HARRY POTTER BEANBOOZLED CHALLENGE / BERTIE BOTT'S EVERY FLAVOR BEANS | Hashtag Zoe
HARRY POTTER BEANBOOZLED CHALLENGE / BERTIE BOTT'S EVERY FLAVOR BEANS | Hashtag Zoe
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y - Duration: 1:34.Yeah
I'm intoxicated
Rhymin at this mic as my mind gets wasted
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Thapat Vadi | थापटवडी | Masvadi | Patvadi - Duration: 4:30.Hello ! Welcome to Marathi Kitchen !!
Todays Recipe is Thapatvadi.
This vadi is made from Besan/Gram flour and is patted by hand so it is called Thapatvadi.
This can be served as a Side dish
When made with curry can also be served as Main dish.
Ingredients required for this recipe are:
1 Cup Gram Flour/ Besan
Cumin Seeds ,Mustard Seeds, Asafoetida, Turmeric
Garlic- Green Chilli Paste
Grated Dried Coconut
Poppy Seeds ,Chopped Coriander
Heat the oil in Pan. Add Mustard Seeds
When Mustard Spatters, add Cumin Seeds, Asafoetida and Garlic-Chilli Paste.
When Garlic is fried add 1/2 tsp Turmeric
For 1 cup Besan, add 2 Cups of Water.
Add salt as per taste.
When Water starts boiling add Besan in small portions and keep on mixing.
Add Besan in small portions to avoid forming lumps. Also keep on whisking continuously.
To avoid formation of lumps You can also mix Besan with water and use here.
But in traditional Recipe Besan is added in Boiling water.
And it tastes good.
Put lid and cook it for 5-7 mins.
When Mixture thickens switch off the flame.
This mixture will look like thick Pithal.
The mixture will get thicker as it cools.
Apply oil to plate.
Pour this mixture
When mixture is warm, apply water to hand, and pat it to form thick vadi
Add roasted Poppy Seeds on top.
Cut Vadi when mixture cools down.
Add Grated Coconut and Coriander on top to serve as Side Dish.
To make Curry or Saar along with Vadi, we require:
One Onion and Tomato, chopped finely
Ginger, Garlic and Coriander , grinded with water to make fine Paste.
Add Water into the same Pan which has remaining mixture. Boil the water.
Heat oil in the Pan. Add Mustard and Cumin Seeds.
Add chopped Onion and cook it well.
Add Ginger-Garlic and Coriander paste.
When oil starts separating add Turmeric and Tomato and Red Chilli Powder.
At last add Boiled Besan Water.
Add water and salt to taste.
Serve curry separately or with Vadi dipped into curry.
Let me know your comments. Subscribe for watching more Videos. Thank You!!
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'Hey Bill Nye, Is Time Real?' #TuesdaysWithBill - Duration: 4:47.Alicia: Do you think time is real?
For example, sometimes an hour can feel very short and sometimes it can feel very long
depending on your perception.
So then is time subjective?
If it's a measurement of something what is it a measurement of?
I'd really like to know your thoughts about time.
Thank you.
Bill Nye: Alicia, that is fantastic.
Notice that in English we don't have any other word for time except time.
It's unique.
It's this wild fourth dimension in nature.
This is one dimension, this is one detention, this is one dimension and time is the fourth
dimension.
And we call it the fourth dimension not just in theoretical physics but in engineering.
I worked on four dimensional auto pilots so you tell where you want to go and what altitude
it is above sea level and then when you want to get there.
Like you can't get there at any time.
We have a whole bunch of other words.
We have appointments.
We have morning, afternoon, evening, noon time.
We have a whole bunch of words describing periods of time, but when it comes to actual
time we just have this one word it's a strange and surprising thing.
So along this line, in my opinion, which as you know is correct, I'm kidding, in my opinion
time is both subjective and objective.
What we do in science and engineering and in life, astronomy, is measure time as carefully
as we can because it's so important to our every day world.
You go to plant crops you want to know when to plant of them.
You want to know when to harvest them.
