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Jesús Adrián Romero responde unas preguntas sobre el peregrinaje/retiro espiritual en el cual se encuentra.
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No Blue Thing is Ray Lynch's fourth studio album, released on August 15, 1989. It peaked at #1 on Billboard's ''Top New Age Albums'' chart as well as #197 on Billboard's ''Top 200 Albums''. The album also peaked at #16 on Gavin Report.
Keith Tuber of Orange Coast praised the album, commentating that Ray Lynch ''has a way with melodies, combining classical, acoustic and synthesized pop elements.'' JA of Keyboard noted that the some of the album is ''more of the same'' from Deep Breakfast; JA wrote that the ''DX patches have a little more bit[e] this time, but the trick of running staccato patterns through a delay line in triplet rhythm hadn't changed'' and that the album, like his previous works, lack percussion instruments. JA concluded that the listeners may or may not like the album. Robert Carlberg of Electronic Musician compared the album to Reed Maidenberg's Unexpected Beauty, praising the album for its combination of electronic and acoustic instruments but criticizing it for having an overreliance of arpeggiations as well as its use of ''plodding'' time signatures and for its ''warm, fuzzy'' instrumentation. Carlberg concluded that the album's flaws ''rob [both Lynch and Maidenberg] of whatever vitality classical training would bring.'' John Diliberto of Jazziz Magazine criticized the album, calling it formulaic and concluded that the album ''breaks no new ground''. Gavin Report wrote that each track on the album is worthy of the listener's attention, especially ''The True Spirit of Mom & Dad'', which was described as the ''climactic final track'' of the album.
Can we see things travelling faster than light?
Check out Audible: http://bit.ly/AudibleVe
Music by Amarante "One Last Thing" http://bit.ly/VeAmarante
Awesome animations by http://youtube.com/minutephysics
Thanks to Prof. Geraint Lewis for input on earlier drafts of this video.
The expanding universe is a complicated place. During inflation the universe expanded faster than light, but that's something that actually happens all the time, it's happening right now. This doesn't violate Einstein's theory of relativity since nothing is moving through space faster than light, it's just that space itself is expanding such that far away objects are receding rapidly from each other. Common sense would dictate that objects moving away from us faster than light should be invisible, but they aren't. This is because light can travel from regions of space which are superluminal relative to us into regions that are subluminal. So our observable universe is bigger than our Hubble sphere - it's limited by the particle horizon, the distance light could travel to us since the beginning of time as we know it.
Lucasfilm and director J.J. Abrams join forces once again to take viewers on an epic journey to a galaxy far, far away with Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker, the riveting conclusion of the seminal Skywalker saga, where new legends will be born and the final battle for freedom is yet to come.
The film stars Carrie Fisher, Mark Hamill, Adam Driver, Daisy Ridley, John Boyega, Oscar Isaac, Anthony Daniels, Naomi Ackie, Domhnall Gleeson, Richard E. Grant, Lupita Nyong'o, Keri Russell, Joonas Suotamo, Kelly Marie Tran, with Ian McDiarmid and Billy Dee Williams
Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker is directed by J.J. Abrams and produced by Kathleen Kennedy, Abrams and Michelle Rejwan. Callum Greene, Tommy Gormley and Jason McGatlin serve as executive producers. The screenplay was written by Chris Terrio & J.J. Abrams and the story is by Derek Connolly & Colin Trevorrow and J.J. Abrams & Chris Terrio, based on characters created by George Lucas. Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker opens in U.S. theaters on December 20.
#ign
Longyearbyen en Svalbard es el asentamiento con más de 1000 residentes que está más al Norte.
Mi viaje a Noruega fue financiado por Screen Australia, Film Victoria y Genepool Productions como parte den nuevo proyecto. Más información pronto.
Más información sobre Svalbard aquí- https://wakelet.com/wake/2cf89....30f-e5ea-4f57-b766-a
Música autorizada de www.cuesongs.com “After Catalunya”
Spotify page: https://play.spotify.com/artis....t/2JnQ2AxkaRjlGCNmfk
iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/gb/ar....tist/emphemetry/id41
Grabado con un dron DJI Phantom 4
Este video es una traducción del video “The Northernmost Town on Earth (Svalbard en 4K)" de Veritasium- https://youtu.be/5NhIRwCq428
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PRIMERA VISTA DE ALFAREROS A EL SALVADOR
Oso Yogi - 10.- El Gran Oso Bravo
PC Reddy, fundador de los Hospitales Apollo, le pregunta a Sadhguru qué es lo que se necesita para estar saludable. Sadhguru hace la diferencia entre las causas de las enfermedades infecciosas y las causas de las enfermedades crónicas. Las segundas, dice, son creadas desde dentro del cuerpo y pueden ser fácilmente curadas si tenemos acceso al “fabricante” interior de este organismo.
