Chủ Nhật, 2 tháng 9, 2018

Waching daily Sep 2 2018

Arsenal took the lead early at the Cardiff City Stadium,

with Shkodran Mustafi powerfully heading home.

But the hosts were creating a number of chances and finally took one just before half time

to score their first goal of the season.

Xhaka's poor cross-field pass was cut out and Victor Camarasa turned and finished well

at the back post from a Joe Bennett cross.

Former Cardiff striker Craig Bellamy was impressed with Neil Warnock's side and the problems

they caused the Gunners.

And he says they more than deserved the equaliser after some lapse play from Arsenal.

"Yeah, yeah I do (think it was deserved)," Bellamy said on Sky Sports.

"Cardiff have had a good few chances.

A lot of it is Arsenal's doing and this is no different.

"Xhaka gives the ball away in his own half, Cardiff pounce on it.

"One thing I like about Cardiff is, Junior Hoilett when he plays that has four people

in the box there, go and attack the ball.

"Yes, a little bit of luck with the first touch, but there's certainly no luck with

the second touch.

Good finish.

"But like I said, numbers getting in the box as well.

That's something Cardiff haven't had over the last three games.

"They've had a lot of encouragement going to press Arsenal from the start.

"When Arsenal are in possession, not a problem, drop deep.

"But when Arsenal are looking to play, especially from dead balls, especially from goal kicks,

Cardiff are looking to punce on them, looking to force mistakes.

"They've had a little bit of joy off that."

Arsenal went on to win the game 3-2, with second-half goals from Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang

and Alexandre Lacazette giving them victory.

For more infomation >> Arsenal news : Granit Xhaka singled out for criticism on Sky Sports during Cardiff clash | AFC News - Duration: 2:19.

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Burial To Be Held For Sen. McCain - Duration: 1:04.

For more infomation >> Burial To Be Held For Sen. McCain - Duration: 1:04.

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New Music For Gamers [No Copyright] (RetroVision - Hope) 🎮 - Duration: 3:00.

For more infomation >> New Music For Gamers [No Copyright] (RetroVision - Hope) 🎮 - Duration: 3:00.

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Kristin Gets A Bikini Wax For The First Time • Ladylike - Duration: 9:06.

- Oh no, we're doing the inside of the book jacket.

- Today we will be giving Kristin

and her lovely friends Brazilian waxes.

- [Amanda] One, two, three.

(wax strip snaps)

(logo whooshes)

- So the other day, it was revealed on group chat, by me,

that I have never gotten a bikini wax before.

But I am very scared, and also very sweaty,

so we decided that we were gonna bring in my friend Cesca.

- Hi, Cesca. - Hi.

- Who loves bikini waxes.

- That is not a lie.

- And we also decided to bring in my friend, Devin,

who doesn't like bikini waxes,

but who is a good friend and who has volunteered

to be here to hold my hand,

and also, spiritually, my vagina area.

- I say yes to too many things.

- I like it because it feels so smooth after.

The alternative is shaving and it's such an ordeal,

for what, 12 hours of gratification,

and then you get stubble.

- You only get 12 hours?

- Yeah, and then it's like stubbly already,

and it's like, well what's the point?

- It's like your vulva is Cinderella.

(Cesca laughing)

- It's like riding a roller coaster.

It's like scary, you scream, but then it's fine.

It's like the thrill of waxing

and then you get, like a reward.

You don't get that in roller coaster rides.

- I used to wax.

I would be like, yeah,

I'll spend $50 on this painful experience.

And then I discovered that I have baby fine hair.

And shaving for me, is my technique.

Why I'm here, I don't know.

Imagine lava on your vagina.

And then imagine God just putting, like, paper towels

and then just, kah, kah, kah!

It's a lot you guys.

I'm not sure you know.

- Is this in real life,

or is this like a movie that you watch?

(beep)

- I wanted to get waxed because some people do love it,

and some people absolutely despise it,

and I've never experienced it.

I don't do anything.

And like, for me, it's because I don't

really feel like it's necessary.

I will do like a little bit of shaving on the sides.

I'll clean up the edges of the plate

before I give it to the guests.

All grooming is valid.

It's just that sometimes, it's time for a new experience.

With friends.

- Have you ever experienced like your eyes

just welling up with tears?

- I mean, when I was like 13, I did that a lot.

- Get ready.

- I'm optimistic.

How bad could this possibly be?

People do it all the time.

- We have to be realistic.

It's a little painful.

- How bad can that be?

(happy piano music)

- My name is Amanda.

I've been doing this for about ten years.

- I'm Andrea Galdamez.

I have been an esthetician for three years.

- My name is Lena Terrell.

I've been an esthetician for three years

and me and my mom do mobile beauty around Los Angeles.

- Hello. - Hi!

- Y'all are gonna be waxing us, in mere moments.

Does this hurt a lot? - Yes.

- Okay, I did not ask you.

- It's gonna be very uncomfortable.

- There's a little bit of pain associated, for sure.

- They're not lying, I'm not lying.

- Okay, okay.

Another thing I wanted to ask,

because of how we scheduled this,

I am gonna start my period any second now.

Is that gonna impact how much pain I'm in?

- So you're gonna be more sensitive than normal.

Our hair system is ruled by the hormones.

Some people say less or more,

so, it just depends on what day.

- So would you time it, like, with your cycle?

- I always recommend to get waxed

a couple of days after it, 'cause that's when it's easiest.

- Great timing, we did it.

- I haven't gotten waxed in, like, maybe four years.

Has anything changed in the waxing community,

technology wise?

- Did you do a hard wax or a soft wax?

- The ones with the strip.

- Oh.

- That's what I'm doing.

- Me and Andrea, we don't use the strip, but Amanda does.

- Just to be clear, one wax is not better than the other,

it's also just kinda what the artist,

or esthetician, just specializes in.

Now, what's changed, definitely,

is preventative care for ingrowns.

There's a lot more access to products

that really help with that,

'cause that is probably the number one reason.

I would say people stop waxing,

'cause it kinda defeats the purpose

of getting the wax, when you get all these gross ingrowns.

- So how does this work?

- So you're gonna get on the table

and I'm gonna have you hike your dress up,

and I'm gonna apply a cleanser first,

and then I'm gonna condition your skin,

and then we're gonna apply the first strip of wax.

- Okay, getting worse.

- Yeah, so we're gonna start in one area

and we're just gonna keep applying the strips

until it's all gone.

And then afterwards, I use a soothing lotion

that feels really good, that cools it down.

Hopefully we'll be done really soon.

- How long does it take?