If you want to have a global positioning system that enables you to determine which side of
the street you're on from your phone you need to take into account both the traditional
passage of time that you might be familiar with watching a clock here on the earth's
surface and the passage of time as it's affected by the speed of the spacecraft and the passage
of time as it's affected by the gravity of the earth itself, both special and general
relativity.
It's astonishing.
So, we work very hard to measure time with all sorts of extraordinary clocks, but there
is no question with our brains, which are wet chemical computers, we lose track of time.
Sometimes it feels short, sometimes it feels long and it's just the nature I think of being
constrained by measuring time with our brains.
This is why we build instruments to measure time outside of ourselves externally.
But it is a great question.
And then the whole idea of science really started with this thing people used to call
natural philosophy.
And when you throw in the word philosophy for me you start asking this question like
can you know anything, let alone what time it is or how long it's been since something
happened or when something will happen in the future or whether or not it will happen
at all, these are philosophical questions.
I feel that you can get yourself pretty spun up in saying to yourself there's no way to
know anything.
Philosophically you can't know anything.
On the other hand, it seems to me we can know a great deal objectively about nature and
that includes time and it's passage.
One last thought Alicia, when I think about my grandfather he had no idea, no understanding
of relativity.
Not because he was a bad person, because no one had discovered it yet.
And so I just wonder what else it is about the nature of time or the nature of what physicists,
astrophysicists like to call space time where you talk about these four dimensions at once
X, Y, Z, and T. I cannot help but wonder there is something else undiscovered about time
and perhaps you and I will be alive, not much more time will have passed before this discovery
is made.
Carry on.
Excellent question.
Thank you.
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COB Dividends Show - February 2017 - Duration: 13:31.(upbeat music)
- Hi everyone and welcome to Dividends,
the show for and about your College of Business.
Our first guest today is Parker Stewart,
and no stranger to the College of Business.
He was a student here, really helped get our
entrepreneurship program off the ground;
but he is here in a different role today.
He is the director of the Veterans Business
Outreach Center, VBOC.
It's a mouthful but he's going to tell us all about it,
and how we're helping Vets, not just in Mississippi.
Parker, good to have you here.
- Thanks, Jeff, I appreciate being here.
- Give us a little background on VBOC,
and tell us about the mission, and then tell us
how you're carrying that mission out.
- Definitely; so the VBOC is a federally funded grant,
we're funded by the Small Business Administration,
and we're all over the country.
There's 20 VBOC's across the country,
and we have a mission
to serve our nation's Veterans
by helping them start businesses.
- Alright, so there are 20 of these
Centers, they are relatively new,
how did Mississippi State get to be a Center;
what makes us qualified to be a Center?
- Mississippi State is prime for entrepreneurship,
and the fact that we've got a solid team of professors
backing the grant that helped to get us this VBOC
here at Mississippi State.
We've got a solid team of people who know
what they're doing, who know how to teach business.
- And I think we are also nationally ranked
as being very Vet
friendly, going all the way back to the days
of Congressman Sonny Montgomery,
who wrote the GI Bill, and just instrumental.
Veterans are in our DNA here at State.
- I would agree; I'm actually a Veteran myself.
Air Force, it helped pay for school.
I'm debt free, and because of the military;
I'm very grateful.
- So how does this work?
What's the mission; how do you carry it out?
So our number one goal is to teach
what's called boost a business,
which is essentially a 50,000 foot level,
how to start a business course for Veterans.
Cuz the fact is that many Veterans,
a large percentage of our small business
owners here in the United States are Veterans,
but many of them don't have that formal business training.
And that's where we come in; we come and we teach
a class on military installations,
it's a two day course, and we teach them
the nuts and bolts of how to start a company.
- So what are some of those things?
I would imagine it would be a, you know, business plan,
P&L statements, you cover marketing, things like that?
- We talk about marketing; the number one key
being, who is your customer, and how do you reach them.
We teach about basic economics behind a business;
we teach the fundamentals of legal structures
and what's gonna be the best legal structure
for your company.
It's really every aspect from a high level
of how to start a business.
