Thứ Sáu, 26 tháng 1, 2018

News on Youtube Jan 26 2018

naa yes cam what you sayin fam yo move init yo move out the way get on it I'm just been

shopping it cuz I'm on holiday in that few weeks so I'm like y'all mom leave it

to me yeah I'll feed your cats basic because basically right what I got in

mega pipe whiskers and that for the cats

no come on how do you do this then what is the

point of this it's give me the bloody give me the food in it don't care about

all this you know move to that some bullshit inconvenience right so what

we're gonna do we're gonna feed them like one each and it or two each someone

like that you'll get one for me for the ground yeah you got it all right sit

wait sit all right let's go feed a minute all right so what you see is got

the balls each and that got like three of them free Patsy yes you're what you

say what you say yeah see see pop it up pop it in there hey get a close-up for

this because it's actually really satisfying bit like I think this

actually talked about weight and sum it up look it up yeah look at that yeah I

reckon this is actually proper nice for Qatar site I love to just eat this stuff

every day longer here's one more all right now free mourn it but he's five

fat cats and I've got two kebabs waiting for and it's got one in it but basically

these cuts are lucky because they get to cuz its meaning I want fat and what you

know the kids I ever get hungry let's kiss me I do that I need that yeah shit

man Oh now will you kill mom's gonna kill me

I'll quit yeah put this bar

last one in it that's one pretty over one day you go me right there for ya

can't doing the same walk to D so what you do pop this in there and then pop it

with some new one out this bloody war we do one last week yes me yes have a

shower later then I had a few weeks I look at and Papa getting into it that

basically this kitchen is special you know why here

it didn't bend look run where's the VIN where's Ben hey and so ways have been no

way know why but right there me right there's Bob that in there yes me and

sick actually know where would recyclables in that go so I didn't is I

just thought moves on the side here like the boxes that I won't even use them now

it's probably on this idea but that's basically it let's base of yep well I

want to show you in it so mean Donna I'm gonna snapchat yeah Donny

dot wrap all I'll see you later in it Oh God do use permissions of it was are

these supposed to give us permission

For more infomation >> How to feed cats - Duration: 3:01.

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How to calculate steel quantity in RCC Slab Beam column footing & Lintel - Duration: 5:41.

hey in this video we will see how much quantity of steel is required per meter

cube for different structural elements

while quantity of Steel is different for various elements it's caused the load

taken by different structural element or different example

Laura beam is slightly greater than the lawrence lab so steel quantity beam

slightly more than slab like worse in other structural element in slab all

ended the minimum percentage of steel is 0.7 percentage therefore quantity of

steel equals to 0.7 divided by 100 multiplied by 1 which is equals to zero

point zero zero seven meter cube the value master steel is required in slab

is zero point zero zero seven meter cube since we know that weight equals two

value multiplied by density yeah the value is zero point zero two zero seven

and the diversity of the steel is seven eight five zero if you multiply these

two values then you will get it as fifty four point nine five which is

approximately equal to 55 kg per meter cube

the maximum percentage of Steel required in slab or Intel is one percentage

therefore quantity of sh t equals to one divided by hundred multiplied by one

which gives us value 0.01 meter cube of steel the weight of the steel equals to

0.01 multiplied by density of the steel that is seven eight five zero if you

multiply these two values then you will get it as 78550 cheap per meter cube now

let's see how much quantity of steel is required in beam minimum percentage of

steel in beef is one percentage therefore the

quantity of the steel required in beam equals to what divided by hundred

multiplied by M R which is equal to 0.01 meter cube and the weight of the steel

equals to 0.01 multiplied by seven eight five zero which is equals to seventy

eight point five kg per meter cube and the maximum percentage of Steel required

in babies two percentage therefore quantity of steel equals to 2 divided by

hundred multiplied by point which is equal to 0.02 meter cube and the weight

of the steel request 157 kg per meter cube what else you can do is for what

percentage be required seventy eight point five kg per meter cube if you

multiply these value with two then he'll get the maximum percentage of steel that

