Thursday, May 4, 2017

Youtube daily report May 4 2017

Your task to get this reward is

Become friends with two of the clinics old hands.

As soon as you leave your room, head to the men sitting at the table.

Talk to everyone about what the game offers.

Once you attempt to unsuccessfully key the door of the elevator, go back to the old man and talk.

After completing the interview, you will receive a reward.

I will be very glad if you start subscribing to the channel.

This will support me in translation trophies, achievements and turning these video tutorials.

If you can not get the reward, let me know in the comments. I will gladly help you.

If you guide a little help, or have already earned a reward, surely leave a LIKE!

I wish you luck, to gain additional rewards!

For more infomation >> Syberia 3 - Friends for life - Trophy/Achievement (CZ) - Duration: 1:41.

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Brutal Enduro - Duration: 17:06.

Holy shit!

Fuck!

What did you hit?

Legs on the handlebar?

Yeah...

Did the shorts protect you?

Yeah...

Fuck, it hurts anyway...

What's this?

The hit came here...

I see how you flew, and that there is fucking not enough speed!..

... and I realize what will happen next! :)

OK, fuck...

Shit!

Cool!

Got off with only a fright! :D

Sasha, are you OK?

Anything hurts?

It's OK! :)

Is it OK?

Ouch!..

You left your plastic!

Ouch-ouch!

Hello, guy! :)

Did you hit anything?

With fucking handlebar!...

On you fingers?

This is how you ride! :D

Zhora is the best kurva-maker! :D

Fucking shit!..

Come on... it moves...

It's better to call the others...

Come on!

Fuck!!! :D

Fucking great kurva! :DDD

That was funny! :D

Zhora you fucking always keep your style of enduro-kurva-hitman! :D

Cool! :D

Come on, bitch!

Come on, come on!

Good boy!

Do only retards do it like that? :D

How the fuck we now pull you back...

Shit!..

Withoug Kirill you won't do that! :D

No! Fucking stop!

Calm down I didn't pull it, fuck... it's disgusting!!!

Fuck you, Sergey!!! :D

Get up! :D

Hop! :D

Get up! :D

Come on, are we going down?

First time doesn't count! :D

Cool... Oh fuck@!!!

Come on!

Grab the hand!

An now look down!

Everybody wend there.

I also did it there! :)

I have no idea how... But I won't do it any more! :D

It's not moving...

Come on!

Pull it harder!

Zhora, come and help!

Ugh, Fuck!..

We are close...

It's over!..

Sorry guys...

Move away, I will try to get out of here... :)

I've stuck quite deep... :D

Fuck, how do you make it there at all?..

Ah, fuck!..

It seemed to be so easy... As you just pull the throttle and fly...

You need to do it at the right time, as well as close it. He's right.

Do you have all your teeth on the place? :D

Come, you are wellcome, right on time! :D

Are you fucking kidding me?!..Again?!! Fucking hell!..

Shit happens... :)

come on, come on... it moves, it moves...

More!

One more time...

What a new fashionable high-pressure washer you have here! :D

Ah, fuck!!!..

Shit happens... :)

For more infomation >> Brutal Enduro - Duration: 17:06.

-------------------------------------------

PLAYING GOD SCIENTISTS ANNOUNCE PLANS TO BUILD SYNTHETIC HUMAN D - Duration: 7:13.

PLAYING GOD?

SCIENTISTS ANNOUNCE PLANS TO BUILD SYNTHETIC HUMAN DNA

Manipulating the fundamental building blocks of life is one of science`s biggest ethical

debates, and tensions are about to flare up once again as scientists have revealed a controversial

and rather ambitious plan to write the human genome from scratch.

They want to synthesize DNA and then put it into mammals, with human cells perhaps being

only four or five years away.

SCIENTISTS WANT TO WRITE HUMAN GENOME FROM SCRATCH

Almost 200 genetic researchers along with researchers in bioengineering will be heading

to New York next week to a meeting that will discuss the stages to follow of what has been

called the Genome Project-write, also known as GP-write.

This is a venture costing US$100 million to engineer, research and test a living system

of model organisms, which are said to include human genome.

THE NEW PROJECT TAKES UP WHERE THE HUMAN GENOME PROJECT ENDED

The new project is said to be the follow-up to the Human Genome Project which reached

an end in 2003 following research that spanned over 13 years and which mapped out the human

genetic code.

The new project is said to be the next logical step forward so that scientists can learn

how to synthesize animal, plant and human DNA cost-effectively.

The GP-write coordinator Nancy J. Kelly said that HGP had allowed scientists to read the

genome, however, at the moment it isn�t completely understood.

The scientists involved want to portray the project as being an international collaboration

that has been designed so that scientists can further their understanding of genome

science.

The project brought about a lot of controversy during the first meeting, a year ago, which

had been conducted in secret with only a hand-selected group of experts invited to talk behind closed

doors.

DETAILS OF THE PROJECT REVEALED IN PAPER Since that time researchers have become more candid

and have announced the details of the new project in a paper along with releasing a

white paper which gives the outline of the timeline and goals.

Jef Boeke, biochemist, and geneticist is one of the leading scientists on GP-write and

he said that the approach has been to consult with the scientific community to steer and

frame the research as it develops.

He went on to say that the plan was not to start off with human genome; there is a four

to five year period during which there is lots of time to talk about the wisdom of it,

if the resources should be put into that direction or if another should be taken.

He said that whenever it�s human genome people will have an opinion and they will

speak out and want their voice to be heard and the scientists want to know what they

have to say about the matter.

Of course, while conversations may be ongoing, the science is continuing to develop.

Boeke gave details about a project that is related which he is working on.

In the project he is working with hundreds of scientists all working together to try

to synthesize artificial yeast genome, this project is expected to be completed by the

end of 2017.

While there is a big difference between being able to synthesize the DNA of yeast and the

creation of human DNA from the drawing board, the overall goal remains the same, to find

out how to synthesis comparatively simple genetic code before then moving on to the

final goal.

Boeke said that in the end, a synthetic genome is just a new engine for allowing learning

of new information.

GP-write is the parent project encompassing the core area of Human Genome Project-write,

with a focus on human genome synthesis, either in whole or in part.

COST OF ENGINEERING GENOMES NEEDS TO BE BROUGHT DOWN Along with synthesizing animal, plant

and human DNA, the project`s goal is to bring down the cost of engineering genomes.

At the moment it is said to cost around 10 US cents just to synthesize a base pair of

nucleobase molecules making up the DNA.

When you take into account that human beings have 3 billion pairs, it is expensive.

The scientists hope to bring down the cost by over 1,000-fold in 10 years.

If the costs can be brought down and expenses loved for synthesizing DNA, it may unlock

many kinds of potential medical treatments, which may be able to target cancer or genetic

diseases, which may help the body in better accepting organ transplants, along with boosting

learning about gaining immunity to viruses.

Before this happens, the organizers of GP-write will have to raise around US$100 million in

funds, a topic which is going to be discussed in another meeting.

It is exciting, but there is sure to be a lot more controversy as the project goes ahead.

HERE'S WHAT HUMANS MIGHT LOOK LIKE IF WE HAD EVOLVED TO SURVIVE CAR CRASHES

For more infomation >> PLAYING GOD SCIENTISTS ANNOUNCE PLANS TO BUILD SYNTHETIC HUMAN D - Duration: 7:13.

-------------------------------------------

Pojďme Hrát Dungeon Siege 1 (VYMÓDOVÁNO, 100%) - 71 - Tajný Bažinný Chrám {CZ} - Duration: 17:52.

For more infomation >> Pojďme Hrát Dungeon Siege 1 (VYMÓDOVÁNO, 100%) - 71 - Tajný Bažinný Chrám {CZ} - Duration: 17:52.

-------------------------------------------

PLAYING GOD SCIENTISTS ANNOUNCE PLANS TO BUILD SYNTHETIC HUMAN D - Duration: 7:13.

PLAYING GOD?

SCIENTISTS ANNOUNCE PLANS TO BUILD SYNTHETIC HUMAN DNA

Manipulating the fundamental building blocks of life is one of science`s biggest ethical

debates, and tensions are about to flare up once again as scientists have revealed a controversial

and rather ambitious plan to write the human genome from scratch.

They want to synthesize DNA and then put it into mammals, with human cells perhaps being

only four or five years away.

SCIENTISTS WANT TO WRITE HUMAN GENOME FROM SCRATCH

Almost 200 genetic researchers along with researchers in bioengineering will be heading

to New York next week to a meeting that will discuss the stages to follow of what has been

called the Genome Project-write, also known as GP-write.

This is a venture costing US$100 million to engineer, research and test a living system

of model organisms, which are said to include human genome.

THE NEW PROJECT TAKES UP WHERE THE HUMAN GENOME PROJECT ENDED

The new project is said to be the follow-up to the Human Genome Project which reached

an end in 2003 following research that spanned over 13 years and which mapped out the human

genetic code.

The new project is said to be the next logical step forward so that scientists can learn

how to synthesize animal, plant and human DNA cost-effectively.

The GP-write coordinator Nancy J. Kelly said that HGP had allowed scientists to read the

genome, however, at the moment it isn�t completely understood.

