Thứ Hai, 19 tháng 2, 2018

Waching daily Feb 20 2018

Trump urged to impose tariffs, quotas on steel, aluminum imports

The Commerce Department has recommended that President Trump impose tariffs or quotas on

steel and aluminum imports from major supplying countries to protect U.S. national security.

Trump has 90 days to review the Commerce report and determine whether or not to follow Ross'

recommendations.

In a 262-page Commerce Department report published Friday, the ?agency gave Trump three choices

to protect the U.S. steel industry.

One is an across-the-board tariff of 24 percent on imports from all countries to the U.S.,

and another is a 53 percent tariff on ?imported steel from China, Brazil, South Korea, Vietnam,

and India, among other countries.

A third option is to impose a global quota that would limit countries to shipping 63

percent of the steel they shipped to the U.S. in 2017.

Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said the surge of foreign metal imports has created a national

security risk? and left the American manufacturing community struggling.

?"Excessive steel imports have adversely impacted the steel industry," he wrote Friday.

"Numerous U.S. steel mill closures, a substantial decline in employment, lost domestic sales

and market share, and marginal annual net income for U.S.-based steel companies illustrate

the decline of the U.S. steel industry."

?Trump has regularly floated the idea of imposing tariffs and quotas on steel imports in an

effort to resuscitate U.S. production, a proposal that critics claim would hurt American consumers

and businesses.

The president faced backlash late last month for approving tariffs of up to 30 percent

on solar panels and washing machines.

Ross ?has also recommended ?that Trump impose ?a 7.7 percent tariff on all aluminum ?imports,

or a stiffer tariff ?of 23.6 percent placed on ?major exporters like China, Venezuela,

and Russia?.

A third option would be quotas equal to 86.7 percent of their 2017 exports.

For more infomation >> Trump urged to impose tariffs, quotas on steel, aluminum imports - Duration: 2:56.

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How to Crochet Celebration Poncho Join Triangles To Make Rectangles Figure Flattering Light & Lacy - Duration: 20:45.

hi I'm Kristin Omdahl. Welcome back to my studio today I want to show you how

to make this beautiful and deceptively simple celebration poncho it starts with

a triangle you start at the top here and you work your way down increasing as you

go to make one solid triangle then you join a secondary smaller triangle to the

side of the larger triangle as you go on one side and then on the other to create

a rectangle then we repeat the entire process for the back and join them

together to make this beautiful poncho that you can wear in a number of ways

follow the links to my website where you can download this beautiful pattern as

well as order be so fine yarn you'll need two balls to make this project and

this is shown in colorway sangria let's get started I have one half of the

poncho completed already so you I can ship so I can show you what we're going

to be doing today first we're going to start here at the top Center and work as

a top down increase in construction for this Center triangle okay so this is the

original piece that we're going to make and then we're going to come and join

halfway up one of the sides and do a top down increasing triangle that joins to

the original triangle as we go for one side and then we're going to come over

here and do the same thing over here and by adding these two join as you go many

triangles to the original large triangle we then get this great rectangle for

making a beautiful figure flattering poncho the project uses be so fine yarn

which is fingering weight yarn but to show you the stitches a little bit

bigger on camera today I'm using my worsted weight organic cotton and bamboo

blend be so bold yarn and I'll be using a size H 8 5 millimeter crochet hook but

if you're doing the actual pattern with be self fine yarn

you'll be using an e 4 or 3.5 millimeter crochet hook depending on the look

you're going for because this is a top-down construction you could actually

do this project on any weight yarn you'll just want to make your first

triangle the length that you want your entire piece to be and the width you

want your entire piece to be and that's set and the smaller triangles will then

just fill in the gaps to make it a rectangle you're going to need two

rectangles to make the poncho I have one done already and now let's get started

on the large main triangle we start by tying our yarn to our crochet hook you

can use a slipknot a square knot whatever you prefer we're going to start

with a chain 4 and work 8 double crochets in the fourth chain from your

hook the fourth chain to count four chains you want to skip the loop on your

hook that is not a chain that's your working loop so we're going to go we're

going to count back one two three and four double crochet is yarn over your

hook insert your hook into the chain yarn over pull up a loop yarn over and

pull through two loops on your hook yarn over pull through two loops on your hook

