Thứ Hai, 28 tháng 5, 2018

Waching daily May 29 2018

*[ Still fixing time stamps at the moment. Click back soon for completed English subtitles! ]

Tokyo.

December 10th, 1968.

It was pouring rain.

The bank manager of the Nihon Trust bank was on edge.

Someone had threatened his life and those around him over the past few months.

Just four days prior, a letter (one of recent many) was sent to his personal residence demanding

300 million yen or his house would be blown up with dynamite.

The letter was made up of characters cut out and pasted from movie magazines.

Police were notified; and indeed they kept a close eye on the bank and his home; though,

this did not ease the mind of the bank manager who shared his concerns with his branch employees.

Now of course, this is Japan, and work is work; the show must go on.

With this in mind, the bank manager went on with his duties, sending four of his employees

to the nearby Toshiba factory to make a scheduled drop.

So off they went, taking the company car, but not long after leaving the bank, the four

heard police sirens approaching.

(At that very moment they happened to be next to a prison of all places).

A police officer screeched to a halt in front of the car, and frantically got off his motorcycle

to warn them.

The branch manager's home had just been blown up, people were injured; and some presumably

worse.

Despite police monitoring the locations, the perpetrator was still able to carry out his

threat.

But it wasn't over, additional threats were made.

The bank in particular was now a target and branch employees were at risk, especially

those who had left the bank earlier to carry out bank duties in clearly-marked company

cars.

Their car needed to be searched.

The officer got down underneath to check the car, but before he could do a proper search

an employee started noticing smoke and flames emerging from the vehicle.

Fearing the car was about to explode, the officer desperately tried to roll out of the

way.

Everyone ran as fast as they could to safety, retreating behind the prison walls.

They waited and waited for the explosion.

But there was no explosion.

They looked back…. and realized the company car was gone.

The police officer was gone.

Had he moved the car to safety?

Confused, they called the Nihon Trust bank to find out what was going on.

To their relief, the bank manager answered; he was alive and well.

In fact, everything was fine there; the bank manager's home was never blown up.

As the adrenaline wore off, it finally dawned on them what had happened.

This was the moment the perpetrator had been setting up the past few months.

Disguised as a police officer, he had now gotten away with what was to be the bonus

payments of 523 Toshiba employees; the stolen amount totalled to 300 million yen or 6 million

dollars, the exact amount he had asked for.

On the ground they found various items left behind including a warning flare that the

officer must have ignited while under the car, to mimic dynamite.

A reported 120 pieces of evidence was left behind at the crime scene, which is a lot

and would normally be beneficial, but this was purposely done to mislead the investigation.

This worked.

Half a century later, the case remains unsolved.

Some say this was the greatest heist in Japanese history; there was no loss of life, no blood

spilt; the plan meticulously carried out by a single person; and in the end the money

taken; but there are many ways a bank heist can be great, there are many ways it can be

notable.

Take the case on May 15th, 2016.

At around 5am in the early hours, cash was physically withdrawn from an ATM from a Tokyo

7-Eleven.

The amount was a 100,000 yen (about $880) which was the cash limit.

Now, this doesn't seem too bad; but try repeating this 14,000 times across Japan in

the span of just two hours.

Because that is exactly what happened.

In total, 1.4 billion yen (about 13 million dollars) was taken from ATMs alone; and this

wasn't done electronically.

It was done in person.

Sure, it had to have been some sort of a large coordinated group, but the staggering number

of transactions in a two hour frame made even this seem questionable.

Compared to other notable cases, the largest known recorded number of participants to have

been involved in a single heist, wouldn't have been able to pull this off either; unless

they had super powers.

Involving an even larger team would presumably be unwise, as there'd be too many chefs

in the kitchen.

Now after police completed their painstaking process of checking security footage from

each 7-Eleven store (and yeah it was only 7-Elevens hit), they found their answer.

In this particular case, the more chefs the better.

It wasn't a team of 50, or 100, or even 200.

It was 600 people.

600 people pulling off a sophisticated, highly-coordinated heist using fake credit cards.

Quite the contrast from the single perpetrator of our first heist.

