Thứ Sáu, 9 tháng 3, 2018

Waching daily Mar 9 2018

Yes. I have won a package.

Yoors World Editorial thanks to more than 10,000 followers.

1 of those many followers I am.

I left a long reaction with them on one of their many pages.

Subjects are about nature including turmeric, sage, cinnamon, herb garden, lemon tea, canes, tips and so on.

This is their site with more than 1000+ topics.

https://yoo.rs/useroverview/14552/Yoors%20World%20Redactie?Ysid=86449

For more infomation >> Unpack the gift of De apotheek van de natuur bedankt meer dan 10000 volgers. - Duration: 1:11.

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PA LO MIO - EY LEE - Duration: 2:26.

For more infomation >> PA LO MIO - EY LEE - Duration: 2:26.

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How To Join The Grind Squad ? - Duration: 5:39.

Hi everyone, it's Golden, and welcome to a brand new video

Quite simply to talk about the Grind Squad

Because I made a little vote

And

Wow, it's just insane (x2)

I made a little vote

Just before-

Because I told you in a video I was going to create a group soon for the Grind Squad, and it's done. The group has been created

I'll put the link in the description

So there's already 19 members who've joined

So here it is, I also bought a Clan, it cost me 600 Robux (100 for the Group, and 500 for the Clan)

So here it is, I think it'll be very nice, it'll be very nice

So yeah, Grind Squad is a clan, like every other clans, it's not a little group anymore, to clarify things because I know some people will ask the question again

"Is it a little group of 10 people" like I've said before since the beginning, or "Will I finally turn the group into a Clan like the others"

*stutters*

For example "GR", "EPA", or everything else

So yeah, it's a Clan like the others

So everyone can join, absolutely everyone can join, I'll put the link in the description

And I think it'll be nice, there's a lot of things to do with this clan

And we'll see what happen

But

I think it'll be great

So here it is, I put that in #announcements on my server

After that-

If you want to XP for the group, all you have to do is put this group in Primary and play Roblox WWII, and normally, the XP will be attribute to the Grind Squad group

And honestly, it would make me so happy if the community participate, frankly, it would be so crazy

And yeah, we'll see how it goes

And after that, I made a last vote, here it is, I said :

*reads*

A lot of people asked me to turn the Grind Squad into a clan like the others, quite simply, because a lot of people wanted to try in it

And 24 votes. *laughs* 24 votes, it's just insane, honestly, it's insane

I didn't expect to receive so many votes

So here it is, honestly, thanks you so much

And yeah, Grind Squad is a clan like the others

So

*reads*

So it's a kinda tryout, everyone who is in tryout will receive the "Potential Grind Squad Member" role, and here it is

And the requirements to join the Grind Squad, because I know some people are going to ask me that, quite simply :

-Be active on Roblox WWII

-Be a minimum active on the Grind Squad server if you have Discord, but it's especially being active on Roblox WWII

And again, I don't ask you to play 24/7

Honestly, it's not the main goal, I think everyone has a life besides that

So here it is

And basically, that's it, be active and motivated on Roblox WWII, quite simply

So "How To Join The Grind Squad", you just have to do that, and I know that "Txslify" is very motivated

So here it is, for the moment, there's 2 potential Grind Squad members : Txslify & Respek

We'll see how it is

And also, I created a new channel : #donations

So it represents the donators who have donated for the Grind Squad group

*reads*

*stutters* I can't even talk anymore

*reads*

Realm just did something crazy

Even in the DMs, I told him "You don't have to give all that !", and he was like

"Yeah, I have too much Robux, and I know know what to do with it"

And that's insane, like- look

Look at the Realm's transactions, it's just insane

And I was surprised that Brady donated as well

And I don't think I was the only one to be surprised

That's- Here it is, so #donations channel

*reads*

So here it is, I think I told you everything, "How To Join Grind Squad", and I created the group so, yeah

Again, the link is in the description

Link of the Grind Squad Discord as well if you want to join it

Very important, because it'll maybe depends-

Of your place in the Grind Squad if you want to join it

And that's it, we'll see ourselves later for a Roblox WWII video

I think I told you everything

Peace ! <3

For more infomation >> How To Join The Grind Squad ? - Duration: 5:39.

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Pondělí vtip u Horvího # (9) Hospodské vtipy - Duration: 1:18.

For more infomation >> Pondělí vtip u Horvího # (9) Hospodské vtipy - Duration: 1:18.

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Digimon Arena (Speedrun) - All rounds. - Duration: 21:02.

For more infomation >> Digimon Arena (Speedrun) - All rounds. - Duration: 21:02.

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Learn Food Vocabulary in English: U.S. Culture with JenniferESL - Duration: 12:47.

Hello everyone. Its Jennifer.

I'm here in my kitchen so that we can talk about food and our eating habits.

If you'd like to learn even more vocabulary after this lesson, be sure to check out my

vocabulary playlist and also my language note series that focuses on American culture.

Do you eat healthy?

I try to, but I admit that I have a sweet tooth.

I like to eat all kinds of sweet things, like chocolate and

baked goods.

These are lemon bars that my neighbor made. They smell wonderful and they taste even better.

I think I've eaten five or six of these lemon bars in the past few days.

I asked you about eating healthy.

"Healthy" is an adjective. The adverb form is "healthily."

But in American English when we talk about everyday things like our eating habits,

we often use "healthy" as an adverb.

You can also use "healthy" as it should be used: as an adjective.

People sometimes wonder if I watch what I eat because I'm kind of skinny.

Well, I can tell you that I have a healthy appetite. I'm not on a diet to lose weight.

I eat healthy portions of food at every meal. I try not to overeat, though.

I hate that feeling of eating too much. Don't you?

American restaurants usually serve large portions of food, and I think it's terrible because

people are tempted to overeat.

I have a good appetite at breakfast, lunch, and dinner, and I snack between meals.

My favorite meal of the day is breakfast.

What's yours?

I really do love breakfast and when I have time on the weekend,

I enjoy a hearty breakfast of blueberry pancakes, scrambled eggs,

fresh fruit,

yogurt, and a hot cup of tea.

Do you enjoy a hearty breakfast? That's one of the questions you can answer for me in the comments.

My son enjoys a good breakfast, too, every day of the week...at least now he does.

His appetite has grown over the past year or so.

My son is still a picky eater, but at least he eats bigger portions now

He doesn't like fish or meat very much, but he's not a vegetarian. He eats only one kind of meat:

chicken.

He's picky about vegetables too. He'll eat peas, corn, and carrots and not much else.

Thankfully, he loves fruit.

My daughter has my sweet tooth, so the two of us have to be careful.

One thing both my children enjoy is yogurt.

I often buy these yogurt tubes for them.

But I buy lactose-free yogurt for myself because my body doesn't digest

regular dairy milk very well now..well, now that I'm getting older.

People who don't tolerate milk and other dairy products very well are called lactose intolerant.

Fortunately, I'm not allergic to milk, so I can enjoy small amounts of cheese.

Food allergies are quite common in the U.S. today.

People are allergic to nuts, fish, and other foods.

Many U.S. restaurants post a sign on the wall or

a request in the menu,

and it says:

Many food shops have a similar request posted somewhere

If you're hosting a dinner party,

these days it's not a bad idea to ask:

A similar issue is having food restrictions.

Some people are on a special diet to avoid digestive problems.

For example, some people need gluten-free foods,

so serving these people wheat bread or regular pasta isn't a good idea.

In other cases, food restrictions are a matter of preference because of one's lifestyle or religion.

In U.S. stores, it's fairly easy to find kosher foods, for instance.

These are foods that are prepared according to Jewish law.