The scientists involved want to portray the project as being an international collaboration

that has been designed so that scientists can further their understanding of genome

science.

The project brought about a lot of controversy during the first meeting, a year ago, which

had been conducted in secret with only a hand-selected group of experts invited to talk behind closed

doors.

DETAILS OF THE PROJECT REVEALED IN PAPER Since that time researchers have become more candid

and have announced the details of the new project in a paper along with releasing a

white paper which gives the outline of the timeline and goals.

Jef Boeke, biochemist, and geneticist is one of the leading scientists on GP-write and

he said that the approach has been to consult with the scientific community to steer and

frame the research as it develops.

He went on to say that the plan was not to start off with human genome; there is a four

to five year period during which there is lots of time to talk about the wisdom of it,

if the resources should be put into that direction or if another should be taken.

He said that whenever it�s human genome people will have an opinion and they will

speak out and want their voice to be heard and the scientists want to know what they

have to say about the matter.

Of course, while conversations may be ongoing, the science is continuing to develop.

Boeke gave details about a project that is related which he is working on.

In the project he is working with hundreds of scientists all working together to try

to synthesize artificial yeast genome, this project is expected to be completed by the

end of 2017.

While there is a big difference between being able to synthesize the DNA of yeast and the

creation of human DNA from the drawing board, the overall goal remains the same, to find

out how to synthesis comparatively simple genetic code before then moving on to the

final goal.

Boeke said that in the end, a synthetic genome is just a new engine for allowing learning

of new information.

GP-write is the parent project encompassing the core area of Human Genome Project-write,

with a focus on human genome synthesis, either in whole or in part.

COST OF ENGINEERING GENOMES NEEDS TO BE BROUGHT DOWN Along with synthesizing animal, plant

and human DNA, the project`s goal is to bring down the cost of engineering genomes.

At the moment it is said to cost around 10 US cents just to synthesize a base pair of

nucleobase molecules making up the DNA.

When you take into account that human beings have 3 billion pairs, it is expensive.

The scientists hope to bring down the cost by over 1,000-fold in 10 years.

If the costs can be brought down and expenses loved for synthesizing DNA, it may unlock

many kinds of potential medical treatments, which may be able to target cancer or genetic

diseases, which may help the body in better accepting organ transplants, along with boosting

learning about gaining immunity to viruses.

Before this happens, the organizers of GP-write will have to raise around US$100 million in

funds, a topic which is going to be discussed in another meeting.

It is exciting, but there is sure to be a lot more controversy as the project goes ahead.

HERE'S WHAT HUMANS MIGHT LOOK LIKE IF WE HAD EVOLVED TO SURVIVE CAR CRASHES

For more infomation >> PLAYING GOD SCIENTISTS ANNOUNCE PLANS TO BUILD SYNTHETIC HUMAN D - Duration: 7:13.

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Mercedes-Benz C-Klasse C 180 d Estate Business Solution - Duration: 0:41.

For more infomation >> Mercedes-Benz C-Klasse C 180 d Estate Business Solution - Duration: 0:41.

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Mercedes-Benz C-Klasse C 180 d Estate Business Solution Plus - Duration: 0:42.

For more infomation >> Mercedes-Benz C-Klasse C 180 d Estate Business Solution Plus - Duration: 0:42.

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Mercedes-Benz C-Klasse C 180 d Estate Business Solution Plus - Duration: 0:44.

For more infomation >> Mercedes-Benz C-Klasse C 180 d Estate Business Solution Plus - Duration: 0:44.

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Mercedes-Benz C-Klasse C 200 d Estate Automaat Business Solution AMG - Duration: 0:44.

For more infomation >> Mercedes-Benz C-Klasse C 200 d Estate Automaat Business Solution AMG - Duration: 0:44.

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Mercedes-Benz C-Klasse C 200 d Estate Automaat Business Solution Plus - Duration: 0:41.

For more infomation >> Mercedes-Benz C-Klasse C 200 d Estate Automaat Business Solution Plus - Duration: 0:41.

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Mercedes-Benz C-Klasse C 180 d Estate Business Solution - Duration: 0:42.

For more infomation >> Mercedes-Benz C-Klasse C 180 d Estate Business Solution - Duration: 0:42.

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Episode #3 : je pars en voyage - Duration: 1:35.

For more infomation >> Episode #3 : je pars en voyage - Duration: 1:35.

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468 Sq. Ft. Tiny Cottagein Olympia, Washington, Amazing Small House Design - Duration: 4:29.

468 Sq. Ft. Tiny Cottagein Olympia, Washington

For more infomation >> 468 Sq. Ft. Tiny Cottagein Olympia, Washington, Amazing Small House Design - Duration: 4:29.

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Bruno Colmant : "Un choc d'une telle envergure qu'il est presque inimaginable" - Duration: 8:32.

For more infomation >> Bruno Colmant : "Un choc d'une telle envergure qu'il est presque inimaginable" - Duration: 8:32.

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REKLAMPEDIA VLOG | TRAVEL LONDON IN 6 MINUTES | TRAVELPEDIA #3 - Duration: 6:19.

For more infomation >> REKLAMPEDIA VLOG | TRAVEL LONDON IN 6 MINUTES | TRAVELPEDIA #3 - Duration: 6:19.

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Wayne Dyer - Freedom to be Yourself - Duration: 23:25.

