Thứ Sáu, 13 tháng 10, 2017

Youtube daily Oct 13 2017

Hey guys and girls it's me JoshyTek.

Google has announced their next Flagship device called the Pixel 2.

On their event, the home screen of the pixel 2 looks different to its predecessor.

If you want this style on your home screen stick around as I will be showing you how

to get this style on any android device.

So the first thing you'll need to do is if you haven't already, go and download and install

Nova Launcher from the Playstore.

You can try the free version which will give you limited features but however you can buy

the optional Prime version which will unlock all of its functionality.

So to set this up, you will need to start from scratch with a fresh new home screen.

Just go through the same prosecutor as I'm doing here and you should eventually end up

with a new home screen.

After doing that, next we will need to go into The page overview and you need to make

sure you only have one page on your home screen, and get every icon and widget off your desktop

so you have nothing on your homepage.

After doing that, go to your Nova Launchers Settings and turn off the dock background.

And change the padding to small for the width and none for the height padding.

We will then need to navigate on over to desktop and change the icon layout to 5 by 5 and also

turn on subgrid positioning.

You will then turn off icon labels and for the icon size my recommendation would be at

115%.

You will then need to set your width padding to small and your height padding to none.

After doing that, scroll down and turn off the page indicator

and also turn on Widget Overlap and Overlap When Placing.

Just back out and we will need to go to Apps and widget drawers.

In here, we will need to change the drawer app grid to 6 by 5 and then change the icon

size to 115%.

Make sure you have swipe to open enabled and just below that you will need to turn off

swipe indicator.

It's optional if you want fast scroll bar enabled but I have it turned off.

Just make sure you have selected the blue accent colour.

We can now back out and this next thing is optional but I like to have it enabled, it's

called night mode.

If you want it enabled, just make sure you have the correct time zone at the top and

all off the toggles enabled below.

Ok so we can now go to our home screen and there is a couple of things that we will need

to do before finishing with this tutorial.

One of them is to add the google search bar at the bottom of the page.

Just hold down on an empty space on your home screen and tap on widgets, make sure you're

at the top of the page and we will need to find the quick search bar.

It's hidden at the top of the page so you will need to scroll left and you will find

it at the end.

Just drag that widget and drop it on the bottom of your home screen.

Just resize it to fit the whole bottom of the dock and we will then need to hold down

on the search widget and tap on edit and just copy as I'm doing here.

You will also need to set the transparency to 15% so you will get this slight transparency

effect.

After doing that you can now swipe up and drag your favourite apps above the search

widget so you have something like this.

For the clock widget at the top, the application we will need to do this is called Zooper Widget

Pro, I'll link the app in the description alongside all of the other apps that I mentioned

in this video.

After doing that the rest is up to you.

What I have done here is I have used a Zooper Widget skin called Pixup for Zooper and placed

it at the top of the page.

I also added my profile photo in the widget too.

For the wallpaper, you can use the original Google pixel 2 wallpaper but I do like to

use google's live data wallpapers especially the one called Aurora Time Lapse as it changes

the colours accordingly to what time of day it is in your location which satisfies the

dark theme used in the search widget and drawer.

There's also the Google Live Earth Wallpapers which they announced in 2016 too which you

can download on any android device.

I will leave the links to both of the wallpapers in the description so you can download and

install them.

The icon pack I would recommend if you're aiming towards a Pixel 2 home screen is the

Pixel Icon Pack which I will leave below to install from the Playstore.

But that's how to make your android device look like the Google Pixel 2.

All of the apps and links I mentioned will be in the description of this video and I

do hope you enjoyed this tutorial but apart from that I will see you in next week's video

and um yeah goodbye.

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NASA Silicon Valley Podcast - Episode 63 - Chris Potter - Duration: 26:58.

Host (Matthew Buffington): Welcome to NASA in Silicon Valley, Episode 63.

With me again for the intro is Miss Abby Tabor.

Welcome, Abby!

Abby Tabor: Hi Matt, thank you!

Host: Tell us a little about our guest today.

Abby Tabor: Okay, so today we're talking with Chris Potter, who is one of these biologists

by training, who didn't know he could someday end up working at NASA.

He studied ecology, and today he is an Earth Scientist at NASA Ames, and he's been simulating

global systems, Earth's climate system, working on modeling that sort of thing.

But also more recently he's been looking at specific areas of the globe, and how are

they changing more quickly than others.

For example, he's been up in Alaska.

And he's on the ground, out in the forests of Alaska, looking at how wildfires, which

have gotten more intense and are burning hotter, are changing the landscape there.