- Usually I can get it in 10 to 15 minutes.

- So it's just gonna be like a bad episode

of television, basically.

- You might get a little sweaty,

but baby powder soaks it right up.

- Let's rip out some hair down there.

(whimsical bells chiming)

- Is it time?

- Yes, it's time. - Oh, my god.

- The setup, it makes it look like I'm giving birth to pain.

Obviously, we're not gonna have our party makers

on camera, so we have created these

little, pre-censor boxes.

So that no one will ever see.

- I feel like we should just go around

and just talk about what we named our vaginas.

- [Kristin] We could, but--

- I'll start.

My vagina's name is Lois Lane.

- Oh.

- Mm-hmm, mm-hmm.

I named her in college.

- I'm gonna start cleansing.

- Okay Kristin, so I'm gonna have you

hug both of your knees into your chest.

- So much is happening right now, oh my god.

- [Amanda] Conditioning your skin.

- Oh wow, that cleansing was fast.

- [Amanda] I'm gonna do one area at a time.

- Okay, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, everyone,

we haven't talked about whether or not

we're getting it all off or just a strip?

I'm getting the least painful option.

So, we're just doing the sides and the top.

- I think the goal is to do a full Brazilian,

but we're gonna start with the sides and the top,

and we're gonna see how far we get

before I throw in the towel.

- I'm just getting as much of it off as possible

until we end this shoot.

- The strip is going on, the strip is going on.

It's on.

- Should we hold hands?

- No, I'm good.

(all laughing)

Here you go.

- [All] Yay.

- [Devin] Okay.

Holy shit, I already feel it.

- [Amanda] One, two, three.

(Kristin groaning) - Ow!

- No, we're doing the inside of the book jacket.

Oh no, I'm a little worried about this part.

- [Estheticians] One, two, three.

- Ah!

- I'm okay.

This part is a little bit more painful, right?

Oh!

Oh!

(plucky keyboard music)

- Me and Cesca are gonna finish out our Brazilians.

What percentage would you say I've done?

- I'd say you're about 15%.

- Okay, so we're gonna do a speed run.

'Cause that sure felt like more than 15%.

Apparently, it's going to take a whole calendar year

to clean out the forest.

So my legs are butterflied out right now.

So we're doing like the valley

between thigh county and lady bit municipal center.

Honestly, it's like getting just

a really, really big eyebrow wax,

just a massive, inconveniently placed eyebrow.

We're moving into, ow!

(Kristin laughing)

- If I laugh, it's not a scream.

Now we're doing the other valley.

- No, we did the un (screams) canny valley.

Cesca, how are you doing over there?

- I'm good, I'm just retreating into my quiet space.

Basically, I've just been looking and seeing,

'cause there are painful parts of the lady pocket.

Oh, there you go.

- [Lena] Alright love, you're done.

- I'm done. - You're done?

- Oh, look friend, I haven't seen you in awhile.

- I feel like every person is different, obviously,

but I feel like every person I've talked to

is like, this is horrible.

And you will regret every second, you idiot!

I was like, okay, fun advice, thanks everyone.

But actually, like, this was fine.

- I think they're just also really good.

- Yeah it could be that y'all are just really good.

- Did you go full Brazilian?

- I just took everything off.

- Wow!

- Well, the thing is, I was doing so well,

it was just kinda like I might as well get the extra credit.

- [Amanda] Okay, I'm gonna have you hug your knees

in again, one more time, just some finishing touches.

- Oh.

Oh, and now, this, oh, yep, yep.

Oh, it wasn't bad.

- I'm so proud of you.

- Honestly like, sometimes you just gotta try new things.

- Okay, I'm gonna put some soothing lotion on.

- [Kristin] Oh, we're done?

- Yep, we're done.

- Yay! - Yay!

I'm done, I did it!

We did it.

(all cheering)

We did it, oh my gosh!

Y'all, thank you so much.

But like I was pleasantly surprised at how easy that was.

You guys were really good. - Really good hands.

- I mean, I know it was a long journey,

but I appreciate y'all got through it.

I feel pretty good.

- I feel clean, feel fresh.

- Kristin getting waxed for the first time.

Lady tested,

- [All] Lady removed!

(upbeat music)

- Hey, Unsolved is on a new channel.

And now your part.

- [Together] Subscribe here.

- That was my part.

(logo whooshes)

For more infomation >> Kristin Gets A Bikini Wax For The First Time • Ladylike - Duration: 9:06.

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Aged Dependent Relative Visa Subclass 114 For Australia - Duration: 8:14.

For more infomation >> Aged Dependent Relative Visa Subclass 114 For Australia - Duration: 8:14.

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Jesus Our Perfect Hope by Charles Stanley - Available for Preorder - Duration: 1:04.

Life can be weary.

Some of us are losing hope.

Some of us are burdened, and at times, it feels like our faith is sinking.

No matter where we are.

Who we are.

Or what we are experiencing.

Jesus is always our perfect hope.

Introducing 'Jesus, Our Perfect Hope' a new devotional from Dr. Charles Stanley.

For more infomation >> Jesus Our Perfect Hope by Charles Stanley - Available for Preorder - Duration: 1:04.

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Part 7 • Karen Armstrong Interview on Her Vision for the Future - Duration: 1:43.

SB: You've spoken about your vision for compassion, could you name a specific objective, perhaps

you see the world can achieve let's say in 25 years?

Then what insights and suggestions would you offer that might address and achieve this

vision, within the time frame of 25 years?

Dr. Armstrong: Well, what I suppose I'd like to see happening would be a "trans-world

tunnel of people" who come together periodically which is quite easy to do now with modern

electronics and things, and come together and who will create a body of sages, if you

like.

Wise people of all religious traditions, or philosophical traditions, or secular traditions.

People who think deeply and who will gain respect because they would be people of eminence,

that's Nobel Prize winners, but who come together instead of just going off from Stockholm back

home but linking up and will address some of the burning issues of the time.

Giving an ethical voice that will make people think, re-evaluate, and feel that they're

not perhaps awaken, in more ordinary funk, a sense that they are not alone in their feelings

that something must be done.

SB: You've spoken about your vision for compassion, could you name a specific objective, perhaps

you see the world can achieve let's say in 25 years?

Then what insights and suggestions would you offer that might address and achieve this

vision, within the time frame of 25 years?

Dr. Armstrong: Well, what I suppose I'd like to see happening would be a "trans-world

tunnel of people" who come together periodically which is quite easy to do now with modern

electronics and things, and come together and who will create a body of sages, if you

like.

Wise people of all religious traditions, or philosophical traditions, or secular traditions.