is two point zero percentage now let's see how much quantity of seed is

requiring column the minimum percentage of Steel required in column is zero

point a percentage of its value okay so quantity of steel equals to zero point

eight divided by hundred multiplied by 1 which is equal to zero point zero zero

eight meter cube the weight of the steel equals to 0 point 0 0 8 x seven nine

five zero which is equal to sixty two point eight zero kg per meter cube and

the maximum percentage of Steel required in column is six point zero therefore

quantity of steel equals to 6 divided by hundred multiplied by one which uses

valuable 0.06 and the weight of the steel equals to zero point zero six x

seven eight five zero which is equal to 471 kg per meter to the maximum

percentage of steel in column up to four percentage only because after four

percentage it will become difficult to pour and compact the

comments column if we can add add mixtures then you can go beyond the four

percentage up to six percentage because if we share the workability of the

cartridge we'll be good now how much quantity of steel requiring foundation

the minimum percentage of Steel required in foundation is 0.5 percentage

therefore quantity of the steel equals 2.5 divided by hundred multiplied by 1

which is equal to 0.005 meter cube the weight of the steel equals to 39 point 2

5 kg per meter cube the maximum percentage of steel required in

foundation is 0.8 percentage therefore quantity of the steel equals to zero

point zero zero a meter cube and the weight of the steel equals to sixty two

point eight zero kg per meter cube if you enjoy the video then like the video

and if you're new to my channel then subscribe to my channel thank you guys

thank you for watching

For more infomation >> How to calculate steel quantity in RCC Slab Beam column footing & Lintel - Duration: 5:41.

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Michael, Construction Business Owner Part 1 - What I do and how much I make - Duration: 5:05.

I am Michael Walker, I'm 25 years old,

I have two different jobs, I run my own company,

which is Walker Wilderness Enterprises,

which builds a tiny houses and hunting cabins,

and I also work for a large equipment auctioneer company,

and my salary is 37,000.

So, for Walker Wilderness Enterprises,

I do everything from building

to the finances side of it,

on bookkeeping, marketing, advertising.

For building these tiny house,

I'll look around on the internet,

I'll call people, I'll drive around to different yards

that have containers, and just see what price

I can get for them, and also the size that I want,

'cause they come in multiple different sizes.

And then from there, I'll get it back here,

to my shop, and then I'll do

all the designing and planning as well,

all by myself through Google SketchUp actually.

So, I'll design it all

and then I'll just take an image from there,

and start measuring out the container

and how I wanna put it together,

and then I usually start with sealing up the floor,

washing it out, getting it all ready and prepared,

and then I'll cut out the windows

and start framing it up,

and putting in windows the windows,

and then we'll start building from there,

or I'll start building building from there

from insulation and drywall, to the flooring,

to all the plumbing and electrical,

and everything else that is involved with that.

So, with Walker Wilderness,

I found clients through the Internet,

just joining different tiny house blogs,

and contacting different tiny house companies,

and different people that were randomly saying,

I'm looking into a tiny house,

and so, I'd reach out to them,

and then I also went to a Trade Show,

which was the International Sportsmen Expo in Denver,

and I took a container there,

and I met a lot of clients there,

and work with them, they contacting through email on phone

and designing back and forth,

and sending them some of my designs,

and they would critique it, and send it back.

We've done four projects so far, and currently

I'm working on a tiny house for me and my wife,

and our child as well.

When I started Walker Wilderness,

I knew that it could either be a big company

that had millions of dollars, or it could totally be a flop

and it would have a big financial risk,

but I was ready for that, and my wife and I

talked about that before, and we made sure

that we had money aside in case it totally went under,

or that it was just a small amount of money

that was coming in, and so that's also why

I took this other job at the auction house

so that I could help fund it, during the slow times,

but then we could just celebrate and put it back

into the company when there were good times as well.

So, I kinda figured it out, how much money I would need

to start with one container, and all the tools I needed,

and anything else like that,

and I think it was around 30,000 I started with,

and from there I didn't wanna spend every penny,

I tried to use materials

that I had or that I could acquire from a recycling center

in terms of like windows

that were still in good quality, or something like that.

