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How to do flower paper by hand is Very Cute Flower - Duration: 11:15.
How to do flower paper by hand is Very Cute Flower
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Ray J Wonders Who The Father of Lyrica's Baby Is 'Sneak Peek' | Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood - Duration: 2:53.
♪♪
Why am I so happy I'm out the house?
Thank you.
Why they not here yet?
It's all good, though, you know?
Because I'm happy that A1 and Lyrica just wasn't
sitting here waiting for us.
Because, you know,
I just been feeling, you know, that way.
I'm uncomfortable with-- with looking at the homey.
You know?
You need to get over it.
I'm just telling you before it happen
that, um...
I told Safaree to come along.
I did, I told him to pull up.
Because I felt like it was the right thing to do.
That's the wrong thing to do. Why would you do that?
They invited us out.
We're supposed to have a good time,
and now, like, it looks like...
I'll pay the bill.
Yo!
(Ray J) Hey!
Ray-Ray!
What's up, my brother?
What's up, little one?
(Princess) Hey.
Hi!
I love dinner, I really do.
But to sit here and lie to A1's face
is really, really, really unsettling.
I'm really optimistic that everything will turn around,
so my special guest for tonight's gathering
is for the greater good.
Hi!
You look good.
(squealing and laughing)
It's late, but y'all look good, though,
so it's cool.
Now...
Princess, I'm so sorry that I, like,
missed your gender reveal and...
It's okay. Actually, that was perfect timing.
And I hate for us to fight, honestly.
I-- I apologize.
I haven't been myself lately.
I've been going through some things,
had to get rid of one of his hoes.
But it doesn't matter
because... ahem...
Ohh!
This is turning into an engagement party.
(all cheering)
Like "Coming to America"!
(overlapping chatter)
Mrs. Black on the way, honey.
Wait, hold on, I have something to tell y'all, too.
Hold on, bro. Oh...
Well, first of all, me and her are back.
And...
We're having a baby!
(women shrieking)
Are you serious?!
(laughter and shrieking)
Hey, hey!
(overlapping chatter)
Time out!
(whistle blows)
These two were separated for weeks.
Weeks!
Only thing I can wonder now
is whose baby is this?
A1's...
or Safaree's?
Congrats, everybody.
Penises, vaginas, and babies, yay!
(all cheering)
Look me in my eyes so I know it's real.
I have to go to the bathroom. You wanna come with me?
Yeah, of course.
(Princess) If Safaree's showing up tonight,
that's bad enough.
But to know that Lyrica's pregnant...
She needs to know immediately what's about to go down,
because my childish-ass husband couldn't keep his mouth shut.
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THE FOOTAGE IS REVEALED... - Duration: 4:37.
Your captions has been turned on for you.
Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, no no, no. no, this ain't over yet. This ain't over we still got one more
We still got one more what you mean?
I'm Glad that I remember it just in time cuz today
Today yo
was
I'm speechless cuz how how I got accused by
By two girls they say I raped a girl which which is one of them in year four
no, I haven't I wouldn't to do such a thing and I told them that they're liars and I told them to fuck
to fuck off
Yeah
So that happened. So yeah, I
Never did that just telling you right now never did that. Yeah, so stop your lying
CaymanianGamer: Oh stop lying!
CaymanianGamer: Stop lying.
Girl 1: Ashton!
Girl 1: Why would I lie of something like that?
CaymanianGamer: Cuz…
Girl 1: Or about people?
CaymanianGamer : What?
Girl 1: Why would I lie about that?
CaymanianGamer: First of all I never did that, I never raped you so stop your lying!
Girl 2: She didn't say…
CaymanianGamer: Ok so tell me, so tell me what happen then.
Girl 2: You fricking grabbed her by the shirt and you fucking kissed her, fricking to face! Remember…!
CaymanianGamer: Yeah, yeah yeah liars! Liars!
CaymanianGamer: (Name censored) were you there, were you there?