Wayne Dyer: so what we have to do is learn how to

take this ego of ours this part of us

that believes that who we are is what we

have and what we do and what other

people think of us but remember if you

grow up believing that you are what you

do then when you don't you aren't and if

you believe that you are what you have

when it's gone you aren't and if you

believe that you are what other people

think of you your reputation which we

raise people to believe it's Mike I have

to be concerned with what other people

think of me take this ego and retrain it

and one of the ways that you do to

retrain it is first you take this idea

that the ego has of fear what are you

afraid of anybody out there what are you

afraid of shift from fear to curiosity

become curious about what you're afraid

of that's what Lao Tzu taught me become

curious about what you're afraid of

you're afraid of flying get curious

about that get interested in that you're

afraid of snakes you're afraid of

disapproval you're afraid just shift

from fear and say I'm going to become

more curious about what I'm afraid of

and then take all of the things that

you're attached to like all of your

photographs okay all of your furniture

are like all of your clothing like all

of the stuff that you find so much

attachment to and start letting it go

start letting it go you know the day

that I turned that key on made the 11th

and 2006 I didn't even know where I was

going I just knew there was a shift

taking place I felt freer than I'd ever

felt I think in my life that's in my

mid-60s out there on a whole new

adventure and here we are talking about

on that on national television on PBS

take that idea that you have to be

attached to things and know that you

came in with nothing with no thing and

you're going to leave with nothing with

no thing and understand that your life

is a parenthesis in eternity live there

without attachments and then take your

need to be in control

of yourself of others of the situation

and shift some control to trust begin to

have it too loud sue is profound about

this and each one of the 81 verses it

comes up about 60 times as you look at

letting go and letting God allowing

yourself to trust in your nature

allowing yourself to no longer believe

that everything has to be controlled by

me and that other people no longer have

to be in control of me as well begin to

trust instruct just like you did for the

first nine months you trusted your nose

showed out your height showed up your

eyes showed up whatever it all showed up

it's all perfect it's all of us so why

not wander through your life and have

this wonderful peaceful knowing that

it's all fine and finally shift from

your sense of entitlement look nobody

nobody can treat me that way I'm

entitled to have this while I paid for

that I let go I mean back in one year I

let go of all of my entitlements I have

I don't feel on the title to anything

I'm just here shift from entitlements to

radical humility

Lao Tzu speaks about it so often stay

humble stay low the greatest leaders are

the ones who do the least the ones who

stay back and and just model and allow

and at the end of the day in one of the

verses of the Dalit says the people will

say we did it ourselves we did it

ourselves in verse 49 of the daodejing

here's an exact quote the sage is kind

to the kind and kind to the unkind

because the nature of his being is

kindness and also be wise and help all

beings impartially abandoning none you

know what I do just before I did this

program I have to admit I was nervous I

was humbled by it like who are you Wayne

Dyer

who are you to read the Dow and believe

that you can interpret it on television

and interpret it in a book and spend a

year and like I got real humble with

that and you know what I say Dow which

is just another word for God or source

or Krishna or Allah or whatever you want

to call it guide me guide me now I have

that awareness before I come out of you

if you new says in the Course in

Miracles if you knew who walked besides

you at all times on this path that you

have chosen you could never experience

fear or doubt again I remember mother

Teresa saying to a dear friend of mine

who was asking what could he do what

could he do to do something for her he

was a name was Pat McMahon he was on KTR

radio in the Phoenix and he finally

mother Teresa said to him you can do

something for me she said tomorrow

morning get up at 4:00 a.m. and go out

onto the streets of Phoenix and find

someone who's living there who believes

that he's alone and convinced him that

he's not that's what you can do that's

how Saints talk

that's how those loud Seuss book okay

let's go on to the next thought to

change so you're changing from not

trusting in your nature to trusting in

your nature your change your thoughts

from I need more to what I call living

contentment what is this thing about

more it's the if the mantra of the ego

isn't it I have to have more I have to

collect more stuff I have to have more

friends I have to have more money it's

more and more and more and more and more

when where you came from came from

nowhere you don't need anything it's a

continuous bombardment that we are all

exposed to in this whole world of

believing that we have to have more one

of the reasons why I love Public

Television so much you don't see ads on

PBS you don't have to be constantly

exposed to the idea that you have to

have more and you have to

and if you don't have this then you're

not complete and so on so we get

bombarded with this idea of attracting

more and Lao Tzu says live contentment

live in a state of being contented

here's the verse 81 the last verse of

the daodejing my favorite translation of

it and I put it right into the book

sages do not accumulate anything but

give everything to others having more

the more they give it's a great lesson

my son fans whose you know that were

very very close we just spent a couple

of months together over Maui just just

being together just being it was a

divine time and he came home with was

last summer he came home with 4 t-shirts

that he loved and I said well honey I

said which one do you like the best

he said well I that one over there that

blue one it's got the red and it's got

the drawing and it's got a surfer and I

said that's great I said I'd like to

have that one he said no no dad that's

my favorite that's the one I that's the

one I liked the best I said I know I

said that's the one would you mind if I

had that one he said I would mind a lot

if you had his helper he said maybe you

can have one I'm not so crazy about this

one over here I said so you're going to

give me something you don't like you

know I said I want that's the one I love

that because we have the same tape could

I have that one he's dead you're crazy

he said you can't have my favorite

t-shirt I said well I want you to think

about that I want you to think about

detaching and letting go and not needing

to have more and he's heard me talk

about this stuff his entire life so

finally he just you know I went in and I

tried it on and I said AHA distinguished

so great looking in the mirror and okay

that that that really is mine I said

yeah I said but you're gonna give it to

me he said no no I think so well just

think about it you know because I I'm

your dad and I'd really like to have

this so he reluctantly parted with it

and so the next the next that evening I

was still wearing the shirt and he

looked at me and he said that's my shirt

I said you know it fans I said that you

gave me the shirt I said I'm gonna wear

this shirt until you are happy that I

have your favorite shoe I'm going to

never going to take it off until you are

happy he said well you'll be wearing

that shirt a long time said well that's

ok so I wore it the next day I got up I

slept in it that night I got up to it I

did okay cut up the next morning I put

it on and that fans would come in and

we'd look at next oh you're still not

happy that you gave me something that

you really love because that this is

what it really means to be a sage this

is what it means to be a divine being to

be someone who's willing to depart with

not the things they don't like but what

they do like I wore it the next day I

wore it the next day

I worked for two weeks take it off only

to wash it put it right back on two

solid weeks he's one of my children will

treasure finally one day he said dad I'm

so happy I am so thrilled that you have

that t-shirt I said oh that's great I

can finally take this thing off I'm

going to I'm going to just give it away

but it's like what a great lesson in

that the idea that you take you know

there's a rule it's called the 80/20

rule and in the 80/20 rule it says

everything that you have all of your

stuff 20% of it is what you use all of

your clothes in your closet 23 just keep

using the same 20% over 80% of the

clothing that you have in your in your

closet for so many people is something

that you never use you don't work you

look at it you store it you think well

there might come a day I can't part with

that even though you've been carting it

around every time you move you move it

and you put it

take the 80% that you don't use says

loud to and give it away give it away

Lao Tzu says that when your cup is full

stop pouring when your cup is full stop

pouring we have an obesity crisis in the

United States in the Western world the

obesity crisis can be handled if you

just read the doll if you realize in

verse 33 it says if you realize you have

enough

you are truly rich if you could just

learn something called portion control

well you just take a bite and you say is

my cup full stop stop calling in other

words instead of filling yourself with

with that which is already a surplus and

the dollar teaches us to take surpluses

and to reduce them and to take

deficiencies and increase them so that

we create balance in our lives to be in

balance you can take the jewelry that

you don't use you can take the clothing

it and then once you've given away the

80% that you don't use take one of the

things that you really like and practice

giving that away it's such a wonderful

way listen to this poem it was written

by a great Persian poet named Hafiz says

even after all this time the son never

says to the earth you owe me

just look what happens with a love like

that it lights up the whole sky it

lights up the whole sky

there's no always there's no owing you

don't have to be you can practice living

a state of contentment this was so

powerful for me you just can't imagine

how good it felt for one entire year to

walk through every day and say I'm

content I'm content I start out every

morning of my life the first words javi

says if there's only one prayer that you

say every day make it thank you just say

thank you that's how I start

wake up thank you God thank you thank

you source Thank You Dow whatever you

want to call the opening line of the Dow

says the Dow that can be named is not

the Dow as soon as you put a name on it

it dissolves there's no name for it it's

just endlessly invisibly constantly in a

state of creating out of a state of love

the next thought that the dow teaches us

to change change your thoughts change

your life you really do see so much of

the previous PBS specials that I've done

on inspiration and intention these were

teaching people generically how to think

differently what Lao Tzu taught me was

what to specifically think in place of

thinking that instead of thinking that I

don't trust my nature he said trust your

nature instead of saying I need more he

said you need less more is less that

comes right out of a doubt next thought

move from thinking in a rigid way to

thinking and being flexible soft and

allowing from rigidity to softness what

a wonderful transformation that is I was

standing looking at with my son Sam and

we were on Maui and we were looking at

water as water was going against

some rocks and some cliffs and so on and

in these pictures in this in this moment

I said to my son I said which do you

think is stronger the water or the cliff

the water or the rocks which one do you

think is more powerful and stronger and

he said well he said the rocks obviously

they're stronger and they're bigger and

Owen said but I said water is very very

patient isn't it how much chance to

those rocks have if there were if they

if they want to survive I mean what

chance do they have that way and and

Matsu is speaking to us about

understanding our nature by examining

how nature works and then making it

apply to our thoughts so that a soft

thought a thought that isn't a rigid

thought a thought that doesn't say you

have to be this way or you have to be

that way

a thought that is not stiff a sock that

water he there are so many references to

water and what we can learn from water

here 75% water the planet is 75% water

we are water the rest of us is just

muscled water it's just it's all water

and water is soft water can enter

anywhere you get into a conflict with

somebody else and you picture yourself

as water you can enter with water in any

place that there's an opening if you can

visualize yourself as a being who moves

into the space of water if you can see

yourself that way you can just enter

into those places and the people that

you love and your children and your

spouse and anyone at all and an enter

there softly hears verse 8 the supreme

good is water which nourishes all things

without trying to and verse 78 right

smack out of the doll nothing in the

world is softer and weaker than water

but for attacking the heart the

unyielding nothing can surpass it there

is nothing like it here it is I asked

when I

this set this beautiful set and thank

you designers for this I asked if I

could have water on the on mistake they

did it they figured it out there's a now

I'm going to try to get some of this

water okay so you get down here and it

just stops Allen just scoop this up at

night okay no tighter you hold it the

less chance you have of doing anything

with it isn't it how can I experience

water the way to experience water is to

just get saw just get unbending and

there it is that's what water is the

minute that grass but the minute I try

