Thứ Tư, 10 tháng 1, 2018

Waching daily Jan 10 2018

DJ (Canto Bight) Star Wars Last Jedi Force Link 3.75 Action Figure Toy Review - Benicio

del Toro as DJ, an underworld codebreaker - Bring the galaxy to life with Force Link!

Recreate the adventures of

a galaxy far, far away with Force Link, a new interactive play system from Hasbro that

gives kids the sound effects and phrases from the Star Wars movies right in the palms of

their hands!

Wear Force Link wearable technology (Available in Starter Set.

Sold separately) to activate lights, sounds, and phrases in Force Link-activated figures,

accessories, vehicles, and playsets!

With Force Link, kids can bring their favorite Star Wars adventures to life!

When kids wear their Force Link wearable technology and pick up the 3.75-inch scale Star Wars

DJ (Canto Bight) figure, they can activate authentic figure phrases and sounds!

Figure includes movie-inspired design and a character-inspired accessory.

May the Force be with you!

Please Subscribe and Support the channel!! https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC23U4jpP2BAw8uxaH4Zwh8g?sub_confirmation=1

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About Me ********

Toy Reviews, Action Figure Reviews - EVERY SINGLE DAY!!!

- New video uploads 05:00 am + 17:00 pm UK GMT TIME; Marvel Legends, DC Collectibles,

Star Wars Black Series, Elite Series, NECA, McFarlane, Diamond Select & Bandai SH Figuarts.

I Also love audience participation I do poll voting so you the viewers, choose the

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Join me for regular Lego Unboxing & Builds, Toy Hauls & Mystery Box videos!

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love visiting WALT DISNEY WORLD

and DISNEYLAND PARIS yearly creating memories and vlogs So join me in my geeky world and

smash the subscribe button This is my channel Toy Reviews, Action Figure Reviews - EVERY

SINGLE DAY!!!

- New video uploads 05:00 am + 17:00 pm UK GMT TIME; Marvel Legends, DC Collectibles,

DC Designer Series, Multiverse & Icons, Star Wars Black Series, Elite Series, NECA

DJ (Canto Bight) Star Wars Last Jedi Force Link 3.75 Action Figure Toy

Review

Let me know your thoughts in the comments below;

#StarWarsTheLastJedi #starwars #lastjedi #thelastjedi #dj #actionfigures #toy #unboxing #review

#hasbro #figure #disney

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For more infomation >> DJ (Canto Bight) Star Wars Last Jedi Force Link 3.75 Action Figure Toy Review - Duration: 11:22.

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Śmieszny CHOWANY w CS:GO ❗😁 z KiFi ZIO AGU CZOKLET! DRAQDRAS ZTROLOWANY | HIDE AND SEEK - Duration: 24:30.

Nie zapomnij o subie z dzwonkiem!

For more infomation >> Śmieszny CHOWANY w CS:GO ❗😁 z KiFi ZIO AGU CZOKLET! DRAQDRAS ZTROLOWANY | HIDE AND SEEK - Duration: 24:30.

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Neo Classical Metal Guitar Licks! - Duration: 3:47.

this video is about how to play neoclassical metal guitar licks oh man I

think I'm getting aroused

welcome to the Shred zone I'm shredmaster Scott if you'd like to

master music theory, metal guitar and melt women's hearts subscribe to the

Shred zone in this video I'll unpack the key components of the neoclassical metal

sound the etude you just heard is in the key of e harmonic minor a favorite used

by Yngwie Malmsteen and many others in the genre in this piece I'm essentially

outlining the one four and five chords using arpeggio licks

in E harmonic minor the primary chords are e minor a minor and B major

use alternate picking to slice through each section with style and sex

appeal it's always about sex with you shred in the B section I outlined a

series of substitutions using the low E string as a pedal we've got the five of

five or F sharp 7 followed by the neapolitan chord F major seven a

half-step up from the root are you just making up words?

the key here is to sound bitchin speaking of bitches let's hear the B

section

man that was a real B finally I launch into a descending lick reminiscent of a

James Bond film the chromatic line on the low e-string weaves through a series

of licks built on the root note E

and BAM instant neoclassical metal licks what's that

we're can you get the tab to this masterpiece? well I'm glad you asked

hit the link in the description below to get the tab and the backing track I've

got tons of other tabs and backing tracks there on my patreon page as well

upload your cover to instagram, tag #shredmasterscott and i'll check it out now

if you're starving for more neoclassical metal check out my video on how to

master metal guitar below but be careful you may bring a tidal wave of women your

way

For more infomation >> Neo Classical Metal Guitar Licks! - Duration: 3:47.

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讓皮膚紅潤的秘密【紅酒開箱】 - Duration: 9:20.

For more infomation >> 讓皮膚紅潤的秘密【紅酒開箱】 - Duration: 9:20.

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Dividend Stocks With Ex-Dividends - Dividend Investing RPM, PNM, GD, MAIN, PG - Jan 15-19 - Duration: 18:48.

hello everyone and thanks for tuning into the financial investor channel my

name is Brent and today we're going to be doing our five random socks with

ex-dividend x tweak so these five socks work sort of prescreened this week it

was round it was less than 40 socks for sure all of these have price earnings

ratio less than 25 and they have a current dividend yield greater than 1.5

so the video will be released of course right now Wednesday at 8 a.m. and I do

have 5 socks for you guys so I have our p.m. international I have PNM resources

I have general dynamic corporation Main Street capital and Procter & Gamble so I

have all of their ticker symbols right here just released the article about 33

minutes ago so once we jump over there who turns directly into my website and

again I just kind of put what we're screened for so I took a bunch of stocks

screen them we're looking for price earnings ratio less than 25 yields

greater than 1.5 and then we're gonna basically be covering the dividend dates

price comparison it into the yield the price comparison to the earnings to the

average of the industry the payout ratio dividend history and a few other

statistics so of course these are the ex-dividend January 15 through January

19th so their very first stock is ticker symbol rpm rpm international owned

subsidiaries that are world leaders and specialty coding and sealants serving

both industrial and consumer markets rpms industrial products include roofing

systems sealants corrosion control coatings flooring coating and specialty

chemicals so they do have a bunch of brands they're stone-hard trimco and so

on so they're ex-dividend date is on Tuesday the 16th of January so you do

need to buy the stock on Monday or prior you'll then get paid out within the same