- You're actually very uniquely qualified for this
because as you mentioned, you're a Veteran,
so you have instant credibility
when you get in front of these folks.
- Right, right.
- And also you're a serial entrepreneur.
- That's right; yeah.
- So tell us a little bit about your entrepreneur
history at Mississippi State, going back
when you were just a wee little student.
- Well you remember when we first met,
I actually brought you my first business plan,
it was a breathalyzer vending company.
I had the goal of trying to help people get home safely,
with a wall-mounted machine;
I wrote a 30 page plan; I raised some money
and ran it for about two years.
- And you were in several college towns, right?
- Right; so we were all over the state of Mississippi.
We had the rights for the entire state.
I ran the company for about two years,
sold it and have since started
a food business with my parents.
- And the food business, you can go ahead
and give just a shameless plug for your Del-Viejo
salsa and your other spices and sauces; go ahead.
- It never hurts.
So it's Del-Viejo, which is legendarysalsa.com
We have a salsa, a spice blend, a marinade
barbeque sauce, we have a jalapeno honey mustard,
range of products, and it all started
here at Mississippi State.
I had a lot of help through the Entrepreneurship Center,
and I'm very grateful; I couldn't have done it without them.
- And so you actually went to Florida,
right? - Right.
- And you're working on your business,
and then this opportunity came up,
and I guess you saw it as a good fit for you?
- Right; so with my business background,
I graduated Mississippi State from the Business School,
and with entrepreneurial experience
and being a Veteran myself, I wanted to give back,
and it was a great chance to come back
to my hometown; I love Starkville,
and being able to travel around and help
other Veterans start companies
is really fruitful; it's fulfilling.
- Has anything, as you do these sessions
for these Veterans,
anything strike you as,
you know, unusual
or just typical that you're seeing
with these Veterans as you do these sessions?
- So I guess the main thing that we stress
is to talk to your customers; a lot of Veterans,
and I did the same thing with my first company.
I spent a lot of time doing research
in an insulated computer lab and I didn't actually
get out there, and get real world feedback,
and so that's the main thing we try to stress.
- I would think there would be some advantages
that Veterans would have as well
because I've noticed even working with you,
there seems to be this core understanding
of the mission,
of getting it done, and I would think that Veterans,
that would be an advantage for them,
that they would have these skills,
because that's what's taught in the military, right?
- It's the sheer determination, the willpower,
the persistence to achieve and the willingness
to not give up, really suits well for entrepreneurs.
- Well, we appreciate you coming back
to the mother ship here at Mississippi State
and sharing your talents
to help get our Veterans started in business,
and it's a great Center, and we're proud
to have it and proud that you're at the helm.
- I appreciate you saying that, Jeff; it's good to be back.
- We're going to take a short break.
We'll be back with more in just a moment.
- The Entrepreneurship Center exists to give
innovators here at Mississippi State an edge.
Our goal is to provide startups with the resources
and support they need to reach the marketplace
and ultimately achieve success.
- Success for us was growing our company
from two founders, to eight employees.
- Success for me, was turning my personal lifestyle
into a corporate partnership.
- Success for us, is turning academic research,
into applied engineering solutions.
- Success for me, was turning my passion
into a profitable opportunity.
- The success of our entrepreneurs is a team effort.
It takes a strong support infrastructure of people,
to encourage innovation and explore new ventures.
We need business leaders to mentor and guide
these visionaries through the practical challenges,
and do everything we can to give them a shot
at real success.
(upbeat music)
(upbeat music)
(upbeat music)
(upbeat music)
(upbeat music)
(upbeat music)
- Welcome back everyone.
I always love featuring our student entrepreneurs
on Dividends and today,
we're going to introduce you to your mystery date,
Michael Lane.
Hey Michael.
- Hey Jeffrey, it's good to be here.
- You're not just one of our entrepreneurs;
you help us run the show, and we appreciate that.
Let's tell folks a little bit about your background,
engineering student.
- Yep, mechanical engineering.
Started about two years ago in that degree.