and Lao Tzu is saying the same thing is

true in everything in your life the more

you glass the more you try to hold on to

it the more you try to be rigid with it

the less control you have of the softer

you are the less rigid you are the more

flexible you are as a person the more

you can accomplish and this is a great

way to practice and parenting as well

and this idea that a rigid thought how

many times have you heard this idea that

if I tell you something I'm going to

stay consistent with it we have a set of

rules these are the rules and we'll do

it this way and the dialogue says the

more rules you make the more rule

breakers you create

it's true the more rules you have in

your house about how everything has to

go we had in our house my wife would

have a big jar of M&Ms

peanuts you know different with all

these different multicolored ones and so

and the kids in our house because we

didn't feed them sugar and we didn't

give them sodas and stuff like that so

they you know they were just more like a

decoration every once in a while someone

would take them they'd hardly ever be

replaced now when we had kids come over

to our house who weren't ever allowed to

have such horrible things you should

have seen their behavior you know they

would scoop them up they'd be putting

them in their pocket and they get their

curses and they don't put it up you know

the whole thing would be empty I said

what are you doing well well you mean

you could just have these whenever you

want them well we don't really have any

rules about that it's just it's not

something that we encourage or

discourage it's just there it's like

Emerson had a wonderful line he said a

foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of

little minds a foolish consistency a

rigid consistency so that there are many

people who will say if I say it on

Monday you can be absolutely certain

that on Wednesday I'm going to believe

the same thing regardless of what might

happen on Tuesday now Tuesday might have

something real that you might want to be

changing your mind

you might want to say you know I thought

that this time but now I've seen this

and now we can shift and you can see how

this can become when and so much about

the dollars on leadership leadership in

the family leadership in the community

leadership geopolitically less rigidity

more openness more willingness to listen

and say I changed my mind

because a foolish consistency is the

hobgoblin of little minds and what I

believed on Wednesday has changed

because of what happened on Tuesday now

another important thing to say to your

children to your friends to your lover

to your spouse's to whomever

to the people you work with words that

were so terrified to say but which give

us a sense of living with the doubt I

don't know I don't know I'll look it up

say it

I don't know doesn't hurt say it again

I don't know isn't it fearful I mean so

many things and it's like very freeing

because my kids call ask me something of

it I don't know they say dad you know

everything you know everything I said

well I don't know that and I'll look it

up I will try to find an answer to that

but I don't quite know I know that what

even you know I spent 20 years running

and I ran every day for 20 years for 22

years without missing a day 8 miles

never missed a day that's Richard all

right I'm call that obsessive but you

brush your teeth every day I used to say

and you don't call that obsessive and

you go to the bathroom every day and you

don't say well he's obsessively doing

that again today you don't do that but

anyway what I learned is that in even in

the world of exercise there are certain

things that are built in to make us

widget to make us stiff to make us hard

and we lift and we run and we kick and

we this is what we call getting working

out there's another kind of working out

that it's ancient it goes back to the

time of Lao Tzu and before which is

called yoga and yoga means union it

means union with your source and when

you do yoga you can stay in the same

place you can do the equivalent of 8

miles when I used to run 8 miles I had

to run four miles that way turn around

four miles back and I'd be sweating now

I can do yoga and I can just stand in

one place in a 90 minute by being supple

by making myself stretch by not being

hard and rigid I can you know I can get

that out there I can get that leg up I

can do these kinds of things and nine

and ninety minutes later you know it's

like I'm totally sweating until it and I

feel so different I used to when I would

go out at night to eat or something

after running so many miles running

marathons and

those things I'd go to get up and it

would be okay going to take a little

while okay and everything what's that

like

that doesn't happen anymore because I've

given up hard

I've given up being rigid and

substituted it for being supple for

being flexible for living a life in

which I don't have to always be so Fiat

listen to this verse of the daodejing

one of my all-time favorites verse

number 76 a man is born gentle and weak

at his death he becomes hard and stiff

all things including the grass and the

trees are soft and pliable in life dry

and brittle in depth stiffness is thus a

companion in death flexibility is a

companion in life and it's not just for

how you exercise it's how you think how

you think

For more infomation >> Wayne Dyer - Freedom to be Yourself - Duration: 23:25.

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Syberia 3 - Friends for life - Trophy/Achievement (CZ) - Duration: 1:41.

Your task to get this reward is

Become friends with two of the clinics old hands.

As soon as you leave your room, head to the men sitting at the table.

Talk to everyone about what the game offers.

Once you attempt to unsuccessfully key the door of the elevator, go back to the old man and talk.

After completing the interview, you will receive a reward.

I will be very glad if you start subscribing to the channel.

This will support me in translation trophies, achievements and turning these video tutorials.

If you can not get the reward, let me know in the comments. I will gladly help you.

If you guide a little help, or have already earned a reward, surely leave a LIKE!

I wish you luck, to gain additional rewards!

For more infomation >> Syberia 3 - Friends for life - Trophy/Achievement (CZ) - Duration: 1:41.

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В 4 СЕЗОНЕ ПОВСТАНЦЕВ ПОЯВИТСЯ СИТХ КОТОРЫЙ КРУЧЕ ВЕЙДЕРА(Экзар Кун)?! - Duration: 3:34.

For more infomation >> В 4 СЕЗОНЕ ПОВСТАНЦЕВ ПОЯВИТСЯ СИТХ КОТОРЫЙ КРУЧЕ ВЕЙДЕРА(Экзар Кун)?! - Duration: 3:34.

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KASHID BEACH - Beautiful Beach Sunset Blue Sky White Sand and Palm Trees in Maharashtra, India - Duration: 7:45.

Hey guys, What's up

I am heading towards western coast area

Let' see I mean I've a day with me

So let's see what all we can discover

For more infomation >> KASHID BEACH - Beautiful Beach Sunset Blue Sky White Sand and Palm Trees in Maharashtra, India - Duration: 7:45.

-------------------------------------------

Advancing Accessibility through Libraries - Duration: 41:30.

Good morning everyone.

Look at you, up for that first session.

You've had your first cup of coffee.

Thank you for joining us.

My name is Laura Wood and I'm going to kick off our presentation.

Before I do, a couple of words.

They are recording this session.

The Q and A, however, will not be recorded.

It's just the audio of the first part of the presentation that they're trying to

capture and the slides.

To my left, your right, Jody Combs, who is from the University of Vanderbilt, and also

working with ARL more intensively these days.

And, our invisible co-presenter, Beth Namachchivaya, from the University of Illinois.

Unfortunately, had to send her regrets.

She is ill and was not cleared for travel.

We are quite grateful she is not sharing with us at this time, although we wish she were

here for the presentation.

We do have notes from her so we will try our best to represent the content and the update

on her project.

So, jumping in, the issue of accessibility is not a new one at all.

Most of us are familiar with the Americans with Disabilities Act, ADA, from 1990.

People, I find that people may be less aware of the Rehabilitation Act that President Nixon

signed into law and in Section 504 of that, extended civil rights to people with disabilities

and provided a lot of opportunities in education and anywhere federal funds are involved.

Section 508 required that electronic and information technology developed by the federal government

be accessible to people with disabilities, in 1973.

So, they were fairly prescient, and we're still trying to figure out how to do that.

As scholarly content made its way into digital devices, electronic versions and online, colleges

and universities have been adoption these and finding that accessibility issues are

a major stumbling block, leading to lawsuits and typically settlement agreements.

These agreements are a trove of information and have served as a startling kick in the

pants for some institutions.

About two weeks ago, many of you have already seen, the 2017 NMC Horizon report on libraries

was released.

It helpfully identifies trends for the industry as well as challenges.

Accessibility of library resources and services is called out this year as one of those challenges.

T he good news is that NMC has labeled this challenge as "solvable."

It's a challenge we understand and know how to solve and that's, I think, where

we come in today.

There are many projects.

These will be just three that are trying to work on how we do that solving…how we chip

away at that challenge.

I will discuss accessible instructional materials or AIM.

Jody will talk about video captioning and I'll share a few words on behalf of Beth

regarding Daisy Files and the HATHI Trust digital library.

I do want to spend a few minutes in the beginning talking about the scope and nature of this

issue just in case some of you are also looking for some entry into the issues of accessibility.

I hope you can read this in the back.

According to the US government accountability office, 10.8% of students enrolled in post-secondary

institutions in 2008 had a disability.

While dated, these seem to be holding and are the best comprehensive statistics I could

find that array this way.

This represents more than 2 million students in post-secondary institutions across the

United States.

Students with disabilities share demographic distribution with the general population of

post-secondary students in terms of race, age, and schools attended.

So, this table shows you the categories of disabilities that have been tracked and how

that 10.8% population is distributed across those categories.

It's important to note here that learning disabilities is by far the largest population

group and that's where most of the growth has come from.

Statistics on disabilities in higher education are also based on self-identification by students

and so are widely believed to be underestimates, which is only logical.

We just doing know how dramatically their underestimated.

88% of institutions report enrolled students with disabilities and 99% of public institutions,

and 100% of medium and large institutions report students enrolled.

So, accessibility is an extensive and relatively urgent issue in higher education.

It also helps to talk about what do we mean when we say 'accessible'?

The federal government has used this language in many of the settlement agreements.

The repetition of it over and over again serves as a signal that this is not an evolving concept

but a clear expectation of compliance.

Accessible means a person with a disability is afforded the opportunity to acquire the

same information, engage in the same interactions, and enjoy the same services as a person without

disability in an equally effective and equally integrated manner with substantially equivalent

ease of use.

The person with a disability must be able to obtain the information as fully, equally,

and independently as a person without a disability.

Although this might not result in identical ease of use compared to that of persons without

disabilities, it still much ensure equal opportunity to the educational benefits and opportunities

afforded by the technology and equal treatment in the use of such technology.

Now, a basic element of trying to meet accessibility is the availability of required readings for

a class.

So, I'm going to start to talk about my project update, which deals with that material.

We've been working on an IMLS title grant, which was titled, Repository Services for

Accessible Course Content.

The core members of my steering committee on this project were Jamie Axelrod, Stephen

Downie, Mike Furlough and John Unsworth.

Major help came from David Wedaman, who is also a co-author on the White Paper, and from

Katrina Fenlon, who really did yeoman's work on the research we did, the focus groups we

conducted, and then the data analysis.

She is the first author on the paper that was published.

So, what is accessible instruction materials?

In order to provide accessible learning materials, institutions navigate a variety of sources

to see if digital formats already exist.

They also request electronic copies directly from publishers or through a mediated service.

Some publishers are relatively responsive to requests but others aren't.

Response rates range from one day to two weeks or more and there is no obligation for publishers

to be timely with responses.

As a last resort, a school may scan works from print, some of them do that a lot because

they don't want to wait.

Regardless of the original source, a digital file will then need to undergo significant

reformatting before delivery to the student.

Numerous institutions may be seeking the same text at any given time but they have no mechanism

for sharing.

Here you might think about best-selling textbooks and how often they would be used across the

country and if one of those is made accessible where it might also be needed in an accessible

format.

The work that goes into a single file may represent many hours of labor and the quality

of the results vary depending on the school's resources.