month on the 31st of January so I took their information here charted it out

and we can see here that they're currently paying out 32 cents per share

each quarter they're currently priced at 53 dollars and 51 cents

their price earnings ratio is twenty point five eight their current yield is

two point two eight and their price Tabuk is four point four five so this is

all in a three-year period here you can see this is from back in January of 2015

until current year January 2018 so when charted it does show the current

stock it's a higher price to yield over the three-year period which may indicate

it may be overvalued at this time the stock is under in the industry price

earnings average and sits below 60% payout ratio and I said dividend growth

for the last forty three years so I would consider this one very recession

proof the price the book value is four point four five but you can see it stays

read about this right about that price to book value the price in comparison to

what's Book value stays right about the same it's actually came down a little

bit from where it was before maybe been like 4.5 4.6 it is currently higher than

3.0 we're value investors we've considered a value but it could be a

good long term buy and hold the stock is currently at around a twenty point a

twenty point five p/e ratio the industry average is twenty two point eight we can

see it has around a two point two eight two point three nine percent yield it

pays out a dollar twenty eight per share payout ratio is forty two point seven so

it's very recession proof even if their earnings drop by 50 percent

they would still have a ratio of an 80 percent or under their dividend growth

again forty three years of continued dividend growth and their annual

dividend growth was six point six seven percent so they increase it they've been

increasing it yearly and they increase it from a brown 29 cents and some change

up until 30 cents so that was actually an increase of around six point six

seven percent so that was ticker symbol rpm

the next stock we're going to be covering is ticker symbol P and M now

p.m. resources engages in a generation transmission and distribution of

electricity and focus on the sale and marking and electricity and the western

United States and New Mexico the company also provides regulated transmission and

distribution services so here the ex-dividend is on the 17th of January

and that's a Wednesday yep that's correct and then you would get paid out

on the 1st of February so again you do need to own this stock one day prior to

the ex-dividend date so you would need to buy it on Tuesday or prior hold it

until Wednesday to be eligible for the payout date here we can see that they

currently raised their dividend just they recently declared the dividend

increase from around 23 and some change to over 26% so they have an annual

dividend growth the last of nine point two eight percent so very nice growth

they're currently priced at $39 the a a dip right here you can see they went

from around forty five forty four dollars all the way down to thirty nine

dollars so it does look like this happens quite a bit they have a very

nice build up period they do it teacup comes back up but this one they fell

quite a bit below their last support so definitely want to take a look as to why

they fell recently that would be good to know they're currently have a yield of

two point four nine and a price to book value of 1.75 so here we can see their

p/e ratio is not currently on the chart and this one shows that as a twenty

point two but the graph here on the right hand side it's not gonna be able

to show us that information because it had to include that their p/e ratio was

in the three thousandth at some time so maybe they weren't very the earnings

weren't very up there in the past their price had skyrocketed past earnings

which caused their p/e ratio to go into the thousands whereas now it's back at a

normal rate of twenty point two so p.m. stock when charted it does show

the current stock has a higher price to yield which would make a indicate it may

be overvalued at this time the stock is under in the industry price earnings

average is sitting below 60% payout ratio and I said dividend growth for the

last six years the price the book value is 1.75 and that's pretty consistent

which is lower than 3.0 where value investors with some center a value here

we can see that the current dividend yield is 2.4 9 on this chart but they

recently had that hike that was declared and has not been paid out yet so this is

actually the incorrect yield there actually yielded a 2.7 to they pay out

$1 o 6 per share their payout ratio is 57% their dividend growth to 6 years and

their last if declared dividend was an increase of 9.2 8% so very nice growth

there the next stock is ticker symbol GD general dynamic corporation it's an

aerospace and defense company it is a market leader in business aviation land

and expect expeditionary combat systems Airman's and munitions shipbuilding &

marine systems and information systems and technologies so this activity date

is on Thursday the 18th of January you would then get paid out on the 9th of

February so you do need to own the stock on Wednesday or prior to be eligible for

the payout date this one pays out 84 cents per share but they are very

expensive at 205 dollars and 79 cents their p/e ratio is eddie 19.5 - their

price to book value is that a 5.3 one and their current yield is one a you

know one of the lowest points right now and over the line you know in the last

three years it's at one point five nine which is near one of the lowest periods

just in the last three years alone so GD stock when charted it does show that the