Not surprisingly, people have surmised with this many active participants, there must

have been links to a large crime organization.

But as of today, despite the numbers, no one of note has been caught.

Now here's a quick one.

Kobe.

August 7th, 1994.

540 million yen was stolen from Fukutoku Bank; which is a sizeable amount, but what makes

this story so unique is that 10 days after the heist, the bank (still reeling from the

events) received a note from the robbers.

The note read "Thank you very much for the bonus.

We can now live on this loot for the rest of our lives."

It was a sincere message of gratitude.

Yeah we all know the reputation Japanese people have for being polite but this took it to

another level.

So, the last three cases involved plans being executed perfectly with no loss of life, but

not the case with the next one.

We're going way back.

January 26th, 1948.

Again in Tokyo; a man in his forties walked into a branch of the Imperial Bank, just before

closing time.

16 people were inside including customers and bank workers.

He got everyone's attention and explained he was a government health inspector sent

by the US occupation authorities.

(Remember, this was postwar Tokyo, still under US occupation).

The man stated there was a sudden outbreak of dysentery in the area, and he was to carry

out inoculations.

In postwar Tokyo, the disease was a legitimate threat so no one really doubted him (add to

the fact the man wearing an official government armband).

He gave all 16 people a pill, and a few drops of liquid, which they quickly drank.

Now…

It wasn't long, until they fell, one by one; in agony.

With everyone incapacitated, the so-called health inspector grabbed all the money he

could find, and calmly left.

12 of the 16 people would later be confirmed dead, including a young child.

The solution they drank was a cyanide solution.

This was a ruthless way to go about a heist;

but what made this even more strange was that the man left behind a business card; he left

it at the scene.

The card was marked with the name 'Shigeru Matsui', apparently from the Department

of Disease Prevention; which does make sense since he was pretending to be a health official.

But Shigeru Matsui turned out to be a real person, who actually worked for the Department

of Disease Prevention.

Not surprisingly, upon investigation Matsui was cleared, he was not the robber, he had

several alibis.

But he told police he had exchanged business cards with 593 individuals.

Japanese people have the habit of exchanging business cards with personal details; so this

was helpful, as police now had 593 suspects.

Over time, they were able to whittle down this number to just 8 cards (8 suspects)...

one of which was a man named Sadamichi Hirasawa, a Japanese painter.

When Hirasawa was questioned and asked to produce the card of Shigeru Matsui's which

he should have had; he could not.

He claimed it must have been in his wallet which was stolen the other day.

(He was a victim of pickpocketing).

Of course, police had a feeling they knew exactly where the card was.

When asked to produce an alibi, he could not.

When police looked into his history, they found four previous cases of bank fraud.

When they searched his possession, they found a similar amount of money to that stolen from

the bank (Hirasawa suspiciously refused to divulge how he got the money).

Finally, when his face was shown to eye witnesses, they immediately identified him as the poisoner.

Upon further interrogation, Hirasawa confessed.

He was arrested for the robbery and the murders; and in 1950, he was given the death penalty

(he was sent to death row to await execution by hanging).

Case closed.

Or is it?

Because after the trial, some had doubts whether Sadamichi Hirasawa was indeed the perpetrator.

Everything mentioned was circumstantial.

There was no real conclusive evidence.

In fact, it was revealed his confession was viciously beaten out of him; allegedly tortured;

and it was only two of the eyewitnesses who identified him as the criminal.

Perhaps he was telling the truth.

Perhaps he was really a victim of pickpocketing as he claimed.

The unexplained origin of the money in his possession was also thought by some to be

from his side business of drawing pornographic pictures (revealing this truth to police (and

to the public) would have been detrimental to his reputation as an artist).

There was also no way Hirasawa could have realistically obtained the ingredients for

what turned out to be a military grade cyanide solution used in the robbery.

Interestingly, some have claimed that the true culprit was actually a former member

of the notorious Unit 731; a covert biological and chemical warfare research and development

unit of the Imperial Japanese Army; that undertook lethal human experimentation during wartime.

If so, this would explain the accessibility to the poison.