As those electronic files are created and provided to students, the disabilities resources

and services department must wrestle with a significant file management problem.

The files need to be secured for the sake of copyright.

But, most courses are taught multiple times with some re-use of common texts.

The ability to securely store, describe, and reuse these reformatted materials is necessary

on every college campus.

In our planning project, a major component was sitting down with disability services

staff to better understand how they create and manage accessible course content.

We held focus groups at the AHED Conference in 2015.

Ahead is the Association of Higher Education and Disabilities.

The paper that was published through the proceedings of the ASIST annual conference and the White

Paper we very recently released, both detail more of the findings from that research.

It is not the number of students or the volume of requests as much as the nature of the request

that determines the amount of effort and funding required to make materials accessible.

Focus group participants were very clear that there were certain disciplines and content

types that are exceedingly difficult and resource intensive.

STEM disciplines are by far most difficult and highest in demand.

The common use of equations, images, charts, and graphs make accessibility requests very

challenging.

Images need text descriptions far beyond an image caption that might already be provided.

Charts and graphs may need to be depicted tactilely for some students.

Staff may need to solicit help from the teaching faculty or graduate assistants to create those

descriptions and interpretations of the material for the student.

The second most often mentioned area of difficulty was foreign language materials, especially

when involving additional alphabets.

Furthermore, images, tables, multimedia may need special attention for conversion and

adaptation.

Music, theology, and professional school disciplines also present extra challenges.

Non-text formats are resource intensive, such as video and audio.

Focus group participants conveyed the need for flexibility and creativity in order to

provide disability accommodations.

They are a very flexible and very creative bunch.

Our White Paper describes in some detail additional factors such as the existing landscape of

resources and the behavior and practices of publishers.

Frankly, I decided at this hour of the day its too depressing to start that way.

But, they are important factors.

I hope you will peruse the White Paper for more information.

It's available through the links on the project-briefing page for this presentation.

Overall, it's very hard to quantify the cost associated with current ways schools

create and distribute accessible instructional materials.

But, I would like to offer and example for context.

One state institution that we know of, it has a population of roughly 28 thousand students,

the institution uses a mixture of full time staff, student workers, and third-party vendors.

They remediate, on average, 1,200 print items, and caption 1,500 multi-media items every

year.

In total, the annual budge for those processes is around 100 thousand dollars.

I believe that doesn't include some of the staffing costs for that single university

for that single year.

And that excludes any braille production, which varies significantly from year to year.

When those braille costs come in, they can have real spikes in terms of costs for people.

For a single student requesting an accessible version of an assigned text for class, accessibility

typically refers to a version of the text that can be or has been manipulated to meet

the student's need.

Whether the student will use the copy electronically, such as with screen reader software or other

assistive technologies, or needs a fixed version, like large-text or braille, an accessible

file will be a digital copy of a text with markup of headers and other formatting features,

alternative text to describe images and graphs, notifications of page-breaks and marginalia

and so on.

In short, the accessible file replicates the structure of the document in addition to the

content of the text.

I can't help but talk a little bit about the legal landscape here.

Our schools are prudent in attempts to mitigate and reduce risk.

There are two fundament legal areas that drive college and university behavior with accessible

course content, copyright infringement on the one hand, and civil rights violations

on the other.

Many schools remain concerned that the act of simply creating accessible version of course

materials is a violation of copyright and a legal liability.

The legal basis for providing reformatted and accessible course content and services

in libraries and universities is recently, strongly affirmed by the US Court of Appeals,

second circuit.

Ruled in Authors' Guild v. HathiTrust that, "the doctrine of fair use allows the Libraries,

to provide full digital access to copyrighted works to their print disabled patrons."

Through this ruling, the court removed considerable ambiguity regarding the rights of schools

and, for the first time, made clear that authorized entities can make copies for print disabled

users.

It is important to note, however, that the court was specifically addressing the provision

of works digitized, on mass, from library collections, not newly produced textbooks.

Further, although the logic of the ruling could be extended to other formats, such as

audio and video materials, the ruling doesn't specifically address their reproduction.

Nevertheless, the second circuit ruling should reassure libraries and educational institutions

they can lawfully make and provide specialized copies of educational materials for their

eligible students.

And it has encouraged many to expand their services, which is a good thing.

Libraries and their parent institutions must be attentive to numerous elements of potential

violation of copyrighted status with printed published scholarly works in media.

But in the context of accessible course materials, protection of copyright owners might take

a backseat to a greater area of legal risk.

The potential of a lawsuit or investigation for failure to provide adequate accommodation

for students with disabilities by the office of Civil Rights, by the Department of Justice,

or by individuals and advocacy agencies.

The office of Civil Rights is focused on the availability of alternate formats of materials

or other accommodations to provide access when a student need arises.

They have stipulated that the timeliness and ease of use of those materials is a critical

factor in ensuring equity.

Most importantly, institutions should be considering accessibility before an individual need may

arise.

This includes the holdings of the institution's library and all of the services it offers.

Libraries need to be able to provide equal access to the educational opportunities and

benefits of the library, all the collections, and all the services.

Despite government expectations, there is little evidence of widespread proactive efforts

by our schools to ensure readiness for requests.

While there's increased attention in the literature of libraries around accessibility, relatively

little is found around course materials or general collections or other types of services.

Through the combined pressures of liability, to demonstrate ADA compliance, and reassurances

of safe harbor through the doctrine of fair use, really makes this an excellent time for

further action to address this growing need.

Like it or not, there's at least one digital library on your campus that could use some

help.

Disability resources and services staff needs help with storage, metadata, multiple formats

and discovery.

Armed with the research of our project, we have a really, fairly clear, understanding

of the needs of the community so we're trying to move ahead with a project to create repository

series.

This will be a specification driven process.

We're now evaluating platform technology options in light of the awareness of needs to see

what is our best option going forward.

These are the current collaborators for the next part of this project as we seek our next

round of support.

Each one of these schools has identified participants from both the disability resource services

area and the library.

So, the project intends to build collaboration with the institutions while it also builds

collaboration across institutions.

We're hardly the first to pose file sharing.

Various groups and organizations have attempted this approach previously in areas around accessibility.

However, we're finding that as the population grows, the technology's improving and the

legal environment shifts.

It now is a better time and a good time for us to focus on sharing.

This is my favorite quote from our focus groups.

It gives me motivation when I feel like this is an impossible task to keep it going.

So, before I turn it over to Jody, one more point.

There's much more work to do.

The Horizon report says it very well…

"Libraries can pave the way for their campuses by working with other institutional stakeholders

to implement policies that ensure equality of opportunity for disabled students, faculty

and scholars."

In addition to our analysis of the environment, our White Paper includes as set of recommendations

directed towards libraries.

One, directed towards university and college administration, and one directed towards publishers.

We can always hope.

Any development of repository services is simply one tool in a very complex environment.

We're calling on libraries to take seriously the information needs of students with disabilities.

For those willing to connect with their disability services staff, we provide an appendix with

suggested topics for discussion and questions for working together to develop new service

workflow's.

For libraries interested in a more internal review of how the library handles accessibility,

there's an appendix of reflection question and topics to support making improvements

in your own environment.

By analyzing the local environment at a single institution, the library can create a set

of priorities for action, which will best assist their community and enable librarians

to be a bigger part and a better, stronger part of the community puzzle.

Our work has to be proactive.

It has to be collaborative and we really need to be persistent.

With that, Jody's turn.

Waypoints for a Roadmap

Okay, so I've been working with the accessibility side of things for ARL on the captioning project

starting in January and came into this conversation almost immediately as a pre-proposal was being

developed for a larger grant.

As part of that conversation, along with a lot of conversations with many of you.

I think I've probably talked to half you on the phone at some point or another, or

in a conference call.

I've been trying to put together, you know, pieces and parts of a puzzle that might lead

to a roadmap for project Plan.

Also, trying to spin up as fast as possible as far as where the state of the art is for

captioning, as it sits in this larger context of accessible materials.

So, I've started categorizing certain aspects of the conversations that I've had with

you, and put them together into the next slide, which is sort of way points for the roadmap.

Its not quite a roadmap.

I'm sorry its so text dense, but I didn't want to go through multiple, multiple slides.

These are areas where we've had some really fruitful, I think, conversations that have

helped me understand what might work, what's feasible and what's not.

The first part had to do with the discoverability issue.

One of the things that I think frustrates all of us is building a tool or service that

nobody uses because they can't find it.

That led me to questions around Laura's project about what kinds of metadata standards

exist for accessibility.

There have, in fact, been a fairly number of projects aimed at this, starting around

2011, really taking traction around 2013.

There is a W3C standard that includes accessible tagging and there are going to be slides here

with links to this material but I didn't want to waste our time together today going

over each piece and part.

We can do that in the Q and A, if you like.

Zeroing in on captioning, version one of that standard, which was developed by schema.org

and then adopted, has one tag for captioning and it is captioned—that's it.

Not quality of the caption, how the caption was generated, not whether it has error correction

or anything like that done to it.

So, one could hope for more articulate metadata but it's a start.

That means we wouldn't have to start from zero.

There is much more tagging associated with other types of accessible formats that I think

merits some revisiting.