there so the chain three that we skipped counts as our first double crochet

that's our second we want a total of nine so we have to chain three plus

eight double crochets for a total of nine double crochets in that last chain

you

and this is what the end of row one should look like Row 2 begins with the

chain seven the chain seven counts as our double crochet four three chains and

then chain four so it's a double crochet chain four we're going to turn our work

and double crochet in the first stitch yarn over your hook insert your hook in

the first stitch yarn over pull up a loop yarn over pull through two yarn

over pull through two so now that chain seven and double crochet counts as a

double crochet chain four double crochet we're going to chain four okay then in

the space after the first three double crochets but before the fourth double

crochet we're gonna double crochet in that space between the two stitches yarn

over insert your hook yarn over pull up a loop yarn over pull through two loops

on your hook yarn over pull through two loops on your hook okay so we double

crocheted in the space between the two stitches we're going to chain 4 skip

three stitches and double crochet in the space before the next stitch yarn over

insert your hook in the specified space yarn over pull up a loop yarn over pull

through two yarn over pull through two chain four and double crochet chain four

a double crochet all in the last stitch the last stitch was the first chain

three that counted as a double crochet in the last row so to double crypt so to

work into the chain three that counts as a double crochet you're actually working

into the third chain of that chain three space so we're going to yarn over insert

our hook in the top chain of that chain three which be the top of the double

crochet equivalent yarn over pull up a loop yarn over pull through two yarn

over pull through two chain four and double crochet in that same space

and this is what the end of row 2 should look like

you should have five chain four spaces Row three begins with a chain three turn

your work in the next chain 4 space we're going to work three double

crochets now you're not working on two into any stitches you're just working

into that large space

okay skip the next stitch and in the next chain for space work three double

crochets

the next chain for space is our center chain for space and then we're going to

work 9 double crochets

in each of the next 2 chain 4 spaces we're going to work three double

crochets each

then you want to work a double crochet in the last stitch well the last stitch

is well it would have been the first stitch at the beginning of the last row

which was a chain seven that counted as a double crochet chain four so if you

want to crochet into the double crochet part of it

you want to count up three chains and in the top of that third chain would be the

double crochet equivalent and you'll double crochet into that chain and this

is what the end of Row three should look like Row 4 begins with a chain seven

that counts as a double crochet chain four turn your work and double crochet

into the first stitch chain 4 skip the next three stitches and double crochet

in the space before the next stitch chain 4 skip the next three stitches and

double crochet in the space before the next stitch and this is what you will

repeat across to the end of the row skip the next three double crochet in the

space before the next chain four okay so in the last stitch which was a chain

three that counts as a double crochet which means we're going to work into

that top third chain we're gonna work double crochet chain four double crochet

so double chain four

and double

and that's what the end of row four should look like row five we start with

a chain three Turner work work three double crochets in the next chain 4

space

and we're going to repeat that all the way until we get to the center chain 4

space so in every side chain 4 space we're going to work three double

crochets then in the center one work 9 double crochets oK we've come to the

center chain 4 space so now we're going to work 9 double crochets there and then

we'll work three double crochets into each of the last 4 chain 4 spaces and

double crochet in the last stitch

remember the last stitch is part of that chain 7 the counter does a double

crochet chain 4 so you want to find the third chain that would count as the top

of the double crochet and work your last double crochet there and this is what

the end of Row 4 should look like Row 5 begins with a chain 7 if it counts as a

double crochet chain 4 turn your work and double crochet into the first stitch

chain 4 skip the next three stitches and double crochet in the space before the

next stitch and we're going to repeat this across the entire row and then in

the last stitch work the increase like we did in the first stitch with a double

crochet chain 4 double crochet

okay we're down to our last stitch now which is a chain three that counts as a

double crochet so make sure that you're working into the top or third chain of

that chain three to count as the top of the double crochet and you're going to

work double crochet chain four and double crochet all into that same stitch

and that's what the end of row five should look like you want to repeat rows

four and five for the desired length of your first triangle in the next section

I'm going to show you how to join one of the many triangles to the side of this

larger triangle as we go this is what it should look like at the end of row six

you want to repeat rows five and six for your desired size of your first triangle