And, just kind of went from there,

and tried to keep it within my budget that I had started

and from there I was breaking even,

and it's been two and a half years

since I started looking into the company

and starting it.

The skills that you need to have

for doing these two different jobs,

is that you need to be confident in yourself

and the skills that you have so far

and don't hesitate to ask for help,

that's one of the biggest things

in both of my jobs that I do, is if you don't know

don't just assume,

just reach out to somebody that might know

and then it will really benefit you in the future.

So, some of the other skills would be,

to be self-motivated and passionate in what you're doing,

and then you also need to have some other trade skills.

I needed to learn how to weld,

I needed some mechanical skills

to look at different equipment,

I also had to learn how to do different woodworking skills

which I had growing up.

I try to learn from school and family.

Some of the other skills that I needed were,

computer skills in terms of making these designs

and having different ways to communicate with people,

then also you needed to have marketing skills

and sales skills.

You know, when I was at the Trade Show,

I had to talk with everybody

and hope that everybody was gonna come in

and purchase something, and I had to try to work my way

and figure out how to reach out to all different clients.

So that was something I wasn't very good at first,

I was kind of held back, now I realize

this is how you have to be successful,

you have to reach out to all these people,

even if you don't want to, or you're scared to.

For more infomation >> Michael, Construction Business Owner Part 1 - What I do and how much I make - Duration: 5:05.

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Julia, Registered Nurse Part 1 - What I do and how much I make - Duration: 5:32.

My name is Julia Walker, I'm 27 years old,

I'm a Registered Nurse, and I make around $56,000 a year.

So I work in a hospital in a Critical Care Unit.

Critical Care Units are typically the most intensive care

that a hospital will provide.

So, I tend to care for the sickest patients

that walk through the hospital doors.

So, as an inpatient nurse, I typically work

about three shifts a week.

That's a total of 12 hour shifts, which you never

leave on time.

It's more like 13, 14 hours that you're on the job

or on the clock, if you will.

And I try to clump them together so that I know my patients,

so I don't walk in the next shift

and get a different patient assignment.

Sometimes you have that happen, but for continuity

of care, that's really nice in nursing.

You get to know your patient, their families,

and they get to know you as well and trust you.

I go on around six at night, get there a little early

of course, get settled, but then I'm there until 6:30,

seven in the morning.

And it's a different pace at night.

There's pros and cons.

Pros, you know, it's not as busy, so that's very nice

in some ways, you know.

You don't have as many family coming in, physical therapy's

not pulling your patient out of bed at four in the morning,

and you really get to be with your patient

and spend more time on the cares, if you will.

But also, it's very hard on you as the nurse

because your circadian rhythm, that's your sleep rhythm,

gets totally off because you go from working,

staying up three nights, and then you have to go back

to normalcy for four days or so.

And so, personally, that can be very difficult.

You have to do a lot of self care.

But when I walk on, onto my first shift,

I take my assignment from my charge nurse,

I go and look at all of my orders from the physician.

That includes medications, what the plan of care is,

any special studies we have to have performed,

and really, I make a plan for those 12 hours

so that I know exactly where I am and where my patient

needs to be.

And I coordinate that plan, not only with the patient,

but their family, and the physicians,

and other nursing staff that I'm working with.

So there's two different branches of nursing

that we're taught in nursing school.

There's the science of nursing,

which is very honed in upon, but then there's the art

of nursing, and that's really where it gets

to the human to human connection and interaction.

That's where you give your patient a hand massage

just because they need a little tension relief.

You clean them, that's honestly one of my favorite things

to do, is clean a person.

There's nothing more humane that you can do to somebody

than help them feel worth and feel like they have dignity.

Cleaning their environment, making sure they have

a nice, clean hospital room, preventing infection,

and sometimes helping them pass on as well.

That's a big part of nursing, and that's one of the most

rewarding things, really, that I've done,

is helping people pass beautifully.

And it can be done.

A lot of people think that the soft skills of nursing

are just ingrained in nurses.