So he's there, looking at how the permafrost is melting because the fires have burnt everything

down to the surface.

And he's digging in the solid and taking thermal images and sticking probes in the

ground to explore how the Earth is changing up there.

Host: Super relevant for today.

We recorded this episode awhile back, but you know, speaking of all the crazy forest

fires happening in Northern California, it's all very relevant to what we're living right

now.

Abby Tabor: Really intense, yeah.

Host: So before we jump into the episode, a little bit of housekeeping.

We would love to hear your comments about the podcast and ways we can improve things.

We are on social media using the hashtag #NASASiliconValley.

We also have a phone line you can now call in on, that's (650) 604-1400.

And a reminder, we are a NASA podcast, but we are not the only NASA podcast!

Our friends over at Johnson Space Center have one called Houston We Have a Podcast, our

friends over at Headquarters, and really it has content from all over the agency have

one called This Week at NASA that's both on YouTube, and also there's an audio version,

and we have a big RSS feed called NASA Casts where you can catch all of the NASA content

in one big feed.

We would love it if you guys leave us a review, we're on iTunes, Google Play Music, SoundCloud,

and we just started putting up audio versions on YouTube.

Of course, the RSS feed, you can plug it into any podcast app and that all works.

The reviews are really a cool way to help other people find the podcast.

But, that's enough of the housekeeping, but for today's episode…

Abby Tabor: For today, let's listen to Chris Potter.

[Music]

Host: How did you end up joining NASA?

How did you end up in this area, in Silicon Valley?

Chris Potter: I joined NASA in 1991 as a NASA post-doc.

There's been a program here for a long time to bring new PhDs into NASA.

I came out here to join one of the earth scientists who was working here, named Pam Matson.

She's since gone on to Stanford.

She's the Dean of Earth Science at Stanford, but she worked here.

I came here to work with her, and develop some computer simulation models of the earth

system, which didn't exist at the time.

I had a background in the modeling of what we call the "terrestrial" part of the earth,

the land surfaces, the ecosystems on land.

And that's what they wanted, so I came out here to fill that position and stayed.

We just really liked it out here.

I had to commute from the city for a few years, but that was okay.

We made it work.

And then we eventually moved to the Silicon Valley.

Host: Did you do your post-doctoral work in earth science?

Chris Potter: Mm-hmm.

Host: When you were growing up as a kid, did you always have an eye focused towards wanting

to work for NASA, dealing with space?

How does all of that play into it?

Chris Potter: No, I didn't ever think that I'd work for NASA when I was studying biology,

which is what my background is in.

All my degrees are in biology, and ecology in particular.

But like a lot of people back then, I didn't think NASA was the place to do that.

I thought if I was going to work for the government, maybe I'd work for the Parks Service or the

Host: Yeah, the Bureau of Land Management or something.

Chris Potter: Well, maybe not.

I didn't even know that they existed back then, because I grew up in the east.

But, you know, the Environmental Protection Agency -- something like that.

As it turns out, NASA has the biggest environmental science budget of, arguably, any agency in

the world.

We are number one in terms of funding both basic research in earth sciences and in, of

course, providing all the technology that it takes to get that job done: the satellites,

the aircraft, the data systems, storage, which is a huge part of the whole endeavor at this

point.

Host: It's one of those things where it's two-fold.

One thing I always think of is: when you're looking at exoplanets, if you're looking at

the other planets in our solar system, it's really helpful to understand our own planet.

We're sitting on top of one big example of life that works and that exists, and if you're

out looking for life, if you don't fundamentally understand what our own planet looks like,

then how do you even know what you're looking for?

Also, on the flipside, a lot of the earth science stuff involves sending satellites

up.

There's not a lot of government agencies that are particularity skilled in sending satellites

up -- I mean, obviously NASA and I'm sure the Air Force.

But it's one of those things where to put things in the air, it's a very particular

set of skills.

Chris Potter: Yeah, it is.

NASA has been at it for a long time, and so has NOAA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric

Administration, who are always close partners with NASA because they have the weather satellites.

It's not NASA's job to forecast the weather or monitor the weather, but it is NASA's role

to look in the long-term.

That's the difference between weather and climate, of course.

Climate is weather over hundreds of years.

And so that's what we're supposed to be doing.

We're supposed to be monitoring the long-term changes in the earth, and looking for new,

undiscovered phenomenon that are going on with our climate system, or ocean chemistry,

or land-use change patterns, in the same way we would be looking for them if we were looking

at Mars.