for the demo we're going to be using a triangle this size which is rows one two

three four five six seven eight so we're working through rows eight you're going

to want to repeat rows five and six for whatever size triangle you're going to

be using at this point you want to mark the chain for space that is halfway

between the corner and the center so here's our corner here's our Center

chain for space so you want to count back from each side to find the center

so one each one each one each this is the center one this is the spot where

you're going to join your yarn with a slip stitch and begin one of the smaller

triangles to fill in this gap to create the triangle into a rectangle

okay so holding on to that spot so holding on to that chain 4 space we're

going to join our yarn with this slip stitch

chain 3 and slip stitch into the next chain 4 space now working in the first

chain 4 space we slip stitched into we're going to now work 9 double

crochets and slip stitch into the next chain 4 space this is what the end of

the first row should look like on the smaller triangle now we're going to

chain 3 slip stitch into the next chain 4 space on our large triangle chain 4

turn our work and now in the first double crochet on the first row of the

small triangle work a double crochet chain 4 now in the space after those

first three double crochets but before the fourth we're going to double crochet

chain 4 skip the next three stitches and in the net in the space before the next

work a double crochet chain 4 and in the last stitch we're going to learn double

crochet chain 4 and slip stitch into the next chain 4 space I'm the original

triangle and this is what the end of Row 2 should look like for the small

triangles we'll set this back so you can see the main triangle and you see we've

worked back and forth joining as we go we have two rows complete of our mini

triangle now we're going to chain 3 slip stitch into the next chain 5 chain 4

space turn our work and in that first chain 4 space work three double crochets

in the next chain for space work three double crochets in our center chain for

space work 9 double crochets

for double crochets in the next chain for space

three double crochets in the next chain for space and slip stitch into the next

chain for space I'm the original triangle this is what

the end of this row looks like that would be row three of our small triangle

that's joined as you go to the large triangle we're now ready to do our final

row here which is to chain 3 and slip stitch into the next chain 4 space chain

4 turn your work double crochet into the first stitch on the previous row chain 4

in between the first 3 stitches and the fourth stitch we're going to double

crochet in that space chain 4 skip the next 3 stitches double crochet in the

space before the next stitch I'm going to repeat this all the way across

in the last stitch we're going to work double crochet chain four no barely

gonna make it on this one and slip stitch into the next chain 4 space on

the original triangle ok and you can see we now have one of our small triangles

completed on to the large triangle so this half is now turned into a rectangle

and I'll show you what it looks like when you end up doing both sides you now

have a rectangle and then you're going so then once you have both of those done

you're gonna either sew from the shoulder to the edge or you can

crocheted them together or you can follow the decorative stitch that I used

when you go to download the free pattern on my website remember that this is a

smaller size version of the poncho for the demonstration you want to make sure

that you're repeating rows 4 and 5 until you have completed your small triangle

and you'll know when you're done because you'll have joined to the corner chain 4

space and the center chain 4 space on your original triangle I hope you

enjoyed making the celebration poncho with me please leave me any questions in

the comments subscribe to my channel for more videos and let us make time to

create share and inspired today and every day I'll see you next time

For more infomation >> How to Crochet Celebration Poncho Join Triangles To Make Rectangles Figure Flattering Light & Lacy - Duration: 20:45.

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CAPE MAY LEAGUE BASKETBAL - Duration: 4:32:01.

For more infomation >> CAPE MAY LEAGUE BASKETBAL - Duration: 4:32:01.

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Nominees: Drama of the Year in the 13th Annual Soompi Awards - Duration: 6:35.

Hello! We're your special K-drama MCs for the 13th Annual Soompi Awards!

I'm Oh My Girl's Jiho,

and I'm Binnie!

It's time for the most distinguished category of the K-drama awards!

The Drama of the Year category honors the most popular dramas

that had the entire international audience tuned in.

That's right!

Everyone laughed, cried, and eagerly followed along together-

these dramas truly made their mark in 2017.

These are the nominees for Drama of the Year!

For more infomation >> Nominees: Drama of the Year in the 13th Annual Soompi Awards - Duration: 6:35.

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সরাসরি আজকের সকালের বাংলা খবর ২০ ফেব্রুয়ারি ২০১৮ Bangla Tv News Today Bangla News BD - Duration: 13:51.

bangladesh news 24

For more infomation >> সরাসরি আজকের সকালের বাংলা খবর ২০ ফেব্রুয়ারি ২০১৮ Bangla Tv News Today Bangla News BD - Duration: 13:51.

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Durham City Council Feb 19, 2018 - Duration: 57:49.

For more infomation >> Durham City Council Feb 19, 2018 - Duration: 57:49.

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Why I study the most dangerous animal on earth -- mosquitoes | Fredros Okumu - Duration: 12:50.

I guess because I'm from Tanzania

I have a responsibility to welcome all of you once again.

Thank you for coming.

So, first of all, before we start,

how many of you in the audience

have been in the past a victim of this bug here?

We apologize on behalf of all the mosquito catchers.

(Laughter)

Ladies and gentlemen,

imagine getting seven infectious mosquito bites every day.

That's 2,555 infectious bites every year.

When I was in college, I moved to the Kilombero River valley

in the southeastern part of Tanzania.

This is historically one of the most malarious zones

in the world at that time.

Life here was difficult.

In its later stages

malaria manifested with extreme seizures locally known as degedege.

It's killed both women and men, adults and children,

without mercy.