I've worked with many nurses who are fabulous nurses

that don't necessarily have those soft skills,

but have to learn it.

Now, these skills are compassion, patient teaching,

patient education.

There is such an art to explaining a disease process

to a patient.

It's hard to communicate, but most nurses

have a healing touch, I find.

They have, when they lay their hands on a patient,

you can tell that they're communicating their love,

strength, nurturment.

And you can tell when a patient has been cared for well

that day.

And so, while you have to be a great critical thinker

and have a lot of knowledge base, you also really have

to have the compassion.

A lot of people end up in the hospital for issues

that, really, they don't need to be there for.

They're more just needing somebody, needing to be heard.

And that's, it's nice to be that person.

So I love that about nursing.

I love the compassion.

I love being tender to people that maybe

haven't really felt tenderness before.

I love the variety too.

You can be an ICU nurse or you can work in a school

with children.

I mean, there's great variety, and that can change

throughout your career.

You don't have to be stuck in one thing.

Registered nurses have a lot of variability

in what they can make as far as their salary.

They can make anywhere from 35 to 45,000, which is around

where I started in outpatient nursing, to over $100,000.

You can make that kind of money if you become

a clinical nurse specialist.

So you're still a registered nurse but you have

more credentialing, you focus on specific fields,

or if you go into nurse leadership, you can certainly

branch into higher salary brackets.

If you decide to advance your education and obtain

a masters or doctorate degree in nursing,

you have even more potential for salary increases.

So, nurse practitioners in the state of Colorado

right now can make starting around $80,000,

which is an nice jump from where I've been

as a registered nurse.

So that's one of the reasons why I'd like

to become a nurse practitioner.

But also, you have more autonomy as well,

which is very important to some nurses.

For more infomation >> Julia, Registered Nurse Part 1 - What I do and how much I make - Duration: 5:32.

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Report Details How Much Taxpayer Money Has Been Spent On Settling Harassment Claims - Duration: 1:31.

For more infomation >> Report Details How Much Taxpayer Money Has Been Spent On Settling Harassment Claims - Duration: 1:31.

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How to stop being bored and start being bold - Duration: 9:58.

When I was in the 6th grade, my friends and I,

at such a pivotal moment in our lives, realized how bored we were.

There was a lack of excitement in our adventures,

we had found that we had done everything we could possibly think of

to fill in an empty space of time.

We'd have sleepovers, play video games,

watch movies, walk around the neighborhood,

and even after all of this, we were still bored.

And the worst part about this

was that we knew that other kids felt the same thing, too.

So after talking and discussing amongst ourselves,

we realized that as much as we try to fix our boredom,

we weren't doing anything substantial about it.

That's why we decided that we wanted to make people laugh.

We wanted to make funny videos that joked about things

that no one really joked about.

We wanted to joke about our quirky, quiet town of Alton, Texas.

Now, I'd love to tell you that I'm here

to share that my videos have millions of views

and that I've sold tons of merchandise worldwide,

but unfortunately, like many of the ideas that we have,

we never made our videos, our idea, a reality.

I know right now there's probably at least one of you who's like,

"Man, this guy's depressing. Is he going to keep talking like this?"

But there's a reason.

As time went on, more and more of us left the group

until eventually all of us left the group.

All of us, except for one.

My friend couldn't let go of his idea,

so after we all left in the 6th grade, he decided to make a team.

Members would come in, and leave out, fluctuate,

he learned how to use complex computer software

and he learned how to work with cameras.

He would make videos on drama, comedy, things here and there,

and I didn't know any of this

because I hadn't seen or talked to him in six years.

My friend, the one who never gave up on his idea,

has now launched his own videography company.

Like him and the rest of the world, we all have tons of ideas every day.

And there was something different about him

because six years ago, my group of friends and I,

we all had the same idea,

but he was the only one who actually saw it through.

How many of you ever feel a drive inside of you

that tells you "Take a chance. What if? Why not?"

For many of us, while we're sitting down at work,

eating lunch or waiting to drift off to sleep,

we get a sense of that feeling, that drive that we had.