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Aprende la meditación guiada gratuita de Sadhguru
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Yogui, místico y visionario, Sadhguru es un maestro espiritual con una diferencia. Una notable combinación de profundidad y pragmatismo, su vida y su trabajo sirven como recordatorio de que el yoga es una ciencia contemporánea, de vital relevancia en nuestro tiempo.
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Today we’re going to talk about how computers understand speech and speak themselves. As computers play an increasing role in our daily lives there has been an growing demand for voice user interfaces, but speech is also terribly complicated. Vocabularies are diverse, sentence structures can often dictate the meaning of certain words, and computers also have to deal with accents, mispronunciations, and many common linguistic faux pas. The field of Natural Language Processing, or NLP, attempts to solve these problems, with a number of techniques we’ll discuss today. And even though our virtual assistants like Siri, Alexa, Google Home, Bixby, and Cortana have come a long way from the first speech processing and synthesis models, there is still much room for improvement.
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These are the molecular machines inside your body that make cell division possible. Animation by Drew Berry at the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research. http://wehi.tv
Special thanks to Patreon supporters:
Joshua Abenir, Tony Fadell, Donal Botkin, Jeff Straathof, Zach Mueller, Ron Neal, Nathan Hansen
Support Veritasium on Patreon: http://ve42.co/patreon
Every day in an adult human roughly 50-70 billion of your cells die. They may be damaged, stressed, or just plain old - this is normal, in fact it’s called programmed cell death.
To make up for that loss, right now, inside your body, billions of cells are dividing, creating new cells.
And cell division, also called mitosis, requires an army of tiny molecular machines.DNA is a good place to start - the double helix molecule that we always talk about.
This is a scientifically accurate depiction of DNA. If you unwind the two strands you can see that each has a sugar phosphate backbone connected to the sequence of nucleic acid base pairs, known by the letters A,T,G, and C.
Now the strands run in opposite directions, which is important when you go to copy DNA. Copying DNA is one of the first steps in cell division. Here the two strands of DNA are being unwound and separated by the tiny blue molecular machine called helicase.
It literally spins as fast as a jet engine! The strand of DNA on the right has its complimentary strand assembled continuously but the other strand is more complicated because it runs in the opposite direction.
So it must be looped out with its compliment strand assembled in reverse, section by section. At the end of this process you have two identical DNA molecules, each one a few centimeters long but just a couple nanometers wide.
To prevent the DNA from becoming a tangled mess, it is wrapped around proteins called a histones, forming a nucleosome.
These nucleosomes are bundled together into a fiber known as chromatin, which is further looped and coiled to form a chromosome, one of the largest molecular structures in your body.
You can actually see chromosomes under a microscope in dividing cells - only then do they take on their characteristic shape.
The process of dividing the cell takes around an hour in mammals. This footage is from a time lapse. You can see how the chromosomes line up on the equator of the cell. When everything is right they are pulled apart into the two new daughter cells, each one containing an identical copy of DNA.
As simple as it looks, this process is incredibly complicated and requires even more fascinating molecular machines to accomplish it. Let’s look at a single chromosome. One chromosome consists of two sausage-shaped chromatids - containing the identical copies of DNA made earlier. Each chromatid is attached to microtubule fibers, which guide and help align them in the correct position. The microtubules are connected to the chromatid at the kinetochore, here colored red.
The kinetochore consists of hundreds of proteins working together to achieve multiple objectives - it’s one of the most sophisticated molecular mechanisms inside your body. The kinetochore is central to the successful separation of the chromatids. It creates a dynamic connection between the chromosome and the microtubules. For a reason no one’s yet been able to figure out, the microtubules are constantly being built at one end and deconstructed at the other.
While the chromosome is still getting ready, the kinetochore sends out a chemical stop signal to the rest of the cell, shown here by the red molecules, basically saying this chromosome is not yet ready to divide
The kinetochore also mechanically senses tension. When the tension is just right and the position and attachment are correct all the proteins get ready, shown here by turning green.
At this point the stop signal broadcasting system is not switched off. Instead it is literally carried away from the kinetochore down the microtubules by a dynein motor. This is really what it looks like. It has long ‘legs’ so it can avoid obstacles and step over the kinesins, molecular motors walking the other direction.
Studio filming by Raquel Nuno
Tom & Jerry Spotlight Collection Vol. 1-3 Available now on DVD
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Heisenberg's uncertainty principle tells us that it is impossible to simultaneously measure the position and momentum of a particle with infinite precision. In our everyday lives we virtually never come up against this limit, hence why it seems peculiar. In this experiment a laser is shone through a narrow slit onto a screen. As the slit is made narrower, the spot on the screen also becomes narrower. But at a certain point, the spot starts becoming wider. This is because the photons of light have been so localised at the slit that their horizontal momentum must become less well defined in order to satisfy Heisenberg's uncertainty principle.