People who think deeply and who will gain respect because they would be people of eminence,

that's Nobel Prize winners, but who come together instead of just going off from Stockholm back

home but linking up and will address some of the burning issues of the time.

Giving an ethical voice that will make people think, re-evaluate, and feel that they're

not perhaps awaken, in more ordinary funk, a sense that they are not alone in their feelings

that something must be done.

For more infomation >> Part 7 • Karen Armstrong Interview on Her Vision for the Future - Duration: 1:43.

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Ex-Muslims banned from Houston Hilton Starbucks for Atheist shirts - Duration: 3:27.

We're going to Starbucks. Starbucks? Yeah!

Sir, Is it just because we're wearing these shirts?

You're not allowed on the property.

Why? Why are we not allowed?

Cuz you're not allowed, you've got shirts right now

There's a protest going on. Yeah? You can if you take your shirts off whatever

Why? Does my shirt offend you?

This is private property! You're being told you're on our property!

Beyond this line here, you can go ahead and leave.

So it's your official statement representing the Hilton that if my shirt offends you I can't be here.

I'm making my statement right now

you are not allowed on the property right now because you're part of the protest

Because of wearing my shirt? If I take my shirt off

So many people here are part of the protest? part of the convention

If you don't have your shirts , wouldn't start any type of issue, we would have no problem

If you take off your shirt we can go?

Why would my shirt start an issue? It just says I'm an ex-Muslim.

If she takes off her shirt, can we go inside?

This is outside, this is public property

It's not, you are not on public property.

Now we can record?

You're still on our property.

Are we still on your property? Yes you are!

What about now? When are we off your property?

Make sure , black line, you are behind the line

As long as you are on the other side of the line

so we can be, you can be on the other side of the line

He's not wearing a shirt, can he go in? No! I can't go in?

Because he's part of the protest, we're not allowing it.

Please stop recording. no no no we can't

I'm asking you to please stop recording

We are going to record, we are outside

We are outside the line , we can record because we're not on private property

because we're not on private property

look this is your line right we can

continue recording you can do what you

want to do I know what you come on my

property will be arrested for

trespassing because you've been warned

not to trespass on our property at this

point. we're not part of the protests. it doesn't matter

At this point you've been told we don't want you on our property

All right, we just wanted to make sure we have that on the record.

Just because we represent ex-Muslims??

Is that your statement?

Sir is it your statement that we can't be on your property because my shirt says i'm an ex-Muslim

okay. Your statement is that you will arrest me if I cross this line while wearing this shirt?

Is that correct? Sir? Sir?

I've advised you all I'm going to tell you at this point okay

So, If I cross this line you will arrest me because I have a shirt that says I'm an ex-Muslim.

Because I've already warned you not to come on our property!

This is the Hilton across the street

from the convention they have no actual

association when it's not besides the

fact that a lot of the visitors or

people that are coming to the convention

are staying there I'm not sure what

happened that it has been decided that

anyone wearing a shirt that says I'm an

ex-muslim it's not allowed on the

property

we've been advised that we will be

arrested if we cross the line and walk

For more infomation >> Ex-Muslims banned from Houston Hilton Starbucks for Atheist shirts - Duration: 3:27.

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KETOGENIC DIET for ADVANCED 🥑 [2018] - Duration: 11:36.

For more infomation >> KETOGENIC DIET for ADVANCED 🥑 [2018] - Duration: 11:36.

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Arsenal news: Granit Xhaka singled out for criticism on Sky Sports during Cardiff clash - Duration: 2:28.

 Arsenal took the lead early at the Cardiff City Stadium, with Shkodran Mustafi powerfully heading home

 But the hosts were creating a number of chances and finally took one just before half time to score their first goal of the season

 Xhaka's poor cross-field pass was cut out and Victor Camarasa turned and finished well at the back post from a Joe Bennett cross

 Former Cardiff striker Craig Bellamy was impressed with Neil Warnock's side and the problems they caused the Gunners

 And he says they more than deserved the equaliser after some lapse play from Arsenal

 "Yeah, yeah I do (think it was deserved)," Bellamy said on Sky Sports. "Cardiff have had a good few chances

A lot of it is Arsenal's doing and this is no different. "Xhaka gives the ball away in his own half, Cardiff pounce on it

 "One thing I like about Cardiff is, Junior Hoilett when he plays that has four people in the box there, go and attack the ball

 "Yes, a little bit of luck with the first touch, but there's certainly no luck with the second touch

Good finish. "But like I said, numbers getting in the box as well. That's something Cardiff haven't had over the last three games

 "They've had a lot of encouragement going to press Arsenal from the start. "When Arsenal are in possession, not a problem, drop deep

 "But when Arsenal are looking to play, especially from dead balls, especially from goal kicks, Cardiff are looking to punce on them, looking to force mistakes

 "They've had a little bit of joy off that." Arsenal went on to win the game 3-2, with second-half goals from Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang and Alexandre Lacazette giving them victory

For more infomation >> Arsenal news: Granit Xhaka singled out for criticism on Sky Sports during Cardiff clash - Duration: 2:28.

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Full • Karen Armstrong Interview on the State of Our World Today For The.Ismaili - Duration: 50:20.

Sahil Badruddin: The Golden Rule to treat others as we wish to be treated ourselves,

you've often mentioned is the foundation of the virtue of compassion.

Dr. Karen Armstrong: Yes.

SB: While easier said than done, it's actually a very difficult commitment.

In a way— Dr. Armstrong: It is.

SB: —it requires a constant daily struggle and a great deal of humility.

Could you speak about the Golden Rule, compassion, and the power they have to create a peaceful

global community?

Dr. Armstrong: I came to the Golden Rule, by my study and by my research.

I found that every single religious tradition has formulated that Golden Rule -- and said

that it is that -- and not a particular doctrine, that is the fundamental teaching of their

tradition.

The first person to emphasize this in a way that was actually written down was Confucius,

who was writing about some 500 years before the Common Era.

Right back at the very beginnings of civilization in ancient Egypt, the Golden Rule was of the essence

of that morality, because it was the only way to run a decent society.

It requires of you…it's formulated in various ways, some people put it in the positive way,

as you did yourself just now, always treat others as you'd like to be treated yourself.

Others put the negative view forward, never impose on others, said Confucius, what you

yourself do not desire.

It requires of you that you look into your own heart, discover what gives you pain, and

then refuse under any circumstance whatsoever to inflict that pain on anybody else.