And then, after a few minutes of reminiscing,

we continue doing what we're doing.

For some of us, that feeling comes around often.

It makes us remember how we always wanted to start our own band,

take a road trip with our friends,

or even something small like clean up the trash in our local park.

And it sucks because the thing that you remember the most out of everything

is the fact that you didn't do it.

My friends and I, while we were in the process of making these videos,

we had so many opportunities to get something done.

I can remember how many times

an adult came up to us and told us,

"Hey, I actually might know some things,"

a kid would come and tell us, "I know how to edit videos,"

or even amongst ourselves, we would tell each other,

"You can come over to my house we'll work on it."

All opportunities that we never actually took.

As time went on, I realized that I had to stop giving up my ideas.

Years and years went by, and we never met up

I never had the opportunity to explore that idea.

I had many ideas each day, but they would all pass by,

until eventually, I came upon an idea that I couldn't afford to let go of,

an idea that I couldn't afford to regret.

That idea was the South Texas Ideas Festival, STXI.

I come from a place where typically youth are not encouraged to do better.

They are discouraged.

They feel that they can't do the things that many other people can do,

and this was a problem because we didn't want this to happen anymore,

we didn't want people to feel like they needed to leave our home

to do something better.

Our festival was student-led.

With a team of high school students,

we put on a festival that hosted 300 students from across our region.

And it was great, we received a ton of commendations for it.

And I know it sounds like an overnight success story,

but it really wasn't,

and one of the main questions that people would ask us was,

"Where did you get the drive to do this?"

When I was a little kid, I learned a lot from what was going on around me.

I came from a home where the only way to make a living

was to pick up plastic bottles and cans and sell them to processing plants.

My first real job was helping a woman set up her booth at a flea market

from seven in the morning to three in the afternoon for $20.

My neighbor's son learned how to cut hair when he was eight years old

because it was the only way he and his family could afford a haircut.

At such a momentous time in my life, I thought that I was limited,

that my community was limited, my neighborhood was limited,

all because of our circumstances.

And then came my crazy grandpa.

I went home and one day he was watching TV and he told me,

"Michael, look. I want this."

Not the horse, the pole.

It's a horse patience pole. It basically teaches a horse to be patient.

And he told me, "I want this,"

and I asked him, "How are you going to afford it when you don't have the money?"

And he said, "I'll find a way."

So I forgot about it, I was walking around the house,

And during that time, he left and he got a wheelchair from I have no idea where

and giant metal pole from I have no idea where,

and when I got back home,

I went into the backyard and this is what I saw.

My crazy grandpa had cut the wheelchair in half,

attached it to the top of the pole, stood it upright,

and tied the horse to it.

And in just three days, we not only taught the horse how to stand still,

we taught it how to run in circles.

And I remember when I saw this, my mind was blown away

because I had never seen someone

take that initiative to do something despite the odds.

And thinking about it now that I'm older,

I realize that I'm not that impressed in the actual pole

because at the end of the day, its just a pole.

I was more impressed in the fact that my grandpa went out and did it.

He didn't let resources get in the way of his idea.

He didn't find a reason not to do it.

He didn't choose to experience regret.

If you feel that idea, that tug,

then I'm telling you do what my grandpa did

because that same drive that he had

is what made the South Texas Ideas Festival possible.

It was a team of high school students, we had no idea what we were doing.

We just knew that we wanted to present a big festival

to the people of our community to show them everything we got.

If you feel like an idea is worth something,

be it yours or someone else's,

if you feel that an idea is worth time constraints, rejections, and failures,

then let me give you a piece of advice:

Stop what you're doing,

put down your phone,

pause the TV show that you're watching,

hold off on that nap for five more minutes,

and think.

You're bored, right?

Well now is the perfect opportunity for you to take that road trip,

the perfect opportunity for you to start that band,

the perfect opportunity to clean up some trash.

Now, the next time that you're bored, I beg of you, I implore you,

to get excited

because you might just be on to you next best idea.

Thank you.

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