- And your home is the great railroad town
of Amory, Mississippi.
- Yep, grew up there, moved there from Dallas
shortly after I was born, so I've been a native
to Mississippi for most of my life.
- And you're not only an entrepreneur,
and we'll take about that, but also you help us
run the Center, and one key part of the
Center is something called the makerspace.
Tell folks what a makerspace is.
- So, makerspaces are do-it-yourself communities
that bring together tools, equipment, training,
for people who don't have access to that stuff.
We allow them to use equipment
to design their own projects, products,
whatever they want, that they wouldn't have access--
- Prototypes.
They can do prototypes. - Yep
- And what I'm saying, it's everything
from the basic metalworking, woodworking,
to pretty sophisticated 3-D printing.
- Yep, we go all the way up to 3-D printing,
C&C machines, laser cutting, all that stuff.
- So this brings us to your business,
I guess as the guy
who sort of oversaw the makerspace,
you saw a need to try to have
something to help you manage it, right?
- Yep; we originally started MakerSync
in order to build a management system for ours,
after participating in eWeek
last year for the Entrepreneurship Center,
I realized I might be able to turn it into a business,
and build that software for all makerspaces.
- So this is an app?
- It's a web-based software, so it can be on your
phone app, web, whatever.
- What does it do; I mean it manages,
you can tell who's in there, what's being used,
what equipment, who has it, who's using it?
- Ya, so it uses integration with hardware
to track real-time usage of equipment,
so you can tell who's turned on a piece of machinery,
whether they're qualified to use it,
and you can also remotely shut 'em off
and turn 'em on.
- And how has this been received?
Where are you in the process?
- So we're in development right now;
we've gotten the first couple of major
aspects of the software up and going,
looking to start really marketing this summer.
- Have you had to pitch this,
or do any of that?
- Yep; I've actually been in a couple of pitch
competitions; I won first place in the conceptual
at eWeek, and I've also pitched it down in Jackson.
- Alright, so you've got a product,
you know it's got some value because
you actually live in that space.
- Mm-hmm
- So how do you get it out there?
How do you market; how do you make money on this;
what's your plan to roll it out?
- So ours will be direct-to-consumer sales.
So I'll use my connections,
that I've gotten through working with makerspaces,
to go directly to these spaces and try to market it.
- How big is the market?
I think a lot of our viewers might be hearing
about makerspaces for the first time
and think, okay, you sell two or three of these.
What's the market really look like?
- So there's probably about,
roughly a thousand maker spaces
in the U.S. right now - Really?
And it's been growing more and more every year.
- Wow, so you actually have some room there for some sales.
- Yes.
- Alright, now is this going to be a full-time gig
for you, or what are your plans
the next two, three, five years?
- My goal is to get MakerSync up and running
and then hopefully one day I can sell it.
- Alright, so they call that an exit strategy
for anyone that starts a business.
So then what's next for Michael Lane;
you're gonna retire with all your millions,
of course give some of that back to the E-Center.
- Of course.
- And then go sip pina coladas by the pool.
- My immediate goal after that would be to start investing.
And then I'll try to start another company.
- Okay; and this will be related to your engineering
background, or what interests you?
- I'm mainly interested in tech fields,
so I'll probably have something to do with that.
- And how has the E-Center, and your experience
at Mississippi State helped prepare you for all that?
- I do a lot about business that I didn't know
before I got involved with our Entrepreneurship Center.
And for a non-business major, that's very important.
- It is.
Well thanks, not only for sharing your story,
but for your contributions to the E-Center,
because you run a piece of that, that's really important
for us, so appreciate it.
Thanks for coming on.
- Thank you.
- Folks, thanks for watching; it's good to have you here
and we'll look for you next time on Dividends.
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HOW SUNSCREEN COULD BE CAUSING SKIN CANCER, NOT THE SUN - Duration: 11:21.HOW SUNSCREEN COULD BE CAUSING SKIN CANCER, NOT THE SUN.
BY ARJUN WALIA.