My home institution, Ifakara Health Institute,

began in this valley in the 1950s

to address priority health needs for the local communities.

In fact, the name Ifakara refers to a place you go to die,

which is a reflection of what life used to be here

in the days before organized public health care.

When I first moved here,

my primary role was to estimate

how much malaria transmission was going on across the villages

and which mosquitoes were transmitting the disease.

So my colleague and myself came

30 kilometers south of Ifakara town across the river.

Every evening we went into the villages with flashlights and siphons.

We rolled up our trousers,

and waited for mosquitoes that were coming to bite us

so we could collect them

to check if they were carrying malaria.

(Laughter)

My colleague and myself selected a household,

and we started inside and outside, swapping positions every half hour.

And we did this for 12 hours every night for 24 consecutive nights.

We slept for four hours every morning

and worked the rest of the day,

sorting mosquitoes, identifying them and chopping off their heads

so they could be analyzed in the lab

to check if they were carrying malaria parasites

in their blood mouthparts.

This way we were able to not only know how much malaria was going on here

but also which mosquitoes were carrying this malaria.

We were also able to know

whether malaria was mostly inside houses or outside houses.

Today, ladies and gentlemen, I still catch mosquitoes for a living.

But I do this mostly to improve people's lives and well-being.

This has been called by some people the most dangerous animal on earth --

which unfortunately is true.

But what do we really know about mosquitoes?

It turns out we actually know very little.

Consider the fact that at the moment our best practice against malaria

are bednets -- insecticide treated bednets.

We know now that across Africa

you have widespread resistance to insecticides.

And these are the same insecticides,

the pyrethroid class, that are put on these bednets.

We know now that these bednets protect you from bites

but only minimally kill the mosquitoes that they should.

What it means is that we've got to do more to be able to get to zero.

And that's part of our duty.

At Ifakara Health Institute

we focus very much on the biology of the mosquito,

and we try to do this so we can identify new opportunities.

A new approach.

New ways to try and get new options

that we can use together with things such as bednets

to be able to get to zero.

And I'm going to share with you a few examples

of the things that my colleagues and myself do.

Take this, for example.

Mosquitoes breed in small pools of water.

Not all of them are easy to find --

they can be scattered across villages,

they can be as small as hoofprints.

They can be behind your house or far from your house.

And so, if you wanted to control mosquito larvae,

it can actually be quite difficult to get them.

What my colleagues and I have decided to do

is to think about what if we used mosquitoes themselves

to carry the insecticides from a place of our choice

to their own breeding habitats

so that whichever eggs they lay there shall not survive.

This is Dickson Lwetoijera.

This is my colleague who runs this show at Ifakara.

And he has demonstrated cleverly that you can actually get mosquitoes

to come to the place where they normally come to get blood

to pick up a dose of sterilants or insecticide,

carry this back to their own breeding habitat

and kill all their progeny.

And we have demonstrated that you can do this

and crush populations very, very rapidly.

This is beautiful.

This is our mosquito city.

It is the largest mosquito farm

available in the world for malaria research.

Here we have large-scale self-sustaining colonies of malaria mosquitoes

that we rear in these facilities.

Of course, they are disease-free.

But what these systems allow us to do

is to introduce new tools and test them immediately,

very quickly,

and see if we can crush these populations or control them in some way.

And my colleagues have demonstrated

that if you just put two or three positions

where mosquitoes can go pick up these lethal substances,

we can crush these colonies in just three months.

That's autodissemination, as we call it.

But what if we could use

the mosquitoes' sexual behavior

to also control them?

So, first of all I would like to tell you

that actually mosquitoes mate in what we call swarms.

Male mosquitoes usually congregate

in clusters around the horizon, usually after sunset.

The males go there for a dance,

the females fly into that dance

and select a male mosquito of their choice,

usually the best-looking male in their view.

They clump together and fall down onto the floor.

If you watch this, it's beautiful.

It's a fantastic phenomenon.

This is where our mosquito-catching work gets really interesting.

What we have seen, when we go swamp hunting in the villages,

is that these swamp locations tend to be at exactly the same location

every day, every week, every month,

year in, year out.

They start at exactly the same time of the evening,

and they are at exactly the same locations.

What does this tell us?

It means that if we can map all these locations across villages,

we could actually

crush these populations by just a single blow.

Kind of, you know, bomb-spray them or nuke them out.

And that is what we try to do with young men and women

across the villages.

We organize these crews, teach them how to identify the swarms,

and spray them out.

My colleagues and I believe we have a new window

to get mosquitoes out of the valley.

But perhaps the fact that mosquitoes eat blood, human blood,

is the reason they are the most dangerous animal on earth.