current stock has a higher price of yield which would indicate it may be or

reevaluate at this time the stock is under and the industry price to earnings

average and is sitting below 60% payout ratio and that's that dividend growth

for 20 years so this one again is another recession resistant stock the

price the book value is that a 5.3 one which is slightly higher than it was

three years ago and it is higher than 3.0 where value

investors which considered a at value the stock is currently set at a 19.3 p/e

19.5 depending on the current price the industry average is 24.7 so here we can

see that they're currently yielded around one point five nine one point six

three of their annualized pale is three dollars and thirty six per share that

gives them a payout ratio of thirty four point three their dividend growth has

twenty years and their annual dividend growth from the last time they increase

it here you can see that these are dividend increases are very nice so they

have a very consistent around ten percent growth per year so in seven

years actually rule of 72 you take 72 divided by ten and that would give you

7.2 so it would take you about seven point two years possibly if they

continue to have this growth where your initial dividend payouts would double in

seven years just base off their growth so that's a very nice stock there it

does look a little bit maybe overpriced at this current time if I came down a

little bit maybe down into the 185 it might look like a pretty good bargain

the next stock is Main Street capital now this is a reso real estate so Main

Street Capital Corporation actually it's an investment firm which focuses on

providing customized debt and equity financing to lower middle market

companies Main Street's lmmm portfolio investments consists of secured debt

equity warrants indirect equity investments and privately held lmm

companies the ex-dividend date is on Thursday again the 18th of January so

you do need to own the stock on Wednesday or prior you would then get

paid out on the 15th of February this chart you can hear that seed that their

payout the dividend yield or it's not the dividend yield the dividend payout

is 19 cents per share but it spikes up and that's because they have special

payouts it looks like every year they have around to special payouts which are

around see 27 cents per share so instead of

paying their normal 19 cents per share they spike out probably pay 30 cents per

share which is almost you know almost double what they normally pay out so

while their yield appears you know it's actually pretty high 5.8 and then when

they actually pay out those special payouts

it's a payout ratio payout reeled of around seven point seven five or higher

so that's pretty pretty nice special payoffs are the currently price at

thirty-eight dollars and sixty cents the p/e ratio is at thirteen point five for

a payout nineteen cents per share per quarter and they're currently yield at

five point eight percent their price to book value is at a one point six eight

where you can see here for the last three years has remained about the same

we can see here that their price has gone down actually that's their yield we

can see that their yield is actually sitting at one of the lowest points in

the last three years whereas their price is that one of the highest points in

last three years ever since January of 2016 this talk has been on a very nice

uptrend since that time so about two years the

stock if you bought it you would have gotten nice capital appreciation and

where I got some special payouts during that time so main stock wind chartered

it does show that the current stock has a higher price to yield which which

would indicate it may be overvalued at this time the stock is under in the

industry price earnings average which is it is sitting over 60% payout ratio

that's pretty normal for these these you know investment firms and such it could

be a little bit high definitely do your research there it's high dividend gross

for the last seven years has price the book value is one point six eight which

is lower than 3.0 word value investors put consider a value their dividend

yield currently sits at five point eight five point nine depending on the price

of the current stock the annualized payout is two dollars and twenty eight

cents per share the payout ratio is pretty high at ninety seven point nine

the dividend growth has been for the last seven years they've continued to

increase their dividend and they've had annual dividend growth of around two

point seven so very slow here you can see the last three years has had very

slow growth very slow in the in the sense like I'm not sure what it were it

was last time it may have been like point zero two point zero five change

difference you know it's nineteen cents right now it could have been eighteen

you know eighteen point five eighteen point seven five it's in the decimal

form and the very last stock we have for you guys is Proctor and Gamble

ticker symbol PG this is a very well known company the Procter and Gamble

Company is a consumer goods provider the company sells actually have it cut off

don't I there we go I'm not used to having my screen I must

have cut off more of my screen than I normally do so the Procter & Gamble

Company is a consumer goods provider the company sells its products in more than

180 countries and sells various items including beauty grooming products and

home good products currently the company has two main segments global business

units and beauty including beauty and grooming and house

care directive Eden is again on Thursday the 18th of January the payout date

would be the 15th of February they're currently priced at ninety one dollars

and nine cents they're currently paying out 69 cents

per share for each quarter their PE ratio is fifteen point nine eight and

they're currently have a yield of three point zero one their price to book value

is at a four point two which is pretty consistent but is higher than it was

maybe in the last three years I have to remove that little hex you know a little

decimal thing anyways Procter & Gamble stock one chart it does show the current

stock has a higher price to yield which would indicate it may be overvalued at

this time the stock is over in the industry price earnings average it is

sitting over 60% payout ratio and it's had dividend growth for 61 years so this

one is very recession proof the price to book value is four point two nine which

is higher than 3.0 where value investors would consider to a value the stock is

hidden and a twenty four point five p/e ratio where the industry average is

twenty point one the dividend yield is three point three or point three point

zero three or three point zero one depending on the current price of the

day the annualized payout is two dollars and seventy six per share or sixty nine

cents per share per quarter the payout ratio is sixty five point eight the

dividend growth again sixty one years of continued dividend growth but their

annual dividend growth is only three percent and we can see here where they

may have increased it from say sixty six sixty six cents and some change to sixty

nine cents that three cent difference that they increase it is very lows

comparison to like a percentage-wise it's only three percent increase in here

back in 2016 they from 2015 to 2017 January there wasn't a lot of dividend

growth there it may have been half of that so the dividend growth between this

time frame between 2015 and 2017 that two-year period you probably would have

had dividend growth of around one point five percent so it's been pretty slowing

down so those are the five stocks for you guys if you did enjoy the article

remember to like share and subscribe to my channel if I

were to pick one stock out of all these you know I don't hold actually any of

these so disclosure I don't currently hold any of the stocks that I covered in

today's video the the ticker symbols here are p.m. the ticker symbol pn m GD

main and Procter & Gamble if I had to pick just one sock I am not sure which

one I would actually go with these are all it's a it's a hard market right now

to really buy in and look for good investments so I would definitely want

to look a little bit further nothing right off the bat screams at me to look

a little bit further because they are all sitting a little bit beyond you know

the price is much higher than the yield would have been in the last few years we

can see here that 2.2 wait is almost in the center mass here but the price is a

little bit higher than normal just kind of taking a look at what we do have

I would think that Procter and Gamble is always a good stock to go into so out of

all five of these I would probably choose Procter and Gamble just because I

know they have they had they do have dividend growth it may be slow but you

know they can always withstand recessions

it's recession-proof I don't have to worry that I'm buying in at a position

where maybe in the next ten to fifteen years they might not be able to

reappraise yet - so Procter & Gamble is always a safe stock to invest in - I

believe inside my wife's portfolio she is actually holding it but I don't hold

it myself so that is it for this video if you have found it enjoyable remember

to like comment below and subscribe to my channel if you were a new viewer or a

reoccurring viewer that way these videos come out every single Wednesday I make

five stocks with X evidence next week I also do my financial segment on Monday

covering you know random topic on finance or investing and then I have my

weekly recaps and my monthly recaps and such so if there are other articles or

investments or financial areas you would like to cover go ahead and leave them in

the comments below and it is that is it for this video thank you guys for

watching and I will see you guys next time have a great day

buh-bye

For more infomation >> Dividend Stocks With Ex-Dividends - Dividend Investing RPM, PNM, GD, MAIN, PG - Jan 15-19 - Duration: 18:48.

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САЛАХ В РЕАЛЕ, А ИКАРДИ НЕТ - РАЗНИЦА В ИСТОЧНИКАХ [ТРАНСФЕРНЫЕ БЕСЕДЫ] - Duration: 8:09.

For more infomation >> САЛАХ В РЕАЛЕ, А ИКАРДИ НЕТ - РАЗНИЦА В ИСТОЧНИКАХ [ТРАНСФЕРНЫЕ БЕСЕДЫ] - Duration: 8:09.

