Sunday, April 1, 2018

Youtube daily report Apr 1 2018

[INTRO ♪]

When we need a little help sniffing something out,

we usually turn to our furry best friends.

And there's good reason for that: dogs are relatively easy to train,

and their sense of smell is as much as 100,000 times more acute than ours.

And they're cuter.

We have machines, sure, but electronic odor detectors

tend to struggle when the chemical of interest is in low concentrations

in a complex mixture of molecules, like, I don't know, the air.

So we've taught dogs how to sniff out

everything from sewage leaks to artwork-destroying insects.

But they're not the only critters whose sense of smell can be put to good use.

There are other champion sniffers that we could use

to detect everything from disaster survivors to gourmet fungi.

Here are six of the animal kingdom's most useful noses.

Truffles—the edible fungi that grow underground, and not the chocolates—

are a gourmet food that can fetch extremely high prices.

Since they're very hard to cultivate, they're usually gathered from the wild.

But finding fungi growing up to a meter underground is pretty challenging.

Luckily, pigs are here to help us sniff them out, and they have for centuries.

Pigs have over a thousand olfactory receptor genes in their genomes—

that's more than dogs, or us, so they're able to detect a wider variety of smells.

And their olfactory bulb—

the part of their brains that processes the information from smelling—

make up about 7% of their brain.

Your bulb is a mere 0.01% of your brain.

But the real reason we use them to hunt truffles

is that they seem to have a weird natural affinity for them.

In the 1980s, researchers discovered that truffles contain large amounts of

a musky steroid that boars secrete in their saliva to put their sows... in the mood.

So, many think that's what attracts the pigs.

But a study in 1990 suggested another compound—

dimethyl sulfide—was the odor instead.

And there hasn't been much follow up, so the jury is still out.

Either way, pigs' natural instinct to root around in the dirt

in search of food probably enhances their truffle-finding skills.

Though, apparently, the pigs are notorious for snacking on the goods they find,

and it's no picnic trying to wrestle a $1000 fungus from a 200-kilogram hog.

Which is probably why nowadays,

they're losing their truffle hunting jobs to trained dogs.

I guess natural talent just doesn't trump canine ease of use.

Detecting sick animals could help predict and track

outbreaks of diseases like bird flu that can jump from other species to our own.

But classic methods for detection, like blood tests,

require a lot of time and money for sample collection and analysis.

And why do that, when there's a living disease detector right under our noses?

Enter: Mice.

Like dogs and pigs, rodents have far more functioning genes

for odor reception than we do, so they're able to

distinguish between scents that we can't even smell.

And, relative to the size of their brains,

their olfactory bulb is 200 times bigger than ours,

and 5 times bigger than dogs'.

That, and their ease of breeding and care,

makes them ideal for use as biosensors: living chemical detectors.

In a 2013 study, researchers found that mice could sniff the difference

between the poop from healthy mallard ducks

and poop from ones infected with avian influenza.

The six trained mice managed to pick out the right poop about 80% of the time,

though that was under lab conditions—

it remains to be seen if they fare as well in the field.

But that hasn't stopped New York scientists from trying to take

the whole mouse biosensor idea to the next level using genetic engineering.

In 2016, they showed their "MouSensor" mice,

which are engineered with additional olfactory receptor genes,

can be up to one hundred times better than regular lab mice

at detecting particular smells—and those were just the pilot versions.

With results like that, it might not be long

before dogs start losing ground to super sniffing genetically modified mice.

Landmines left behind after conflicts kill thousands of people every year,

but finding and removing them is a dangerous and difficult task.

It's much safer for the humans involved if something smaller and lighter

can go through and flag where all the bombs are first.

People have used dogs for this, but they're expensive to train,

and hard to transport around the world.

So, a Belgian nonprofit enlists local noses instead—

those of Gambian pouched rats.

These so-called rats—which are actually members of

a different rodent family—are huge rodents native to central Africa.

They can be 75 centimeters from nose to tail and weigh over a kilogram.

Their vision is terrible, but they make up for it with an amazing sense of smell,

which they use to communicate with each other over long distances.

And that means their noses have no trouble detecting

small amounts of explosives like TNT, even if said explosives

are buried 20 centimeters below ground in a land mine.

They're also light enough to walk across minefields safely, and they're fast—

a single rat can check 200 square meters in 20 minutes,

which would take a person days to do.

The nonprofit calls their trained rodents "HeroRATS"—and it's easy to see why.

Gambian pouched rats helped clear over 13,000 mines in Tanzania,

Mozambique, Angola, and Cambodia between 1997 and 2015.

But the rats do require a rigorous training protocol

that takes the first nine months of their eight-year lives.