The Minister of Justice himself doubted Hirasawa's guilt and so never signed the death warrant.

This opinion was shared by successive Ministers of Justice, so the death sentence was never

actually carried out.

And so Hirasawa sat in prison, on death row, for the next 32 years of his life, one of

the longest tenures ever on death row.

And on May 10th, 1987, he caught pneumonia and died in a prison hospital.

Despite the verdict, the case was never truly put to rest, and many people felt that the

true culprit, all those years ago, would have been within grasp if only the focus was on

the right person.

This brutality happened in 1948, but 70 years on, there would emerge a new type of heist.

January 25th, 2018.

Land of the rising cyber-crime.

The Tokyo-based exchange, Coincheck, one of the most prominent virtual currency exchanges

in Asia was to fall victim to the biggest cryptocurrency heist in history.

At 2:57 a.m., using overseas servers, hackers disguising themselves as authorized users,

were able to enter the system.

They remained undetected for the next eight and a half hours, stealing 58 billion yen

worth of the cryptocurrency NEM, which is about $530 million dollars.

Then they were gone.

This incident became an embarrassment to the Japanese government who had been trying to

make Tokyo the global center for cryptocurrency.

Coincheck revealed they failed to implement the required extra layer of security, but

even worse the stolen currency had been kept online in a "hot wallet" rather than in

a much more secure offline storage facility known as a "cold wallet".

This is similar to if a convenience store kept significantly large amounts in a cash

register as opposed to an off-premise bank vault.

Now one of the stranger aspects of the heist is that the stolen virtual funds were able

to be traced online, because transactions for bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies are

all public.

And so the $530 million worth was eventually traced back to 11 specific addresses; but

the identities of those sending and receiving the money unfortunately remained anonymous.

Indeed no one yet has been caught, but the developers of NEM were able to label the 11

addresses with specific warning tags for all to see, they also set up a tracking tool to

automatically reject exchanges involving the stolen funds.

Of course the most frustrating part of this is that it all easily could have been avoided

if Coincheck just added that extra layer of security.

And really it's not just big companies; most people today are too laxed when it comes

to online security using the same password for every account they have.

Now if this is you, congratulations, you have bad habits just like me, but that's okay

because Dashlane makes keeping track of all your passwords ridiculously easy.

It stores all your passwords in one super-secure place then auto-fills them on websites you

go to.

If you have the same password everywhere but are too lazy to go to each individual website

to change your passwords, well all good because you can just click one button in the Dashlane

app, and it does it for you.

Dashlane also has a password generator so you don't have to spend time thinking up

super strong passwords like this one.

By going to dashlane.com/kentobento, you can get started for free; and if you want some

extra special features like syncing your passwords and login details between all your devices

like iOS, Android, Mac and Windows, you can upgrade for 10% off by using the promo code

'kentobento' at checkout.

For more infomation >> This Is The Greatest Bank Heist in Japanese History - Duration: 13:12.

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Vet employee describes moments after woman hands over note: 'My boyfriend is threatening me' - Duration: 2:23.

For more infomation >> Vet employee describes moments after woman hands over note: 'My boyfriend is threatening me' - Duration: 2:23.

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Nearly 60 years later, a Vietnam vet's body is returned home - Duration: 1:54.

For more infomation >> Nearly 60 years later, a Vietnam vet's body is returned home - Duration: 1:54.

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Life is Beautiful - Duration: 2:24.

I am Catherine.

I love life.

Life is beautiful.

Soak in all the life that you can while you're here on this beautiful earth.

Learn all that you can.

Use everything you do as a learning experience.

Knowledge is something so valuable.

Blue.

The color of the sky.

The color of the ocean.

Pink.

The color of the cherry blossoms.

April.

New life.

The leaves return on the trees and whisper through the night.

Music.

The way it flows and fits together like a puzzle.

The ability it has to take you to a new place.

Adventures.

Going somewhere you've never gone before.

Exploring your own town.

Or going somewhere far away.

Taking a walk through the forest.

The shades of green.

The fresh smells.

The pines that tower high above you.

Like a skyscraper.

The glassy exterior reflects the clouds.

This is home.