The people who devised this wonderful saying, and who came to this conclusion, they were

not living in loving, peaceful societies, but they were living in violent times, like

our own, where aggression and warfare had seemed to reach an unprecedented level.

They were doing this in a sense of urgency, and this was not just something for your private

life, it was also essential for politics, they said.

As one Chinese sage put it, if you honor the state as you honor yourself, you would not

invade that state, because you'd know you would not wish to be invaded yourself.

It now seems to me that, unless now we implement the Golden Rule globally, so that we ensure

that all people whoever they are, are treated as we would wish to be treated ourselves,

the world is simply not going to be a viable place.

All these, every single one of them, all these sages insisted that you cannot confine this

benevolence to your own group.

You must have, what one Chinese sage calls Yàn Aí -- concern for everybody.

Love the stranger, says the Jewish Bible.

Love your enemy, said Jesus.

Frankly now, unless we treat our enemies with the practical help of the sort and with the

respect that we would wish to have for ourselves, really, we'll be in a very dangerous situation.

If we'd done this more assiduously in the past, we wouldn't be having so many terrible

problems today.

SB: What, in your opinion, are the top two or three challenges you feel individuals face

today that actually undermine their ability to make compassion a priority in their daily

lives?

Dr. Armstrong: Well, number one is ego.

I mean basically, because what this does, it means that every day you can't put yourself

in the center of the picture.

You have, in a sense, to dethrone yourself and put yourself in the position of somebody

else.

Now most people, frankly, don't want to do that.

We are programmed to be pretty selfish in order to survive.

Our species wouldn't have survived if we all sat down being without aggression.

We survived as a species by terrible aggression.

Our civilization depends upon violence and aggression.

No state, however peace loving it says it claims to be, can afford to disband its army.

Our state is founded on force, and all states, however lofty their ideals, have always been

unjust, there have always been inequitable.

The challenge is its ego, and of course compassion demands, as I say, that you dethrone yourself

from the center of your world, put another person there, but you do it as Confucius said

- not just when you feel like it but all day and every day.

That's why also it's not just a political practice but a spiritual practice, too, because

what holds us back from what is called enlightenment, or holiness, or deification, or whatever you

wish to call it, is selfishness, preoccupation with ourselves.

The best way of doing that is by a system of compassion where you put other people first.

It requires a great deal of intelligence.

It's not just a question of going around being nice.

You have to decide what is actually the best situation from that person's point of view

and from the point of view of the whole and do a great deal of thought.

Again, people don't want that kind of spirituality these days.

A lot of them just want that spirituality to make them more than themselves.

They want to have a nice warm glow, and they go to the church or the mosque, or the synagogue,

or the temple.

And to feel that they're good people and one with the world, and then not likely to [have

it] impinge too much on their lives.

This is the demand that religion makes.

It's certainly there in the whole of Islam, the whole of the Qur'an is basically a cry

for compassion— SB: Right.

Dr. Armstrong: —to look after the poor and the needy, to give to people when you've got

very little yourself.

The bedrock message of the Qur'an is it's wrong to build a private fortune, and good

to share your wealth, so that you create a just and decent society where poor and vulnerable

people are treated with respect.

We don't see much of that today, frankly, with all our fine talk about democracy and

equality; compassion demands equality.

Compassion is often mistakenly confused with pity, but pity means that you are in a superior

position, and you look mercifully down at somebody in a more inferior position, to who

you can show pity.

Compassion, it comes from a Greek and Latin root that means "com-pathein".

Pathein to feel, or to endure, or to experience, and "com" with somebody else, so that

you are constantly feeling with something, of not just hugging your own feelings for

yourself or polishing just your own soul.

SB: In the current climate we're seeing, as you mentioned, less humility, less openness

to other perspectives, instead people are becoming more convinced of the rectitude

of their own views— Dr. Armstrong: Yes.

SB: —in a sense, we're seeing more tribalistic and nationalistic tendencies.

Dr. Armstrong: Yes, we are seeing the disease of nationalism at the moment, and ethnicity

at the moment.

It's almost-- you see what we've created is a global market, where we are, actually

whether you like it or not, profoundly interdependent and all our economies are intertwined.

If stocks fall in one part of the world, they plummet all around the globe that day.

What happens in Yemen tomorrow can have repercussions in a terrorist attack in London.

This is the world we've created.

The people are retreating from this, in all kinds of ways, into these tight little ethnicities,

some of them religious, and some of them political.

Brexit, for example, case in point, complete denial.

And if you remember when the Berlin Wall fell, people were dancing in the street, but when

there was talk during the recent presidential campaign of a wall being built between the

United States and Mexico, people were cheering.

This, the idea in here, this is [held] very widely-- and it's in religion too.

People that were retreating into ghettos because the more we discover about the great religious

traditions of the world, the more we find that despite their very revealing and insignificant

differences, they have an immense amount in common.

SB: Right, exactly.

These trends of, as I mentioned, tribalism and nationalism, they're clearly impacting

our sense of compassion, and they're making us less compassionate—

Dr. Armstrong: Yes.

SB: How do we reverse this or diminish this, and help people become more committed so that

compassion, again, impacts their daily lives?

Dr. Armstrong: I think you have to startle them a little bit, to make them in a little

bit uncomfortable, because too often people regard religion or morality something to make

them feel good.

With the Charter for Compassion, we've created cities of compassion where the Mayor endorses

the Charter and undertakes a program for the city that the city needs - it might be homelessness

for example, or medical care, something of that sort.

It's got to have some practical dimension.

Someone asked me once, "What should a compassionate city be like to live in?"

I said, "A compassionate city should be an uncomfortable city."

It should be profoundly not sitting complacently around a city saying, "What a wonderful

compassionate society we've got here," but looking at the state of the world around.

I think you'll correct me, but I believe someone once told me that the Prophet Muhammad

once said, peace be upon him, that no one of you can be a believer if he can sleep when

is someone is hungry.

SB: Right.

Dr. Armstrong: Now, we know, we see on our televisions screens; the depths of massive

inequity within our own societies.

This winter in London, it was particularly cold.

Britain is one of the richest countries in the world and yet there were unprecedented

numbers of people sleeping on the streets.

This should be disturbing us.

I didn't hear any religious leader come forward to talk about this.

I didn't hear the Archbishop of Canterbury making a point about this.

When they're watching the news, it now seems regular for the newscaster to say when he's

introducing some footage, "This is a warning.

You may find this disturbing, distressing."

And that gives you a chance to switch channels or turn off.

God forbid, within your nice comfortable home you should see something upsetting.

We've got to really make ourselves aware of the pain in the world because it only makes

sense because all this pain and anguish and suffering-- there are children growing up

in Syria who've never known peace, they've just seen horror in their life.