Halal foods are becoming more common, too, in the U.S. These are foods that are prepared according to Islamic law

So you know about vegetarians not eating meat, right? What about vegans?

These people choose not to eat any animal products.

It's a very strict diet,

but it seems a lot of people choose to go vegan. If you go vegan, you switch to a vegan diet.

A trend that I see is that the world is becoming a more accommodating place for all the dietary needs that people have.

When I went on vacation last summer with my family,

I was very happy to find lactose-free yogurt and gluten-free muffins at the hotel breakfast buffet.

So what kind of diet do you have? Do you have any restrictions? Are there some foods you'll never give up?

Tell me in the comments.

Really do try to eat healthy, but I can't completely give up junk food.

I admit that I have some unhealthy foods in my pantry.

I keep snacks like potato chips up here. That's for when I get the munchies.

So when I want to nibble on something and I start to reach up high, I remind myself that we have healthier snack choices

below, like dried fruit and crackers.

But sometimes you just want to indulge yourself a little, right? I think it's okay to treat yourself to things sometimes.

To eat healthy...well, it's usually about eating things in moderation.

You may wonder why I chose this topic.

Well, one thing I think we all enjoy is food. It's a common topic of conversation.

But there's another reason

There's a trend in the U.S. today.

The popularity of food shows cooking shows and cooking competitions has grown.

We have a network on TV that's devoted to everything about food.

More and more people in the US are becoming foodies. We're not experts.

We're not chefs, but we take an interest in food, and we enjoy trying new dishes.

Foodies like me enjoy watching cooking shows and cooking competitions. My own children like watching a kids baking championship.

And foodies enjoy a good trip to a restaurant. It doesn't have to be expensive or fancy.

The food just has to taste good.

Are you a bit of a foodie too?

That's all for now. Please like this video if you learned new vocabulary today.

Thanks for watching and happy studies!

Become a sponsor of English with Jennifer.

You'll get a special badge, bonus posts, on-screen credit, and a monthly live stream.

Click on the link or look in the video description for more information.

Note that sponsorships are not available in every country at this time.

I'd like to say a very special thank you to my current sponsors. Hopefully, more of you will join us for the next live stream.

Join me on my YouTube community tab for special posts each week if

If you haven't already, please subscribe to my channel. That way you'll get notification of every new video I upload to YouTube.

For more infomation >> Learn Food Vocabulary in English: U.S. Culture with JenniferESL - Duration: 12:47.

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How Tattoos Really Work... At Least in Mice - Duration: 5:54.

SciShow is supported by Skillshare.

Tattooing goes way back in human history.

We've been inking ourselves for thousands of years.

And yet, exactly how the ink sticks around has remained somewhat of a mystery.

The rough idea was that either some skin cells or immune cells absorb ink particles, and

then basically never die.

Unless it's been a long time or they're blasted apart by lasers.

But a new study in The Journal of Experimental Medicine is here to set the record straight:

it is immune cells that suck up the ink.

But they die all the time, and new ones take over the ink hoarding.

At least, that's what research in mice indicates.

When you're getting tattooed, tiny needles poke holes that let the ink into your second

layer of skin, called the dermis.

Previous studies have looked at tattooed skin under a microscope.

But when you're looking at a bunch of ink-filled blobs, it's tough to learn specifics — like

which cells suck up the ink, how long they live, or what happens to the ink when they

die.

So this team took a different approach.

They used genetically modified mice that let the researchers flip a genetic switch and

kill off macrophages, the immune cells that travel around your body gobbling up foreign

substances and other debris.

And they used machines that can sort cells by really specific characteristics that a

microscope can't see, like what proteins are on the outside.

That way, they could dig deep into which cells were there, and which had ink in them.

Through these experiments, they discovered that a unique kind of dermal macrophage is

probably involved.

Specifically, it's a kind of melanophage, which are cells that ingest melanin, the pigment

responsible for tanning and variations in skin color.

Unlike other kinds of macrophages, they don't carry their contents away to be destroyed—they

stay put and hold onto that pigment.

And when the researchers gave their mice green tail tattoos, they found that melanophages

were picking up the ink.

When the researchers killed these cells off, the ink hung out in the goo between cells.

Then, as the melanophages were replaced with new ones from the blood, they sucked up the

same ink.

To see if this kind of turnover is normal, they grafted tattooed skin from one mouse

to another.

And sure enough, while all the ink-containing cells were from the graft donor at the start,

after about 6 weeks, they were mostly from the recipient instead.

Of course, this was work done in mice, so it may not perfectly model human tattooing.

But our skin does contain similar melanophages.

And the findings could explain why laser tattoo removal is so tricky.

The goal is to use light to break the ink pigments into smaller chunks and kill the

cells holding them.

But before all the ink is whisked away by your immune system, nearby melanophages might

absorb it again, helping your tattoo stick around — whether you want it or not.

Genetic engineering is a bit of a theme this week, from modified mice to plants.

Crops are among the thirstiest organisms on Earth, guzzling up to 90% of the world's

available fresh water.

And, like, we can't just stop growing them, because we need to eat.

Not to mention, we're staring down a future of widespread droughts thanks to climate change.

So this huge water problem is one that genetic engineers have been trying to solve.

And this week we may have taken one step forward.

A new study published in Nature Communications describes a single gene that can be manipulated

to make plants more tolerant to drought.

The new finding comes from an international research project called Realizing Increased

Photosynthetic Efficiency or RIPE.

It's a huge collaboration by seven institutions and dozens of scientists.

They're studying the remaining mysteries of photosynthesis, the process by which plants

use light energy to produce sugars and oxygen from carbon dioxide and water.

And now, they've discovered that increasing the amount of one protein—called Photosystem

II Subunit S or PsbS—creates water-conserving plants.

PsbS is found in all crop plants because it's one of about 30 proteins in Photosystem II,

the machinery that captures light energy.

When plants absorb more light than they need, PsbS helps dissipate some of the absorbed

energy as heat.

So when there's a whole bunch of PsbS, more light energy is diverted.

The plants are basically tricked, so they aren't getting ready to photosynthesize

as much, and need less of the other ingredients.

Plants take in carbon dioxide through little pores on their leaves and stems called stomata,

which can open or close to let in different amounts.

And these pores let water evaporate as a side effect.

But with more PsbS tricking the plant, stomata will stay partially closed, preventing some

CO2 uptake /and/ water loss.

To figure all this out, the researchers took tobacco plants and engineered them to produce

more or less PsbS.

They tested four overproducing and two underproducing varieties against non-engineered plants by

growing them in fields, where there's a little less control than greenhouses or labs.

And they found that the PsbS overproducers lost an average of 25% less water than the

non-engineered tobacco plants.

Even with partially closed stomata, the engineered plants had plenty of CO2 because there's

a lot more of it in the atmosphere than there used to be… thanks to us.

The main downside the researchers found was that half of their engineered plants were

less productive than the normal ones — they were shorter, had less mass, or had smaller

or fewer leaves.

But half weren't, and they weren't entirely sure why.

And they note that their experiment was done with lots of available water.

But if they'd simulated a drought, they expect the genetically modified tobacco would

perform even better.

Now, they aren't going to unleash these plants on the world anytime soon.

This is mostly just proof-of-concept that manipulating one gene found in a lot of plants

can make water conservation possible.

In the future, the RIPE researchers hope to engineer plants that can thrive in dry, nutrient-poor

soils.

But until these plants are made and tested there's no way to know how successful or

revolutionary they'll be.

And that's how science works.

It takes a lot of clever people working together to learn, experiment, and solve problems — both

in the classroom and out in the field.

Our friends at Skillshare have asked us to spend the time we would normally dedicate

to talking about their classes to instead talk about a great YouTube creator you might

not have heard of as part of their Skillshare Spotlight program.