This is me.

For more infomation >> Life is Beautiful - Duration: 2:24.

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Wat is het geheim om vet te verbranden? - Duration: 11:01.

For more infomation >> Wat is het geheim om vet te verbranden? - Duration: 11:01.

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England's batting: Why is it so bad and what can they do about it? - Duration: 12:49.

England's batting: Why is it so bad and what can they do about it?

Jonny Bairstow was one of three England batsmen who were bowled on the first day of the international summer. The statistics dont lie.

England have not won any of their past eight Tests and the nine-wicket defeat by Pakistan at Lords was the first time they had lost in May since 1921. They cannot blame luck or the conditions.

They won the toss and the greenish pitch was ideal for Englands excellent seam and swing attack, although for some reason Joe Root elected to give Pakistan the first bowl on it under classic overcast skies.

But that was not the reason England were so heavily beaten. They were utterly outplayed in all departments by a Pakistan side featuring only four players who had previous experience of a Test in England.

Roots team were defeated - as they have been 13 times in the past 22 Tests - because they cannot bat.

In that time they have been dismissed 24 times for less than 300, the bare minimum for a total in five-day cricket. Why is the batting so bad and how can they fix it?.

What exactly is the problem?. There is no permanence about England batsmen. Apart from Alastair Cook, no-one is prepared to knuckle down and grind out runs in an unattractive but effective way.

When I told Cook he looked good making 70 in Englands first innings, he regarded it almost as a criticism. He does not want to be pleasing on the eye; he wants to make monumental scores.

Cook is the only batsmen happy with a low-risk strategy. He chips away at the bowling in small chunks rather trying to take great whopping slices off it.

He makes runs because he knows it his duty to do so. He is not out there for fun.

Most modern English batsmen instinctively like to dominate - this is what they have been conditioned to do. It is more enjoyable and more entertaining, but it also much riskier.

England have given debuts to 12 batsmen since 2014. Their combined average is 26. Contributions like that are not going to win Test matches. Where have the hundreds gone?.

It is ironic that the ECBs shiny new tournament is called the Hundred because it is individual hundreds that England are lacking.

England managed only three centuries in last winters five-match Ashes series. The Australians made 10. England scored only five in seven Tests against South Africa and West Indies last summer.

The trend is evident at county level too: no batsman has scored 10 hundreds in a season - or 2,000 runs - since Mark Ramprakash in 2007.

Cook, Englands all-time leading run-scorer, has compiled 104 fifties and 61 hundreds in first-class cricket, an impression conversion rate of 59%.

However, of his top-order colleagues in the first Test, Mark Stonemans conversion rate is 42%, Dawid Malan 41%, Jonny Bairstow 40% and Ben Stokes 44%. Even Joe Roots, Englands best batsman, is only at 40%. It is a problem with technique?.

The current generation of batsmen, many of whom are reared on limited-overs cricket, like to go at the ball without properly moving their feet towards it.

They will try to drive balls that are not half-volleys, backing their eye - and the non-swinging white ball - to hit it cleanly.

That is not so easy against high-class international bowlers armed with the red Duke ball, which can move prodigiously in the air and off the pitch.

In the last Test for example, Jonny Bairstow was bowled in both innings. Each time the ball moved late in the air.

But if he had been playing defensively rather than attempting a forced shot, he would have had more chance of survival.

The one-day generation have developed lazy habits. They rarely get properly forward or back with their feet, adopting what is known in the trade as a half-cock position. This makes them more susceptible to the fullish delivery that seams or swings late.

Mark Stoneman, who made four and nine at Lords, has been dropped for the second Test. The side-on image of Stoneman being bowled in Englands first innings illustrates the point.

His weight is not fully forward, his right knee is straight rather than bent and he is pushing out in front - leaving a gap between bat and pad which the ball sneaked through.

Techniques like this are fallible to skilful full-length bowling from craftsmen who are able to make the ball deviate off the seam. South Africas Vernon Philander exploited this flaw last year and Pakistans Mohammed Abbas is the same type of bowler.

What else are England doing wrong?.