What are those children going to be grown up to become in the future?

So this is not something we should just switch off and then return to our nice comfortable

suburban homes.

We should be making ourselves extremely uncomfortable about the state of the world looking at the

pain of the world, that's what all the great prophets did, they were not sitting around

complacently doing yoga.

The Prophet used to go, before he received any revelation, make a retreat on Mount Hira

every year, with his wife Khadija.

There they would start engaging some ascetical exercises and also give food or alms to the

poor, who would come to visit them.

But it says that while he was doing this, he was troubled about the state of the world,

it distressed him.

He was anguished at the state of his own society in Mecca where there were huge spiritual melees.

But also, the whole region was engulfed in warfare with Persia and Byzantium engaged

in these devastating wars.

We should make ourselves aware and to make ourselves uncomfortable because that suffering,

we must feel it as though it were our own.

I think that we've got to shake up, we live in such a cocoon in the west.

In previous years or in pre-modern states, which were based on agriculture, agrarian

produce.

Ninety per cent of the population was reduced to serfdom in order to support a small tiny

aristocracy.

Historians tell us that without this inequitable system we would probably never have evolved

beyond subsistence level because it created a privileged class with the ability, the leisure,

to develop the arts and sciences on which our progress depended.

No civilization until the now modern industrial civilization found an alternative to this

inequitable system.

Now, we talk a great deal about equality, but we're not seeing the fact that a lot

of the goods that we're buying or rather are encouraged to buy in order to keep our

commercial economy going, have been created in sweatshops from people working as indentured

slaves.

And we never see that.

At least the aristocrats saw the peasants toiling in the fields.

We don't see, we live in this cocoon, and God forbid, we should see some distressing

sight on the news.

This is profoundly dangerous.

SB: At some level, this goes back to materialism.

Could you speak about the dangers of materialism for humanity in general, and how materialism

may disrupt our commitment to compassion?

Dr. Armstrong: Materialism is part of it, certainly.

Basically, in the old days, religious people wanted to transform themselves, at least that

was the goal.

It was at a profound level, it's about transformation and change.

Now we are less ambitious, we just want to be slimmer or more charismatic, we don't

want necessarily to become saints.

We're encouraged-- our economy is dependent on this.

Remember, after 9/11, George Bush telling us all to go shopping.

Then I was sitting with someone who said, "Shop?"

On the other hand, of course, the economy has to get going and you get back to the shops

and start buying all this stuff that we have.

So that, all along our big motorways, there were huge emporiums of storage systems where

people are storing mountains of stuff that they've acquired which we don't need.

We're continually being nagged at to buy this, to buy that, buy the other because the

economy depends upon it.

I read someone who said nowadays we change ourselves by changing our stuff.

We get better stuff and we feel transformed.

It encourages superficiality, greed, and it does not encourage us to think or to see the

disparity in our society where people have not got enough.

SB: Going back to the Charter for Compassion, which has over two million signatories, what's

currently happening with it, and what are your future plans for it?

Dr. Armstrong: We're coming to a turning point now because Joan Brown Campbell who

has managed it for years, she's retiring now, she's 87.

I'm hoping-- we've got a whole new Board of Trustees.

Some of them I'm happy to say, a lot younger than I am.

And I should be having meetings with them at the Parliament for World Religions that's

taking place in Toronto in November.

I need to just hand this over to them because we are too old, our rhetoric and everything

is-- we need to speak to the young.

I'm hoping that…I know Joan was saying these young people they have loads of ideas,

so I want to hear them and to sit down so that we take this further.

My dream for the Charter has always been much more global than is currently.

People want their own cities to be nice.

My dream was to-- although there are now 200 of these cities - my dream was to twin or

unite some of these cities, so that you had, say a city in the United States twinned up

with a city in Pakistan or the Middle East, and that the universities who all subscribe

to the Charter could exchange news; younger people could form email friendships, we'd

exchange views and gradually, some of the misapprehensions we have about one another

in our cocooned existence can be erased, and our horizons enlarged - but I cannot get them

to do it.

Maybe the younger people will see the point.

We are so obsessed with our own by what we see in these cities, for example, every time

we hear of a disaster.

So many disasters come to mind, but say when you hear of a particularly appalling incident

in Syria, or you hear of a terrible-- like that time in Pakistan where the Taliban slaughtered

140 children - what they should be doing in a compassionate city, is going to the Pakistani

embassy and laying flowers there or going to the Syrian embassy, making people aware

that this is happening.

SB: I completely agree.

Dr. Armstrong: And the thing is, I've been appalled at some of our terrorist attacks.

The year before last, we had a spate of them in London and then there was that business

with the Charlie Hebdo massacre in Paris, and yet there has been no such outcry about

the Pakistani children.

A few days after that, Boko Haram slaughtered 2,000 Nigerians and that had a tiny mention

in the press.

You remember that march that the Heads of States were doing, linking arm in arm for

free speech.

I looked at this with unbelief, and I think my own Prime Minister was then David Cameron,

who headed a country, Britain, which had for over a century, aggressively supported regimes

in Muslim majority countries that allowed their people no freedom of expression at all.

SB: That's appalling.

Dr. Armstrong: There's no thought of that at all, and as with the Paris attacks, there

have been some terrible attacks elsewhere in the Muslim world, not a sign of it.

But during the Iraq and Afghanistan war, it was quite right that they honored the soldiers

who were brought home dead in their coffins.

But there was no sustained outcry about the unacceptably high level of civilian casualties.

All this should be making us uncomfortable, I keep coming back to that, and not just to

see ourselves as the center of the world, because we're not.

SB: Right.

On various occasions, you've said that religions share similar core values and ethics and humanity,

in general, shares the same desires and worries.

In this spirit, do you think it would be productive -- so, that we as a humanity can come together

-- if humanity was to explicitly lay out a consensus of these shared values as a sort

of universal code of ethics?

Dr. Armstrong: Yes, I think that would be great, and there have been attempts to do

this, but there are all too vast and too wordy.

This is the age of the tweet.

For example, there is the Amaan Statement, it's about 6,000 pages and same with the Common

Word, no one is going to plot through all this—

SB: It's too long.

Dr. Armstrong: Somehow and this is why I want to get these younger people going here for

the Charter because, I'm too old.

I email, of course, and all that but I'll never think electronic, but the language is

changing.

People's ways of thought will be affected by the electronic media.

It's already starting to happen and somehow, we've got to put these statements so that

they're not just yet another wordy and wordy thing that no one is going to plough through.