At least they look super cute in their special little harnesses!

After a disaster like an earthquake,

finding victims trapped in debris can be a slow, challenging process.

Search and rescue dogs and their powerful sniffers are a big help.

But often, a smaller, more agile critter would be even better.

Something like … a search and rescue cat!

Okay, cats aren't actually being trained to do this yet,

but experts argued in a 2017 paper that maybe they should be.

That's because, although we don't know as much about their sense of smell

as other animals, what we do know suggests they've got great noses.

For example, they have 30 variants of the V1R odor receptor gene—

dogs only have nine, and we only have two.

That suggests that they may be even better than dogs

at discriminating between some scents.

The scientists behind the 2017 review argue that this means they could

take over some of the scent-related jobs that dogs are trained to do now.

And since cats are better climbers and can squeeze into smaller spaces,

they might be better suited to searching for trapped people than man's best friends.

The problem is training them, but the researchers believe it's possible,

with proper socialization and the right rewards to motivate them.

I mean, if we can train pigs and mice and giant rats, how hard could cats be?

Though, that saying about herding cats does exist for a reason.

So whether cats will live up to their heroic potential remains to be seen.

When you're sick, you actually smell a little weird.

No offense.

The illness and your immunological reaction to it

alter the concentrations of some molecules in your bodily fluids.

I mean, you might not smell the difference, but bees can.

Though they don't have noses in the way we think of them,

honey bees do have an amazing sense of smell.

That's what allows them to sniff their way to food even if it's miles away.

And scents play incredibly important roles in bee social lives.

Which is why, in their genomes, they have 163 functional

odorant receptor genes—the smelling genes unique to insects.

Fruit flies, for comparison, which also have to sniff out their meals,

have less than half that number.

These diverse odor receptors allow bees to smell the difference

between subtly different varieties of the same plant.

And it only takes a single encounter with an odor associated with a reward,

like nectar, for a bee to be able to identify the smell again.

That makes it really easy to teach bees to detect a variety of chemicals,

including disease-specific odors on our breath.

A designer in the UK even invented a glass apparatus

that allows for diagnosis by bee.

The bees have to be trained on the smell of the disease in question,

but if a person with that condition breathes into the device,

the trained bees swarm towards their breath.

If they're not sick with the target illness, the bees don't react.

It's just a prototype, but it did work at least once,

identifying a confirmed case of diabetes.

And sure, dogs can perform a similar trick, but the bees are a lot easier to train.

It only takes about 10 minutes of training to get 98% accuracy from the bees,

whereas dogs take weeks and are only right about 71% of the time.

So making honey, pollinating plants, and now diagnosing diabetes—

is there anything bees can't do?

But bees aren't the only insects with smelling superpowers.

Wasps can get in on the act, too.

A tiny parasitic wasp called Microplitis croceipes

lays its eggs in the bodies of living caterpillars.

And it behaves differently when it smells its host as opposed to its food,

which means scientists can train a single wasp to identify two different smells!

On the downside, the wasps only live a few weeks,

and they only remember the scents they've been trained on for a couple days.

But on the upside, they're cheap to raise,

and are reportedly even easier to train than bees.

And according to researchers that have worked with them,

they can detect "almost anything"—they've trained wasps on explosives,

food toxins, and even the pheromones of bed bugs.

In trials, the wasps were at least ten times as sensitive

to the test chemicals as the best electronic sensors.

The researchers even invented a device

for harnessing the wasps' super sniffing ability.

They call it the "Wasp Hound", because it's kind of like having

a trained bloodhound… except it's a container of wasps,

that wiggle instead of howl.

The wasps are held in a cartridge, which is exposed to air samples.

Based on their movements, the researchers can tell

whether the chemical they've been trained on is present in the sample or not.

Sniffer wasps could be used for jobs considered

too dangerous for us or our loyal companions to perform.

But the startup hoping to market the wasps' mad sniffing skillz

hasn't been too successful, so it's unclear if wasps

will replace the hounds they're named after anytime soon.

But even if some of these examples are still conceptual,

it's pretty wild that all sorts of animals—

from those with backbones and four legs, to those with stingers and six legs—

have these amazingly useful olfactory abilities.

Whether it's ridding the world of dangerous explosives left over after wars,

or finding gourmet fungus growing underground,

these six animals follow their noses to do some incredible things.

If there's a scent we need to track down

that our human schnozzes can't detect,

there's probably a critter out there that can help us sniff it out.

Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow.

While our noses aren't quite as keen as the animals we just talked about,

they're not as bad at sniffing as you might think.

If you want to learn more about that,

you can check out our episode about human smelling abilities.