But think about it this way --

mosquitoes actually smell you.

And they have developed

incredible sensory organs.

They can smell from as far sometimes as 100 meters away.

And when they get closer,

they can even tell the difference between two family members.

They know who you are based on what you produce

from your breath, skin, sweat and body odor.

What we have done at Ifakara

is to identify what it is in your skin, your body, your sweat or your breath

that these mosquitoes like.

Once we identified these substances, we created a concoction,

kind of a mixture, a blend of synthetic substances

that are reminiscent of what you produce from your body.

And we made a synthetic blend

that was attracting three to five times more mosquitoes than a human being.

What can you do with this?

You put in a trap, lure a lot of mosquitoes and you kill them, right?

And of course, you can also use it for surveillance.

At Ifakara

we wish to expand our knowledge on the biology of the mosquito;

to control many other diseases, including, of course, the malaria,

but also those other diseases that mosquitoes transmit

like dengue, Chikungunya and Zika virus.

And this is why my colleagues, for example --

we have looked at the fact

that some mosquitoes like to bite you on the leg region.

And we've now created these mosquito repellent sandals

that tourists and locals can wear when they're coming.

And you don't get bitten --

this gives you 'round the clock protection

until the time you go under your bednet.

(Applause)

My love-hate relationship with mosquitoes continues.

(Laughter)

And it's going to go a long way, I can see.

But that's OK.

WHO has set a goal of 2030 to eliminate malaria from 35 countries.

The African Union has set a goal

of 2030 to eliminate malaria from the continent.

At Ifakara we are firmly behind these goals.

And we've put together a cohort of young scientists,

male and female,

who are champions,

who are interested in coming together to make this vision come true.

They do what they can

to make it work.

And we are supporting them.

We are here to make sure that these dreams come true.

Ladies and gentlemen,

even if it doesn't happen in our lifetime,

even if it doesn't happen

before you and me go away,

I believe that your child and my child

shall inherit a world free of malaria transmitting mosquitoes

and free of malaria.

Thank you very much, ladies and gentlemen.

(Applause)

Thank you.

Kelo Kubu: OK, Fredros.

Let's talk about CRISPR for a bit.

(Laughter)

It's taken the world by storm,

it promises to do amazing things.

What do you think of scientists using CRISPR to kill off mosquitoes?

Fredros Okumu: To answer this question, let's start from what the problem is.

First of all, we're talking about a disease that still kills --

according to the latest figures we have from WHO --

429,000 people.

Most of these are African children.

Of course, we've made progress,

there are countries that have achieved

up to 50-60 percent reduction in malaria burden.

But we still have to do more to get to zero.

There is already proof of principle

that gene-editing techniques, such as CRISPR,

can be used effectively

to transform mosquitoes so that either they do not transmit malaria --

we call this population alteration --

or that they no longer exist,

population suppression.

This is already proven in the lab.

There is also modeling work

that has demonstrated that even if you were to release

just a small number of these genetically modified mosquitoes,

that you can actually achieve elimination very, very quickly.

So, CRISPR and tools like this offer us some real opportunities --

real-life opportunities to have high-impact interventions

that we can use in addition to what we have now

to eventually go to zero.

This is important.

Now, of course people always ask us --

which is a common question,

I guess you're going to ask this as well --

"What happens if you eliminate mosquitoes?"

KK: I won't ask then, you answer.

FO: OK. In respect to this, I would just like to remind my colleagues

that we have 3,500 mosquito species in this world.

Maybe more than that.

About 400 of these are Anophelenes,

and only about 70 of them have any capacity to transmit malaria.

In Africa, we're having to deal with three or four of these as the major guys.

They carry most -- like 99 percent of all the malaria we have.

If we were to go out with gene editing like CRISPR,

if we were to go out with gene drives to control malaria,

we would be going after only one or two.

I don't see a diversity problem with that.

But that's personal view.

I think it's OK.

And remember, by the way,

all these years we've been trying to eliminate these mosquitoes effectively

by spraying them -- our colleagues in America have sprayed with --

really bomb-spraying these insects out of the villages.

In Africa we do a lot of household spraying.

All these are aimed solely at killing the mosquitoes.

So there's really no problem if we had a new tool.

But having said that, I have to say

we also have to be very, very responsible here.

So there's the regulatory side, and we have to partner with our regulators

and make sure that everything that we do is done correctly,

is done responsibly

and that we also have to do independent risk assessments,

to just make sure

that all these processes do not fall into the wrong hands.

Thank you very much.

KK: Thank you.