Alex Nickel is a 16-year-old nerdfighter who makes educational content on his channel Technicality.

If you love learning, well-timed jokes about your favorite fandoms, and the occasional,

but very good, pun, check out Technicality.

There's a link to his most recent video in the description where you can learn more

about Technicality and a special offer from Skillshare if you're just hearing about

them for the first time too.

For more infomation >> How Tattoos Really Work... At Least in Mice - Duration: 5:54.

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Why I'm Donating My Body To Science - Duration: 6:55.

- When I die, this body is going straight to science.

It's not going in a casket.

It's not going to a crematorium.

I'm going to donate it right to a medical school.

Why?

- My name is Peggy Reilly.

I'm 65 years old.

- This is my mother.

And the story starts with her.

She traveled all around the world,

raised three awesome kids, and is generally amazing.

But then something happened.

- I had a stroke

on March 23rd,

2012.

- [Kevin Reilly] The stroke was caused by a blood vessel

bursting in her brain.

It changed everything.

- I miss working properly,

taking care of my husband and my children.

I miss that.

And driving, and ...

taking care of the dogs, and cleaning the house.

And walking.

I miss all that.

- A few years after the stroke,

she told me she wanted to donate her body to science.

And my reaction was, "Why?"

- Because its expensive to have a funeral.

But I'd like them to learn from my body,

so that they can use everything from my whole entire body,

and the bones and everything.

- Funerals are expensive.

According to the National Funeral Directors Association

the median price is about $7,300.

And a cremation is only about a thousand dollars cheaper.

This is a funeral pricing checklist

from the Federal Trade Commission.

Basic service for the funeral director and staff,

pickup of body, embalming, other preparation of body,

casket, funeral memorial service, graveside service,

including staff and equipment, hearse.

This is ridiculous.

I don't want to put my loved ones through that.

So this got me thinking that, like my mom,

I should use what I have to help people once I'm dead.

So I went to find out how I can donate my body.

This is Jo Wiederhorn.

She's the President and CEO

of the Associated Medical Schools of New York.

That's the group that makes sure

body donation programs in New York are legit.

- So the process is really very easy.

First of all, when you decide

that that's what you want to do,

you should contact the medical school

that you want to donate to.

And I would say that you should donate to a medical school.

They are licensed; they go through

a rigorous process to become licensed.

- [Kevin] Medical schools seem like an obvious choice,

but there's a darker reasoning behind this.

- Revealing new details about a case of human body parts

sold on the black market.

- A private company was selling body parts

from bodies that had been donated?

- There's a whole cottage industry of "body brokers".

- Some U.S. companies are making a fortune

by selling human bodies that were donated to science.

A Reuters investigation revealed that this

often unregulated business is worth millions

and rarely guarantees that your body

is going to be used for what you hope for.

Really, if you want to ensure that your body

is going to go for educational purposes,

because that's what most people want to do.

They want to be able to help train

the next era of physicians.

So, the best place to do that is to a medical school.

Every single one of our,

we have 16 medical schools in New York.

Every single one of them has a donor program.

- [Kevin] Dr. Jeffrey Laitman is the Director

of Anatomy and Functional Morphology

at the Icahn School of Madison at Mount Sinai.

This is where my body will wind up.

But I needed to know why these schools

really wanted my body.

- The laying on of hands is a sacred trust,

a very, very special thing to do.

That process begins in the first day of an anatomy class.

It's a very difficult thing for a student to do.

In our culture, we refer to the cadaver

as one's first patient.

- [Kevin] But with all the advances in technology, from VR

to animatronics, why do they need to use real bodies?

- Everything up to this point is very conceptual:

PowerPoint slides, drawings in books.

And this is the first time you see a tangible representation

of humanity and how we're going to treat them.

- [Kevin] The students dissect cadavers

in their first anatomy classes, practicing on human bodies

before they ever step into a surgery room.

And even experienced doctors continue to use cadavers.

- Other things can be helpful.

And you can learn from models and computer programs

and all sorts of wonderful adjuncts.

But the key of medicine as long as you'll be treating

real people is gonna be learning from real people.

- The body is not just a box that has organs in it.

Everything's not always in the same place.

Within the course we have oral exams

in which the teaching assistants will come around

and ask us questions about all of the different structures

that we should have dissected or learned the names of.

And my first oral exam, I was so nervous.

But I felt calmer than expected,

and I realized at the end of the test

that I had actually been holding my cadaver's hand,

which was somewhat horrifying but strangely comforting.

- [Kevin] And if you're wondering what happens

to the cadavers once they're done with them ...

- And when the course is over,

the remains are then either cremated or buried,

depending upon the wishes of the deceased.

- Each year, many of the schools

hold special ceremonies honoring the donors.

Here at the University of Buffalo, friends and family

were invited to join the students and doctors.

That's right, I get a service, burial or cremation,

and I'm helping to train doctors.

Cost?

Zero.

It's covered by the school.

Now, to be clear, donating your body to science

is different from being an organ donor on your license.

With whole-body donation, the organs are kept intact.

Students need all the parts to learn about the whole body.

So the only thing left to do is mail out the form,

because when I go, this is going to science.

If you want to find out more about whole-body donation,

call your local medical school.

Or use this full list of programs put together

by the Anatomical Board of the State of Florida.

(bright music)

For more infomation >> Why I'm Donating My Body To Science - Duration: 6:55.

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In Focus | Artificial Intelligence - Duration: 9:18.

- Hello, I'm Jeff Warner coming to you

from the LG Digital Studio at Georgetown University

School of Continuing Studies.

In Focus today, artificial intelligence.

I'm joined by Dr. Annie Green,

curriculum advisor and faculty member

for the Certificate in Artificial Intelligence Management.

Welcome, Annie.

- Thank you Jeff.

- So let's begin with the first question.

Annie, tell us, what's the difference between

artificial intelligence, business intelligence,

and machine learning?

- That's actually a good question.

Let's kind of put things in context here.

Intelligence has been around for a while, I mean,

we have agencies that actually focus on intelligence.

Things like the Central Intelligence Agency

and that sort of thing

so artificial intelligence kicked in at about 1956

back when they had the first

artificial intelligence conference.

So I'm looking at it that we came into now the 21st century

that all of a sudden intelligence

is a component of the business environment.

So therefore, we have put it in context now

so business intelligence

is basically artificial intelligence,

it's just that it's in the context

of the enterprises that we run.

So we've had intelligence in tools,

we've had intelligence in products,

we've had intelligence in a lot of disciplines,

but however, it's now hitting our mainstream enterprise

so there really is no difference.

It's like artificial intelligence is the bucket

because it is digital

so it's not a human intelligence

so therefore it is artificial.

But in retrospect, all of them are basically the same

which is what is the information

and the knowledge that you need to be able to make

the proper decisions in today's world.

- Well, let's talk about the enterprise

and the organization,

how can artificial intelligence help the decision maker?

- We have gotten to a point where we have

so much information around our operations,

within organizations,

that we need to look at that as historical data,

as longitudinal data,

it puts us in perspective in like a time period

of things that have happened that have repeatedly happened,

it helps us to recognize that there are

some practical decisions that can be made immediately

if we then augment them with judgment

to get better decisions.

So, what I'm getting at is that

we have gone through those ages

and now we're in an age where we have collected

so much information that if we actually take that

information and model it based on how we do our work,

then we can get results that will help us

to make better decisions based on previous lessons learned,

based on previous best practices,

and based on innovation and improvement of the way we work.

- So we have the data,

we have the models,

so how can artificial intelligence

help us become better strategists in the enterprise?

- As a strategist, the first thing that we're looking at

is establishing the goals and objectives

that we're trying to achieve.