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Wie man einer Frau Komplimente macht - Sehr mächtig - Duration: 3:29.

For more infomation >> Wie man einer Frau Komplimente macht - Sehr mächtig - Duration: 3:29.

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HOW TO MAKE A FOUNDING MOLD IN DELFT CLAY ? - Duration: 4:49.

For more infomation >> HOW TO MAKE A FOUNDING MOLD IN DELFT CLAY ? - Duration: 4:49.

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[인생] 밥쓰TV멤버 인생이의 자기소개 - Duration: 1:16.

For more infomation >> [인생] 밥쓰TV멤버 인생이의 자기소개 - Duration: 1:16.

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The Man Who Parkinson's Disease is Named After was Implicated in a Plot to Assassinate The King - Duration: 4:36.

For more infomation >> The Man Who Parkinson's Disease is Named After was Implicated in a Plot to Assassinate The King - Duration: 4:36.

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Cobi - Goddess - Duration: 4:14.

Future you hold all my sorrows The past she was good to me

She said all my time here is borrowed She's counting the days

I bit off more than I can swallow She plays with my fantasies

She's making me think I'm Apollo She takes me away

I don't know what she knows But I know in my heart the past is gone

Caught in the afterglow Been dreaming too much I'm coming down

Her secrets she withholds Now I'm at her mercy I'm her pawn

She won't let me go I'm in the arms of a goddess tonight

You make me believe You make me believe

I'm in the arms of a goddess tonight You make me believe

You make me believe I'm in the arms of a goddess tonight

Take me to heaven above There's not enough love in the world

Take me to heaven above There's not enough love in the world

Testing my will with temptation She lays down in front of me

I'm only rewarded for patients when I play her game

She picks up on all my vibrations And plays with my chemistry

She tricks me with all of these visions Then takes them away

She knows how to control The thunder and rain or dusk to dawn

She's spinning a tornado She screams like a banshee all night long

And that's how the story goes I'll burn in the flames of glory cause

She won't let me go I'm in the arms of a goddess tonight

You make me believe You make me believe

I'm in the arms of a goddess tonight You make me believe

You make me believe I'm in the arms of a goddess tonight

Take me to heaven above There's not enough love in the world

Take me to heaven above There's not enough love in the world

She knows how to control The thunder and rain or dusk to dawn

She's spinning a tornado She screams like a banshee all night long

And that's how the story goes I'll burn in the flames of glory cause

She won't let me go I'm in the arms of a goddess tonight

You make me believe You make me believe

I'm in the arms of a goddess tonight You make me believe

You make me believe I'm in the arms of a goddess tonight

Take me to heaven above There's not enough love in the world

Take me to heaven above There's not enough love in the world

You make me believe I'm in the arms of a goddess tonight

For more infomation >> Cobi - Goddess - Duration: 4:14.

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Colors Fingers Family, Hand Body Paint. Learn colors hand feet 3D Finger Colors Soccer Ball for kids - Duration: 10:58.

Colors Fingers Family, Hand Body Paint. Learn colors hand feet 3D Finger Colors Soccer Ball for kids

For more infomation >> Colors Fingers Family, Hand Body Paint. Learn colors hand feet 3D Finger Colors Soccer Ball for kids - Duration: 10:58.

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Bad Royale & Da Nation ft. Shumba - Go Down "2018 Soca" (Official Audio) - Duration: 2:30.

Bad Royale & Da Nation ft. Shumba - Go Down "2018 Soca" (Official Audio)

For more infomation >> Bad Royale & Da Nation ft. Shumba - Go Down "2018 Soca" (Official Audio) - Duration: 2:30.

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Γιατί Η Απόρριψη Πονάει; - Duration: 10:28.

For more infomation >> Γιατί Η Απόρριψη Πονάει; - Duration: 10:28.

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Exploring the Arctic for Kids: Arctic Animals and Climates for Children - FreeSchool - Duration: 20:04.

You're watching FreeSchool!

At the northernmost point of our world lies a land of ice and snow - a land of darkness

and light - where strange creatures have made peculiar adaptations to the harsh conditions.

Despite the bitterly cold winters, life flourishes in the short, cool summers, making this fragile

ecosystem a remarkable one.

Come explore the Arctic, one of the most remote and beautiful places on earth.

Because of the tilt of Earth's axis, the Arctic gets a great deal of sunlight in the summer,

and very little in the winter.

As spring turns to summer, the days become longer and longer, until finally there comes

a day when the sun does not set at all.

When daylight lingers all through the night, it is called the Midnight Sun, something which

occurs in the days surrounding the summer solstice.

As fall turns into winter the days get shorter and shorter, until finally there comes a day

when the sun does not rise and darkness lasts a full 24 hours.

This is called Polar Night.

The polar night may be long, but there is a light in the darkness, and its name is aurora.

The aurora borealis, also known as the Northern Lights, is a display of lights in the night

sky that is only visible near the north pole.

Although they may occur at any time, they can only be seen at night, as they are too

faint to be seen in the light of the sun.

The Northern Lights have fascinated people for thousands of years!

Some people once thought they were spirits dancing in the sky; others thought they were

the flames of dragons.

Today's scientists have learned that the auroras are caused by charged particles from the sun

that interact with Earth's magnetosphere, exciting the gases of the atmosphere until

it glows.

Auroras will also occur in the skies surrounding the South Pole, where they are called the

Southern Lights.

Any place on earth far enough north that it has at least one night where the sun does

not set and one day where the sun does not rise is considered to be inside the Arctic

Circle.

The Arctic Circle is an imaginary line that encircles the North Pole at about 66 degrees

North Latitude.

The Arctic is mostly ocean, but it also includes parts of Greenland, Canada, the United States,

Russia, Norway, Finland, Sweden, and Iceland.

Lands at the southern edges of the Arctic Circle are generally covered by tundra.

The tundra is vast, and for the most part, treeless.

The short Arctic summers are too cool and too brief to allow trees to flourish here,

but there is another barrier as well: permafrost.

Beneath a thin active layer of soil that thaws and re-freezes every year, the ground is permanently

frozen.

The plants that survive - mostly grass, moss, and shrubs,

grow close to the ground and have shallow roots.