(Applause)

For more infomation >> Why I study the most dangerous animal on earth -- mosquitoes | Fredros Okumu - Duration: 12:50.

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Net Net Strategy : How to detect undervalued stocks, the Warren Buffett way - Duration: 0:15.

For more infomation >> Net Net Strategy : How to detect undervalued stocks, the Warren Buffett way - Duration: 0:15.

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Can Going To Magic Kingdom In The Rain Still Be Fun? Don't Let Bad Weather Ruin Your Day At Disney! - Duration: 9:17.

Cohen, your Monorail is here! Are you happy? Uh huh!

Monorails are amazing!

You're right...they're amazing!

Oh, look there everybody!

There's the Castle!

There's the Town Square Theater. There's Main Street, City Hall, Fire Station.

The Emporium, my favorite gift shop. And we're in Magic Kingdom! Awesome! It's about time

for the three o'clock parade. They're starting to rope things off and tell

people to walk on the sidewalk. But we're gonna do something else while the parade

is going on. Sometimes it's a good idea, if you've already done the parade, and

then you can also ride rides while the parade is going on. And the wait is not

as long for the rides then. The castle is amazing every time I see it. So, what do

you do on a rainy day at Magic Kingdom? We knew it was gonna rain, but we weren't

about to miss a day at Magic Kingdom, since it was our last day in the parks.

So, we decided to find what we can do indoors, and there's actually lots of

things. If it's not raining very hard or just intermittently, the rides will run

whenever possible. The Carousel is still going now. It was raining earlier, and it's

probably gonna rain again, but for now you can ride the carousel. And they'll do

the carousel in the light rain because it's under cover, and the winds not blowing hard.

Nice and dry under here! "It's A Small World" is a great choice, too.

We've been excited for Cohen to try this ride for a long time! "It's A Small World",

and it's only a 15-minute wait. I think "It's A Small World" is gonna be one of

Cohen's favorite rides. One of those he'll get off of and say, "I want to do it again!"

Can I ride in your boat, me and grandma? Can we ride with you? Can me and grandma do that with you, and Matt? Yes!

There's Pinocchio Village Haus as you're going by.

It says. "Do the chicken dance", up there!

Wow!

I like those goats.

Mickey's Philharmagic is a great option when it's raining. It's a great show any

time, but if you need a place to hide out for 20 minutes or so, try it out. The show

is only about 10 minutes, but there is waiting time for it to start. And you

won't get wet!

Alright everyone, put on your opera glasses, because it's time

to present Maestro Mickey Mouse and the

Philharmagic Orchestra!

Philharmagic is a great thing to do on a rainy day in Magic Kingdom.

You can always explore the gift shops on a rainy day.

They give you cover for a long time. There's always lots to look at.

You can hang out in a restaurant while you wait for the weather to clear.

There's usually lots of room in most of the restaurants. If it's a brief shower, just

sit it out and wait for it to break. Princess Fairy Tale Hall is a good

hideaway.

Use your muscles Mister...pull it out! Pull up, Cohen, up, up, up! Maybe next time!

Would be a good time to spend some time in the Hall of Presidents.

If it's just a light rain, they'll go ahead and do Jungle Cruise. Here's our boat the Ganges Gertie.

Well, we begin our journey here the Amazon rainforest where it rains 365

days a year. That's like almost every day.

Right over there are some fake gnus. It looks like we're now in a dangerous

hippo pool, you guys. They can easily capsize the boat, so I'm

gonna try to scare them them away.

I love you!

I want a commitment!

Meet my parents! Well, that's never failed to scare anyone away before. Well, at this

point in our touring I would like to point out just a few of my favorite

plants that we have out here in the jungle.

Any questions? Okay! I really wanted to get you all some souvenir plants to take

home with you, but I just hadn't botany. Well, what did you guys do so far here that was so fun

at the Magic Kingdom? This!! That's a good answer - The Jungle Cruise was a lot of fun.

My name is skipper Ryan, and if you didn't laugh, thanks for leaving, it's been a pretty

long time ten minutes of silence with you just staring at me.

Check out the Enchanted Tiki Room. That'll keep you dry for a little while. You can listen to the chitter chatter of

little birds instead of listening to the pitter-patter of the rain.

One of the best places to spend a rainy day for a while is Pirates of the Caribbean.

The long queue will hold a lot of people and then the ride lasts a while.

And here's an idea I know that Disney would approve of...spend some time in a

gift shop and buy something, anything. You can hang out with the Bears

in Country Bear Jamboree. It's a wild and wooly good time,...and dry.

It's raining pretty good now so we're gonna go to the Haunted Mansion. It's got a covered queue

and a decent length of the ride. You're gonna ride it anyway, so if you

know it's gonna rain, wait to ride it until it does rain.