Within the organization there,

and here's where I think we kind of stray a little bit,

within an organization you definitely have a supply chain

but you also have a value chain

and some look at them interchangeable

but a value chain is where am I going to gain information

in order to improve the efficiencies, effectiveness,

and possibly innovate within the organization?

So when I'm looking at strategy,

my goal is what am I trying to do?

Am I trying to improve the competencies of my people

so that they can produce better products?

Am I trying to improve the competencies of my partners,

which are the contractors and such

that are within my organization?

Am I trying to ensure that my people have the information

such that they can make decisions in a quick manner?

So you see you can go along and come up with

what are the areas that my strategic plan

has laid out for improvement within my enterprise?

Even technology, am I using the right technology?

Is that technology bringing performance gains to me?

How is this technology augmenting my enterprise

such that it is improving the efficiency

or the effectiveness of how I operate?

So, artificial intelligence, with that knowledge,

especially like transactional knowledge,

even transactional information as well as people

and how they work and the information they gather,

it can tell the story or give you insights

into what you need to do to improve.

We've constantly been improving our enterprises

because I mean, come on, we've gone through,

what would you call it, business process engineering,

we've gone through business process improvement,

we've gone through re-engineering types of efforts.

We've done all of this and key to the success of those

was understanding what we were doing in the first place.

And in most cases, we didn't.

When we downsize, we eliminated a lot of people

in the organization because we didn't know how they fit in

and we didn't know which transactions

they actually contribute toward.

We then right sized based on what we thought

and our organizations have suffered

from a lot of those decisions.

Now we have information that can feed in

and increase the certainty of those decisions.

It won't make it absolute

but at least it will give insights into whether or not

it is a high risk or a low risk

type of decision to move forward.

- Well let's explore that.

You bring up the point of risk

and also augmenting the value chain.

So, the implementation of AI in an enterprise,

what are some of the risks

and what is some of the risk about not implementing AI?

- The risks of actually implementing AI,

partly culture and then secondly,

it's gonna be, I have to say understanding.

And why I say that is because I think

that we're in a battle for semantics here.

Things have been introduced and when they don't catch on,

we tend to take an alternate path.

Rather than understanding what it is we're trying to do

and how it fits in, we would rather take another path

so that the words marry up instead of the actual actions

of what we're doing.

I don't know if that's kinda confusing to say

but what happens is my risk of going into an organization

and saying perhaps you need to look

at your operations differently,

the executive might look at it

and if I use the proper buzz words,

then they might be inclined to follow me.

But if I use words that they're not familiar with,

then they tend not to follow you

and therefore, they're not coming up to speed

on the new innovations and the new things that are out there

and they lack some of the important information

that's necessary to make decisions

around implementing AI within this organization.

So what you wind up with is a shell

and what it is is something that looks and feels good

but then you're not certain about how it operates.

Now how that'll make a problem

when you put AI into your organization

is that if you are placing AI that's supposed to

augment your decision making

and you're unaware of the algorithms

or you're unaware of the components

that need to go into those algorithms

so that they can guarantee you some level of certainty,

then your risk is gonna be extremely high

because then you're gonna be making decisions

based on guess and gosh

rather than on getting to the precise definitions

of what it is we're trying to uncover

to make decisions on.

Does that make sense? - It does.

So if I understand you correctly,

we need to understand the underlining algorithms.

What are they producing? - [Dr. Green] Yes.

- But most importantly, I'm understanding that

it comes down to people and communication.

- Absolutely.

- And if the people, the communications,

and the culture are not prepared to adopt AI

or any other advanced technology,

there's a huge risk of failure.

- There's an extreme risk of failure.

It could be disastrous.

Now if they are, the benefits will far outweigh the disaster

but you have to be prepared for it.

You have to have,

let's get to a point of like even in intelligence,

there's a different side to it, too.

It's not just the exact absolute running of algorithms,

sometimes there's judgment that has to go into it.

And how do you measure judgment?

How do you look at the moral compass of a person

and know that they're gonna make the right decision?

And how do you know not to just go with the individual

but to come together collectively

and come up with something that fits

within your organization

and doesn't marry up with the morality of the individual?

- Thank you Dr. Annie Green,

thank you so much for sharing your thoughts with us today.

And thanks to everyone out there for watching.

Stay tuned for more from the LG Digital Studio

at Georgetown School of Continuing Studies.

For more infomation >> In Focus | Artificial Intelligence - Duration: 9:18.

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How to Draw Triangle for Kids | Triangles Coloring Pages for Children | 1 Hour Compilation - Duration: 1:00:08.

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Magic

Coloring Pages

For more infomation >> How to Draw Triangle for Kids | Triangles Coloring Pages for Children | 1 Hour Compilation - Duration: 1:00:08.

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5 Fifty Shades Sex Positions To Set Your Climax Free - Duration: 3:10.

For more infomation >> 5 Fifty Shades Sex Positions To Set Your Climax Free - Duration: 3:10.

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$24 VIRGIN HAIR DUPE!? Sia Honey Blonde | HeraRemy - Duration: 6:42.

hi guys welcome back to my channel if you're new I am desi and don't forget to

hit that subscribe button down below if you would like to see more videos from

me today's video is a wig review the company Hera Remy reached out to me to

review a few of their units so I decided to you know go ahead because I wanted to

start a summer spring spring summer wig series on my channel and I thought this

would be the best way to start it off their site offer a synthetic wigs human

hair blends and also human hair wigs so check their website out I would have all

their information linked down below in the description box I'm done rambling

let's get into this wig so the hair comes in this box it just has their

company name on it and one thing I thought was really really cool about

this company they use recycled material to make their boxes so they're eco

friendly so when you open up the package it just has the hair there it comes with

an information card which just lets you know the hair company's name the name of

the unit I receive which is SIA the color of the unit which is honey blonde

and the back of that just have the care information on here so yeah the

wig does come with a net around it so here is how the cap construction is it

comes with a breathable mesh wig cap it comes with three combs two at the front

and a one at the nape it also comes with adjustable straps the lace on this wig

is soft one thing I am noticing right now is it does come with maybe a half an

inch of this hair on the lace so if you want to finesse

this hairline you totally could so what I'm going to do is cut the lace off put

this wig on and I'll be right back now that I have this week on I'm just gonna

brush it out just to see what that looks like

I'm so happy that brush this wig out because I'm gonna keep it all the way

real with you guys when it was like this I was like *strange noise* but that brushed out action

this wig is gorgeous like hold on let me brush out the other side this wig is

everything I love it one thing I can tell you right now is it's definitely

big head friendly like I tightened my straps and it's still like super loose like

yeah so it's big head friendly I have a peanut head so that probably will be my

problem but it's big head friendly one thing I can tell you is when I thought

up the color honey blonde I didn't think of this color but I'm not mad at it it's

gorgeous and it complements my skin tone so

that's always a plus. So the texture of this wig is on the yaki side but it's

more of a silky yaki if that makes sense like it's not course at all you can run

your fingers through it without a problem like look at the color of this

wig like just just take it in I love how this wig looks so you do get a little

flap action here but you can you can take care of it easy all you have to do

is get you some got to be glue you know tack her down but I have a lot of

videos to record today so we're not doing that but one thing I can tell you

is I really really like this hair this hair brushed out it's so cute like

before when it wasn't brushed out I was unsure if I was gonna like it or not but

now that it's brushed out and it's one me I freaking love it this wig is so

cute it's super soft I do experience a little shedding but honestly I might

have nicked the lace once or twice so I'm not gonna

blame the wig on my unsteady hand I'm loving these beach waves right now I wasn't