But to find a way of putting it that shows, the urgency and also gives people something

practical to do.

I'm not very good at this kind of thing but, so that you give them a statement and now,

perhaps make a point.

Each church or each mosque making a move towards a house of worship belonging to another faith

in your vicinity etc.

Something that is concrete and practical and helps people to start doing something, instead

of just thinking, because it goes in one ear and out the other.

You see, we have had the Common Word, we had the Amaan Statement-- I was at a conference

held at the British foreign office and it was held in Rome about religion and politics,

with a lot of Ambassadors there, diplomats and also people from Islamic countries, and

they're always talking about these statements.

I said, "look, somehow, we've got to start thinking outside the box a bit more."

That's where we need the help of the young and getting them engaged.

SB: I completely agree with you there as well.

I think another problem we're facing today is the lack of religious studies or religious

literacy content in school curricula— Dr. Armstrong: Yes, I think that is certainly

true.

It's at very, very poor level, I don't know how it is much in the United States—

SB: It's really bad— Dr. Armstrong: It's very bad here and in Britain,

of course, Britain is a profoundly unreligious country.

Only 6% of the population attended religious service regularly—

SB: It's a secular country, in a sense.

Dr. Armstrong: It is, entirely.

It's probably the most secular country in the world, I think, far more than the Netherlands

for example, where they may not want to "do religion," but they understand it much more

than the British.

Yes, the level of religious literacy is appalling and even in some of the houses of worship

too.

SB: Even in the houses of worship themselves?

Dr. Armstrong: Yes, I often hear people talking about Christianity with very little understanding

of Christian doctrine or the depths of how we got to where we have or the way we don't

think quite differently about things like God or the Eucharist or what we did before

and all that.

There's very little understanding of that.

I bet the same is true in mosques.

SB: I think so.

So it's available at the university level but unfortunately not available in prayer

spaces or in high school, middle school, elementary schools, how can we—

Dr. Armstrong: And the trouble is, people do academic courses and PhDs in this and then

they can only speak in utterly incomprehensible ways.

SB: I'm glad you mentioned that.

Dr. Armstrong: This is part of the problem.

After 9/11, I was very much involved in talking about Islam, I was in the United States for

three months and I was based at Harvard.

There were people there who really wanted to come out and help me with this but every

time that they got on the stage, they just lost it.

They were talking to one another is such arcane terms because PhDs are meant to be incomprehensible

or they couldn't actually agree.

I remember sitting next to a Canadian who said to me, "Oh, look, these guys are doing

their best, but this isn't it at all."

SB: I think Einstein said it best, and if I may interject is, "If you can't explain

it simply, you don't know it well enough."

Dr. Armstrong: I quite agree, yes, but now you see, the trouble is, the academic specialists

have become so specialized that it's almost a point of honor to be incomprehensible even

to your colleagues in the same department.

So you might want to undertake a study of, I don't know, some abstruse sect in 17th century

in Britain, for example, become the world expert on that.

People are divided very much in their specialisms.

SB: How do we move this forward, any suggestions or solutions?

Dr. Armstrong: I don't know, as I say, I think I'm too old to advise you on this because

I'm stuck, of course, in the old world.

What I can do with religion is what I've taught myself, I didn't do it at university

level which has been a great advantage to me but—

SB: It's kept you away from all of the…

Dr. Armstrong: Well, yes, exactly.

I've not been forced into an academic straitjacket.

But again, I think here is where we need to talk, to really engage, somehow get up to

some kind of dialogue with concerned youth, and perhaps have some meetings between the

elderly with their concerns, because young people are very, very open, some of them and

eager, but to get [the youth] so we can start infusing them and getting them to express

it in their new language.

SB: I completely agree.

In this case, as you mentioned your work, why did you choose the topics you chose for

your books?

I know you've written tons and tons of books.

I'm just curious on how you went about on choosing particular topics.

Dr. Armstrong: Well, I fell into this completely by accident, I've never intended to do this.

I wanted to be an English literature major and failed my PhD, became a school teacher,

and I went into television for a while.

I had been a nun in my youth, and I came out of the convent and wanted nothing to do with

religion ever again.

I thought it was all rubbish and dreadful, and my early books were very angry.

Then I had yet another career disaster and went off and started to write a book called

The History of God, and I expected it to take the skeptical line of its predecessors.

But because I was now working alone, there was no one to egg me on to be outrageous,

and I worked in silence for most of the time.

You realize theology is poetry and you cannot read a poem in a noisy nightclub, you need

a different state of consciousness, and I began to see things-- the words, these texts

started to speak to me in a new way but then in the middle of this, the Salman Rushdie

crisis appeared.

I was appalled by the fatwa but I was also appalled by the way leading academics, philosophers,

novelists were coming out in the newspapers saying that Islam is evil and bloodthirsty

religion.

SB: Sadly, yes.

Dr. Armstrong: I was filled with dread.

I said, "we in Europe have learned nothing since the 1940s, this is how Hitler began."

We haven't learned and of course at the end of that decade, the 90s, there were concentration

camps again on the outskirts of Europe, this time with Muslims in them.

So, I have a sense of dread and I remember sitting in my sitting room and looking at

the dreadful Sunday newspapers all around me and I said, one of the problems is that

they just don't know anything.

Of course, you remember the Rushdie's novel was about the Prophet Muhammad.

SB: Right, of course.

Dr. Armstrong: I said, well, there isn't a life of the Prophet for Europeans, for them

to read, why don't I write one?

So that was how that process came along.

At first, we couldn't get a publisher because people thought Muslims would be so enraged

by my doing such a thing, that I would be joining Salman Rushdie in hiding.

We finally did get a publisher and I found that the people who were reading it, most

were Muslims, especially Muslims from the West.

SB: That's good!

Dr. Armstrong: It was great since nothing like that had been expected, that put me on

a course of writing about Islam.

I also had to write a short history of Islam, which became very popular after 9/11.

That was how I got into Islam.

My last book was about religion and violence, so clearly someone needed to have a look at

that, given what's going on in the world.

And to take it, not just for yet another discussion of Islamic terrorism but looking at the role

of violence and what we mean by religion indeed.

I looked also in China and India, as well as in monotheisms, so that you have a wider

view of what the issues involved there.

Usually, it's been something jarring in society where I've been hearing a lot of nonsense

being spoken.

Saying well, let's get a deeper hold on this.

I just finished a new book, which will be published next year, I suppose, about scripture.

Scripture in all religious traditions, and it's a history of scripture.