Although there is little rain on the tundra, summer is very wet.

The frozen upper layer of soil thaws out, but water cannot sink into the ground past

the frozen barrier of the permafrost.

Since temperatures there rarely climb higher than 54 degrees fahrenheit or 12 degrees celsius,

very little of the water evaporates.

Instead, it sits on top of the permafrost layer, forming lakes and marshes that will

turn to ice as soon as temperatures sink below freezing once more.

Many birds, especially waterfowl, will migrate north to these cool summer wetlands to breed.

One bird that does this is the trumpeter swan, with some flying from wintering grounds as

far south as Texas or Mexico.

With adults frequently reaching weights of 30 lbs or 13.6 kg, it is the heaviest bird

living that is native to North America.

It is also the largest species of waterfowl in the world, with a wingspan that can surpass

10 feet or 3 meters.

The Arctic wetlands provide an important habitat for the trumpeter swan - a refuge from hunters

that decimated populations in Canada and the northern United States near the beginning

of the 20th century.

By 1933, only a few dozen wild trumpeters could be found in these southern areas, and

people feared they would become extinct.

Then, a second population of trumpeter swans was discovered up in Alaska: thousands of

them.

Some of the Alaskan swans were carefully introduced to the areas where trumpeters had been overhunted,

allowing the populations to recover.

Waterfowl are not the only animals to make their home on the tundra.

Fish like salmon and cod migrate to the waterways there each year.

The fish, in turn, attract predators like bear and eagles.

Wolverine and fox live here, too, as well as musk ox and caribou.

Caribou, or reindeer, are one of the world's great migrators.

In the winter, they travel south to snowy pine forests.

They cannot survive farther north, where the snow is too deep, because they must dig through

the snow to eat the moss and lichens beneath it.

In the spring, they migrate north again to take advantage of the plants growing on the

tundra and birth their calves.

Some North American caribou have the longest migration of any land mammal in the world,

up to 3,000 miles or 5,000 kilometers.

Animals attempting to survive in the Arctic need every advantage they can get, and some

have found it by changing their appearance.

In a land of ice and snow, it is sometimes helpful to be white yourself.

Some animals, like the snowy owl, keep white feathers year round.

Others, like the arctic fox, wear brown or gray fur in the summer and only turn white

in the winter.

Another color changer is the ptarmigan.

Covered in patchy brown and white feathers in the summer, they begin to change their

plumage as the days shorten.

Both male and female ptarmigans will go through the winter in a coat of nearly pure white

feathers.

Once the snow begins to melt, bright white birds can easily be spotted by predators,

and so they change back.

The female regains her brown camouflage first, when spring comes, which offers her some protection

from predators while she sits on her eggs.

The males, on the other hand, keep their white feathers for a while to stand out and attract

a female - and to prove that they are smart and quick enough to avoid being eaten in showy

feathers.

The puffin is another Arctic bird - with a very different tactic for camouflaging itself.

Puffins are seabirds.

They only return to land to breed, nesting in burrows dug in clifftops.

They prefer to breed on islands, where risk from land predators is much lower.

Puffins spend months at a time out on the open ocean, and it is out at sea that their

coloring comes in handy.

They have black feathers on their backs, and white feathers on their stomachs.

This color pattern is called countershading, and it helps them blend in to the dark ocean

water when seen from above, or the bright sky when seen from below.

Although they can fly, puffins are awkward in the air and typically move around by paddling

their webbed feet as they sit on the water's surface.

To catch fish, they dive, moving along by flapping their wings underwater, much as penguins

do.

The rich feeding grounds of the northern oceans attract larger animals than puffins - much

larger.

Humpback whales travel north in the spring to feed on the krill and small fish abundant

in the frigid waters.

Although humpbacks are often solitary, they sometimes form small groups - especially when hunting.

A group of humpback whales together can use a special method called bubble netting to

trap fish and krill.

The whales will surround and circle a school of fish.

Then, other whales begin blowing a ring of bubbles to trap them.

Once the fish are trapped close together, the whales will come up from beneath them,

mouths wide open, scooping up huge quantities of fish like a net.

Their baleen plates allow them to strain the tiny creatures from the seawater.

The humpbacks must eat massive amounts of food in the spring and summer months to build

up their fat stores.

When the weather turns cold, they will migrate to warmer tropical waters, and they will not

eat again until the spring.

It is in these warmer waters that they mate and give birth: newborn calves could not survive

the freezing temperatures near the poles.

It is important for the adults to have successful summer hunts, so that they can survive their

yearly migration.

As we travel farther north, we come to areas where the snow and ice never completely melt,

in a place called the High Arctic.

Even here, there is life.

Instead of tundra, the high arctic has polar barrens.

Far fewer plants survive here, mainly moss and lichens.

As a result, most food chains do not rely on land-growing plants.

Instead, they begin in the sea.

The walrus is at home on the land, in the water, or on the ice.

They sleep and rest on beaches or on ice shelves.

They prefer to live near shallow waters.

Walrus cannot dive as deeply as their relatives, the harp seals, and must be able to reach

the sea floor to find their favorite foods: clams, mollusks, and oysters.

They may look peculiar, but walruses are well-adapted to their icy habitat.

Their wrinkled skin is nearly 4 inches or 10 cm thick in places, and the layer of fatty

blubber beneath it is even thicker: nearly 6 inches or 15 cm.

The purpose of both is the same - to allow walruses to stay warm in freezing Arctic waters.

Thick skin and thick blubber contribute to the walrus's massive size: adult males often

weigh more than 2000 lbs or 900 kg, and some even weigh double that.

By far their most recognizable trait, however, is their tusks.

Both male and female walruses grow tusks.

Tusks are enlarged teeth that can grow about 3 feet or a meter in length.

Walruses use their tusks like ice picks, to help pull themselves out of the water onto

sheets of ice.

They also use their tusks to clear breathing holes when ice covers too much of the water's surface.

Finally, tusks provide some defense against the only animals that prey on walruses: killer

whales, and polar bears.

Because of their harsh Arctic habitat, polar bears rely more on meat than any other bear.

They eat mostly seals, waiting at breathing holes in the ice for them to pop their noses

through the surface of the water and then dragging them up onto the ice.