[OUTRO ♪]

For more infomation >> 6 Animal Noses That Outsniff Dogs - Duration: 9:53.

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🍖 Monster Hunter World - Chroniken einer Jägerin - Duration: 5:15:03.

For more infomation >> 🍖 Monster Hunter World - Chroniken einer Jägerin - Duration: 5:15:03.

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CASA DE MADEIRA-SIMS HELEN - Duration: 4:01.

For more infomation >> CASA DE MADEIRA-SIMS HELEN - Duration: 4:01.

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

Cathy & Mats Hummels: So feiern sie ihr 1. Ostern mit Ludwig - Duration: 1:29.

For more infomation >> Cathy & Mats Hummels: So feiern sie ihr 1. Ostern mit Ludwig - Duration: 1:29.

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Coaching Niches 2018

For more infomation >> Coaching Niches 2018

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

President Dallin H Oaks, first counselor in the First Presidency - Duration: 5:19.

President Dallin H. Oaks: 'Small and simple things'.

On a morning walk, President Dallin H. Oaks was reminded of the power of small and simple

things over time when he saw thick and strong concrete sidewalks that were cracked from

the force of slow, small growth of roots from adjacent trees.

"The thrusting power that cracked these heavy concrete sidewalks was too small to

measure on a daily or even a monthly basis, but its effect over time was incredibly powerful,"

remarked President Oaks, first counselor in the First Presidency, in his Sunday morning

general conference address on April 1.

"So is the powerful effect over time of the small and simple things we are taught

in the scriptures and by living prophets," he said.

"Consider the scripture study we've been taught to incorporate into our daily lives.

Or, consider the personal prayers and the kneeling family prayers that are regular practices

for faithful Latter-day Saints.

Consider attendance at seminary for youth or institute classes for young adults.

Though each of these practices may seem to be small and simple, over time they result

in powerful spiritual uplift and growth.

This occurs because each of these small and simple things invites the companionship of

the Holy Ghost, the Testifier who enlightens us and guides us into truth."

Ongoing repentance, even of seemingly small transgressions, is another source of spiritual

uplift and growth, President Oaks said.

"Our own inspired self-evaluations can help us see how we have fallen short and how we

can do better.

Such repentance should precede our weekly partaking of the sacrament."

Seemingly insignificant private decisions that prepare for profound decisions include

"how we use our time, what we view on television and the internet, what we read, the art and

music with which we surround ourselves at work and at home, what we seek for entertainment,

and how we apply our commitment to be honest and truthful," President Oaks said.

"Another seemingly small and simple thing is being civil and cheerful in our personal

interactions," he added.

Such behavior must be consistent and continuous to have a lifting effect, he said.

"We are surrounded by media influences and cultural deteriorations that will carry us

downstream in our values if we are not continually resisting.

To move upstream toward our eternal goal, we must constantly keep paddling."

Displaying on television screens images of a single paddler and then a team of paddlers,

President Oaks explained, "It helps if we are part of a team who are paddling together,

like a rowing team in action.

To extend that example even further, the currents are so strong that if we ever stop paddling,

we will be carried downstream toward a destination we do not seek but which becomes inevitable

if we do not constantly try to move forward."

Referring to the account in Numbers 21:6 of Moses erecting a serpent of brass on a pole

and instructing the people to look at the serpent in order to be delivered from the

plague of fiery serpents, President Oaks commented, "That example and that teaching remind us

that the simplicity of the way or the easiness of the commanded task cannot mean that it

is unimportant to achieve our righteous desire."

Similarly, he said, even small acts of disobedience or minor failures to follow righteous practices

can draw one downward.

"The Word of Wisdom provides an example of this," he said.

"Likely the effect on the body of one cigarette or one drink of alcohol or one dose of another

drug cannot be measured.

But over time, the effect is powerful and may be irreversible."

He noted that avoiding consequences of partaking of anything that can be addictive — such

as drugs that attack the body or pornography that degrades one's thoughts — is totally

avoidable if one never partakes even once.

President Oaks cited the words of President M. Russell Ballard given at the general conference

of April 1990.

On that occasion, President Ballard spoke of weak fibers that form yarn, then a strand

and finally a rope that can become too strong to be broken.

He compared it to the power of small and simple things to either build spirituality or to

lead one into despair and misery.

Similarly, President Oaks noted, Steven C. Wheelwright at a BYU-Hawaii devotional on

Aug. 31, 2007, said, "'It is in failing to do the small and simple things that faith

wavers, miracles cease and progress toward the Lord and His kingdom is first put on hold,

then begins to unravel as seeking after the kingdom of God is replaced with more temporal

pursuits and worldly ambitions.'"