A lot of this work came out of funding by the Gates Foundation through, I don't know

how to pronounce this, but it's A-11-Y metadata, which was a workgroup that you'll have a

link to.

So, the discoverability issue, I think, is one that is feasible, fungible, manageable,

needing a little additional work.

The next think I wanted to look at were the tools and technologies for captioning and

so have spent a fair amount of time asking and begging people to test things for me or

inform me about what they are currently using, what's working, what's clunky, what doesn't

work, and what gaps are there where we could maybe ask for better tools.

And, have played a little bit…have talked with YouTube about their automated captioning

process, which, by the way, has gotten better, which is not to say…the bar was pretty low

to begin with.

So, it's a comparative thing.

But, I would encourage you, if you're interested, to have a look again.

I've had some of our folks test it out on short videos and the accuracy rate seems to

be around 90-95%.

And, you can go back and do error correction or enhancement.

The challenge for automated captioning, of course, has to do with descriptions of sound

that are not words.

So, if there's an explosion in the background, someone has to type in and machines aren't

terribly good at figuring that out yet, though maybe eventually they will be.

The availability of desktop software has also increased as has commercial providers of,

of providing caption that many of you use.

I've played around myself with a couple of desktop things and I'm one, impressed by

how friendly they generally are but two, how labor-intensive of a process it is.

This is something that cries out for crowd sourcing, I think.

I think there are folks that would spend a couple of hours on a weekend doing error correction

if the tools were available for it.

The intellectual property considerations around video, I have some familiarity with having

an association with the Vanderbilt Television News Archive and lots of very friendly conversations

with legal council for national network news organizations.

Every time they get a new vice-president, I usually get a call to say, "What are you

doing with our stuff?" and "How dare you."

And "Oh, there is actually a section of the copyright law that allows us to do this."

So, dealing with the intellectual property issues, I think, a dicy thing, particularly,

as we first imagined we'd be storing video with embedded captioning in it.

But, in conversations since I've come on board, we thought about not storing video

with embedded captioning but just in the caption files in multiple formats.

Players, video players, including web-based HTML5 players, are able to merge the caption

file with the video at the point that it's being streamed.

And this would do two things for us, we think.

One, reduce the liability issue.

Obviously, I don't think we would be storing captioned files that were already on sale

by a publisher somewhere.

And two, would greatly limit the storage problem that video tends to present.

Caption files are small.

Text files, storing them would be a trivial matter.

Working with partners for Laura's project might be a way to deal with the issue of storage

and making them discoverable and marking them up and that sort of thing.

So, the intellectual property considerations, I think, are, we think, are also something

that we can work with.

Interesting side here…when I talked with YouTube about…I mean, clearly, they have

this problem, right?

They have developed a service called 'Content ID' where, if I upload your video and you

discover it, you can claim it as yours.

And effectively, any ad revenue that's generated by that item goes to you, not me.

In other words, I'm doing free labor for you if you're a publisher, for example.

And, I'm not sure that it wouldn't be a bad idea to tell publishers, "If you haven't,

if you don't have a captioned version of this, we're going to place it up into a shared

repository, lets have a conversation about whether we just give it to you or somehow

or another work out an arrangement where you benefit and therefore its not a question of

liability but a question of a business arrangement."

I know that's unheard of, but, you know, give it a try.

I've also spent a fair amount of time looking at the landscape of commercial providers.

As I say, I met and talked with YouTube.

Many of you use 3playmedia, I'm sure.

If you have this service on your campus, there fairly economical ways to have captions generated

if you want to.

At least one university has a site-wide subscription to deal with this issue of accommodation with

replay.

So, effectively its on-demand.

I may not be the fastest way, the most prompt way to get things to students but at least

its there.

And no, it is not cheap.

So this might be something that many of us going together might be able to look at.

Lots of you are interested, obviously, or you wouldn't be here, but there's a very

large list, growing list, of universities that are interested in dealing with this.

Partly, I think, because of compliance issues but also partly because it's the right thing

to do.

Many times, these issues are being dealt with as compliance problems but they're also part

and parcel of the diversity and inclusion movements that are sweeping our campuses.

This is a diverse…it's a diversity question.

This is a group of people with a different perspective that bring different abilities

and different views of the conversation to the table.

And as institutions of higher education, that is, after all, part of our mission.

Maybe a central part.

I have looked at architectural considerations and talked with many of you about whether

a centralized repository is the preferred route, ala Hathi or one of the others.

Or, whether we would want to have a linked set of repositories, possibly piggybacking

on the institutional repository structure.

I don't think there's any clear direction on that other than the answer seems to be

both.

It would be good to have a centralized, easily findable repository, but the ability to link

out to repositories around the country.

Types of materials of interest is also another question…how am I doing on time?

Okay.

As we think of the issues of what kinds of things go into a repository, at least initially,

some kind of prioritization might be in order.

Whether those are items that are, for example, a part of our collection that need to be captioned

or their instructional videos that are of general interest to many of us or they are

associational webinars.

One of the things I asked about the PowerPoint today was, "Will it be captioned?" and

the answer is, "yes.

It will be captioned."

So, you know, those kinds of things that are widespread in general interest, I think, are

natural targets for this kind of activity.

The business model and sustainability question, I really haven't made a lot of progress

on but it will have to be asked and answered at some point.

Grant funding will go someway and I think this is an eminently fundable area.

In the long run, we have to think through the issue of how do you keep it going into

the future.

And the same, I haven't made a lot of progress on identifying possible funding for pilot

projects.

I will, though, say there are a number of foundations that have expressed interest in

the past on this kind of work—Gates Foundation is one that did the metadata schema.org thing.

And, so I'm kind of confident that those things can be turned up.

And, I think I'll stop there and we'll wait.

I hope we'll have some good question and we can have a conversation.

The next two slides, or maybe there are more, are items that will be part of this deck that

you'll have access too.

These are just things that I've researched that you might want to visit if you haven't

already.

And, is there one more.

Yeah.

Here's the standards—that the A-11-Y metadata.

I was very pleased to find this.

I mean, this is a route by which tagged material makes its way into the large search engines.

Laura: Jody and I flipped a coin and decided that

I do a better Beth imitation, so I'll go it my best shot.

So, the University of Illinois has been working with HathiTrust Digital Library and their

ultimate goal is to develop a scalable approach to scanning, generating metadata and DAISY

files and making digital accessible text accessible to print disabled reader through the HathiTrust

Digital Library.

The pilot partners are the library and the digital resources in educational services—they

refer to them as DRES—unit of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and the HathiTrust

Digital Library.

The initial goal is to develop and test and evaluate a workflow and access method for

the University of Illinois to produce digitized texts, metadata, and accessible digital text

(DAISY files), ingest them into the HathiTrust Digital Library, make them accessible to proxies

for download on behalf of print-disabled users.

Our initial goal was to have a pilot workflow outlined by December 1, 2016, so we could

put a test volume through the steps.

This would be utilized to have a more significant pilot of about 50 volumes ready to launch

in 2017.

The pilot would be used to refine the service, develop a more accurate cost model, and launch

a full program for late 2017/early 2018.

With responsibilities, the University of Illinois Library agreed to fund the acquisitions needed,

the associated Internet archive scanning, and the staff resources to work on the HathiTrust

ingest process.

DRES has assumed responsibility for generating the DAISY files, working with the JPEG 2000

images and OCR generated from the Internet archive scans.

So, to date, with scanning and OCR production, using Internet archives, to date the library

chose to scan the contents so it would mesh well with the Internet archives existing operating

and invoicing procedure.

In order to do so, the content had to be placed online.

If we want the images to be cropped and OCR processed, which we do, they need to be uploaded

and derived.

After discussing with staff from Internet archive, the recommendation was to load this

content into Internet Archives print-disabled collection, which is not findable, as it consists

of in-copyright content.

This interferes with Illinois' internet archive workflow the least and subsequently

would allow the internet archive to host and share the JPEG 2000 files for those items

so that with the login, DRES can go in a download the JPEG 2 files and manipulate them as needed

to create the proper OCR DAISY content.

This removes the added need for setting up shared server workspace and keeping it updated.

For availability in restricted Internet archive collections, from there, Internet archive

and I, Beth, decided that designating this content in the future as DRES would entail

the scanners uploading it to an access-restricted collection, which content appears only to

users who have the URL and proper permissions through an Internet archive log-in, which

they've made for preservation services to be shared with the cataloging and metadata

unit and eventually with DRES.

Following this, conversations with Hathi about how Hathi could inject this content resulted

in the solution of having Internet archive link the UIUC and HathiTrust accounts and

grant Hathi Internet archive with equal permissions to access and manipulate the disability resources

educational services collection.

The HathiTrust metadata access, Hathi was subsequently able to get this working in their

end and found they were able to get content working with their ingest tools in their development

environment, which means that once there's metadata for it in the HathiTrust Zephyr metadata

system, it can then be fully ingested.

On Illinois's part, we have been able to download and modify the metadata for a test

item.

In theory, we are on the cusp of being able to fully ingest the content.

T he final step for the pilot is to ensure that this content is fully accessible to a

proxy user.