Sometimes they will catch beluga, narwhal, or young walruses this way, but larger prey

of this kind is much more difficult to manage.

Polar bears are the largest land predators in the world, but they are also excellent

swimmers, sometimes swimming for days at a time to move between hunting grounds.

Like the walrus, polar bears are well adapted to their harsh Arctic habitat.

Thick white fur serves as camouflage as well as insulation, and a layer of blubber underneath

provides extra warmth.

Their paws are extra wide, to help them distribute their weight and allow them to walk on top

of snow or thin ice without breaking through, and their thick, strong claws help polar bears

grab onto slippery prey as well as better grip the slippery ice.

The Arctic is a harsh, forbidding land, but it is far from lifeless.

Plants and animals live and grow and flourish in the conditions they are adapted for.

Many species depend on the cold and the ice and would not be able to survive if it was

gone.

Because the Arctic climate is so unwelcoming to humans, much of it has gone untouched and

undeveloped, but we can still disturb the delicate balance these creatures depend on.

Hunting... pollution...and gathering natural resources may cause changes that upset the

network supporting life in the northernmost reaches of our planet.

I hope you learned a lot today about the Arctic, the land of the midnight sun.

Goodbye till next time!

For more infomation >> Exploring the Arctic for Kids: Arctic Animals and Climates for Children - FreeSchool - Duration: 20:04.

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Speaking Finnish with Thomas Delaney, Aron Johannsson & Ishak Beldodil | SV Werder Bremen - Duration: 4:00.

World Peace

Is that finnish? Yes.

What is that?

Next.

Freetime activities

Is that really one word?

Airplane Mechanic Trainee Officer

Come on, stop it now. What's that?

Never.

Never, never... I couldn't say this. That doesn't work for me.

For more infomation >> Speaking Finnish with Thomas Delaney, Aron Johannsson & Ishak Beldodil | SV Werder Bremen - Duration: 4:00.

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BEST BUNDESLIGA GOALS, SKILLS & FOULS 2017- Recreated by freekickerz - Duration: 5:47.

Hello and welcome to a new video. My name is Laura Wontorra and today we're going to show you the best goals, fails and highlights of the first leg of the Bundesliga season 17/18!

With me, the guys from freekickerz, hello, and PMTV! Meti and Patrick, hello!

In order to give us the 100% Bundesliga feeling, these boys will now present you their personal highlights of the current season. Let's go!

That were our best Bundesliga highlights! And if you out there recognized all scenes

then you should check out our website Nitro-TV.de and try to solve our quiz about this video here!

And you'll be able to win some great prizes and find out all the info about our show 100% Bundesliga - every Monday at 10.15PM on Nitro!

All highlights from the 1. and 2. Bundesliga. We have great studio guests with us every show. So tune in!

Thanks for participating in this video! Thanks to you guys for watching. As always, stay active and see you next time!

For more infomation >> BEST BUNDESLIGA GOALS, SKILLS & FOULS 2017- Recreated by freekickerz - Duration: 5:47.

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Ein GESCHENK für Lord Voldemort – DRAW Challenge - Duration: 9:08.

For more infomation >> Ein GESCHENK für Lord Voldemort – DRAW Challenge - Duration: 9:08.

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What Are Common Stereotypes About British People? - Duration: 7:04.

Today we are back to stereotypes.

Social psychologists tell us there's nothing wrong with stereotyping, and sometimes what

we think is true.

They give the example of young men committing more violent crimes than other male age groups,

or women.

It's just a fact.

Statistics back this up.

As we saw in other shows, not all Americans are overweight, carry guns, or are patriotic,

but a good number of people in the states can tick some of those boxes, often all three.

We also saw that while Russian men are not all macho, there is some truth to how Russian

culture has propagated the image of the tough guy.

But what about those Brits?

Are they all tea-drinking, cricket-loving geezers with a stiff upper lip?

That's what we'll find out, in today's episode of the Infographics Show, Common Stereotypes

about the British.

Don't forget to subscribe and click the bell button so that you can be part of our

Notification Squad.

Let's start with the tea.

Do Brits drink the stuff like water, imbibing their Tetleys and Yorkshire tea throughout

each and every day?

Well, according to the UK Tea and Infusions Association, 165 million cups of tea are served

daily in the UK, which is 60.2 billion cups per year.

The population of the UK is about 65.6 million, so those Brits are consuming almost three

cups a day each!

According to an article in The Atlantic, the biggest tea drinkers in the world are the

Brits, with China, Turkey and Ireland also big on tea.

Unlike some other countries, though, the Brits stick mainly with what is sometimes called

English tea.

96% of the time it comes from a bag, and 98% of the time it's drank with milk.

According to Statistica, 37 percent of Brits drink 2 or 3 cups a day, 21 percent said 4

or 5 cups, 7 percent said 6 to 8 cups, and a few folks 9 or 10 cups.

There's no doubt about it, those Brits are hooked on their cuppas.

Ok, so now let's get down to perhaps a more unappealing stereotype; after all, we've

picked on Americans enough.

We noticed that when we last mentioned that Brits had bad teeth, a lot of people expressed

in the comments that this was not true at all.

Was the Simpsons wrong to laugh at British teeth when they created 'The big book of

British smiles' as a warning to cartoon American children?

Was the Seattle grunge band, Mudhoney, wrong to name an EP 'Boiled beef and rotting teeth',

jokingly prodding the Brits?

According to dental statistics, yes, they were.

According to 2015 OECD data, in terms of decayed, missing, or filled teeth, the Brits along

with Germany actually have the best teeth in the world.

According to the DMFT (decayed, missing, filled, Index), the worst oral hygiene in the world

is in Ecuador, Cambodia, and worst of all, Grenada.

The same data says the Brits have the fourth best teeth in the world, while the Americans

come ninth.

So, take that Simpsons!

Denmark came first on the list.

The BBC writes that the myth of bad British teeth is mostly American-made.

It may have held some truth in the 70s, says the BCC, but it's all changed now.

The Brits can now stand tall and smile wide, and proudly cite any number of statistics

that say their teeth are in a better state on average than those yanks over there in

TV smile land.

So, when they are not drinking tea or brushing their teeth, those Brits are obviously talking

about the weather…especially those in rainy Manchester.