feeling it at first but when I brushed it out like she came to life I'm feeling

her she's cute it's a 26-inch I don't believe it it's 26 inches because me I'm

pretty tall and that stops about there on me I'm not sure if it's actually 26

inches I wouldn't know I've never experienced 26 inches ever in my life so

I can't say yea or nay towards 26 inches for the most part I feel like this hair

it's fabulous I love the beach wave what I can say is I love the color I'm really

into like brownish-blond hair at the moment as you can see from the wig I was

wearing in intro but I really like this wig I will give it a 8 out of 10 the

price of this wig is $24.99 you can find it on the HeraRemy website which is linked

down below in the description box and then everything I have to say about this

wig I do love her and she's big head friendly

she's $24.99 the color is gorgeous even though I thought the color would be a

little more blonde but honey blonde or brown I'll take it. The cap is a

breathable mesh cap it has three combs two in the front one in a back it also have

adjustable straps this unit reminds me of that Ciara video what song was that

never ever on the number ever video I feel like her hair was something like this

Like it was waved out a little bit

I feel like this wig is giving me Ciara vibes so that wraps up today's video don't

forget to check out my description box there's a lot of good information down

there be sure to LIKE comment and subscribe if you haven't already and

I'll see you guys in the next one

For more infomation >> $24 VIRGIN HAIR DUPE!? Sia Honey Blonde | HeraRemy - Duration: 6:42.

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COMO FAZER A SUA MAQUIAGEM DURAR O DIA TODO! - Duration: 7:33.

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Coyote Quickie - Solo Rifle Predator Hunting POV Video - Duration: 1:23.

He made the mistake of going in that brush. I was able to come right up over

the top of that hill right there, had the wind just right, stopped a hundred yards

broadside, one-shot!

awesome! that's pretty nice-looking coyote, really.

For more infomation >> Coyote Quickie - Solo Rifle Predator Hunting POV Video - Duration: 1:23.

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A MUST WATCH - MOTIVATIONAL SPEECH FOR SUCCESS FOR 2018 - Duration: 32:46.

whenever people fail to achieve their goals 99.9% of time you ask him why

they'll tell you it's because of a lack of resources that's what all these

things are I didn't have the support right I didn't have the money we didn't

have the time we didn't have this we never that there's a resource that

people believe is missing and that resource belief structure then keeps

people from ever being able to really lead because what leaders do is they

find a way to maximize whatever resources they have have littles they

maybe and they don't believe in limited resources I'll give you an example take

a business example to start with in 1974 I can't even saw him Walton had built

his little company up he capable that idea started with $20,000 and I think in

1962 if I remember right but by 1974 within 12 years he had 78 stores and you

know I did it in the middle of the night he drive across border and he'd go and

study other people's stores he buy everything the cheapest he could in the

middle of the night he'd go to the people's stores whatever was working he

figured out success leaves Clues he came back and did it in his store whatever

was working in any store in any competitor anywhere he could do it he

did it so he forgot to maximize the little

resources he had his twenty thousand built 78 stores and if you read any of

the people following him the company's gone public in that year they were all

saying this is it he's maximized his resources I mean only have so much money

there's only so many cities that are gonna appeal to this discounting

mentality right this is it this is all he can do and the word of Wall Street

was self now what's interesting is at that time you look at Sears and Kmart

and they were a gargantuan companies weren't that 20 30 40 50 times a hundred

times his size or more probably and at that time they were the leaders and they

knew what's gonna happen but two things change yes or no did he suddenly get

mass amounts of capital no here's what they didn't understand Sam Walton now or

the Walton organization Walmart is the most successful retailing operation on

earth and when you talk about Bill Gates being the richest man in the world

that's only true because Sam's fortune has divided up amongst a bunch of

different family members you put them together they dwarf bill gay

Sam Walton did this how did he do it what people underestimated is that this

guy could go to 4,400 stores do 250 billion

where's Kmart today and they've been shrinking all women shrieking and he's

the dominant force on earth here's the thing he understood resources are

interesting but the ultimate resources are the feelings of emotion that make

you resourceful think of it this way resourcefulness is the ultimate resource

what do I mean what are the emotions that make all this possible what's the

fuel that takes an idea from being in your head when you wouldn't you'll

actually know what to do how many got an idea for example was a great idea you're

excited about it and then you didn't do anything one day there you saw it on the

Shelf you saw it somewhere someone stole your idea how many had this happened say

I the only one seeing you and that person was not that they had more

resources they were more resourceful when people are beset with a catastrophe

like let's say the death of their father that they are prone to use that as an

excuse for not going about the business that they should be going about because

they can say to themselves well I would accept and accept there's always good

reasons I mean believe me there's always good reasons for not doing what you

should that's for sure the reasons pile up day after day to not do what you

should especially because you're you're aiming at things in the future you can

put them off and definitely right because of the demands of the day like

there's no excuse whatsoever for not getting at what it is that you should be

doing it's absolutely reprehensible to justify you're in action with a

catastrophe that extracts mercy from other people right there's a tricky

tricky game that's going well of course I can't do that look at the terrible

thing that's just happened to me it's see how okay I understand you're

absolved of any necessity to move forward because of your current

catastrophe it's like well actually you're not and it's rather rude of you

to use it as an excuse and it's certainly counterproductive the bravery

and discipline to say no to you to your many good opportunities what destroys a

great company is actually opportunity bloating

too many good opportunities so literally you diffuse your team's bandwidth and

you get distracted you see with so many companies right now they they sort of

found their sweet pocket and they were absolutely winning in their marketplace

and they decided to go hmm we've got this app that is really changing the

game and owning the marketplace let's get into food delivery let's get into

this let's get into that it happened to General Electric as well and you

probably know they decided at one point if we can't be one or two in any market

we're gonna get out of that market that's the key point I'm trying to make

no you're mighty mission no your monomaniacal focus and then have the

discipline to say no to everything else so you can lock and load on your finest

opportunity to completely change the game it was 25 or so I probably weighed

about 138 pounds I smoked like a pack of cigarettes day I drank tremendous amount

of alcohol I was from northern Alberta this rough little town up and northern

Alberta called Fairview and you know there were long winters there and my

friends were heavy drinkers and most of them dropped out of school by the time

they were 15 or 16 went off to work on the oil rigs and you know it was a rough

town and we drank a lot I started when I was 14 and you know and so I was I had a

lot of bad habits let's say and things that were and I wasn't in great shape

physically and I was also still intellectually obsessed by as I am now

and so that would have been that would have been in 85 but when I but I decided

around that about 85 84 or something like that maybe a little earlier that I

was really going to try to get my act together and so I started doing that I

you know I first of all I quit smoking well that took a long time because I

eventually had to quit drinking to in order to quit smoking and I started

working out starting playing sports which I'd never done I had a fine town

when I was a kid and but I needed really to get disciplined and I

had to do it because I was working on these hard problems that you know that

I've been discussing with all of you and I've been working on them

really you know obsessively since I was probably about 18 maybe even earlier not

got to the point around 25 when I was in graduate school trying to get my PhDs

doing all my research that guy published 15 papers by the time I graduated with

my PhD which was by I think by a fairly large measure the most papers that any

graduate student at that time had ever published at McGill I think that's right

might have been twice as many or maybe twice as many maybe even three times as

many and at the same time I wrote maps of meaning which was a terrible terrible

terribly difficult thing to do because I was writing about three hours a day

doing that and I couldn't do all that and continue with my misbehavior you

know my sort of my what would you say my why my hedonistic my hedonistic my

massive hedonistic consumption of alcohol and all of that I just couldn't

keep it up and also work seriously on the issues that were at hand so you know

I had to stop that's a sacrifice I had to stop I'm the kind of person that

believes you should always make decisions with your heart and soul you

can use your brain for math you can use your brain to look at the fine print in

a contract but when it comes to the actual feel of the decision you always

want to go inward and check it against your heart and soul how do you do that

here's the simple test does the decision that you're about to make expand you

expand your future or expand the possibilities of your life if the answer

is yes then the decision is yes no matter how terrifying it is if you

conversely look at the choice that you have to make and the decision will

shrink you will silence you will inhibit you in some way then the answer is no no