For the future, the HathiTrust intends to start developing a workflow for ingesting

the metadata and making the DAISY files accessible to proxy users sometime in 2017.

From the usability end, our applied health sciences librarian is to focus on how these

items are used from a patron perception.

HathiTrust proxy system, in essence, allows her, as a proxy for the print-disabled patron,

to download the full PDF text from Hathi.

In future development, Hathi may also place a DAISY download under it, similar to what

Internet archive offers.

Their DAISY files are automatically generated but future unacceptable OCR quality for the

Illinois DRES level needs.

Where to store DAISY files and how to make the available to proxy's who need to download

them for print-disabled users is on the agenda for HathiTrust to consider in the future.

There is strong interests among the big ten academic alliance in seeing Hathi develop

the capability to ingest daisy files, OCR and metadata associated with the accessible

text; and to make this information available within the HathiTrust proxy service.

HathiTrust is clearly interested in working towards this, resources permitting.

Access to this content has the potential to be one of several federated components that

support more streamlined access to text and media for users with disabilities.

She lists here members of the project team with some of their contact information and

you can see, as she has mentioned, this is bringing people in from across the university

to work together.

So, now, we have time for questions.

For more infomation >> Advancing Accessibility through Libraries - Duration: 41:30.

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ЛУЧШИЕ ПРИКОЛЫ 2017 АПРЕЛЬ | БОЛЬШАЯ ПОДБОРКА CUBE - Duration: 16:40.

For more infomation >> ЛУЧШИЕ ПРИКОЛЫ 2017 АПРЕЛЬ | БОЛЬШАЯ ПОДБОРКА CUBE - Duration: 16:40.

-------------------------------------------

Ready, Fire, Aim by Michael Masterson - Book Review - Duration: 7:01.

how's it going everyone I'm Dono and

this is how to happy. In this video we're

going to be doing a review of ready fire

aim by Michael Masterson this book is

best for those who are interested in

starting a business and growing it up to

a pretty big scale the difficulty to

digest is pretty easy it's pretty well

written and easy to understand if you're

interested in starting a business you

can probably take away some key insights

though the way that it's framed you

might need a couple read throughs to get

everything out of it just because it

talks about these different stages of

business alright so moving on to the key

insights masterson breaks down

businesses into a couple different

stages so the first stage is getting to

a million dollars in sales and the most

important part in this section to get

your business started is to develop one

product and then figure out exactly what

the best way is to sell that product so

masterson puts together this plan to

give you your unique selling proposition

which is basically the reason that

people should buy for you it gives you a

step by step formula to kind of build

that and then emphasizes really heavily

that you need to focus all your

attention on getting sales he also

mentioned not to worry about lowering

your prices if it's going to get you

more customers so the two main things to

look for how to get more sales and how

to get more acquisitions the reason that

sales are so important at this stage

is it's what's keeping the business

alive without the sales you don't really

have a business this goes all the way up

to your first million in sales stage two

is when you start moving into creating

as many products as possible and he

urges that you should really quickly

develop and test new products and it

doesn't mean to put out shoddy projects

but it does mean that you should be

putting them out quickly when you create

all these new products then you have

more things to sell to your existing

customers and then you use your original

products to funnel in more new customers

to make this happen in your business

you're going to need to foster

a culture of innovation and really try

to stay away from any bureaucracy you

have to let people know that it's okay

to fail because they need to be coming

up with lots of new ideas and the ideas

don't have to be groundbreaking or new

you just need to improve on something

that already exists that proves that a

market is already out there so if you

can do something a little bit better you

can capture a lot of that market now

while speed is really important

quality shouldn't necessarily be

sacrificed more so what he means is to

keep pushing out projects and then make

small changes to make them perfected

it's going to work a lot better than

trying to create a perfect product on

the first try so by creating you know

ten different products you probably get

one that's a winner and nine that you

don't need to work on as much now even

though he emphasizes that speed is

important sales is also still really

important so he goes through this list

of 20 or so different marketing myths

and how to overcome them because again

sales is what keeps your business alive

if you're not making any sales there's no

money coming in and you can't keep any

of the operations going he then follows

up by talking about how you can get a

lot more sales by selling to your

current customers since they've already

bought products from you before they're

more likely to buy them because they

already trust you plus you'll kind of

have an idea of the things that they

want and are looking for masterson also

suggest and this is important for this

channel that ready fire aim is a good

strategy for life if you want to do

something do a little bit of planning

jump in and start doing it and then

adjust as you go that's going to be the

way that you learn the quickest then he

moved into stage 3 which is beyond 10

million dollars in sales masterson says

at this point you need to start

implementing some bureaucracy to make

sure that things are streamlined and

efficient because the problems you run

into are having too large of a company

without enough rules to help streamline

them at this point masterson emphasizes

that the key for your business is to

hire really great employees and again to

keep making sales that's something

that's emphasized repeatedly he then

goes on to warn that things can get too

bureaucratic and political and that

bottlenecks can start

to form so your main task as the owner

of a stage 3 business is to kind of make

sure that these things don't start

forming you have to find bottlenecks

even if it's yourself and get those out

of the way you also have to make sure

the bureaucracy doesn't bog down

operations so much that things

screeched to a halt and then on top of

that you need to make sure that people

are actually providing value instead of

just making political moves the last

chapter talks about a stage four business

which basically says that by that point

your business is so large you can just

do whatever you want if you want to

consult or start a new business then you

can do that he also mentioned that your

most value is going to be from becoming a

wealth builder so all in all it goes

through the stages of building a really

big business and there's a lot of good

insights in there but one of the huge

things is that sales are so critically

important a couple other considerations

this is basically a blueprint for

starting a business from nothing and

growing it all the way up to a huge

business so if you're interested in

starting a business but you're not

looking to grow a huge business you may

want to read this book still but just

read the first chapter however as you

get further into the book it's going to

be talking about things that are aimed

at really large growing companies

another thing is if you are interested

in starting a business and decide to

read this book I would recommend reading

through the whole thing anyway but

you're really only going to want to

focus on the chapter that applies to the

size of the business that you're in

because that's what's going to be most

relevant to you let's move on to the

applicable content and exercises section

whether or not you're looking to start

your own business how can you apply the

philosophy of ready fire aim which is to

start projects with some preparation but

not too perfect them to your own life if

you want to start a business what stage

are you at how will you get yourself to

the next stage whether or not you have a

business how can you eliminate

bottlenecks in your line of work? so all in all

I think this is a really valuable book

there's a lot of great insights in there

especially around how to do sells more

effectively and how to frame your

mindset to get more sales if you're

interested in picking up ready fire aim

you can get

in the link below beyond that that's all

I've really got for this video so if you

have any questions comments or topics you want me

to cover leave me a comment

and i will try to get to them as soon as

possible i'll see you next time you can

check out more content at how to happy

.com also don't forget to subscribe so

you can stay up to date on the videos

we've also got a twitter instagram and

facebook you can check out reflect take

action and enjoy life see you next time

For more infomation >> Ready, Fire, Aim by Michael Masterson - Book Review - Duration: 7:01.

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The Beyond Within | Sci-Fi Short Story Audiobook | by JR Creaden - Duration: 11:43.

Tall Tale TV.

Sci-Fi Fantasy Short Story Audiobooks.

The Beyond Within By JR Creaden

"The Elders expect us by nightfall for lessons," Rixx says.

"Where's your gear?

I'll fetch it."

I push myself out from the roamer's wide undercarriage across the hard ground, blinking

at my twin.

Her sturdy figure glows in the ocher morning light of Clarannas' sun, with our small

habitation dome looming behind her like a broken moon.

Khompan Elders can expect whatever they want; I'm not their pet to groom.

Rixx, though, I'm not eager to dismiss.

I avoid looking at her as I stow my tools along my belt.

A thick black line mars the tawny horizon.

Another dust storm, the third in so many days.

This one would swallow the whole plain before noon.

I want Rixx safely away without argument so I can cover the garden.

I grunt, pointing toward the distance, then start the roamer's engine.

"The clouds will follow the storm again," I say, judging the storm's shadow and the

stubby grass patch that surrounded our dome.

"Maybe this time with rain.

I'll stay and guard the grain."

"I—Badan, please."

Her liquid gaze pins me to the dirt.

"We're alone, brother.

You may look more Ajh than me," she flicks a finger at the horn on my chin, "but we're

the same."

She means from the same Khompan experiment.

Raised in the same sterile tank.

The first and only hybrids with the native Ajh, born to watch our planet die.

I stare past her at the golden sky.

Five stars burn to the north—what Khompan Elders call The Martyr, and Ajh, The Friend.

I call them the Reminder.

"There is more," the Reminder calls.

"More to you."

"Come with me."

Rixx's voice softens with unspoken pain.

"Let's find out what else we are.

Together."

I want nothing more than to blast off this wretched, dry planet toward those stars.

Beyond them.

Where life less haggard, less divided, beckons.

"Are you coming?" she asks.

Her slender fingers reach forward, pleading, to grip my shoulder, but, in that moment,

I feel a pull--not from the stars but from within--and I follow it, slipping inside into

another world beyond, and her hand transforms to stone, carved of a time removed.