We'll call Haunted Mansion, "Screaming in the rain"!

It's raining pretty good now, so "It's A Small World" looks like a good place to go.

Winnie The Pooh is pretty busy now. The Mad Hatter's Tea Party. We'll call this one, "Spinning in the Rain".

It's under good cover. And a covered queue. And if you're wet, maybe you can dry off

a little bit here when you're spinning around. You can spin dry!

I'd say the rain isn't stopping very many people from having a good time.

We're in the "Buzz Lightyear's Space Ranger Spin" line.

It's dry under the queue. We are wet we are having fun. Donna's not too happy about being wet.

I hate this! But we're still having fun!

Don't let a little rain ruin your Disney day.

You have saved our lives! We are eternally grateful!

One of the most perfect places to be in the rain is the People Mover! But tonight we've got to walk through this

big old puddle to get there. There's some deep water. Wow!

"Monsters Laugh Floor" is a good bet, too.

Fortunately, the rain held off enough for them to do the fireworks. A perfect ending

to the day.

This is the end of our night at Magic Kingdom.

Here comes our monorail. It was wet but it was fun. We always have fun at Disney!

For more infomation >> Can Going To Magic Kingdom In The Rain Still Be Fun? Don't Let Bad Weather Ruin Your Day At Disney! - Duration: 9:17.

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Metal Gear Survive [Beta Test] - Duration: 7:05:36.

For more infomation >> Metal Gear Survive [Beta Test] - Duration: 7:05:36.

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CASA Safety Video - Professional drone flyer - Duration: 8:31.

- If you want to fly drones professionally

and make it a career, you really need to be licensed and certified.

- I think certainly, people should become licensed.

I think ultimately, it would make for a much safer industry

if people are educated and licensed and understand

the environment that they're operating in.

- If you're licensed and certified as an operator,

what it does is it gives you greater understanding

of the operating environment for RPAS.

- To be certified, this day and age, is incredibly important.

We've got less restrictions because we've done our training,

we've got our qualifications.

- If you're looking to use it as a job,

a lot of people that are going to hire you

are going to look for qualifications.

- If you want to operate properly, you want to go out

and you want to do those big jobs, you want to operate it in all areas,

then getting licensed is mandatory in our opinion.

- If you're operating under sub-2kg rules,

you can't get the same privileges.

So there's no way you can operate within three nautical miles

in the movement area of a controlled aerodrome.

There's no way you can get an exemption to operate at night-time.

You can't operate any closer than 30m to people.

So you've effectively excluded yourself

from a large area of the market.

So by getting some education around the industry,

it will give you some credibility within the industry

as well as your clients.

And it also allows you to gain exemptions

that sub-2kg operators cannot get.

- The other benefit to that is it does allow you to be insured.

So we're not going to be the person that if something goes wrong,

we lose our house.

- Just about every production I work on asks for my licence

because they have to apply for permits to film.

And they won't get the permits from national parks,

councils, building owners - the various places that we film -

they can't get those without my having a licence

and my being insured.

- I became licensed and certified because I wanted

to run a proper business.

I wanted to have the confidence that I was

always going to be operating in a safe manner.

- There is a whole other world out there of aviation

that we need to safely be operating within the framework of.

And when we're operating our drone we become a user of that airspace.

So how do we safely operate in the airspace

without affecting commercial aviation at the same time?

- Because if you're going to fly drones,

you have to be mindful of who you might run into up there.

I can give you a perfect example. Like flying on the northern beaches,

we've often had to do shoots out that way,

and if you didn't know how to read the maps

and know that there was a flight route just off the coast,

you'd be out there.

And the number of times I've been there and been on the radio

and been able to talk to the pilots and have them tell me,

no, we're this far away, we're that far away

So I could go out there safely.

If I didn't know that, I would so easily have been

in their flight path and causing grief.

- If you don't have that education behind you

how do you know that you're operating safely

and not going to cause a risk or a potential problem

to an aviation environment?

Secondly, there's no such thing as too much education.

You can always further your learnings

and get better educated on the issues around commercial operators.

- The analogy I use is, you wouldn't let anyone

just get on a moped and drive around the roads

because they're sharing that road with cars and trucks

who have their licence

and are operating under rules they're familiar with.

- There are two different types of licences you need to be aware of.

The first licence you have is your RePL.

That stands for your Remote Pilot Licence,

which is like your car licence for driving on the road.

So this is your individual licence for the person

that's actually physically flying.

- To obtain your Remote Pilot Licence you'll need to undertake a course.