President Oaks also quoted Elder David A. Bednar as saying at an April 29, 2011, BYU

Women's Conference: "'If you and I are focused and frequent in receiving consistent

drops of spiritual nourishment, then gospel roots can sink deep into our soul, can become

firmly established and grounded, and can produce extraordinary and delicious fruit.'"

For more infomation >> President Dallin H Oaks, first counselor in the First Presidency - Duration: 5:19.

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Author of New Book on Trump White House Says Kellyanne Conway "Is the Number One Leaker" - Duration: 3:10.

The author of a new book on President Donald Trump's administration says White

House counselor Kellyanne Conway is the "number one leaker" in the White House.

"If you wonder why there are so many leaks out of the White House,

one reason is Kellyanne is the number one leaker," said Ronald Kessler,

author of The Trump White House: Changing the Rules of the Game,

which is out on Tuesday.

The book is largely seen as a defense of Trump but he insisted in the interview

with CNN's State of the Union that "there's plenty of negative items in the book

and juicy tidbits in the book."

Kessler claims that at least once when he was interviewing Conway for the book she

"forgot that she was on record, and she started lashing into Reince Priebus," he

said, referring to the president's former chief of staff.

"She said the most mean, cutting and obviously untrue things about Reince.

And I didn't include them in the book because they were so unfair.

She also lit into Jared and Ivanka, saying that they leak against Steve Bannon."

Kessler also harshly criticizes Trump's daughter Ivanka and her husband Jared

Kushner, writing in the book that they were responsible for "the most disastrous

and foolish decisions of Trump's presidency." The problem,

according to Kessler's book is that Trump's daughter and son-in-law "had no

understanding of how the basic fundamentals of how government works,

how a campaign works, how politics works.

Most of all, they had no understanding of the political consequences of their

actions." When asked for examples of this,

Kessler said that they were the ones who pushed the firing of Comey,

which was disastrous." They also allegedly "pushed hiring Anthony Scaramucci,

who had to be the most absurd hire in the history of the White House," Kessler said.

Kessler's book also credits First Lady Melania Trump for being a

strong-behind-the-scenes force who is much more influential on Trump than people

recognize.

Kessler specifically credits her for pushing Trump to run for president.

At the end of the day, Kessler is convinced history will vindicate Trump.

"He will be seen as a great president, just like Reagan,

who was dissed by the press, based on results, the record unemployment,

getting rid of ISIS," Kessler said.

"All these tweets and controversies are going to be forgotten long- term."

The revelations about Conway comes weeks after reports that she was getting close

to accepting an offer to succeed Hope Hicks as White House communications director.

"It's becoming increasingly difficult for her to say no," a senior White House

official told the Atlantic.

Shortly after Hope Hicks announced her resignation,

Conway said on Fox News that she had "been offered that job many times."

For more infomation >> Author of New Book on Trump White House Says Kellyanne Conway "Is the Number One Leaker" - Duration: 3:10.

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

Somebody sent me this! - Duration: 7:24.

welcome back to another video!

as many of you know my birthday is coming up this weekend

how can i explain this....

first of all, my mom knows me well and she knows that I like clothes

I like to tease around talking about expensive clothes like... gucci, louis vuitton, supreme, off white, etc.

all the expensive clothing brand that I like but not like it's necessary and get reasonable price clothes i also like

obviously this...

so my mom sent me a text that I have a package arriving and i wonder what it could be

i'm hoping it not what I think what it is that i like

there are two things i got so far from that kind of stuff

for instance

really love this wallet and then the one i love the most is yeezys, see?

best shoes I have gotten so far in my life

now this

one thing that i can tell you that my mom recently went to LA California couple weeks ago

she told me she went to the gucci store and i was like oh cool, hope you have a fun time in LA. simple

now i dont know if this is the package that she was in LA

if this is not what it is then...

i might delete this video lol

still want to document to see what the kind of reaction i get for my birthday

we need to wait for jake to get here because he wants to see the reveal of the package so we'll wait for him.

i'll get back to you in a second

so he's here now, you ready?

no

going ahead anyways

why am i nervous? haha

no let you know it could be a trick

my parents tend to do that, never know

it's from nordstorm, how is that a trick?

they tricked me with this too

nuh uh!! dont want to see what it is...

OMG!

I knew it!

spoiled! spoiled!

omg

see i knew it

spoiled!

Oh slides!!

finally got those, yeah those are the ones i told mom about that i really like

wow finally got those gucci slides!

spoiled!

spoiled brat

try them on

give me your yeezys

nah man

feels comfortable!