Here, between, all possible paths of present time collide—frozen in place.

A sharp breath sticks in my throat, and I clutch my middle, preparing for my stomach

to turn, but the telltale cramp of leaving the world never comes.

I have slipped many times into the beyond, but never with so little discomfort.

Rixx has faded, colorless.

Her features shine like foggy glass, connecting her to all that is her present—the dome,

the roamer, the tunnel beyond.

All is glass, except for me.

I pinch her nose.

It's like squeezing rock.

"Stay here, sister."

I step away, searching the glass for another texture, for a time that isn't mine.

There.

A slender white vein crawls across the ground toward the tunnel several paces past the dome.

I touch a finger to the white line.

A familiar pearly white world takes shape—the dome on the plains, the tunnel gate—and

another me, from this separate time, a pace ahead, frozen mid-run toward the tunnel.

When I lay my hand on him, he springs to life.

Tall and broad-shouldered like me, his thick skin brown, and his chin horn black.

We are identical, down to our boots and our belts.

His dark eyes catch on mine.

"Thank the stars you found me," Not-Me says.

"I swear, I may not survive the day."

"Were you hoping to slip?"

Not-Me grunts, squinting at the eastern sky.

"If you could see it, you'd understand."

He faces west.

"This sun is done.

It could happen any day for you too.

It happened in waves.

Ajh that remain have been underground for months."

I nod.

The sun of Clarannas is in its death throes; nearly every possibility leads to this.

"My Rixx…didn't make it through the last wave."

When I shudder, he claps a hand on my shoulder.

"Enough of that.

You don't need my troubles yet.

What's new with you?"

He is not the me I hoped to find.

"You're never surprised when I call you here."

He chuckles.

"And we always wonder about that.

What's new?"

"The usual.

Rixx wants to drag me to the Elders."

I cast my attention back to the pearly white stone.

"For now, I want to find a surprised me."

"A third?"

Not-Me draws back.

"You must be the bravest me."

"Help me find another?"

I ask.

"And tell me about your time."

Not-Me searches with me.

As we wander over the plain, he speaks in short whispers.

"My Rixx was hard like bone," he says.

"True Ajh, despite her lack of horns."

"Always?"

My Rixx is soft like feathers in the wind, all heart and dimples and kindness.

"Since her first blood."

Not-Me cringes.

"I should've taken her to the Elders then."

He strokes his horn.

"Did you?

Take your Rixx?"

"Of course," I answer.

"It cost me a season's grain to keep her there."

"The better Badan you are then."

Not-Me kicks at the hard ground.

"She lost something after."

"Is that why yours didn't make it?"

I couldn't bear losing Rixx.

His horn hangs low.

"She was out in the open with friends when the last solar wave hit."

Not-Me points to a hint of black in the distance, near what is a small Khompan shrine in my

own time.

Here, in the white beyond, there is nothing but bare ground and a blot of black where

the shrine belongs.

When I touch the web of black, our surroundings shift again, pearl to shining rock.

This time's possibilities take shape.

The shrine here is larger, made for two, with another me sitting calmly in the center.

His build is slighter than mine or Not-Me's, and I place my hand on his black stone head.

Color spreads over his Khompan robes like slow-moving water, but he does not rise; he

merely opens lazy eyes.

"I'm a third?"

Not-Us says, his voice smooth.

"How interesting."

Not-Me crosses his arms.

"He's not surprised either."

"You'll find no surprise from me.

Not about the slips, anyway."

Not-Us lifts his horn, and his voice sharpens like a sword.

"You're both unstudied?"

Not-Me glares at Not-Us.

"I wouldn't say that."

"With the Elders," Not-Us adds.

"You haven't.

I can tell."

His eyelids droop.

"Steer clear of the Khompan.

Do not go to them.

I must return.

Be well, myselves."

Not-Me and I lock eyes and grunt.

"Wait, you."

I pull him to his feet.

"Explain first."

"I know things I shouldn't," Not-Us whispers and sinks back to the floor.

"That you shouldn't."

Before I can probe further, Not-Us melts to black.

"He's a cryptic one," Not-Me says.

"And you're a master of the obvious."

In the corner of the shrine, a spot of foggy glass glitters.

I touch it, activating my own time stream before setting off toward my dome and my Rixx.

She wants me to study our Khompan heritage, as Not-Us must have been doing for years.

The alternative, Not-Me's Rixx, estranged from the focus of her passion, is dead.

Death by starfire.

Not-Me and I walk in silence back to my Rixx, her hand still reaching for a me that isn't

there.

When we near her, he asks, "Will you save her?"

"And myself, I hope.

I'll try to leave."

I point my chin at the Reminder, and he nods in understanding.

"What about you?"

Not-Me stares across the plain to the eastern sky.

"I'll wander awhile then try not to die."

He grabs my arm.

"Only Khompan ships survive the sun flares."

"Thanks."

That could be useful information.

Not-Me pinches my Rixx's nose and kisses her cheek, then he touches another vein and

vanishes.

I take my position before Rixx and reaffirm my decision to neither join her cause nor

steal her from it, to remain myself.

A self that stands a chance to save us both from the sun.

I settle my thoughts and will myself to return, blending into our shared present.

I gulp a dusty breath.

Rixx's warm hand finally closes around my shoulder.

"I don't want to leave you."

I cover her hand with mine.

"I know, but you will."

Squeezing her hand, I lead her to the roamer's platform.

"Go learn for both of us."

"But what about you?"

Tears swim in her blue eyes but do not spill.

She climbs aboard and slips a sand-scratched helmet over her head.

I smile until she smiles back, her dimples my badges of honor.

"I'll learn for both of us, too," I say.

As her roamer speeds away over the brown plain a minute later, my heart skips a beat.

"I'll learn from myself."

This insanely cool submission came to me from JR Creaden.

JR writes speculative fiction, poetry, songs, and angry political petitions.

She's an unpublished author pursuing traditional publication for Re:Morse, book one of Contact

Files, a YA space opera series.

Check her out at https://jrcreaden.wordpress.com/

Hey guys, so this piece was a bit of an experiment.

I messed around with the background a little bit, not sure if I'm going to continue doing

that or not.

I'd love to know what you think.

Also, this was a bit of a challenge.

I've never had to narrate 3 voices before that were all the same character.

I tried really hard to make them slightly different, while still unique and the same

individual.

Not as easy as it sounds, but definitely a lot of fun.

So what did you guys think of this piece?

I would love to hear any ideas or feedback that you guys may have.

And after that, make sure to hit that subscribe button.

I'm Chris Herron and that's it for today's Tall Tale TV.

For more infomation >> The Beyond Within | Sci-Fi Short Story Audiobook | by JR Creaden - Duration: 11:43.

-------------------------------------------

Brutal Enduro - Duration: 17:06.

Holy shit!

Fuck!

What did you hit?

Legs on the handlebar?

Yeah...

Did the shorts protect you?

Yeah...

Fuck, it hurts anyway...

What's this?

The hit came here...

I see how you flew, and that there is fucking not enough speed!..

... and I realize what will happen next! :)

OK, fuck...

Shit!

Cool!

Got off with only a fright! :D

Sasha, are you OK?

Anything hurts?

It's OK! :)

Is it OK?

Ouch!..

You left your plastic!

Ouch-ouch!

Hello, guy! :)

Did you hit anything?

With fucking handlebar!...

On you fingers?

This is how you ride! :D

Zhora is the best kurva-maker! :D

Fucking shit!..

Come on... it moves...

It's better to call the others...

Come on!

Fuck!!! :D

Fucking great kurva! :DDD

That was funny! :D

Zhora you fucking always keep your style of enduro-kurva-hitman! :D

Cool! :D

Come on, bitch!

Come on, come on!

Good boy!

Do only retards do it like that? :D

How the fuck we now pull you back...

Shit!..

Withoug Kirill you won't do that! :D

No! Fucking stop!

Calm down I didn't pull it, fuck... it's disgusting!!!

Fuck you, Sergey!!! :D

Get up! :D

Hop! :D

Get up! :D

Come on, are we going down?

First time doesn't count! :D

Cool... Oh fuck@!!!

Come on!

Grab the hand!

An now look down!

Everybody wend there.

I also did it there! :)

I have no idea how... But I won't do it any more! :D

It's not moving...

Come on!

Pull it harder!

Zhora, come and help!

Ugh, Fuck!..

We are close...

It's over!..

Sorry guys...

Move away, I will try to get out of here... :)

I've stuck quite deep... :D

Fuck, how do you make it there at all?..

Ah, fuck!..

It seemed to be so easy... As you just pull the throttle and fly...

You need to do it at the right time, as well as close it. He's right.

Do you have all your teeth on the place? :D

Come, you are wellcome, right on time! :D

Are you fucking kidding me?!..Again?!! Fucking hell!..

Shit happens... :)

come on, come on... it moves, it moves...

More!

One more time...

What a new fashionable high-pressure washer you have here! :D

Ah, fuck!!!..

Shit happens... :)

For more infomation >> Brutal Enduro - Duration: 17:06.

-------------------------------------------

不妊症編|Infertility🔴世界初 428Hz 天界とつながるエレメント - Duration: 10:42.

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