You'll need to find an approved training company

and they're certified by CASA.

- For me, it was as simple as going onto the CASA website,

going to the list they have of all the approved training organisations,

finding the closest one near me, and getting in contact.

- Getting an ARN, getting a Remote Pilot Licence is not a big ask.

One week or so of training to say

"that is how you safely operate in airspace, now go for it."

- You're learning from experts in the field.

So people who have been there, done that,

and they can pass down that knowledge that they have attained.

- At the end of the course, you'll sit in exam

where you're tested to make sure you can fly

that particular type of machine safely.

From there, CASA will issue you with your Remote Pilot Licence.

- I really wanted to get my Remote Pilot Licence

because for me it was about taking my drone experience to the next level.

I'd been a recreational flyer for a little while,

but I really wanted to find out what it takes

to make a professional career out of it.

- We train people from all areas. Very popular areas -

surveying, mine surveying, construction surveying.

We have guys go out and do real estate type photography, videography.

So I've trained a few people from the TV stations like cameramen.

You are an aviator. You are a part of an aviation environment.

And they teach you what you need to know

to be a part of that environment.

And really engage in that arena responsibly.

- So once you've completed your Remote Pilot Licence,

you'll be amazed at what you didn't know before you started.

- The sorts of things you'll learn include

how to interpret the weather forecast

to see if it might impact on your operation.

Reading aeronautical charts

to work out if manned aircraft might be operating near you,

such as helicopters.

- From maintenance to basic understanding of your aircraft,

aerodynamics, human factors, pre-flight planning,

battery related safety, understanding weather patterns -

thunderstorms, and windage,

and reading NOTAMs and weather forecasts.

How to use your radio. As part of the course you get an AROC,

an Australian Radio Operators Certificate as well.

There's a whole lot that goes into the course

and it's four, five days of full-on learning

from 9:00 to 5:00 in the afternoon.

That tied in your flight time as well.

That was the one thing I really learned -

was how professional the industry is.

I think there's a real split between recreational operators

and the professional operators.

By the end, you walk away knowing you're just so much more professional

than you were at the start.

- It was a week of learning that's certainly been invaluable

to the safe operation of our business.

- There are two ways of being able to receive an income as a drone pilot.

The first is to operate under CASA's sub-2kg excluded category

that has a set of standard operating conditions

that allow you to conduct a simple business.

But for more complex operations, like operating near people,

over a populous area,

night-time, or a fleet of drones,

you'll need to come to CASA and apply for a RPA Operator's Certificate,

or work for a company that has an operator certificate.

- Within several years as an instructor and also now the time

I've been with CASA, I've seen so many success stories.

These people have come to the course, they've got elevated knowledge,

and now they've actually moved on to bigger and greater things.

Without that knowledge, they wouldn't have done that.

- The drone industry

is one of the fastest growing industries at the moment.

So we're seeing a 3% growth every week

in just the work that we're coming through,

which is just unprecedented.

- The great thing about drone technology

is it cuts across so many different industries in society these days.

- Well, we do aerial photography.

Primary in conservation and anything over the marine environment.

So we do a lot of shark surveillance along the New South Wales coast.

A lot of the marine life, turtles, penguins,

whales, dolphins, everything.

We also do a lot of aerial inspections

or aerial mapping as well.

- Drone technology is getting better and better every day.

We are seeing applications like parcel delivery,

3-D mapping, agriculture, life saving,

and we'll see many more applications into the future.

- It seems like new capabilities are being found for drones

on a daily basis. It's ever changing as you watch it.

Thermal imaging is used in a number of different avenues

that allows us to make the invisible visible.

So we use it in facilities management for picking up defects,

ground-water leaks, gas detection,

identifying feral animals, doing deer counting.

- The other aspect is on high-end assets.

So inspecting communication towers, power lines,

and oil and gas rigs, as examples.

- Currently, some of our projects are doing progressional builds

of people's houses.

We're also looking at doing weddings for bridal parties and the like.

It means we can just get the better shots.

We can fly night.

It's a great thing. It's a exciting field.

- As a wildlife film-maker, this whole drone thing

has completely revolutionised it for us.

I mean, we fly with birds now.

Finding animals in their world.

Finding marine creatures, for example.

They don't see the drone as any kind of threat.

They see it as another sea bird.

And so you're in amongst bait balls.

You're flying with magpie geese.

You know....

It's amazing what you can do with this thing.

The licensing really does open the door.

- The great thing about getting your Remote Pilot Licence

is once you have it, you have that for life.

So you really become part of the aviation community,

and I would highly recommend it to anyone.

- More details on getting your licence

can be found on CASA's website.

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