matter how easy the decision is no matter how safe the decision is the

answer is no now one of the things I want to point out that when you start to

use this does it expand or does it shrink me

does it open possibilities or does it keep things

does it raise my voice or does it silence me right is that there's always

a short-term and a long-term impact to the decision the short-term impact to

making an expansive decision a decision that's based in your heart in your soul

sometimes it's terrifying because sometimes it means moving or it means

changing a job or changing a relationship or having a difficult

conversation or starting something new and those sorts of things are always

uncomfortable so brace for impact put the force fields up but make the

decision anyway because the long-term impact of making a decision from your

heart and soul that is where the best life comes from because you're living

for what's true for you you're actually tougher than you think you never knew

that and maybe you didn't want to take on the responsibility because you know

people play a role in their own demise so to speak when you had opportunity to

go out and explore or withdraw because you were afraid you chose to withdraw

because you were afraid so it's not only that you were over protected often it's

that you were willing to take advantage of the fact that you were over protected

and run back there whenever you had the opportunity you know so maybe you're a

kid in the playground right and you're having some trouble with other kids and

you know in the back of your mind I should deal this with deal with this

myself but you go and tell your mom and get her to intervene and you know that

that's not right you know that you're breaking the social contract but it's

easier and so that's what you do you run off to an authority figure and hide

behind the great father right roughly speaking well the problem with that is

you don't learn how to do it yourself so then you have to relearn it painfully

when you're 40 so then you take people out you say well what are you afraid of

rank it from 1 to 10 so 10 is what make a list of 10 things you're afraid of the

least the thing you're least afraid of will call number 10 so we'll start with

that okay well I'm afraid of elevators ok

well let's let's look at a picture of an elevator let's have you imagine being in

an elevator let's go out to an elevator and let you watch the terrible jaws

of death open because that's how you're responding to it symbolically right and

you're gonna do that at it at the the closest proximity you can manage you

find out you go do that it works you're nervous as hell especially an it from an

anticipatory perspective shaking you go out you stop you watch it happen and you

actually calm down you do that ten times it no longer bothers you well what

you've learned that you didn't die but more importantly than that you've

learned that you could withstand the threat of death that's what you've

learned and then you move a little closer and then you move a little closer

and then you move a little closer and finally you're back in what's no longer

the elevator from a symbolic perspective it's a tomb right it's it's it's a place

of enclosure and isolation and you learn hmm turns out I can withstand that and

then you're met much more together much more confident and that's often one of

the things that often happens in situations like that I've seen this

multiple times is that if you run someone through an exposure training

process like that and and toughen them up they'll often start standing up to

people around them in a way they never did before

Oh Gerber the guy that wrote the e-myth you know talks about why so many

businesses young businesses fail and one of these things he says is most people

are not really entrepreneurs but they think that's what they should be they

think that's the sexy thing that's the most attractive thing that's the best

answer and what I say to you is you've got to separate the vehicle from the

outcome what is it that's gonna truly fulfill you what is it that's gonna give

you that extraordinary life what's gonna make things magnificent on your terms

not somebody else's terms not your father your mother your background what

is that really separate the vehicle there's many ways to get to that vehicle

but I'm saying sometimes you got to reevaluate what's gonna really make you

fulfill what is your gift are you an artist are you the talent that can

produce something no one else produces as a skill or a product or a service or

some impact are you incredibly good at management

you really know how to manage or lead people are you an extraordinary

entrepreneur that has can take that gigantic gut load of risk and can create

the vision and attract the talent that you need and the managers and leaders

you may have all three abilities but which one really fulfills you the most

is gonna be the critical question because we tend to want to do them all

especially the room like this because you're all overachievers right me too

and you say well I can do all these yes you can but what will it do to your

quality of life see again the secrets gonna be this what is an extraordinary

life on your terms today I remember being in Soho New York and I walked into

one of the stories and I bought a coat and I was leaving on an airplane for

home later that day and I asked the person who was taking care of me I said

is it possible that's a great respectful way to ask for something is it possible

to get this coat hemmed and adjust it a little bit for me and he and and I said

the thing is that I'm leaving later today and he looked at me and I've never

forgotten it because we all have these people in their lives who say one thing

or show up in a certain way and they stay with us for the rest of their lives

and he said to me these words he said it I'd love to do that for you I'd love to

do that for you and again the whole brain type - I'm trying to deconstruct

here is make your I can larger than your IQ you know I remember being in Prague

and I asked someone on the other again I spent a lot of time in hotels and I said

is it possible to do this and here was the reply on the other end of the phone

I think was someone from the front desk or maybe it was room service and I try

to eat as clean as possible so probably it was a request could I

have olive oil and fresh lemon or lemon as the salad dressing and here's the

reply and just really lovingly and respectfully and hopefully fluently and

elegantly bring this leadership inside home to you I said is this possible and

is a reply anything is possible so it's really easy

to get seduced and stuck into a mindset of can't you know someone says let's

start a new business someone says here's a great poetic project that if we

release it to the world will help us own our marketplace and it sounds very

obvious again but ask yourself this is your default reply a symptom of a

mindset of Kant or do you have a mentality of possibility when someone

says here read this book do you shift into Kant or can when someone says hey

you know what I'm amped to run a marathon you'll go I can't is that your

default setting in your neurobiological hardwiring or do you go absolutely or

I'd love to do this you know it's really really important and that is one of the

core distinctions of leadership isn't it success and failure are not giant events

they don't just show up you'll just suddenly become successful or suddenly

have this cataclysmic event that makes you fail they look that way but failure

cut them and some all the little things it's failure to make the call it's

failure to check the books its failure to say I'm sorry

it's failure to push yourself to do things physically that you don't want to

do and all those little failures day after day come together until one day

some Cataclysm event happens you blame that that event happened because you

missed all the little stuff do you agree with me and success by the way is not

some overnight event it's all these little things success is having a vision

success is making it compelling success is really seeing it feeling it every day

was strong enough for reasons success he is feeling the sense that I'm here to

grow and I'm here to give something to the world more than just myself all the

little stuff that's where success comes from in business it comes from

delivering more than anybody could imagine all those little things add up

people go wow that's who I want to do business with very great hero was broken

if you were look at Nelson Mandela he suffered more than most people if you

look at mother Teresa she went through Incred

adversity over the course of her journey if you were to study Mahatma Gandhi

Nelson Mandela Rosa Parks Shakespeare and Tolstoy if you look at any great

artist a Picasso jean-michel Basquiat if you look at the great world builders

they all suffered let me put it to you this way with great love and respect

they all out suffered the majority and what I'm suggesting to you is pain can

be transformed into power with the intention to transform pain into power

you see what most people do is this is why most good people lose they stumble

and they fall and they become heartbroken or disappointed by life's

challenges that happens to every single one of us I mean just to be very

authentic as I always want to be in these mastery sessions episodes I've

gone through a lot of hardship in my life when I was you know going through

school very few people believed in me and I was dismissed and called very very

average and the principal at the school I was at said you're not even gonna get

into University and you might know my backstory on the monk who sold his

Ferrari but that was a self-published book and I was at the American

Booksellers conference in Chicago with a cover of one of my books over my around

my neck shaking hands with all the agents that were coming up the escalator

and when I was a self-published author and I used to go into bookstores and say

would you take three copies of my book I'll sign them could you put it on the

shelf and I was treated rudely and I was laughed at and I was on radio shows and

I was ridiculed and then I've gone through a lot of personal pain in my own

life and I've been on the top of the mountain of victory and I must tell you

I have walked the lonely path in the darkness in the valley of darkness but

Rumi the great philosopher said it so

beautifully he said allow your heart to be broken over

over and over until it opens and what I'm suggesting to you is really to dial

into this insight all great heroes have been broken but rather than blaming 27

years in imprisonment in the case of Nelson Mandela rather than blaming his

naysayers and his detractors in the case of of mahathma gandhi rather than saying

life is hard wiesen isn't greatness easy in the case of a mother Teresa or Martin