It's called The Lost Art of Scripture because I see scripture as a kind of art form that

requires a certain mentality and an understanding of the genre etc..

It was also a performative art, it was always recited or sung, not just read in a cerebral

way and in a literal minded way.

I just finished that.

SB: I'm looking forward to it.

Dr. Armstrong: Because you hear such stupid use of scripture, people quoting this and

that out of context and then people say, "well, maybe scripture should be banned," etc..

Then I said, "No, we've got to look at this and see what it really means."

SB: And the literalism…

Dr. Armstrong: It's usually something that I've seen it that's worrying or troubling

that has pushed me.

When Richard Dawkins, Sam Harris, and people were [speaking] against God, I wrote The Case

for God, looking and taking it slightly deeper look at what the version of God involves.

SB: I do want to talk about the future of religion and faith.

Do you think the perception of religious people, of course, it might be worse for some faiths

or better for others, will generally improve over time?

Dr. Armstrong: It'd better or it will just wither away.

I hope so.

I feel encouraged by the thoughtful response I've had to some of my books, even in Britain

where everybody thinks religion is rubbish.

There have been thoughtful, appreciative reviews and that type of thing but even in the United

States, I see people really longing to hear something different.

If I'm giving a talk, then a thousand people will show up and I feel that-- The same in

- I just got back from the Netherlands and also Belgium - people are just longing to

hear something different.

I think there is a desire for it.

The press and the media tend to focus on the less positive aspects of what's going on,

on extremism for example, in its various forms or on the obscurantist view of religion, and

the ghetto-like nature of religion because there's a lot of it, about everyone retreating

into their own religions in a way.

The more we discover, the more we've got in common, the more people are retreating

into these denominational ghettos.

There's a quotation that I often end a speech with, it's by Ibn Arabi.

When I speak in Pakistan, my Ismaili friend who brings me out there said, "End with that.

Always end with that."

And he said, "He feels in the audience a sense of utter relief

You probably know it.

[Ibn Arabi] says, "Do not praise your own faith so exclusively that you disbelieve all

the rest.

If you do this, you will miss much good.

Nay, you'll fail to appreciate the real truth of the matter.

God, the omnipresent and the omniscient, cannot be confined to any one creed, for He says

in the Qur'an, 'Wheresoever ye turn, there is the face of Allah.'

Everybody praises what he knows, his God is his own creature, and in praising it, he praises

himself.

Consequently, he blames the beliefs of others which he would not do if he were just, but

if his dislike is based on ignorance."

SB: It's beautiful.

Dr. Armstrong: It is.

And you feel a sense of relief in the audience.

This is not unusual, there have been many people in the past who wrote like that, and

there are many people in the present.

These voices need to be magnified more I think.

SB: I agree.

You've often also shared that religious institutions don't always display the full spectrum,

understanding, and values inherent in a religious tradition.

I also mean, like, people have a difficult time separating religious institutions from

the religion itself— Dr. Armstrong: Yes.

SB: —And this leads to people becoming non-affiliated, non-religious, sometimes not quite an atheist

or agnostic but believing in spirituality, in some form of a divine-- in America, that's

around 27% total, and if you're actually under the age of 30, there's a higher chance

you're in this non-affiliated camp.

What I want to ask is, what advice or direction would you give to those struggling to look

at this issue and to look at their own religious tradition itself in a different light?

Dr. Armstrong: It's always a good idea to have a look at how things were done a bit

in the past, and then try and do it in the future.

One of the things I've found is about scripture is that until the modern period, scripture

was always a work in progress.

You made it speak, you gave it a new interpretation in order to make it speak to the present.

You weren't harping back to the past so that you would reproduce the conditions of

2nd century Arabia or the conditions of the early Christian church because that was God,

you make that speak to the present.

About a century after the Prophet's death, it did come back.

You need to recognize Islam because it's a change, because they were now masters of

a huge empire and there was a lot of distress about this, how to square imperial injustice

with the Qur'an, and out came all these institutions which we now associate with Islam

which were not there in Medina like fiqh or Sufism or Shia historiography too.

They were making the traditions speak to now.

I think we need to be more creative about religion.

But it's not just about you and your soul.

I think this is one of the things that's happening is that people just want to have

a nice spiritual warm glow in themselves and have some private relationship with God.

What I've found in all the scriptures are a call for action—

SB: In the world, exactly.

Dr. Armstrong: —which you must go back to the marketplace, you must make the world a

better place, you must build a decent society.

Jesus said when the kingdom comes, and the king comes to judge the people, he's not

going to be judging you on your sins or anything of that sort, but he said, "I was hungry,

you gave me to eat.

I was thirsty, you gave me to drink.

I was sick, naked, and in prison, and you came to visit me."

It's that outreach, that compassionate outreach because it's that which makes religions

viable because you're not just engaged in some nice little soul-searching job, you are

trying to heal the world because that's what the Prophet did, that's certainly what

Jesus did.

The prophets of Israel had no time for people who said their prayers very nicely in the

temple but neglected the plight of the poor and the oppressed, and allowed their rulers

to get away with war crimes.

There should be a voice, what the clerics should be doing now, that now religion is

separate from the state, is becoming prophetic in a sense, to speak about current injustices,

and open people's eyes and make them uncomfortable.

I was just reading an account that said in the United States, between 2002 to 2003, sociologists

did a huge survey, and they found something.

I forgot the exact title that they gave it.

They called it Ethical Transcendental Monotheism or something was the major religion of most

young people and their parents.

That God, well, He just wants me to be happy, He's my friend and Jesus is my personal

savior, and so He's your personal trainer or something, just out to make me feel good,

He wants to make me feel good in a way.

Whatever God is, He does not want us to feel good, God wants us to be disturbed by the

distress that we see around us.

I think the secularization of society has somehow trivialized religion so that yoga,

for example, which used to be about getting rid of ego, has now become a sort of aerobic

exercise.

Mindfulness is meant to make you feel more defensive in yourself, more at home with yourself

and etc.

Whereas, the Buddha designed that this practice to show you that the self does not exist at

all.

Our society, especially in the west, is so geared to self-gratification and feeling good

that we expect our religions to make us feel good too.

But religions are telling us, "Get out there."

I think if you want to start getting out there and start engaging with the plights of the

world, I think the texts are speaking to you in a much more urgent way.

SB: If I may ask, what would be a question, even a faith-related question, that you are

still searching for a satisfying answer to, and for which you would even welcome other

perspectives?

Dr. Armstrong: I suppose something I've been struggling with in this last book is

the experience of transcendence which lies at the heart of religion, what are the actual

implications of this, how are the best ways of achieving it, how is it linked with the

neurology of our brains?