We'd be trying to discover something new, and then share that with the rest of the scientific

community.

We're certainly not alone as a space agency, too, there.

All the developed countries in the world have large space agencies that are starting to

rival NASA's.

The European Space Agency, the Brazilian Space Agency, the Chinese and the Indian Space Agencies

all have satellites that are starting to rival ours.

So we need to keep our game up.

But in the meantime, we can benefit from all the data they're collecting as well, because

as long as there's sharing, open sharing of these satellite image datasets or measurements

of the atmosphere, we can all benefit and push climate science, or any other sort of

earth science, ahead for the benefit of.

. . you know?

Host: The scientific community?

Chris Potter: Well, more practically, negotiating scientific treaties, treaties among nations,

whether it has to do with the use of the oceans, the use of space, the use of the atmosphere,

or greenhouse gas emission reductions, all of it.

It's our job as scientists, NASA scientists, to provide the best scientific information

so the decision makers and politicians can make wise decisions that include the data.

Host: Going back a little bit, when you first came to Ames, when you first came to NASA,

what exactly were you working on?

Obviously something in earth science, but what was your day-to-day looking like?

Chris Potter: When we first got here, our role was to work with a team of scientists.

Some were here at NASA Ames, and there were other key members at Stanford University and

the Carnegie Institution of Washington there at Stanford, who is a leader in global change

policy and science of all kinds, and also with Goddard Space Flight Center as a partner,

and several other universities.

We were working as a team to develop the first model, global model, of the earth surfaces

and the greenhouse gas emissions that they were contributing to the atmosphere.

No one had ever developed one before.

That was our challenge.

We succeeded in a couple of years to develop that model, to publish the first paper that

used NASA satellite data to make it much more authentic, true to the ground observations

that we were collecting at the time, which were pretty rudimentary but compared to what

we collect now.

They were still very unique and stunning images of the earth.

We created what was called the first "Breathing Earth" model, and animated it.

It even made a piece on CNN when it first came out.

Host: Oh, nice.

Chris Potter: Yeah, it must have been a slow news day.

Host: What is your day-to-day?

What are you working on right now?

I heard something along the lines of going to Alaska and having a bear gun, so talk to

me a little bit about that.

Chris Potter: Well, we're doing much advanced versions of the same things I did when I came

here, but now we are using much, much more detailed satellite images and aircraft images

of different parts of the world.

While we're still simulating the whole globe as a planet and a global system, more and

more we're trying to isolate specific areas of the world where we don't have a good understanding

of what's going on there yet.

Alaska is one of those places.

It's warming much more quickly than our part of the world, the temperate or tropical areas.

The ice under the soil and [in] the soil is melting very quickly.

The lakes are not freezing over the way they used to even 20 years ago.

If you ask any Alaskan, they'll tell you, "It's not like it used to be here.

We are having trouble hunting, and fishing, and doing all the traditional things our ancestors

used to do, because we don't know every spring whether the ice will be frozen or thawing.

And we might go right through the ice when we try to go out to our traditional hunting,

fishing, and trapping grounds."

So that's why we're there in Alaska, and NASA has a program that is funded through its Terrestrial

Ecology Program in Washington.

It's part of the Earth Science Mission Directorate there.

It's called ABoVE.

It stands for the Arctic-Boreal Vulnerability and Observation Experiment.

Host: Because of course there's going to be an acronym for it.

Chris Potter: Of course, and "ABoVE" sounds pretty good.

It's sort of above the latitudes where we normally live and work, and it covers most

of Alaska -- well, all of Alaska and parts of Northern Canada, which are also experiencing

rapid climate warming.

And so there are teams out there every summer.

There are aircraft flying over the whole state right now, even as we speak, trying to understand

what's changing, where it's changing, what the consequences are for both the atmospheric

changes from greenhouse gas emissions that may be going up as a result of warming -- that's

our hypothesis; that's a working hypothesis -- but also on the ground, there are vulnerabilities

to larger and more intense, hotter fires, wild fires, there in the forest.

As these areas burn, it changes the radiation budget of that area, and it may burn right

down into the soil, and disrupt the permafrost, and cause the entire area to collapse in a

big hole.

Host: Oh, wow.

The permafrost, the ice crystals, the frozen.

. . I mean, it's propping it up.

You know, when water freezes, it expands.

It's holding it.

It's stable.

Chris Potter: Right, yeah.

Host: If you get rid of that, you're going to have a bad time.

Chris Potter: Yeah, it's just like standing on top of a pond and having all the ice melt

out from under you.