(I don't even know what he's saying…)
Girl 2: Exactly!
CaymanianGamer: (Kissing Teeth) You guys are such liars.
CaymanianGamer: Fuck off!
Girl 2: Make me fuck off!
CaymanianGamer: Yeah stop your lying cuz I never did that.
Girl 2: Just fricking get over it cuz it was in year 4 you grabbed her by the shoulder and you kissed her , get over it!
CaymanianGamer: And guess what I didn't! So stop your lying.
Girl 3: Just leave it leave him (CaymanianGamer) be
Girl 1: Oh, oh oh (Name Censored)
( I don't know what they're even saying )
CaymanianGamer: She can, she can open her mouth, is there any problem with dat?
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What is Vulkan? A brief history | Linux Literate - Duration: 4:17.
Hey everybody, I'm Gardiner, The Linux Gamer, and welcome to another episode of Linux Literate.
A series where I dive into an aspect of Linux or other open source topics and help explain
them in an easy-to-understand format.
Today's topic: What even is Vulkan and how does it benefit Linux gaming?
Graphics programming is hard.
Especially when you consider the different architectures of graphics chipsets available.
It used to be that if you wanted to create a game, you had to read the documentation
for the target platform, figure out which hardware registers did what and write your
rendering engine for the specific platform you were targeting.
And if you wanted to release your game on another platform, you would have to re-write
much of your rendering code, since different graphics processors had wildly different capabilities.
To solve this problem, there began to be various standards vying for wide adoption.
You've probably heard of 3DFX Glide, OpenGL, and DirectX.
What these application programming interfaces (or APIs) did was provide a consistent baseline
across hardware vendors to give programmers an easier time when working with 3D graphics.
These libraries enabled 3D acceleration in games at a hardware level, without programmers
needing to get down into the weeds and become experts with one or two chipsets.
Hardware vendors designed their products to be compliant with OpenGL or DirectX, and programmers
could use the abstraction layer they provided to build awesome games.
This was the mid-to-late 90s, and as the march of progress continued, OpenGL and DirectX
grew more bloated, more abstract, and required more computing resources to interface between
the game and the graphics card.
Late into the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3's lifecycle, developers started discarding the
graphics APIs and writing low-level code.
They did this to squeeze every drop of performance they could out of the hardware.
And they could do this because the PS3 and 360 were unchanging platforms.
Every Xbox had the same graphics card, so the devs only needed to write their code once.
And since the graphics APIs like OpenGL and DirectX were being bypassed, the developers
got slightly more performance out of the machines.
But in the PC space, this would be a virtual impossibility.
PC configurability and the wide range of hardware vendors meant that a new solution was needed
to fix the bloat problem.
Enter AMD and their Mantle project.
A low-level graphics API that would allow developers to get closer to the actual metal
and vastly improve performance over DirectX or OpenGL.
It started as AMD's proprietary API, having been developed in conjunction with DICE, and
initial benchmark showed up to a 319% speed increase in some cases.
In 2015, AMD donated Mantle to Khronos group; the non-profit foundation that supported the
development of OpenGL.
Using Mantle as a base, Khronos group started developing Vulkan.
So what is Vulkan?
And what does it mean for Linux?
At its most basic, Vulkan is a free and open source, cross-platform, high-performance graphics
API.
It gives fine control to developers, empowering them to access the raw power of consumer-
and professional-grade graphics cards alike.
Vulkan powers many of the most impressive-looking titles and is the magic bullet behind Valve's
Proton initiative; which allows games made for Windows to be playable on Linux with almost
no performance impact.
While Vulkan-native games are the best option for use with Proton, Valve's Steam Play
will translate games built with DirectX 10 and 11 into Vulkan, giving PC gamers a path
forward into the open source world and away from proprietary operating systems.
Vulkan is truly an impressive technology that shows just how important and influential open
source software is and it gives us an optimistic glimpse of the future.