We don't talk about it enough, I don't think, and I'd like to look.

I was just thinking this afternoon that maybe the subject of my next book is to look at

what we mean by transcendence because what we seek is transcendence.

What is it?

What's good transcendence, what's bad transcendence, and what should it tell us

to do?

SB: It's very fascinating.

I think an immediate important question that we struggle with everyday.

I think one of the Ismaili Imams had said something along the lines of: How are you

facing God?

That's what matters in every moment and if you feel that, you are happy.

It's a very, very powerful line.

Dr. Armstrong: Yes.

Yes, it is.

SB: You've spoken about your vision for compassion, could you name a specific objective, perhaps

you see the world can achieve let's say in 25 years?

Then what insights and suggestions would you offer that would address and achieve

this vision, within the time frame of 25 years?

Dr. Armstrong: Well, what I suppose I'd like to see happening would be a "trans-world

tunnel of people" who come together periodically which is quite easy to do now with modern

electronics and things, and come together and who will create a body of sages, if you

like.

Wise people of all religious traditions, or philosophical traditions, or secular traditions.

People who think deeply and who will gain respect because they would be people of eminence,

that's Nobel Prize winners, but who come together instead of just going off from Stockholm back

home but linking up and will address some of the burning issues of the time.

Giving an ethical voice that will make people think, re-evaluate, and feel that they're

not perhaps awaken, in more ordinary funk, a sense that they are not alone in their feelings

that something must be done.

SB: Thank you for this interview.

Dr. Armstrong: Well, thank you very much indeed.

For more infomation >> Full • Karen Armstrong Interview on the State of Our World Today For The.Ismaili - Duration: 50:20.

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3 tips for development in e-commerce - Duration: 4:13.

Hi, I'm Hans-Kristian,

I'm the founder of Clerk.io.

And today I am going to talk about development in e-commerce.

So, most e-commerce owners or heads of e-commerce,

or whatever position it is when you are running a webshop,

don't have a technical background,

and don't have a development background.

But you have to deal with development and tech.

Of course, we are online.

So, how to do that?

I have been doing that basically throughout all of my professional life.

So I am going to share a bit of my tips on how to do e-commerce development properly.

So, there are 3 things:

The first thing is, there is a difference between development,

meaning adding new features,

and maintenance, meaning maintaining the existing platform.

So an easy way to define it is, is there a high level of maintenance on your webshop?

Well, how many weeks, months, or maybe even days,

can it run without having some developer come fix a bug or do something.

A good webshop,

can run with maybe 1 to 2 hours maintenance, where you just upgrade software each month.

If you have more maintenance than that,

then you start having technical debt.

So always make sure that your platform is maintenance free - it's low maintenance.

And if you have a high level of maintenance,

allocate time for that.

That is an important strategic project to keep maintenance down.

So sometimes, instead of adding a new feature, you can get a lot more out of it,

by simply setting aside a month to only do bug fixing, to make sure the platform just runs super smoothly.

Okay, the second thing is:

when you add a new feature,

the few times you do that,

make sure that you have a clear business case behind it.

There is a big 80/20 rule,

where 80% of your features, no - 80% of your revenue - come from 20% of your features.

And I would even push it and say,

typically, in e-commerce, I might see that 95% of revenue comes from 5% of your features.

Like, there are a lot of features that are being developed that are, more or less, useless.

Make sure you have a clear business case, because every time you add a new feature,

you add more stuff to maintain over time.

And you want to keep your maintenance costs low.

So, when you build a new feature,

spend a lot of time on user research.

Do my customers actually want this?

Does it really make a better bottom line?

Like, do we have a clear business case for this feature?

Okay, then you have that.

Then, the third thing is:

Make sure that when you add features,

they are done properly.

And don't launch them too early.

If you have followed this system of keeping maintenance low,

and only develop/add features with a clear business case,

you have the luxury, of when you actually develop your features,

use quality.

Like, use a lot of time to drive quality.

Quality means lower maintenance costs.

And that means, if you have a clear business case behind an idea,

There's no problem having a developer work a week, two weeks, or even a month more on it,

to polish it,

and make sure that it is bug free and really works for your customers.

Because you know that investing in time and investing in those few, clear features

you can do that without any hassle, because you have a clear idea of the business case,

and you know polishing the feature up will reduce your maintenance.

So those are my 3 tips for development in e-commerce.

Keep maintenance low, and prioritize maintenance if you have a lot of it,

only build features where you have a strong business case,

and only build if you really, really have to.

If you can not get it off of the shelf somewhere.

And, when you build new features,

do them properly.

Really make them shine and polish them.

So, if you do those 3 things,

you'll see that working with tech and working with developers in e-commerce is a lot easier.

I hope you have a fantastic day and if you have any questions, just write to me.

Bye!

For more infomation >> 3 tips for development in e-commerce - Duration: 4:13.

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Why Mustafi could be fined for controversial goal celebration vs Cardiff City - Daily News - Duration: 3:08.

</form>  Shkodran after Arsenal opened the scoring against Cardiff City on Sunday

 The Germany international thundered a header past Neil Etheridge in goal for the Bluebirds to put the Gunners ahead, before wheeling away in delight

 However, Mustafi then put his two hands together and flapped his fingers, apparently in reference to the double-headed eagle, which is present on Albania's national flag

 The celebration reared its head during the World Cup when both Granit Xhaka and Xherdan Shaqiri made the gesture with their hands when scoring for Switzerland against Serbia

 The duo, who are both ethnic Albanians from Kosovo as well as Switzerland internationals, escaped bans during the finals in Russia but were both hit with fines

 Mustafi, who was born in Germany to an Albanian family from Macedonia, made the gesture with his hands in the direction of Xhaka when he scored on Sunday

  His gesture comes on the back of comments from former Liverpool defender Stephane Henchoz, who recently spoke out about Xhaka and Shaqiri's celebrations at the World Cup

  He told Blick: "The double-headed eagle has no business in the Swiss national team

 "When I was in Liverpool, I went to every practice with the 'ball in my stomach' knowing that if I missed a pass, I would get burned by the coach

 "In Switzerland, if you miss a pass, it does not matter. You will take the next one

 "Shaqiri and Xhaka are stars here. They know that they will be in selection in the next game, even if they did not play well this time

 "[Xhaka] does not represent Switzerland. He is a regular player at Arsenal, but I believe a captain must represent Switzerland and the team

Xhaka does not do it."  Mustafi could now face punishment - in the form of a fine - if the FA deem his celebration to be a display of political symbolism

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