Summer may be a long way off, but it�s never too early to start thinking about protecting
your skin. For most people, this means covering themselves in sunscreen, which corporate marketing
campaigns encourage at every turn. Yet, while we do indeed need protection to prevent sunburns,
blocking out the sun entirely is not ideal. Rich in vitamin D, it offers a number of other
health benefits, including, oddly enough, cancer prevention. We�ve been made to fear
the sun, and, as a result, adults and children are choosing to drench themselves in a bath
of toxic, hormone-disrupting chemicals.
Science has long shown that what we put on our skin ends up in our bodies, and quickly.
Multiple studies from across the world have examined sunscreen in particular, evaluating
its ingredients and how it penetrates and absorbs into the skin after application. One
study, conducted at the Faculty of Pharmacy at the University of Manitoba, Canada, sought
to develop a method for quantifying common sunscreen agents. Results demonstrated a significant
penetration of all sunscreen agents into the skin, meaning all of these chemicals are entering
multiple tissues within the body.
Conversely, a study published in Environmental Health Perspectives showed a significant drop
in hormone-disrupting chemicals that are commonly found in personal care products after participants
switched to �cleaner� products. These chemicals include oxybenzone, triclosan, parabens,
phthalates, and more. You can read more about that and access the study here. All of these
ingredients are found within most poplar sunscreens.
So, the next question becomes, are the ingredients used to make sunscreen, which are entering
into our bloodstream, something to be concerned about? The science given to us by the corporations
who profit from the sale of sunscreen says no, but I think by now we have established
how trustworthy such corporately-funded �science� is. It wasn�t long ago that Johnson & Johnson,
for example, was found guilty of knowingly putting a cancer-causing baby powder on the
market. You can read more about that here.
This is precisely why we wanted to bring attention to an article published by the Huffington
Post titled �Excuse Me While I Lather My Child In This Toxic Death Cream.� In it,
mother Sarah Kallies shares how exhausted she feels trying to navigate today�s world
and do the best for her children when everything, everywhere, seems to be killing us. For every
purchase she makes for her children, there is science telling her it�s great on the
one hand and toxic on the other, and so she highlights how confusing the consumer marketplace
has become. We are dished a wealth of information that differs from source to source, on a variety
of different topics, making it difficult to make even the simplest of choices without
second-guessing ourselves.
Yet we know the various chemicals found within sunscreens are toxic, and we know that our
skin absorbs whatever we put onto it. Below are a few examples of these chemicals:
Oxybenzone
This could in fact be the most troublesome ingredient found in the majority of popular
sunscreens. Used because it effectively absorbs ultraviolet light, it�s also believed to
cause hormone disruption and cell damage, which could promote cancer.
According to the Environmental Working Group:
Commonly used in sunscreens, the chemical oxybenzone penetrates the skin, gets into
the bloodstream and acts like estrogen in the body. It can trigger allergic reactions.
Data are preliminary, but studies have found a link between higher concentrations of oxybenzone
and health harms. One study has linked oxybenzone to endometriosis in older women; another found
that women with higher levels of oxybenzone during pregnancy had lower birth weight daughters.
There are many other studies out there on this chemical. For example, one study done
by the Department of Clinical and Experimental Endocrinology at the University of Gottingen
in Germany observed regulatory effects on receptor expression for oxybenzone that indicate
endocrine (hormone) disruption.
A study out of the Institute of Pharmacology and Toxicology from the University of Zurich
determined that oxybenzone may also mimic the effects of estrogen in the body and promote
the growth of cancer cells.
Prompted by multiple studies, a study out of the Queensland Cancer Fund Laboratories
at the Queensland Institute of Medical Research in Australia recognized the significance of
systemic absorption of sunscreens. Researchers discovered that oxybenzone inhibited cell
growth and DNA synthesis and retarded cycle progression in the first of the four phases
of the cell cycle. They determined that sunscreen causes mitochondrial stress and changes in
drug uptake in certain cell lines.
A study published in the Journal of Health Science by the National Institute of Health
Sciences in Japan examined UV stabilizers used in food packages as plastic additives.