Luther King jr. rather than saying why did this happen to me in the case of

Rosa Parks who refused to give up her seat to someone on a bus because she was

being treated like a second-class citizen because of the color of her skin

these great ones all had one thing in common they leveraged their pain and the

power they turned their tragedies into victories

if you concentrate solely on your career you can get a long way in your career

and I would say that that's a strategy that a minority of men preferentially do

that that's all they do they worked like 70 80 hours a week they go flat out on

their career they're staking everything on the small probability of exceptional

status in a narrow domain but it's it's hard on them they don't have a life it's

very difficult for them to have a family they don't know how to take any leisure

activity like they get very one-dimensional now it may be that that

unit dimensionality is the price you have to pay to be exceptional at one

thing right because if you're gonna be something like a genius level

mathematician and you want to do that for a scientist say it's like you're in

your lab you're in your lab all the time you're working 70 hours a week or 80

hours a week you're smart you're dedicated your unit dimensional and

that's how you get to beat all the other people who are doing that it's the only

way but the problem is you don't get a life now if you love being a scientist

and you have that kind of focus of mind well first of all you're a rare person

and second you gonna pay for it but find more power to

you but but it's a it's a risky business to do that you sacrifice a lot for it

you know and I would say most often if you're speaking about having a healthy

life that isn't what you do you spread yourself out more so you know you have a

family you have some things that you do outside of work that are meaningful to

you and useful you you have a network of friends that that those three things a

loner four things alone are plenty to keep you well oriented and then if one

of those things collapses you know everything doesn't go now the

price you pay for that is the more you strive to optimize that balance the less

likely you are to be fantastically successful at any single one of them but

you might have a very you know if you consider your life as a whole that might

be a winning strategy leverage is critical you know I get so much done cuz

I don't just get it done I know the outcome I know the purpose and I look

for leverage leverage is different than delegation what's problem with

delegation delegation is you I've always needs to be done so you give it to

someone else and you tell them it needs to be done

and they don't do it you're pissed off leverage says I can move the biggest

Boulder in the world with a little bit of effort if I get something I can do it

with and I'm still part of it so leverage it is if I'm gonna leverage

something you were Tom I'm gonna make sure Tom understands the what the

outcome I wanna make sure Tom understands the the purpose the why and

the action but I might say to Tom if you get this done without this action or

better actually go for a baby and I want to talk to you on this date we got a

promise and we're gonna check in before it's needed so there's no surprises if

you have the problems Tom come back to me because we're partners on this that I

call leverage and you know what I do when I have no time there is time I just

got to leverage it now saying sad no no leverage YouTube

you know Shane over here right I know stuff he wants to do can't leverage it

but Shane's answer was hire somebody many thinks about what its gonna take

and goes 125,000 dollars can't do that now he's getting caught up

in one way to get the outcome leverage Yoshi was listening goes what if I got

someone who twenty percent of this stuff I got I could spend 20 grand to get that

much freedom I can pay four times ten and if I really productive my

productivity should enhance the world ballet my clients and customers but it

should provide jobs for other people and if there's anything you hate to do it's

because you're either ineffective at it or you don't think it's very important

but it is urgent so you hire somebody for those things and ideally somebody

who loves that job you're never gonna grow when your time is eating up for

activities that aren't that important activity without high levels of purpose

is the drain of your fortune do it now then he can't get it all about you a

part of it now leverage is power it was the night it was the night before we

were putting drywall in our house we were redoing a house and he had put in

all the plastic piping you know and I was gonna test the joints steel are

supposed to be glued together with his pipe glue right and I said I told him I

had to test the joints and he said well you don't have to test my joints they

never leak and I thought yeah that's okay how about if I test them so I went

up on the third floor and filled the pipes with water capping them in the

basement like you're supposed to and like half an hour later I had two inches

of water in the basement there were thirty leaking joints that was the night

before the drywallers were supposed to show up so well so he wasn't

particularly competent that's the point of that story but even more so he had

put a bunch of the plastic pipe outside where the drywall would be so it would

have been sticking through the wall so I spent a frenetic night you know sawing

through plastic pipe and reglue in joints so that my well so that the dry

rollers could come in what's the point if you're going to be a plumber man be a

good plumber because otherwise all you do is go out there and cause trouble we

don't need people to cause more trouble we need people to solve problems you

know and so you can be a tradesman and you can be to make a lot of money as a

trades person it's a bloody reliable honorable forthright productive way of

making a living and there is a hell a lot of difference between a working

man who knows what he's doing and one who doesn't both in terms of skill and

ethics right and you work with someone who knows what they're doing it's a

bloody pleasure they tell you what they're gonna do they tell you how much

it will cost they go and do it it works and you pay them perfect everyone's

happy and that's what happens when you have genuine hierarchies of competence

and so you to listen to these panderers of egalitarian al Geller egalitarianism

and equity and they fail to recognize completely that there are differences in

rank between people it's not such a terrible thing man

maybe you wouldn't be a great lawyer like it's certainly possible most people

aren't but that doesn't mean there isn't something you could be great at there's

lots of hierarchies to attempt to climb and if you fail in one go try in another

but the point is you're still trying to aim for the top and what the hell are

you gonna do if you don't try to aim for the top you know flap about uselessly

and whine about your life it's not helpful it'll just make you miserable

you're not reliable to anyone you can't help out in a crisis it's like so you

tell young people and this is another message for conservatives like I don't

care what you're gonna do but go out there make something of yourself for

God's sake be an honest person and work and get to the top of whatever it is

that you want to get to the top of you know and and and and that you stand up

for yourself like a respectable human being and be a bit of a light on the

world instead of a blight you know and you can tell young people that and they

haven't been told that by anyone now and so the young men are so hungry for that

that it's it's painful to watch they're so relieved when finally someone

finally comes up and says hey you know you get your act together a bit

discipline yourself see if you can learn to tell the truth concentrate on

something for a year or two you could be a bloody world beater they think really

that's possible Wow that would be that would be interesting that might make

life or life worth living it's like yeah it might so why don't you go do it

that's what the damn universities we're supposed to be teaching people they've

forgotten that I went to Harvard month ago month and a half used to teach there

and I talked to a bunch of students you know and I told them it's not easy to

get into Harvard you know like you're a valedictorian if you're at Harvard and

no are you a valedictorian you're way

better than most people at at least two other things or you don't get in and so

that gets I don't know what the acceptance rate is like 5% and believe

me not everybody applies so it's a very selective school and so why am I saying

that it's like these are high quality kids so I told them what I just told you

it's like here you are at Harvard so get yourself educated man read some books

learn to talk learn to think make yourself into something get the hell out

there and make the world that put you here happy that you were put there in

that great institution you know and they came up to me afterwards and said god I

wish someone would have told us that when we were in our first year it's like

Jesus why didn't someone tell the math for God's sake it's supposed to be the

greatest university in the world is it so difficult to figure that out

well I prayed it from my life and anyone I know succeeded I'm a 17 year old kid

from Azusa California with no real education other than self education with

no background with parents that did their best all of them

but no money but I did one thing I love people and I had an enormous the man I

made it by myself and I sculpted my mind and my emotions to get me to do whatever