Happy Birthday! from my parents

well um haha

spoiled!

to my parents, if you're watching this. I love you and thank you for the gift. I really appreciate it! thank you

i knew it anyways lol

so I hope you enjoy this box opening

really nice gift. i really want those slides since. really like them, very comfortable. thanks again to my parents

so i hope you enjoy this video and make sure give a thumbs up for my birthday and i will see you next video

see ya

For more infomation >> Somebody sent me this! - Duration: 7:24.

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

Anyone Else

For more infomation >> Anyone Else

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

6 Animal Noses That Outsniff Dogs - Duration: 9:53.

[INTRO ♪]

When we need a little help sniffing something out,

we usually turn to our furry best friends.

And there's good reason for that: dogs are relatively easy to train,

and their sense of smell is as much as 100,000 times more acute than ours.

And they're cuter.

We have machines, sure, but electronic odor detectors

tend to struggle when the chemical of interest is in low concentrations

in a complex mixture of molecules, like, I don't know, the air.

So we've taught dogs how to sniff out

everything from sewage leaks to artwork-destroying insects.

But they're not the only critters whose sense of smell can be put to good use.

There are other champion sniffers that we could use

to detect everything from disaster survivors to gourmet fungi.

Here are six of the animal kingdom's most useful noses.

Truffles—the edible fungi that grow underground, and not the chocolates—

are a gourmet food that can fetch extremely high prices.

Since they're very hard to cultivate, they're usually gathered from the wild.

But finding fungi growing up to a meter underground is pretty challenging.

Luckily, pigs are here to help us sniff them out, and they have for centuries.

Pigs have over a thousand olfactory receptor genes in their genomes—

that's more than dogs, or us, so they're able to detect a wider variety of smells.

And their olfactory bulb—

the part of their brains that processes the information from smelling—

make up about 7% of their brain.

Your bulb is a mere 0.01% of your brain.

But the real reason we use them to hunt truffles

is that they seem to have a weird natural affinity for them.

In the 1980s, researchers discovered that truffles contain large amounts of

a musky steroid that boars secrete in their saliva to put their sows... in the mood.

So, many think that's what attracts the pigs.

But a study in 1990 suggested another compound—

dimethyl sulfide—was the odor instead.

And there hasn't been much follow up, so the jury is still out.

Either way, pigs' natural instinct to root around in the dirt

in search of food probably enhances their truffle-finding skills.

Though, apparently, the pigs are notorious for snacking on the goods they find,

and it's no picnic trying to wrestle a $1000 fungus from a 200-kilogram hog.

Which is probably why nowadays,

they're losing their truffle hunting jobs to trained dogs.

I guess natural talent just doesn't trump canine ease of use.

Detecting sick animals could help predict and track

outbreaks of diseases like bird flu that can jump from other species to our own.

But classic methods for detection, like blood tests,

require a lot of time and money for sample collection and analysis.

And why do that, when there's a living disease detector right under our noses?

Enter: Mice.

Like dogs and pigs, rodents have far more functioning genes

for odor reception than we do, so they're able to

distinguish between scents that we can't even smell.

And, relative to the size of their brains,

their olfactory bulb is 200 times bigger than ours,

and 5 times bigger than dogs'.

That, and their ease of breeding and care,

makes them ideal for use as biosensors: living chemical detectors.

In a 2013 study, researchers found that mice could sniff the difference

between the poop from healthy mallard ducks

and poop from ones infected with avian influenza.

The six trained mice managed to pick out the right poop about 80% of the time,

though that was under lab conditions—

it remains to be seen if they fare as well in the field.

But that hasn't stopped New York scientists from trying to take

the whole mouse biosensor idea to the next level using genetic engineering.

In 2016, they showed their "MouSensor" mice,

which are engineered with additional olfactory receptor genes,

can be up to one hundred times better than regular lab mice

at detecting particular smells—and those were just the pilot versions.

With results like that, it might not be long

before dogs start losing ground to super sniffing genetically modified mice.

Landmines left behind after conflicts kill thousands of people every year,

but finding and removing them is a dangerous and difficult task.

It's much safer for the humans involved if something smaller and lighter

can go through and flag where all the bombs are first.

People have used dogs for this, but they're expensive to train,

and hard to transport around the world.

So, a Belgian nonprofit enlists local noses instead—

those of Gambian pouched rats.

These so-called rats—which are actually members of

a different rodent family—are huge rodents native to central Africa.

They can be 75 centimeters from nose to tail and weigh over a kilogram.

Their vision is terrible, but they make up for it with an amazing sense of smell,

which they use to communicate with each other over long distances.

And that means their noses have no trouble detecting

small amounts of explosives like TNT, even if said explosives

are buried 20 centimeters below ground in a land mine.

