement

on what features our product should have and be able to roll it out in a timely manner.

And we should be able to pay the people we need to roll these features out in a timely manner.

And we should be able to pay all of these computers that are like

blip-blip-blip-blipping all around the world right now,

keeping the Dash ledger current and secure, right now.

Certainly all these people should be able to be paid.

And that's another major differentiator about Dash, in that,

not only do we pay — if you've never heard of these words forget I ever said them

— but not only do we pay our miners, but we pay our masternodes,

and we have a treasury left over that allows us to hire —

we hire Ryan, we hire Evan, we hire me, we hire several people in this room.

There are several people in this room who get paid magic internet money to work on Dash. Today.

And it's awesome.

And it's created — as I've heard other people put it — a positive feedback loop.

In that the more value we bring to customers, the more Dash we sell.

The more Dash we sell, the higher the value of a coin.

And the higher the value of a coin, the greater the purchasing power of our treasury.

So that just to me, seemed like a winning formula.

And so almost a year ago I asked the Dash network for a job, and they said yes.

You can make Youtube videos for us. And I said thanks. And that's still what I'm doing to this day.

So if you'll notice when you sat down, you may have seen a little card on your seat,

that is the Youtube show that I produce with my partner Pete. It's called DASH: Detailed.

We publish every Wednesday and Friday.

Wednesday's a sort of news update show,

if you care to be kept in the loop about developments in the digital currency Dash.

And then Friday is an interview show,

where I seek to show you the real faces of the real nerds and investors and people who are behind Dash.

Because you don't want to see me all the time, I wouldn't.

And so I invite you to do that. And with no further ado

— please will you stand right where I'm standing for the livestream purposes —

here is Ryan Taylor.

Well, I like to walk around quite a lot so this is going to be quite the challenge for me.

To stand in front of the cameras the whole time.

I'd normally be right over there and back over here.

Well, first of all, before I get into it, thank you all sincerely for coming out.

Seeing this many people in the room for a simple open house,

it truly warms my heart that all the work we put in to our currency is getting such support.

And we wouldn't be able to do what we're doing without all of the investors, users, volunteers that have sacrificed

— literally for years — to get to the point that we're at.

A point where we are self-sustaining and truly able to employ our workforce and everything.

It's really been an incredible journey. It's a journey no other coin has gone through.

And I think that's a segue into what I want to talk about,

which is, the inevitability of our situation that we're in right now.

And I'll expand on that idea. But, before I do —

I've been involved with the coin since early 2014. First as just a regular community member.

Then I moved here for personal reasons. Reached out to Evan. Started a relationship.

Started talking about what features and things should be incorporated next and,

how do you really gain adoption with users.

How do you phase it through to the point that you could continue to grow it.

And I became more and more involved.

And last year I quit my job and joined Dash full time for something like $700 a month,

in order to see it continue to grow.

And Dash's growth has been astounding. We've had triple-digit growth, every single year.

And in our fourth year, we already have triple-digit, nearly quadruple-digit growth. In 2017.

So what is this growth doing for us?

We started out this journey solving one problem, which was privacy.

How do we make transactions more private?

Nobody wants their balances published on a ledger for all the world to see.

Nobody wants their transactions published on a ledger for all the world to see.

Some people and organizations do need transparency

— if you're an NGO, a non-profit of some type — you might want your transactions actually visible.

And so you need to provide both. And so we came up with a solution to do that.

Next, we recognized that Bitcoin transactions take a really long time.

I don't know about you,

but I don't like sitting around waiting 60 minutes to see if my transaction went through to make a purchase.

No other payment system is like that. And so, we went about solving that issue.

Next, we recognized that there was a governance issue in Bitcoin.

And gosh, governance is really important.

We need an explicit means to make decisions on our network before it becomes an issue for us.

So we introduced a simple voting mechanism at the time. Early 2015.

And at that point, then you start to recognize that, well this isn't sustainable.

We can't get people to volunteer their time on this project forever.

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