The deeper issue is a mental one. Dogged occupation of the crease, eschewing high-risk shots, purely staying in when the bowling is very challenging or the conditions awkward - these are not skills ingrained in English players.

Roots Test hundreds usually last four hours, Cooks typically take six. But watch the England players practise in the nets before a game and it will not be long before they attempt attacking shots.

Batsmen generally bat for 30 minutes, facing the England pace attack or the local academy seamers or spinners.

There will be the odd 15-minute session when they try to bat roughly at the tempo of a Test, but the net environment is not suitable to rehearse lengthy periods of abstinence.

Coach Trevor Bayliss, who said after the first Test that you almost throw your hands up sometimes at Englands repeated collapses, takes a back seat during practice, standing at the back observing.

Occasionally his assistants Mark Ramprakash or Paul Farbrace will make a comment to a player, but they keep them to a minimum.

Some players are cross when they are dismissed in the nets - Root, for example - but others do not seem to mind so much.

England captain Joe Root bats in the nets at Headingley, the venue for the second Test. One-day cricket and the flat-pack mentality.

Chopping and changing formats regularly during the season also makes it hard for batsmen to acquire the necessary concentration levels required for Test cricket.

The recalled Keaton Jennings comes in for the second Test on the back of five 50-over matches for Lancashire. Despite making two championship centuries this season, he will not have played a four-day innings for almost three weeks.

You get out of the habit of building an innings brick by brick. You want to put the whole edifice up in one go. It is what you might call the flat-pack mentality.

Large chunks of the season are devoted to 50-over and 20-over cricket. They require a more positive mindset and technique is less important because the white ball does not swing or deviate as much as the red.

A quick 40 can really help the team in limited-overs matches, but in Test and championship cricket that is less valuable.

What can England do to fix the problem?.

It is possible to adapt your method. Against Abbas, who bowls at only 80mph but took eight wickets in the first Test, batsmen could bat out of their crease, or ensure they take a big stride to smother the movement.

Ben Stokes did this successfully against Philander last summer. Vitally, England must try something at Headingley. It is not good enough to say that is the way I play.

They have to bat smarter. They have to think more clearly about how the bowler is trying to get him out and make it a number one priority to keep their wicket intact.

As much as they fancy driving the fourth ball they face to the boundary, they should resist it.

Expansive driving should be banned until after lunch unless its a very full (and not wide) half-volley. Pushes for two or three should suffice until the ball is older and less likely to swing.

Any batsman bowled between bat and pad should be made to do community service.

And what about county level? Truer pitches, more four-day cricket in mid-summer and bonus points for totals of 500 rather than 400 should help batsmen learn how to bat long. The social media generation.

We all know peoples concentration spans are shorter than they used to be. Batsmen are just not willing to endure slow, almost soporific periods of play when nothing happens. They constantly want to make a statement.

It is the social media generation, constantly flicking through the different platforms on their phone for instant gratification. And you know the only England player not on social media? Alastair Cook.

For more infomation >> England's batting: Why is it so bad and what can they do about it? - Duration: 12:49.

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This Groundbreaking Home Cost $10,000 – And The Way It Was Created Is Insane - Duration: 8:12.

A staggering 1 billion people and the world don't have access to adequate shelter. It's hard to imagine

just how awful that must be now though two companies have teamed up in an attempt to reverse this terrible statistic and

The way they're doing it is going to blow your mind

You

The time it takes to build a house can vary greatly

depending on the materials design and other factors a

construction survey conducted by the Census Bureau in

2016 suggested that the average time to erect a family home is about six months

The one you're looking at right now talk less than a single day

You are probably wondering how the truth behind the incredible speed of the build comes down to two things

or more specifically two companies

One is called daikon the other news story and no the home you see on your screen is not a miniature house

the home actually covers some

650 square feet and is made out of cement

However, it's not just the pace at which the dwelling is put up. That's incredible

You see the house wasn't just quick to build, but it was also relatively

inexpensive all told the making of this building costs somewhere in the region of

$10,000 and ikon the company behind it is hoping to one day get costs down as low as

$4,000, but what's the catch and where does new story come into the narrative?