But what are your thoughts on Vulkan?
Leave me a comment and let me know or hit me up on Twitter @TheLinuxGamer.
If you believe in the work that I do, you can help support the channel with a monthly
contribution over on Patreon, or you can pick up a teeshirt.
There's a link below.
But whatever you do, whether it's hitting that like button or sharing this video with
your friends, don't forget to subscribe to see more from me, The Linux Gamer.
And as always, thanks for watching!
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What is Phishing? - Duration: 1:37.
Phishing is any activity designed to trick you in to giving out your personal details.
Fraudsters can then use this information to log in to your online account,
steal information and potentially your money.
Be aware that phishing scams can happen at any time,
but students are often targeted around payment dates at the start of term.
Phishing emails and texts are often sent out in bulk.
They seem official, but if you look closely – you'll often find they're unlikely to contain your first and last name.
Another tell tale sign of a phishing communication is poor spelling, punctuation and grammar!
The Student Loans Company will never ask you to confirm your bank details or login information by email.
Always ensure that you're using a secure website when submitting sensitive information online
and don't post personal info on social media pages.
If possible, avoid logging in on public networks too.
Be suspicious of any urgent requests for personal or financial information.
If you believe you have received a phishing email, let us know by emailing phishing@slc.co.uk
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BUSINESS PARTNER – When Is The Right Time To Get One? - Dreams Around The World - Duration: 7:35.
Hey Dan Johnston here and I wanted to get into the topic of business partners: when,
if ever, is it a good time to start a partnership? Now when I was in my early
stages of entrepreneurship this topic came up a ton I was always looking for a
partner or I'd meet other people at great events and we'd kind of connect
them like: yeah, let's start a business together, let's do something together.
It's totally natural, right, it's a human desire to work with other people, connect
with other people all that kind of good stuff mixed thoughts on this topic
personally I've yet to find that great partnership that ends up in a successful
business the two of my really close friends their businesses are built
entirely on partnerships and have worked out really well for them so whether or
not a partnership can work in general is not the question many many many great
partnerships have formed many great companies and probably on the whole
partnerships do better than just going at it on your own I would guess I
haven't looked at the statistics on it but really one overall is not better
than the other it depends on you what you're looking for and more importantly
what that partnership looks like and that's what I wanted to touch on the
first thing is reasons not to get into partnership do not get into a
partnership because you're lonely or you feel insecure about your own ability to
start a business your partner should complement you
you should ideally have somewhat different skill sets and be quite
compatible in that way where you'd be able to divide up the business you know
maybe you're the loud talking head who promotes everything and comes up with
the vision and they keep things running and keep things going behind the scenes
and you have that really good fit usually it doesn't work great if you're
all trying to do the same thing I was once in a business with five partners in
total and we tackle the decisions together and it did not work out well
it's just way too many people right you want to be able to divide things up
and trust one another that they'll do this and you'll do that and maybe you
meet of course unlike the company vision in that but you should have separate
responsibilities if two people are all doing the same thing it's going to take
probably three times as long as if just you did it alone and you're
burning twice as many hours as both of you are doing it right so you shouldn't
start a partnership because you're insecure because you're lonely because
you're you know you're just not really sure how to do it yourself or it seems
like a fun thing you should be thinking more strategically just this morning
actually I started listening to the book shoe dog by Phil might and it's about
the founding of Nike and it was Phil Knight and Bill Bowerman I believe is
his name I my group getting it wrong there on the last name who was his track
coach and Phil Knight was the young former track athlete who was obsessed
with shoes really obsessed in a very good way and his coach brought a totally
different skill set in that he had he was well known in track so he could
bring a lot of credibility he was also obsessed with shoes
apparently he would like work with all his athletes and I cut the shoes up and
reworked them and resold them to make them better and that kind of thing so
you had this combination of expertise but coming from different areas you had
different ages you had different networks like it made a lot of sense for
them to partner full disclosure I just started the book today I've not finished