There's a thin layer of soil over the pond, but as soon as it collapses, you're going

to create a very liquid, slushy environment.

And the trees collapse into it if they were on top of it, and so the whole system changes

over night.

That means that what you were using it for -- in terms of either hunting, or trapping,

or just recreation -- you have to change your plan.

Beyond that, the atmosphere is loaded up with these greenhouse gases that were stored in

the soil and the peat moss -- there's a lot of peat moss in most of these forested areas.

That's been stored there for tens of thousands of years, and now we are allowing it to come

out during the fires -- when I say "we," that assumes, connecting the dots, that people

are responsible for the greenhouse gas emissions, increasing greenhouse gas emissions to the

atmosphere, that are warming the climate, that are causing more fires.

That's the chain of indirect effects that lead us back to the human nature of more intense

and hotter wild fires throughout the whole West, from California, Southern California,

all the way up to Alaska.

Host: Obviously you'll be there on the ground.

You mentioned the airplanes flying over.

Is this a combination of all the different data points?

I'm imagining -- and tell me if I'm wrong -- you have satellites that are taking some

measurements as they can, as they end up passing over, but combining that data with airborne

data, combining that with data you grab on the ground, and that all of those, with their

powers combined, help paint a good mosaic of what's going on.

Chris Potter: Right, right.

It's basically scaling down from the satellite image, which NASA's best image would give

you a ground resolution data point that is about the size of a tennis court.

That's our best satellite for that.

But airborne data can get you down to a few feet resolution on the ground, so you can

start to see individual patches, and trees, and little ponds.

And then, of course, right on the ground, we'll measure it at a few centimeters resolution.

We want to put all the pieces together, and make sure -- as we reassemble them from the

ground, to the aircraft, to the satellite -- that it all averages [out] again.

That way, we much better understand what our satellite is giving us.

The satellite that we use for this study, for the most part, is the Landsat satellite.

We're on the eighth Landsat satellite since it was launched in the early 1970s.

It's considered a national asset, and is not subject to budget cuts.

Pretty soon, we'll launch Landsat 9, so there's continuity in the program going forward, if

anything happens to Landsat 8.

We've had over 30 years now of continuous observations every two weeks.

The satellite goes over every two weeks, and gives us, hopefully, a clear image.

In Alaska, it's very cloudy at times, so we're happy to get a clear image every month.

That's usually adequate for us to monitor, certainly from year-to-year, what has happened

to the surfaces, and the forest cover, and the tundra cover, which is north of where

I'm going to go.

I'm going to the interior of Alaska, where the forests are being affected.

But north of there, the shrubs are really doing well.

They're growing into the tundra area, and making it even greener in those areas.

So that's changing the habitat for all kinds of wildlife.

Host: What does your day-to-day look like as you're on the ground dealing with stuff?

Chris Potter: During this trip?

Host: Yeah, yeah.

What do you have to prepare for?

What do you anticipate?

Chris Potter: We need to get in our mode of transportation in the morning, and travel

maybe five miles out from the town we're staying in to get to an area that we can see, from

the satellite imagery, had been burned.

And there were large, large fires up there, unprecedentedly large and hot fires, in 2015.

Now we're two years after that.

And so we will go to those areas we can see on the satellite imagery that had different

stages of the burns, barely burned versus burned to the ground and charred.

We'll sample in all these different places -- sample the soils, sample the thermal signature

with thermal cameras -- and take probes and put them into the ground, and then, in bags,

take samples of the soil itself back to measure the carbon in the soil.

And then we'll go to the next site, and we'll just keep doing this over and over again until

we get a statistically large enough dataset to compare to the satellite and airborne imagery.

Host: What is your timeline looking like?

So breaking the fourth wall a little bit.

. . Right now, we're in the middle of July.

Is a trip happening in September?

Chris Potter: No, it's happening in a week.

Host: Oh, it happens in a week.

But you're later on anticipating getting results, getting things, coming in, and writing papers,

or however that works out?

Chris Potter: Absolutely, yeah.

I've designed this one so that we can collect most of the data, 90 percent of it, there

right in the field, write it down or have it in our digital devices.

And then I'll just immediately download it back to my computer that night, and put it

all on a flash drive to bring back.

But if the soil samples take a little bit longer, we'll have to transport them back

here, and they'll be analyzed in a month.

So by January, when there's the next big team meeting of this ABoVE project, we'll take

the results there, present it to our colleagues, be writing the papers, sharing all the results,

and comparing with other folks' perspectives and findings on the same kind of topics.