They found that some UV stabilizers in sunscreen products have estrogenicity in an MCF-7 breast
cancer cell assay as well as an immature rat uterotrophic assay. They tested a total of
11 UV stabilizers. 20 kinds of benzophenones were tested using the same assay to demonstrate
their estrogenic activity.
The list goes on and on.
Retinyl Palmitate (Vitamin A palmitate)
A study conducted by U.S. government scientists suggests that retinyl palmitate, a form of
vitamin A, may speed the development of skin tumors and lesions when applied to the skin
in the presence of sunlight (NTP 2012). �Retinyl palmitate was selected by the Center for Food
Safety and Applied Nutrition for photo- toxicity and photocarcinogenicity testing based on
the increasingly widespread use of this compound in cosmetic retail products for use on sun-exposed
skin,� reads an October 2000 report by the National Toxicology Program.
As Dr. Joseph Merocla explains, this suggests that sunscreen products could actually increase
the speed at which malignant cells develop and spread skin cancer, because they contain
vitamin A and its derivates, retinol, and retinyl palmitate.
Fragrance
Fragrance refers to a host of harmful hormone-disrupting chemicals mentioned earlier, like parabens,
phthalates, and synthetic musks.
Sun Exposure Can Protect You From Cancer
The sun isn�t as bad as it�s marketed to be, however. Corporations are concerned
with profit, not people, and telling us that sun exposure can actually protect against
cancer isn�t going to get us to buy sunscreen. Yet several studies have made this connection,
confirming that the appropriate amount of sun exposure can actually protect us against
skin cancer.
As many of you probably already know, humans require sunlight exposure for vitamin D. Sunburns
are indeed a concern, and there are many studies that link sunburns to melanoma, but due to
a wide range of factors, such as cultural changes and marketing campaigns, our skin
has become less resistant to sun exposure. If you spend a large portion of your time
in the sun, your skin adapts to build a natural immunity. We are naturally built to receive
sunlight, and we have gone backwards in this regard. There are alternative ways to protect
yourself from sunburns. You can buy natural sunscreens without harmful chemicals. Questioning
big name advertisements is crucial to our health in these times of information awareness.
Only 10% of all cancer cases are attributed to all forms of radiation, and UV is a very
small part of that. When we think of skin cancer we automatically want to blame the
sun, but what about other causes of skin cancer that are out there? Arsenic, found in a number
of things we ingest or work around, pesticides, and leather preservatives are all causes for
concern.
Sunscreens are a huge contributor to toxins in the body, being absorbed within seconds
of application. Is it not important to know what you are putting into your body? We now
live in a culture where we fear the sun, which is ironic considering it has created all life
on Earth. It�s important to remember that fear eventually manifests as reality. The
sun has many health benefits, so using natural products will ensure that you receive these
benefits while keeping your skin safe.
Healthier Alternatives
When shopping for sunscreens, be sure to read the labels and avoid buying sunscreens containing
toxic chemicals. They may be tough to find, but a trip to a natural health store can often
do the trick. Look for sunscreens that contain zinc and titanium minerals as opposed to the
active ingredients listed above. Remember, the best sun protection is shade and clothing.
It is not necessary to wear sunscreen every time you are out in the sun. Sunscreen does
NOT allow the body to absorb any vitamin D from sunlight. So if you plan on being outside
for a short period of time, skip the sunscreen and feed your body the vitamin D that will
keep it healthy.
Coconut oil has been shown to provide an SPF of about 8 when it comes to sun protection.
This means that, although it�s protection isn�t very high, it can help. If you were
to apply it often, it would not only offer sun protection, but it would also hydrate
the skin, making it less susceptible to burning. You may also want to try combining natural
sunscreens with coconut oil for protection. To do this, at the beginning of your long
day out in the sun, use natural sunscreen, and after a few hours, try applying coconut
oil to supplement the natural sunscreen and hydrate the skin.
Have you tried using coconut oil as sunscreen before? Or do you use other natural products?
Share your results with the community!
Here�s a short, informative video with some more information and additional options.
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