They're also light enough to walk across minefields safely, and they're fast—

a single rat can check 200 square meters in 20 minutes,

which would take a person days to do.

The nonprofit calls their trained rodents "HeroRATS"—and it's easy to see why.

Gambian pouched rats helped clear over 13,000 mines in Tanzania,

Mozambique, Angola, and Cambodia between 1997 and 2015.

But the rats do require a rigorous training protocol

that takes the first nine months of their eight-year lives.

At least they look super cute in their special little harnesses!

After a disaster like an earthquake,

finding victims trapped in debris can be a slow, challenging process.

Search and rescue dogs and their powerful sniffers are a big help.

But often, a smaller, more agile critter would be even better.

Something like … a search and rescue cat!

Okay, cats aren't actually being trained to do this yet,

but experts argued in a 2017 paper that maybe they should be.

That's because, although we don't know as much about their sense of smell

as other animals, what we do know suggests they've got great noses.

For example, they have 30 variants of the V1R odor receptor gene—

dogs only have nine, and we only have two.

That suggests that they may be even better than dogs

at discriminating between some scents.

The scientists behind the 2017 review argue that this means they could

take over some of the scent-related jobs that dogs are trained to do now.

And since cats are better climbers and can squeeze into smaller spaces,

they might be better suited to searching for trapped people than man's best friends.

The problem is training them, but the researchers believe it's possible,

with proper socialization and the right rewards to motivate them.

I mean, if we can train pigs and mice and giant rats, how hard could cats be?

Though, that saying about herding cats does exist for a reason.

So whether cats will live up to their heroic potential remains to be seen.

When you're sick, you actually smell a little weird.

No offense.

The illness and your immunological reaction to it

alter the concentrations of some molecules in your bodily fluids.

I mean, you might not smell the difference, but bees can.

Though they don't have noses in the way we think of them,

honey bees do have an amazing sense of smell.

That's what allows them to sniff their way to food even if it's miles away.

And scents play incredibly important roles in bee social lives.

Which is why, in their genomes, they have 163 functional

odorant receptor genes—the smelling genes unique to insects.

Fruit flies, for comparison, which also have to sniff out their meals,

have less than half that number.

These diverse odor receptors allow bees to smell the difference

between subtly different varieties of the same plant.

And it only takes a single encounter with an odor associated with a reward,

like nectar, for a bee to be able to identify the smell again.

That makes it really easy to teach bees to detect a variety of chemicals,

including disease-specific odors on our breath.

A designer in the UK even invented a glass apparatus

that allows for diagnosis by bee.

The bees have to be trained on the smell of the disease in question,

but if a person with that condition breathes into the device,

the trained bees swarm towards their breath.

If they're not sick with the target illness, the bees don't react.

It's just a prototype, but it did work at least once,

identifying a confirmed case of diabetes.

And sure, dogs can perform a similar trick, but the bees are a lot easier to train.

It only takes about 10 minutes of training to get 98% accuracy from the bees,

whereas dogs take weeks and are only right about 71% of the time.

So making honey, pollinating plants, and now diagnosing diabetes—

is there anything bees can't do?

But bees aren't the only insects with smelling superpowers.

Wasps can get in on the act, too.

A tiny parasitic wasp called Microplitis croceipes

lays its eggs in the bodies of living caterpillars.

And it behaves differently when it smells its host as opposed to its food,

which means scientists can train a single wasp to identify two different smells!

On the downside, the wasps only live a few weeks,

and they only remember the scents they've been trained on for a couple days.

But on the upside, they're cheap to raise,

and are reportedly even easier to train than bees.

And according to researchers that have worked with them,

they can detect "almost anything"—they've trained wasps on explosives,

food toxins, and even the pheromones of bed bugs.

In trials, the wasps were at least ten times as sensitive

to the test chemicals as the best electronic sensors.

The researchers even invented a device

for harnessing the wasps' super sniffing ability.

They call it the "Wasp Hound", because it's kind of like having

a trained bloodhound… except it's a container of wasps,

that wiggle instead of howl.

The wasps are held in a cartridge, which is exposed to air samples.

Based on their movements, the researchers can tell

whether the chemical they've been trained on is present in the sample or not.

Sniffer wasps could be used for jobs considered

too dangerous for us or our loyal companions to perform.

But the startup hoping to market the wasps' mad sniffing skillz

hasn't been too successful, so it's unclear if wasps

will replace the hounds they're named after anytime soon.

But even if some of these examples are still conceptual,

it's pretty wild that all sorts of animals—

from those with backbones and four legs, to those with stingers and six legs—

have these amazingly useful olfactory abilities.