There are working groups on fire, on carbon, on animal movement.

It's a big project.

It involves many universities across the country and in Alaska.

Host: I anticipate that we'll release this episode in the future, so people are hearing

us from the past.

By the time this airs, you will have already come back from your trip, and started working

on some of that data and some of those results.

Chris Potter: Sure, we'll be working on the data for the next couple of months after I

get back.

It should go quickly, because we've set it all up for over a year now, and we know exactly

how we're going to plug it into our plan and our formulas.

We need to have it ready by the end of the year for a presentation to scientific conferences.

We still publish papers in scientific journals.

That is one of the main ways we get evaluated as scientists still at NASA.

Even though those journals are all digital and online, we still have to go through the

"peer review process" we call it, and pass muster with our colleagues, and get their

comments, and feedback, and improvements on what we're doing.

That'll happen in the next couple of months.

Host: Talk about the different groups that you have to work with to do something like

this.

I'm imagining there's the Bureau of Land Management.

There is probably Alaska's government.

Are there other groups, other things?

Is this an interagency thing that you're working with?

Chris Potter: Yeah, ABoVE is all across Alaska, and it's even into Canada.

You have to work with Canadian agencies as well, to some degree.

But in Alaska, the players are the Department of Interior, which includes the Fish and Wildlife

Service and the Bureau of Land Management.

There are scientists from US Geological Survey in Alaska who are very experienced and who

we collaborate with.

And then there are local and tribal lands that we work on.

I'm going to be working mostly on local lands and those that are used by the tribal, native

people in Alaska.

They are very important to -- maybe the most important people to bring into this whole

discussion, because they are the ones impacted and using Alaskan wildlife, fisheries, and

are very dependent on the energy resources coming from all Alaska.

They're also vulnerable to the destruction or alteration of the infrastructure for pipelines,

and shipping, and all of the things that we need to get energy resources out of Alaska.

Before I ever went, the first call I made on this trip was to the tribal leaders in

the town where I was going to, because I wanted to make sure that they were up front in understanding

what we're doing and involved.

Host: Excellent.

So talking about the interagency stuff, I'd imagine that's not just for this Alaska trip.

You guys work with them on a regular basis, especially here in California.

Is there any other stuff that's going on as well?

Chris Potter: Yeah, some really interesting interagency agreements we have in place for

research have developed over years and years of discussions and collaboration.

The one that I'm leading and spend most of my time on is with the Bureau of Land Management,

which is in the Department of Interior.

They own or are responsible for vast lands in Southern California and throughout the

desertous Southwest.

There are places in the Mojave Desert, in what's called the Sonoran Desert, or the Lower

Colorado Desert, in Riverside County and Imperial County, where their lands have been used in

the past for activities such as off-road vehicle usage, recreation, hiking, campgrounds, and

that sort of thing -- and grazing, of course, by cattle.

But most recently, at the urging of the state of California and Governor Brown, they have

struck a deal with the energy companies in Southern California, PG&E, and also with environmental

groups across the state, who are very much devoted to preserving the desert as a pristine

ecosystem and the endangered species that live there, such as desert tortoises, and

other birds, and amphibians.

It's called the DRECP.

It was a landmark agreement between the government and the conversation and energy corporations

to lease federal lands for solar energy development.

The governor had a very ambitious goal of meeting 20 to 30 percent of our electricity

needs as a state in the next decade through solar and wind energy.

What was to be developed were these large solar farms, photovoltaic or mirror-based

farms that would.

. . We call them "farms."

They're over many, many acres out in the desert.

They produce solar energy that's transported mainly back to the Los Angeles area and San

Diego counties.

They are operational.

There have been several big ones built on BLM lands over the last few years.

It's our job, in cooperation with BLM -- we've been brought in by them, "invited" if you

will -- to use our remote sensing satellite imagery to monitor whether those solar energy

developments are having any negative impacts on the desert environment, because that was

part of the deal that was cut.

BLM had to assure that they could find any early evidence and monitor any adverse impacts

to endangered species, to air quality -- because dust is a big problem there when you go up

and down the roads – and install anything new in the desert, any disturbance to the

fragile soil surfaces there, or desert biological crust that you can barely see but are very

important for stabilizing the surface.

There are ancient desert pavements that have been there since before humans were here.

And they need to be preserved.

We are monitoring it month-by-month with, again, with our Landsat satellite and other

airborne resources we have at our disposal to help the BLM demonstrate whether there

are or have been any adverse changes.