I based this video on one by Prof. Walter Lewin of MIT: http://bit.ly/100Wk2K
Henry (MinutePhysics) has previously made a video about Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle where he treats it as less spooky and more a consequence of waves: http://bit.ly/TV3xO5
Sixty Symbols has a great video on Planck's constant: http://bit.ly/11upebY
Thanks to the University of Sydney for hosting this experiment, especially to Tom and Ralph for their assistance getting it working.
Music: Kevin McLeod (Incompetech.com) Mirage and Danse Macabre
Athair Ar Nearmh by Enya from the album The Memory of Trees. I don't know why but for some reason this particular song by Enya, always gave me a mystical, old world, fairy tail type of feeling! This is my interpretation of this song and how it makes me feel!
Remarkably little is known about great white sharks, but they are similar to humans in a lot of ways - they give birth to live young, maintain a higher body temperature than their surroundings and they are apex predators. There are also many misconceptions about these sharks: people think they don't get cancer and that they reside mainly in shallow waters near beaches. In this video I summarize some of the most interesting things I learned about sharks on my cage diving adventure.
Special thanks to Rodney Fox Shark Expeditions for making this trip possible: http://bit.ly/rodneyfox
Thanks also to Tourism South Australia for facilitating the trip: http://bit.ly/1aq9MgV
Chris Cassella or C² as he is known after this trip was a shark spotter extraordinaire. He also took some of the best shark footage in this video. It was his idea to go on this expedition, which was definitely a once in a lifetime experience, so I am in his debt. Chris, I look forward to going on more great adventures with you. Check out Chris's facebook page ScienceAlert http://on.fb.me/18nhyLp
El Hombre Araña 3 (2007)
Tobey Maguire como Spider-Man/Peter Parker
Kirsten Dunst como Mary Jane Watson
James Franco como Nuevo Duende/Harry Osborn
Thomas Haden Church como Hombre de Arena/Flint Marko
Topher Grace como Venom/Eddie Brock
Rosemary Harris como May Parker
J.K. Simmons como J. Jonah Jameson
Bryce Dallas Howard como Gwen Stacy
Dylan Baker como Dr. Curt Connors
James Cromwell como Capitán George Stacy
Willem Dafoe como Norman Osborn
TM & © Sony (2007) /Zefr SonyPictures /Marvel .
Fair use.
Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. No copyright infringement intended.
http://www.sciencefriday.com
Step Inside A Mad Scientist's Lab
The movie prop shop Jadis, in Santa Monica, California, is packed with ancient, long-forgotten technology: an Edison dictaphone, a typewriter-like counting machine and quack medical devices like the 'Hemodimagnometer.' But you might recognize some of these oddities--they've appeared in movies like The Mystery Men, The X-Files, and The Prestige.
Parke Meek, an industrial designer who worked with the likes of Frank Lloyd Wright and Charles and Ray Eames, opened Jadis as an antiques shop in 1976, with his partner Susan Lieberman. Later, Meek began to design props for the movie industry, like huge control panels dotted with switches and illuminated dials, sourcing his materials at swap meets and government auctions. "He'd say, 'Got anything heavy, expensive and useless for me today?'" Lieberman says.
Meek passed away in 2010 at the age of 86. But Lieberman still keeps the shop open for passersby on weekends--admission costs one dollar. She and Parke's nephew Thomas Meek gave Science Friday a tour of this cabinet of curiosities, recalling Parke's life and describing the perfect ingredients for a Hollywood mad scientist's lab.
Special thanks to: Susan Lieberman, Thomas Meek, Jadis
Audio: Christopher Intagliata
Video editing: Leese Katsnelson
Photography: Christopher Intagliata
Photos of Parke Meek: Lori Lieberman
From the Science Friday Archives!
With global threats like ocean warming and acidification, it's a tough time to be a coral. Marine scientists John Bruno and Elizabeth Selig, of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, analyzed over 8000 coral surveys from all over the world to see if local management through Marine Protected Areas had any positive effect on coral.
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Climbing Kilamanjaro, blasting asteroids, and stopping time to destroy robots are just some of the amazing activities people can experience at VR World NYC. VR World’s Head of Content Tommy Goodkin explains how advances in VR technology have allowed them to transcend an arcade-like atmosphere and redefine what a theme park experience can be.
Produced by Luke Groskin
Music by Audio Network.com
Video Game Captures by VRWorld NYC
Featuring Icaros, Google Tilt Brush, The Climb by Crytek GmbH,
Arizona Sunshine by Intel, Raw Data by Survios,
Job Simulator by Owlchemy Labs, and Richie’s Plank Experience
Special Thanks to Jessica Gray, Alexa Lim, Johanna Mayer, Xochitl Garcia, and Rachel Bouton
Topa desafía a Josefina y a Harmony a una Prueba Express. Josefina deberá ponerle 10 prendas a Harmony lo más rápido posible!
¡Anímate a desafiar a tus amigos a una Prueba Express!
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