Whether it's ridding the world of dangerous explosives left over after wars,

or finding gourmet fungus growing underground,

these six animals follow their noses to do some incredible things.

If there's a scent we need to track down

that our human schnozzes can't detect,

there's probably a critter out there that can help us sniff it out.

Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow.

While our noses aren't quite as keen as the animals we just talked about,

they're not as bad at sniffing as you might think.

If you want to learn more about that,

you can check out our episode about human smelling abilities.

[OUTRO ♪]

For more infomation >> 6 Animal Noses That Outsniff Dogs - Duration: 9:53.

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SCANDAL -「 Take Me Out」#Europa - Duration: 3:53.

A sweet scent tempted me

And I fell in love with your kind eyes

I want to know more about you

tomorrow

I'll follow a route to a future

Where I don't know where I'll end up

Let's dance as our heartbeats overlap

With the sun that rises over and over again

Ah... there's a sky I want to see with you

We've crossed the borderline

Pa, pa-ra, pa, pa, pa-raa...

Ah... hold my hand and take me out

To a paradise no one can find

Pa, pa-ra, pa, pa, pa-raa...

Even if we walk side by side to our shadows

Is this unfulfilled love a sin?

Everyday life is dramatic enough

To be stirred by a tear

If I embrace the words you gave to me

I can be reborn again

The things right beside me in the corners of the round earth

Give me happiness

Ah... we keep coming closer and getting separated

I've solved the secret and am in Wonderland

Pa, pa-ra, pa, pa, pa-raa...

Ah... we keep coming closer and getting separated

The two of us have one love

Pa, pa-ra, pa, pa, pa-raa...

Ah... there's a sky I want to see with you

We've crossed the borderline

Pa, pa-ra, pa, pa, pa-raa...

Ah... hold my hand and take me out

To a paradise no one can find

Pa, pa-ra, pa, pa, pa-raa...

For more infomation >> SCANDAL -「 Take Me Out」#Europa - Duration: 3:53.

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덴마크공군 Saab 35XD (RF-35) Draken 정찰기 | 한국의 군사력 - Duration: 6:14.

For more infomation >> 덴마크공군 Saab 35XD (RF-35) Draken 정찰기 | 한국의 군사력 - Duration: 6:14.

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[ENG SUB] EP 15 Run BTS! مترجم للعربية - Duration: 20:00.

For more infomation >> [ENG SUB] EP 15 Run BTS! مترجم للعربية - Duration: 20:00.

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

Mixdown File1 - Duration: 2:03.

If you wanna learn something about a university or a major that you' re interested in, who

would you choose to ask?

Your counselor?

Your parents?

Collegeboard or Niche?

Sad news, none of them know exactly what courses are offered for a major this year, how much

homework a student's having today, what people do after school, and how they got into

this place.

Why?

It's because they don't have authentic experience!

So, you may find a fellow who's currently studying there, buy him a cup of coffee, and

ask about how his life's like.

Now, with Coffea, this invitation of having coffee is brought online.

In our community, you may ask questions to any fellow who's currently studying in your

dream school and favorite major.

You may join their customized online seminars and even local campus tours, only at the cost

of one-tenth a cup of coffee.

How come?

Thanks to internet, LBS, and the idea of Knowledge Commerce.

Welcome to Quora of colleges and majors.

Other people's personal experience will help you make choices at critical moments.

If you're a college student, Coffea earns you pocket money by simply sharing your life

and answering questions.

If you find yourself lost and does not have any clear goal, our customized interest scale

would help you dig out your hidden interests and personalities, which leads to user-defined

'Interest tags' that only belongs to you.

With the tags, you can now receive recommended Q&A posts according to your personal interests.

Afterward, our school & major matching system will find you good fits.

Your fit gets more accurate as you keep on using Coffea by means of our learning model.

If you want to go on your own, with the selection helper, you can choose your favorite university

and major like shopping in eBay and Taobao.

In addition to grades, rigor, class size, and location, even food can be your most important

parameter!

On the search result page, you will be surprised to find that all descriptions are not dull

wiki articles, but lively Q&As written by current students.

Coffea; 'Fittest is the Best'.

Don't forget to follow our WeChat public account "Futurists" to look through intros

of major and be up to date with our info.

For more infomation >> Mixdown File1 - Duration: 2:03.

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Author of New Book on Trump White House Says Kellyanne Conway "Is the Number One Leaker" - Duration: 3:10.

The author of a new book on President Donald Trump's administration says White

House counselor Kellyanne Conway is the "number one leaker" in the White House.

"If you wonder why there are so many leaks out of the White House,

one reason is Kellyanne is the number one leaker," said Ronald Kessler,

author of The Trump White House: Changing the Rules of the Game,

which is out on Tuesday.