Do they really go on and on about the weather?

According to most websites we can find, yes, they do.

The reason is the unpredictability of the British weather due to its maritime climate.

The Brits can't be sure what's going to happen from one hour to the next, so they

chat about what's happening and what might happen.

In fact, it borders on insanity how much they talk about the weather.

In 2015, the BBC cited research that said all over the UK, 94 percent of people will

have talked about the weather in the last six hours.

That's every day of the week, all year, almost the entire country is weather small-talking.

When website Expat Insider took a poll on worst weather in the world by country, the

UK was 58th out of 64 countries.

Belgium came last.

The weather is so bad in the UK that if they have a few days of sunshine and heat, it's

first greeted with cheers and later there are droughts and pink-skinned northerners

passing out muttering the words, "It's cracking the flags…"

Some Brits might understand what that means, and also know it's pronounced in the north,

"Crackin' flags".

Talking about how those Brits talk, do they really all have accents no one outside of

Britain can understand?

This is true and not true.

Some Brits speak very clearly, and you could say these are all mostly your middle and upper

class variety of Brits.

Yes, they still talk about class over in that funny old land.

According to the Telegraph, Britain indeed is a country of very complex accents.

They mention the accents of Cockney (London), Brummie (Birmingham), West Country (Somerset

and beyond), South Wales, Scouse (Liverpool), Scottish and Geordie (Newcastle), among others.

Imagine travelling through Yorkshire and someone tells you, "Put wood in t'ole!

Was tha' born in a barn?"

That means "Please close the door."

You go up to Scotland and someone turns to you and says, "It's boiling oot."

He's trying to tell you today the weather is hot.

All over the UK you'll find accents that you can't believe are the English language.

Not everyone speaks with the BBC accent, or Queen's English.

Why does the UK have so many regional accents compared to the rest of the world?

It's complicated, but has a lot to do with social standing, communities that identify

with accents, and of course all the tribes that lived on the British Isles, including

Celts, Angles, Saxons, Jutes, German and Norse tribes.

Medieval French became the language after Olde English, and Latin was spoken as well.

All those tribes and all those languages, have led to this confusion of British accents.

As for the Queen, do all Brits love her?

Actually, that's hardly even close to the truth.

She's probably more popular in the US than she is in the UK.

In Scotland, the Queen is less liked than in England.

While polls suggest that about 75 percent of Brits are in favor of keeping the monarchy,

the days are long gone when the UK population worshipped the royal family.

The queen is more of a novelty these days, fodder for those infamous tabloids.

Are the Brits overly polite?

Well, there is certainly a culture of yobbism over there on the small island, but you will

find that Brits agree that they know better than anyone how to form an orderly queue.

In fact, most people there are so polite, they apologize even when they are in the right.

When the Independent cited a British Council report about what the rest of the world thinks

about the Brits, the answer was, "Boozy, ignorant, intolerant, but very polite."

You'll find Brits do binge drink, but the country is only 25th on the world alcohol

consumption list.

Are they intolerant?

Well, Brexit might answer that, but we won't go there today.

Polite is probably true as good manners are important in the UK, and that goes across

all classes.

We can trace some of this back to the Victorian era in Britain when etiquette and manners

were expected from everyone.

Finally, is British food really that bad?

This isn't easy to answer.

You can find restaurants from two of the world's most famous chefs in the UK, those of Jamie

Oliver and Gordon Ramsey.

Amazing cuisine can be found in every city, but you'll also find many poorer people

living on a diet of Tesco Value Foods, cheap, sweet ciders that come in massive plastic

bottles, and basically eating a lot of bad processed food that comes out of boxes and

tins.

Yes, Britain is home to the greasy café and fried egg sandwiches, but you'll also find

some of the best Indian food in the world, as well as great French and Italian food.

Traditional British food, such as roast beef and Yorkshire pudding, is not bad at all.

Still, if we put British cuisine against other countries' cuisines, it might be said to

be lacking.

We checked a number of websites for best cuisines in the world, and British food wasn't on

any of them.

So, Cheerio for now; let us know in the comments if we've missed any common British stereotypes.

Also, be sure to check out our other video called FBI vs CIA?!

Thanks for watching, and, as always, don't forget to like, share, and subscribe.

See you next time!

For more infomation >> What Are Common Stereotypes About British People? - Duration: 7:04.

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How augmented reality could change the future of surgery | Nadine Hachach-Haram - Duration: 11:05.

According to the theories of human social development,

we're now living through the fourth great epoch

of technological advancement,

the Information Age.

Connectivity through digital technology is a modern miracle.

We can say it has broken down barriers of time and space which separate people,

and it's created a condition for an age

where information, ideas can be shared freely.

But are these great accomplishments in digital technology

really the endgame in terms of what can be achieved?

I don't think so,

and today I'd like to share with you

how I believe digital technology can take us to even greater heights.

I'm a surgeon by profession,

and as I stand here today talking to all of you,

five billion people around the world lack access to safe surgical care.

Five billion people.

That's 70 percent of the world's population,

who according to the WHO's Lancet Commission

can't even access simple surgical procedures

as and when they need them.

Let's zoom in on Sierra Leone,

a country of six million people,

where a recent study showed that there are only 10 qualified surgeons.

That's one surgeon for every 600,000 people.

The numbers are staggering,

and we don't even need to look that far.

If we look around us here in the US,

a recent study reported that we need an extra 100,000 surgeons by 2030

to just keep up with the demand for routine surgical procedures.

At the rate that we're going, we won't be meeting those numbers.

As a surgeon, this is a global issue that bothers me.

It bothers me a lot,

because I've seen firsthand

how lack of access to safe and affordable healthcare

can blight the lives of ordinary people.

If you're a patient that needs an operation

and there isn't a surgeon available,

you're left with some really difficult choices:

to wait, to travel,

or not to have an operation at all.

So what's the answer?

Well, part of you are carrying some of that solution with you today:

a smartphone, a tablet, a computer.

Because for me,

digital communications technology has the power to do so much more

than just to allow us to shop online,

to connect through social media platforms and to stay up to date.

It has the power to help us solve some of the key issues that we face,

like lack of access to vital surgical services.

And today I'd like to share with you

an example of how I think we can make that possible.