it maybe there's a massive breakdown
between them ultimately obviously Nike did very well so a partnership like that
makes a lot of sentry of different expertise I remember when I was younger
one of my mentors told me that I should find an older woman to be my partner
because I was 25 ish definitely green definitely young looking he said if you
bring someone who's got that opposite feeling to you know maybe you're kind of
hard someone softer you're young someone older you're old someone younger that it
can work well I know of people who are quite young and working for themselves
and they actually will just pay someone older to come in to sales meetings and
that to give them some more credibility although I think more and more with the
tech scene and everything and how many young successful people there are it's
probably less and less of an issue these days I would I would guess so the big
things to look at if you're considering a partnership whether you're evaluating
doing it with someone or you're thinking like should I get a partner
or look for someone before this business what are the skills how are you gonna
divide up your time your labor your decision-making and that kind of thing
do you really complement each other the partnerships that I've seen do
exceptionally well there's a full division like one person does this side
of the business the other does this side and they work quite well together
they're very efficient you probably want to think about that relationship and
that person as well so if you don't know them very well maybe spend some time
getting to know them before you commit to a full-on partnership because people
change every it's like a first date right everyone puts on their best face
I'm not saying you should only work with close friends or that kind of thing but
working with people who already have a track record may be publicly they've
succeeded in another business or they're friends of friends and people can vouch
that sort of thing it's definitely a good way to go an
interim strategy you can do which I've recommended to more than a couple people
is do like a strategic partnership so let's say you are a freelance copywriter
and you know someone who's a freelance designer and you're thinking why don't
we come together and start an agency in and build that together because you're
both maybe a bit lonely and you think it will be great for your motivation you
could be right that could work but maybe a middle ground step is do like a
referral partnership and once a week meet work together support each other's
businesses and then refer business back and forth and do that for six months and
see how you work together see if it actually helps you before you go and pay
a lawyer sign document start some formal arrangement where you don't really know
you know how it worked out how your chemistry will be in and everything else
ultimately if I'm being totally honest here this is not an area I have a ton of
expertise in that I haven't had a really successful partnership before and so
what I really wanted to do with this video is just throw out things for you
to think about that will help you get some more clarity on whether you're
going down the right route there's examples on all areas just
people who started businesses together because they were good friends and they
had no clue what business they wanted to do and it succeeded but generally that's
probably not the best advice right just like randomly partner with someone at
home to figure something out similarly
there's people I know who never met they just friend not randomly but they just
started a partnership out of the blue and have been extremely successful in
their partnerships as well so there is some chance to it or something else
going on that does affect the partnerships but I think thinking about
these reasons why you should and shouldn't have a partnership will at
least give you a bit of a better foundation to get started with and from
there you can make slightly more educated and thought-out decision on
whether you should jump into a partnership or keep going on things solo
for now thanks for watching if you've enjoyed this if you work for yourself
you're thinking of working for yourself whatever it is do subscribe to the
channel I publish new videos each and every week thanks for watching catch you
soon
you
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This is how 'bling' makes us human - Duration: 9:03.
This is how 'bling' makes us human
This is how 'bling' makes us human.
Why is jewellery so important to the story of human evolution?.
Sparkly jewellery, expensive shoes, designer watches – who doesn't love a bit of "bling"? But this obsession with decorating our bodies isn't just a trivial activity.
Archaeological evidence shows us it's actually a large part of what makes us human.
WHY JEWELLERY IS IMPORTANT Why do we spend so much on decorating ourselves? In short, it's because we use bling to communicate.
For example, consider engagement rings.
It's well understood in many countries that a sparkle on the ring finger of the left hand means that the wearer is engaged to be married.
That ring sends a particular message.
Indeed, everything we wear is sending messages.
We are all familiar with phrases such as "power suits" and "statement pieces".