The book is largely seen as a defense of Trump but he insisted in the interview

with CNN's State of the Union that "there's plenty of negative items in the book

and juicy tidbits in the book."

Kessler claims that at least once when he was interviewing Conway for the book she

"forgot that she was on record, and she started lashing into Reince Priebus," he

said, referring to the president's former chief of staff.

"She said the most mean, cutting and obviously untrue things about Reince.

And I didn't include them in the book because they were so unfair.

She also lit into Jared and Ivanka, saying that they leak against Steve Bannon."

Kessler also harshly criticizes Trump's daughter Ivanka and her husband Jared

Kushner, writing in the book that they were responsible for "the most disastrous

and foolish decisions of Trump's presidency." The problem,

according to Kessler's book is that Trump's daughter and son-in-law "had no

understanding of how the basic fundamentals of how government works,

how a campaign works, how politics works.

Most of all, they had no understanding of the political consequences of their

actions." When asked for examples of this,

Kessler said that they were the ones who pushed the firing of Comey,

which was disastrous." They also allegedly "pushed hiring Anthony Scaramucci,

who had to be the most absurd hire in the history of the White House," Kessler said.

Kessler's book also credits First Lady Melania Trump for being a

strong-behind-the-scenes force who is much more influential on Trump than people

recognize.

Kessler specifically credits her for pushing Trump to run for president.

At the end of the day, Kessler is convinced history will vindicate Trump.

"He will be seen as a great president, just like Reagan,

who was dissed by the press, based on results, the record unemployment,

getting rid of ISIS," Kessler said.

"All these tweets and controversies are going to be forgotten long- term."

The revelations about Conway comes weeks after reports that she was getting close

to accepting an offer to succeed Hope Hicks as White House communications director.

"It's becoming increasingly difficult for her to say no," a senior White House

official told the Atlantic.

Shortly after Hope Hicks announced her resignation,

Conway said on Fox News that she had "been offered that job many times."

For more infomation >> Author of New Book on Trump White House Says Kellyanne Conway "Is the Number One Leaker" - Duration: 3:10.

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BREAKING News From Dennis Rodman About Kim Jong Un…. WHOA!!! - Duration: 3:27.

Dennis Rodman, the only man in the world who is actually friends with both the

dictator running North Korea and the president of the United States hopes the two

will hit it off when they meet in May, FOX News reports.

The NBA Hall of Famer, who has made various trips to North Korea since 2013,

took to Twitter on Friday to express his support for the upcoming summit between

President Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.

"Hoping for this after my two friends and leaders meet next month.

#Peace #Love #NotWar #Diplomacy," Rodman tweeted.

Earlier in March President Trump announced plans to meet with "Lil Rocketman" to

talk about the country's nuclear program.

This week, the president said he believes that the North Koreans want to make peace.

"For years and through many administrations,

everyone said that peace and the demilitarization of the Korean Peninsula was not

even a small possibility," Trump tweeted.

"Now there is a good change that Kim Jong Un will do what is right for his people

and for humanity.

Look forward to our meeting!"

"Chinese President XI JINPING and I spoke at length about the meeting with KIM JONG

UN of North Korea.

President XI told me he appreciates that the U.S. is working to solve the problem

diplomatically rather than going with the ominous alternative.

China continues to be helpful!"

Rodman says that the tensions will go away simply by singing karaoke together…

For God's sake, Rodman has lost his fricking mind!

Rodman said he would like to "straighten things out" between North Korean Dictator

Kim Jong-Un and the United States amid nuclear tensions, Fox News reported.

Rodman, who has made trips to the isolation nation in the past,

told a British television show that he has a history with Kim.

He said they skied together and sang karaoke.

"For me to go over there and see (Kim) as much as I have,

I basically hang out with him all the time.

We laugh, we sing karaoke, we do a lot of cool things together.

We ride horses, we hang out, we go skiing,

we hardly ever talk politics and that's the good thing," Rodman said,

according to Reuters.

The legendary rebounder said he was not trying to defend Kim's provocations and was

"just an ambassador for sports."

Rodman visited North Korea in June and was seen giving President Trump's book "The

Art of the Deal" to North Korean Sports Minister Kim Il Guk.

He said at the time he was "just trying to open a door" through his trip.

He also made a trip to North Korea in 2014.

Rodman made his first trip to North Korea in February of 2013 for a "basketball

diplomacy" trip.

The NBA star returned twice more in 2013 and again in January 2014 for a basketball

game with the dictator to celebrate Kim birthday.

Thank God we have Dennis Rodman ready to save the world…

Unbelievable…

God Bless.

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