So far, we don't see many, which is really good news, because I think we can have solar

energy coexist with -- [background noise] -- a pristine desert.

Whoops, that was my phone.

Host: Forget it.

We'll leave it in.

Chris Potter: So this energy development can be environmentally friendly.

It can be environmentally monitored.

We're pretty sure at this point, without tracking every tortoise out there, that their habitat

is not being adversely impacted.

You do see the solar energy developments.

You can see them from Google Earth.

You can see them because they're very large.

You can see them from, of course, our satellite imagery.

Or if you're standing out there hiking across your desert campground, you might see them

in the distance.

They actually cool the desert surface more than the natural vegetation even does, because

they're designed to absorb the high-energy, visible radiation.

And so they're turning that visible radiation into energy rather than re-radiating it back

into the atmosphere, the troposphere.

So they are cooling the desert surface, and may even provide refuges and habitats for

animals that may otherwise not be able to find a cool place to hang out.

Host: To step into the shade.

Chris Potter: Right.

They are fenced off, though, from most large animals, but smaller ones could crawl through

and find some shade in there.

You know, they probably won't be there forever.

They can be removed, unlike a coal mine or fracking for natural gas.

Their long-term impacts on the environment will be negligible, because they can always

be taken right back out.

We're also estimating how long it takes for the desert to recover completely from any

sort of small disturbance like this.

Generally, when a transmission line has been built through Southern California desert,

within about five years all of the plants and vegetation around those lines have grown

back in.

So we're pretty confident that it's still a resilient ecosystem to minor disturbances

like solar development.

Host: Excellent.

For folks who are listening, if you have any questions for Chris, we are on Twitter @NASAAmes.

We are using the hashtag #NASASiliconValley.

Sends us some questions on over.

We'll hook them back over to Chris.

Thanks for coming.

This has been fun.

Chris Potter: Yes, it was my pleasure.

For more infomation >> NASA Silicon Valley Podcast - Episode 63 - Chris Potter - Duration: 26:58.

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Mar de nubes asombra por su majestuosidad | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 0:43.

For more infomation >> Mar de nubes asombra por su majestuosidad | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 0:43.

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New clues revealed in deadly Boca Raton hit-and-run - Duration: 1:53.

For more infomation >> New clues revealed in deadly Boca Raton hit-and-run - Duration: 1:53.

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Novedoso cojín protege a los niños de la contaminación | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 2:12.

For more infomation >> Novedoso cojín protege a los niños de la contaminación | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 2:12.

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Takashi Murakami Returns as the Curator of ComplexCon 2017's Art Zone Presented by 1800 Tequila - Duration: 2:07.

As some of you probably heard, Complex's annual internet IRL event, ComplexCon, is

coming back to Long Beach, California, Nov. 4 through 5.

And since art is such a major aspect of ComplexCon, we're glad to announce that Takashi Murakami

is also back on board as a host committee member and curator of the 2017 Art Zone, presented

by 1800 Tequila.

As Marc Eckō, founder and chief brand and creative officer of Complex Networks, explained

in a recent press release: "Takashi Murakami is the father of the 'Superflat' art movement…

it defies limiting definitions and emboldens collaboration amongst disparate people.

This is the essence of ComplexCon.

We are delighted that he will again bring his distinctive artistic ingénue to this

year's event."

So with Murakami leading things for the Art Zone—along with lending his expertise to

the overall design and aesthetic of ComplexCon—he'll be inviting big names like Galerie Perrotin,

the famed French gallery, to supply some original artwork and limited-edition prints for lucky

attendees.

Murakami himself, along with fellow, acclaimed artists like JR, Josh Sperling, KAWS, and

Daniel Arsham will also release exclusive prints and items at this year's Art Zone.

This creative space wouldn't be complete without some interactive installations as

well—and, so far, there are several in the works.

Gangster Doodles, Paper Work NYC, and popular GIF app Giphy are among some of the names

behind innovative installations this year; and the celebrated minds of Snarkitecture

are set to return for an exclusive pop-up shop and installation, which will include

a reimagining of their famed pillow lounge from 2016.

ComplexCon's official Art Zone sponsor, 1800 Tequila, will also be bringing a custom-designed

"1800 Lounge" to Long Beach with the help of California artist and designer Madsteez.

Featuring a specially made seating slash bar area, art installation, and giveaways made

in collaboration with Madsteez, the brand Seventh Letter, and 1800 Tequila—only a

few special 1800 Lounge visitors will be able to grab the exclusive collab merch.

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