The items we choose to wear tell those around us who we are: professionals, athletes, doctors, artists, mothers, and so on.
Some choices are conscious, others not so much – but nevertheless everything we wear is telling a story.
BLINGY BIRDS AND FANCY FISHES When I talk publicly about the use of bling by people, audience members often bring up the case of satin bowerbirds.
The male of this species builds an intricate bower before decorating it with blue objects.
Similarly, but under water, male pufferfish create gorgeous geometric patterns in the ocean floor.
But how is this seemingly artistic behaviour any different to what we humans do? The short answer is abstract thought.
The bowerbird and the pufferfish are focused on attracting a mate.
Their message is simple: "I'm here and I'm healthy." There is no conversation about how they should send this message – they just … do it.
Our messages – those we humans are sending through our bling – are coded using agreed symbols (like a diamond ring) which we decide stands for something else ("engaged to be married").
This process of agreeing amongst ourselves that a certain thing can stand for something completely different is what makes us human.
And jewellery has been central to this unique ability for hundreds of thousands of years.
DECORATING OUR BODIES: EXPANDING OUR MINDS For archaeologists, finding body adornments is the closest thing to finding prehistoric thought.
Their first appearance in the archaeological record tells us when the human mind had become sophisticated enough to conceive of individual identities.
Originally, humanity lived in small groups that were spread out across the landscape.
Everyone knew everyone, and interactions between complete strangers were a rare occurrence.
Growing populations, however, led to an increasingly complex social world in which we didn't know every individual personally.
This meant we needed to start telling people who we were.
So, we began wearing certain things to send messages regarding our personal status (available, married, leader, healer) and group affiliations.
This use of body decorations enabled humans to continue expanding our communities, which lead to more complex behaviours and more complex minds.
ORIGINS IN BODY PAINT The earliest evidence for bling is red pigments – mineral earth ochres – which were used as body paints by modern humans (Homo sapiens like ourselves) some 285,000 years ago in Africa.
Interestingly, it appears that not long after (around 250,000 years ago),Neanderthals were doing the same thing in Europe.
However, body paint only lasts for so long – until you wash, it rains, or it simply wears off.
It has a time limit.
BEADS, BEADS, AND MORE BEADS Beads, on the other hand, can last for generations.
This ability to be used and reused significantly outweighs the time and energy it takes to make them – and by at least 100,000 years ago, people both needed and recognised the advantages of beads.
Around this time, people in Africa and in Israel were seeking out tiny white shells called Nassarius, punching a hole through their surface so they could be strung, and using them alongside red body paint.
It is not an accident that the oldest beads are made from seashells: they come in shapes we like (round), colours we like (white/cream/black), and are shiny (we like this a lot).
Small shells are also hardy, being able to withstand being jolted or dropped (useful).
What's more, they can be worn in a wide variety of ways – allowing us to transmit many different messages.
Soon we found other light coloured and shiny materials (bone, tooth, ivory, antler, stone) to make new types of ornaments and send even more messages.
GETTING INKED What's more permanent than beads? Inserting ink into the dermis layer of the skin – also known as tattooing.
Sculptures from Europe suggest that tattooing may have an antiquity of at least 30,000 years, though the earliest indisputable evidence for tattooing is currently the Tyrolean iceman commonly known as "Ötzi".
The victim of murder some 5,300 years ago, Ötzi sports some 61 skin markings.
Similarly aged are two predynastic Egyptian mummies, while a younger, spectacular example is a 2,500-year-old Siberian princess.
Tattooing also has an impressive history throughout the Pacific, inspiring modern practices while simultaneously passing on ancient stories.
BLING IS HUMAN Because bling is so closely tied to communication, archaeologists are able to track not only the development of our minds, but also the development of our societies.
For us, more bling in the archaeological record indicates more interactions.
Traded bling tells us who was talking to whom.
And new types of bling reflect changed circumstances.
All bling is valuable because it tells us something about the person who wore it.
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