The history of surgery is filled with breakthroughs

in how science and technology was able to help the surgeons of the day

face their greatest challenges.

If we go back several hundred years,

an understanding of microbiology

led to the development of antiseptic techniques,

which played a big role in making sure

patients were able to stay alive postsurgery.

Fast-forward a few hundred years

and we developed keyhole or arthroscopic surgery,

which combines video technology and precision instruments

to make surgery less invasive.

And more recently, a lot of you will be aware of robotic surgery,

and what robotics brings to surgery is much like modern automated machinery,

ultraprecision,

the ability to carry out procedures at the tiniest scales

with a degree of accuracy that even surpasses the human hand.

But robotic surgery also introduced something else to surgery:

the idea that a surgeon

doesn't actually have to be standing at the patient's bedside to deliver care,

that he could be looking at a screen

and instructing a robot through a computer.

We call this remote surgery.

It is incumbent on us

to find solutions that solve these answers in a cost-effective and scalable way,

so that everyone, no matter where they are in the world,

can have these problems addressed.

So what if I told you

that you didn't really need a million-dollar robot

to provide remote surgery?

That all you needed was a phone, a tablet, or a computer,

an internet connection,

a confident colleague on the ground

and one magic ingredient:

an augmented reality collaboration software.

Using this augmented reality collaboration software,

an expert surgeon can now virtually transport himself

into any clinical setting

simply by using his phone or tablet or computer,

and he can visually and practically interact in an operation

from start to finish,

guiding and mentoring a local doctor through the procedure step by step.

Well, enough of me telling you about it.

I'd now like to show you.

We're now going to go live to Dr. Marc Tompkins,

an orthopedic surgeon at the University of Minnesota.

He's going to perform an arthroscopic surgery for us,

a keyhole surgery of the knee,

and I'd like to disclose

that this patient has consented to having their operation streamed.

I'd also like to point out that in the interest of time,

we're just going to go through the first steps,

marking up the patient

and just identifying a few key anatomical landmarks.

Hello, Dr. Tompkins, can you hear me?

Dr. Mark Tompkins: Good morning, Nadine.

Nadine Hachach-Haram: Everyone from TED says hello.

Audience: Hi.

NHH: Alright, Dr. Tompkins, let's get started.

So let's start with our incisions and where we're going to make these,

on either side of the patellar tendon.

So if you can make your incisions there and there,

that should hopefully get us into the knee.

MT: All right, I'm going in.

NHH: Great.

So we're just getting inside the joint now.

So why don't we go around and have a quick look at the meniscus.

MT: Perfect.

NHH: Great, so we can see there's a small tear there on the meniscus,

but otherwise it looks alright.

And if you turn and head to this direction,

follow my finger,

let's have a quick look at the ACL and the PCL.

That's your ACL there, that looks quite healthy,

no problems there.

So we've just identified that small meniscus tear there,

but otherwise the fluid around the joint looks OK as well.

All right, thank you very much, Dr. Tompkins. Thank you for your time.

I'll let you continue.

Have a good day. Bye.

(Applause)

So I hope through this simple demonstration

I was able to illustrate to you just how powerful this technology can be.

And I'd like to point out that I wasn't using any special equipment,

just my laptop and a really simple webcam.

We're so used to using digital technology

to communicate through voice and text and video,

but augmented reality can do something so much deeper.

It allows two people to virtually interact

in a way that mimics how they would collaborate in person.

Being able to show someone what you want to do,

to illustrate and demonstrate and gesture,

is so much more powerful than just telling them.

And it can make for such a great learning tool,

because we learn better through direct experience.

So how is this making a difference around the world?

Well, back in my teaching hospital,

we've been using this to support local district general hospitals

and providing skin cancer surgery and trauma treatment.

Now, patients can access care at a local level.

This reduces their travel time, improves their access,

and saves money.

We've even started seeing its use in wound care management with nurses

and in outpatient management.

Most recently, and quite exciting,

it was used in supporting a surgeon through a cancer removal of a kidney.

And I'd like to just share with you a very quick video here.

I apologize for some of the gruesome views.

(Video) Doctor 1: OK. Show me again.

Doctor 2: If you see here,

that's the upper part, the most outer part of your tumor.

Doctor 1: Yes.

Doctor 2: So it's three centimeters deep,

so this should be three centimeters.

Doctor 1: Yes, yes.

Doctor 2: OK, so you need to get a 3.5 margin.

Doctor 1: I'm going to show you anyway

and tell me what you think about it.

NHH: We're also seeing the use of this technology at a global scale,

and one of the most heartwarming stories I can recall

is from the town of Trujillo in the north of Lima in Peru,

where this technology was used to support the provision

of cleft lip and palate surgery to children,

children from poor backgrounds who didn't have access to health insurance.

And in this town, there was a hospital with one surgeon

working hard to provide this care,

Dr. Soraya.

Now, Dr. Soraya was struggling under the sheer demand

of her local population,

as well as the fact that she wasn't specifically trained in this procedure.

And so, with the help of a charity,

we were able to connect her with a cleft surgeon in California,

and using this technology, he was able to guide her and her colleagues

through the procedure step by step,

guiding them, training them and teaching them.

Within a few months,

they were able to perform 30 percent more operations

with less and less complications.

And now Dr. Soraya and her team can perform these operations

independently, competently and confidently.

And I remember one quote from a mother who said,

"This technology gave my daughter her smile."

For me, this is the real power of this technology.

The beauty is that it breaks boundaries.

It transcends all technological difficulties.

It connects people. It democratizes access.

Wi-Fi and mobile technology are growing rapidly,

and they should play a role in boosting surgical provision.

We've even seen it used in conflict zones where there's considerable risk

in getting specialist surgeons to certain locations.

In a world where there are more mobile devices

than there are human beings,

it truly has a global reach.

Of course, we've still got a long way

before we can solve the problem of getting surgery to five billion people,

and unfortunately,

some people still don't have access to internet.

But things are rapidly moving in the right direction.

The potential for change is there.

My team and I are growing our global footprint,

and we're starting to see the potential of this technology.

Through digital technology,

through simple, everyday devices that we take for granted,

through devices of the future,

we can really do miraculous things.

Thank you.

(Applause)

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