You've almost certainly heard of 3d printers. Well, this is a house that's been created by one

I'll be it a much bigger one than the printers you've seen before

it's called the Vulcan and in March 2018 at

SXSW in Texas had unveiled the first module of icons new kind of house

But the story doesn't stop there not by a long shot

That's because the plan isn't to stop at one 3d printed house

Nope icon and new story intent to print an entire community

Indeed over the next year

the two companies will build around 100 houses in El Salvador and

While Ikon might be providing the equipment its new story that's providing the drive to create the more affordable housing

New story had been building housing for people affected by the earthquake in Haiti in 2010 as well as working in

Salvadore, but while immersed in their estimable endeavors the company's CEO Bret Hagler explained to Fast Company

It came across a problem there were too many people needing too many houses and that got the team at new story thinking

We thought what would it look like to have more of an exponential breakthrough for such a big challenge?

Explained Hagler to this end new story came up with three points that realized needed addressing

The price of building houses the speed at which it could put them up and the quality of the finished article

Eventually after seven months of analysis and discussion new story settled on 3d printing

Although it was by no means an easy decision

we were very skeptical of the viability of this Hagler said it took doing a lot of

researching a lot of due diligence to figure out that it could actually solve those three design questions and

While other startups in the same vein are focusing on the higher end of society new story looked at things in a totally different way

We thought okay, what if the bottom billion weren't the last ones to get this but the first ones to get this?

Hagler explained it made sense for us to try to leapfrog what's happening domestically because our homes are so simple

However, just because the homes are simple that doesn't mean they're not flexible

Indeed because they're printed the possibilities are manifold

for example in the future a few tweaks to the printers software will enable the Vulcan to alter the design of each house in

This way the needs of different families could be accommodated and there are other things

too that make the plan new story and icon have come up with so effective for

One thing the materials that the printing process uses are incredibly easy to come by

The Vulcan works with a mortar that can be sourced pretty much anywhere in the world and the concrete

Foundations of the houses are identical to the ones new story was using before the 3d printing brain wave struck

Jason Ballard

One of the cofounders of icon explained too fast company just why that was so important

The big difference between a developed world and developing world

context as you have a much more limited set of materials to work with he said

you want to restrict your material mix to things that you could find very ubiquitously around the globe and

You also want to avoid expensive materials the Vulcan also fits on a truck

Which means it's easy to move around and can be transported to rural areas where people need help

It's strong as well. Meaning it should be able to withstand any harsh conditions that might be thrown in its direction

But how does it actually work?

Well, the Vulcan is mounted on Rails it moves back and forth

Delivering the concrete mix in a series of different layers, which make up the walls and floor of the building

The only part of the house that isn't printed is the roof. This is added once the four room

One-story house is completed

Moreover although each dwelling is comparatively cheap to produce. It's not just a cost issue that these houses solve

Ballard explained that the resulting house is actually incredibly hard-wearing

There are fundamental problems with conventional stick building that 3d printing solves besides affordability

He said you get a high thermal mass thermal envelope which makes it far more energy efficient

It's far more resilient and that meets the third criterion new story was looking at

the plan now with the first of the printed houses is to use it as an office in order to test its viability the

House has been erected just behind the icon offices in Austin TX

We are going to install air quality monitors

Ballard explained to the verge citing a need to answer his question. How does it look and how does it smell?

But sustainable well-built and low cost housing for those who need it isn't. The only thing that icon is aiming for

Ballard explained that in the future

There's a good chance that similar technology to that powering de volcán could be used an awful lot further from home

in fact

It's somewhat fitting that the printer shares a name with an alien race from Star Trek

One of the big challenges is how are we going to create habitats in space?

Ballard told The Verge you're not going to open a 2x4 and open screws

It's one of the more promising potential habitat technologies in other words one day

We might be 3d printing new homes on some of the other planets and moons in the solar system

For a new story though. The immediate future is looking a little more terrestrial

Once the community in El Salvador has been completed next year

It plans to spread the technology far and wide not just to other nonprofit organizations

But to government's also hopefully that will go some of the way to putting roofs over the heads of the people who really need them

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