it would take to achieve and to contribute but to do that I did it by

using my body and changing my focus I did it by putting myself in a Peet

physiology and using what I call incantations can you train yourself to

believe something yes or no absolutely how many have you ever made the fatal

mistake of going to Disneyland or Disney World and while you're there made the

fatal mistake of going to a ride called it's a small world after all what

happens for about a week after you're out of that damn place you're still

singing this thing in your hand in 24 languages right let me tell you

something how many of you have things when you want to go Chiva man this part

of your voice goes oh it's not gonna happen or forget it I'm gonna go to

voice that sometimes interrupts that good pattern say ah what you want to do

is train a new one so starting when I was 17 I started doing incantations not

affirmations affirmation what's the problem you haven't changed your what

your what physiology if you don't change your physiology you won't get anything

so an incantation only you speak it but you embody what you're saying with all

the intensity you can and you do it with enough repetitions that it sticks in

your head like it's a small world now the conversation your head is always the

same and it gives you what you want so use your body and your voice so 17 years

ago I started doing things I was working for Jim Rohn the speaker and I was 17

years old I had long hair minestrone soup acne on my face and I

was trying to call on Bear Stearns type of people and convince them why they

should go to this man seminar be more successful I was driving a 1968

Volkswagen I had earned it $40 a week as a janitor the only way I did it was

parked far from the building and then go in and I love people I

believe what I put myself in state and I was able to influence people that were

far more successful I was at the time I will do something that I still do

backstage and have done for 23 years because I don't hope I'm gonna be in a

good State I demand it so I do an incantation using my whole body it's a

now command my subconscious mind to direct me and helping as many people as

possible live today to better their lives they gave me the strength the

emotion the persuasion the humor the brotherly whatever it takes

you surely feel and get these people to change their lives now I would do that

literally driving in my Volkswagen to a meeting in LA on the freeway for 40

minutes people looking I'm screaming to pop my lungs they're going I know he's a

serial killer I know he is but by the time I entered that room when two people

meet if there's rapport the person who's most certain and they were trying to get

wrapped up to certainty do you agree with this yes or no I do another one

because I was poor I changed my mindset I kept doing things but I never got

beyond it I'd say God's wealth is circulating in my life as well flows to

me and avalanches of abundance all my needs desires and goals are met

instantaneously by infinite intelligence I'm one with God and God is everything

and I would imagine the abundance of my life and I would feel so grateful and a

healer I went for making thirty eight thousand dollars a year to make a

million dollars in one year

For more infomation >> A MUST WATCH - MOTIVATIONAL SPEECH FOR SUCCESS FOR 2018 - Duration: 32:46.

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Founders Day - Duration: 3:29.

Hey everyone my name is Megan and today is the founders day for my sorority

which means one hundred and forty eight years ago my sorority was founded at DePauw

University and I know that my sorority experience isn't actually something that

I've made a vlog about yet which is surprising because I would say by far it

is the thing that has had the biggest impact on my university career. we're

going to head off to our Founders Day celebration which is a time to get

dressed up and go and celebrate our founders as well as just kind of reflect

on what Theta means to us. So I'm super excited let's go!

hi my name is Gabby

I'm Mariah

Hi, I'm Oliva

Megan: What's your favourite part of Thea?

getting my bigs and littles, my little has been a really good thing when

I first joined my big was like my best friend so it was nice to have someone around

that was looking out for me and could like show me the ropes.

I think my favorite part of theta is that I got to meet a bunch of girls from UBC that I

never would have met like I'm studying psychology and so I never would have met

Megan in like a classroom setting, so it was really cool to get to be her and

like all our other friends

what I love most about theta is the friends that I've made, so leadership opportunities that I've had a change to

be a part of.

so I just got home from Founders Day and unfortunately I could

not show more of what we did because a lot of it is actually secret. But it was really

fun and a great chance as always to get to meet people that have been in Theta

for a lot longer than I have .I had a really lovely chat with a woman joined

in 1969. I would have to say that my favourite part about being in theta is

leadership opportunities that I've gotten ,but most importantly it's about

the friends that I've made that I wouldn't have otherwise. I do really love

being in engineering but I also like the ability to have friends that are in

different departments different faculties studying different things

and I don't know if I would have had that opportunity and I hadn't have

joined. And for me Founders Day is somewhat important because of the reason

that my organization was started in the first place which was because back in

1870 there were not very many women in universities at all and it was a really

hostile environment to be a female and our founder Bettie Locke Hamilton was one

of the first women to be allowed into Dupauw university and she didn't want to

be a mascot for a men's organization but they wouldn't allow her to be a full

member because she's a female and she decided that wasn't good enough and that

she was going to start her own organization as good as any men's and I

think that just says a lot about the organization as a whole and one of the

reasons why it means so much to me and has made such a big impact on my

university career so thank you so much for watching I hope you learned a little

bit more. Happy Founders Day!

For more infomation >> Founders Day - Duration: 3:29.

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Couple running generators in home hospitalized - Duration: 1:30.

For more infomation >> Couple running generators in home hospitalized - Duration: 1:30.

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Justin Trudeau's Selfie Diplomacy | 22 Minutes - Duration: 2:55.

A new poll shows that if an election were held tomorrow,

Justin Trudeau would lose.

We could very well go from having a ken doll for Prime Minister,

to having a Cabbage Patch doll for Prime Minister.

Only nine percent of Canadians gave the last federal budget two thumbs up, with 69% giving it

one finger.

So if Canadian's don't want Justin Trudeau, who do they want?

They can't want Jagmeet Singh, they already have an NDP Prime Minister...

Justin has been so worried about Jagmeet, that he stole the NDP's national pharma-care

plan in the budget.

Justin Trudeau is Taylor Swift -

his budget is 'Look What You Made Me Do';

and Jagmeet Singh is the guy who sang 'I'm Too Sexy';

It's a total rip!

It's not just the budget that's hurting the PM;

40% of Canadians believe that the Prime Minister's recent trip had a negative effect on Canada-India

relations.

Here's the first thing that Andrew Scheer said in question period after the budget dropped:

There is nothing partisan about this, it was the Prime Minister's trip that turned

into a disaster.

It was the Prime Minster's office that mishandled the invitation that went out to a convicted,

attempted-murderer.

- You know you stepped in it when you announce a five-year multi-billion dollar deficient,

and the leader of the Conservatives doesn't even mention spending.

But why talk about the budget when you have a picture like this:

That's Jaspal Atwal, a man convicted for the attempted murder of an Indian Cabinet Minister.

A man, invited by the Liberals to a reception in India.

Now this isn't really Justin's fault.

Look - When your goal is to take a picture with literally

every living person: some of them are gonna be attempted murderers.

That's just math!

The political photo op gone wrong has a long, proud history.

For years, people in positions of power have taken pics

that are awkward, controversial,

or just plain sexy.

They've even coined a term for it: Selfie Diplomacy.

Unfortunately, during his trip to India;

Justin's selfie diplomacy turned into a full-blown self-fiasco.

Canadians when less photo ops and more talk!

To be fair, Justin recently took time to explain how he

plans to fight Donald Trump's steel tariffs.

Import more steel, than the Americans, ex-uh,

import-*ahem* sorry- we have a significant trade surplu-

Uh, the Americans have a significant trade surplus with us, on steel...

- On second thought a selfie is fine, Justin!

If an election were held today, Justin Trudeau would lose.

To win, he doesn't have to beat Andrew Scheer or Jagmeet

Singh, he just has to stop acting as his own official

opposition.

The only person that can defeat the Prime Minster,

is Justin Trudeau.

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