Thứ Ba, 13 tháng 11, 2018

Youtube daily Nov 13 2018

Google has a lot of resources that it provides to its users... but the most

common [product used] is the Google search. If you have a question like "what is the difference

between corn and maize" you can use Google to answer this question. If you

want a more authoritative answer you can do a site search. That's when you add in

[site:.edu] - then any of the web pages that come up will be .edu education pages. You can also do a site search

for a search using this: site dot gov [site:.gov] will bring up government

[.gov] websites.

For more infomation >> Google search with site:.edu or site:.gov added - Duration: 1:06.

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Oculus founder sidesteps questions over Facebook firing - Duration: 1:49.

For more infomation >> Oculus founder sidesteps questions over Facebook firing - Duration: 1:49.

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How to Draw the Head from Any Angle - Loomis Method - Duration: 6:05.

Hello my friends and welcome to another Tuesday of tutorial!

I am Leonardo Pereznieto and today we will draw the head in different

angles, based on the technique by master Andrew Loomis

giving in this beautiful book.

As Loomis wrote, the basic shape of the head, the cranium, is like

a flattened ball.

We can divide it into quarters, with a vertical

and a horizontal axis.

And we slice the sides, since I told you, it was a flattened ball.

So, now we have a head that we can point in any direction

and we can use this as the basic structure in our drawings.

Ok, let's try it with a sketch!

First we draw a circle.

Good! and then we draw the flattened area, which if it is in perspective

will be an oval.

We trace the axis, this oval and the axis will give us

the tilt of the head.

The horizontal axis in the middle of the sphere, indicates the height

of the eyebrows.

And this other one is the vertical midline of the face, so this cross in front will be in front

of the eyebrows.

Now we pull the height of our oval with a parallel line to the axes

and that gives us the hairline or the top of the face

and the bottom of the oval will be the bottom of the nose.

Since the face is flattish we draw a straight line down.

As you see we have two equal sections, from the hairline to the brows,

and from the brows to the bottom of the nose.

If we make one more equal section down here, magically, we have

the bottom of the chin.

And we can draw the jaw like this.

Of course all these measurements can vary depending on the person.

The bigger you make the oval, the longer the nose and the face will be.

and the smaller the oval, the more rounded the face.

We add some planes like so. The ear will easily fit in this quadrant,

since its height generally is from about the eyebrows to the bottom of the nose.

The eyes of course go below the eyebrows, and we know the height of the bottom

of the nose, but of course it is not on the vertical midline

since it is sticking out.

I clean up some lines that we don't need,

we draw the mouth and I will shorten just slightly the chin.

We draw the neck... we can refine also a little bit the bone structure and add some

hair.

Alright!

Let's draw some more to get the hang of it.

This time I will use an iPad.

Let's draw the circle... like so

and the oval.

He will be looking down.

The vertical and horizontal axis,

the height of the hairline and of the nose.

The midline of the face and we mark the end of the chin.

Since this time the chin is farther away from us

that section should be a little bit smaller

because of the perspective.

So we know the height of the eyebrows, the bottom of the nose and of the chin

as well as that of the beginning of the hairline

and the exact position of the ear.

Which facilitate things, I erase this plane of the cheeks slightly, and it's done.

Let's do another one, this time looking a little bit more toward us and up,

we make the circle and the oval, then the axis, the parallel lines from the bottom

and top of the oval, for our nose and brows.

The straight midline of the face, and we can begin with the features.

Sorry, the nose will get to here, and therefore the cheek to about here.

As you see the top third is a little bit smaller because it is farther away from us.

In the book I showed you at the beginning by Loomis, it's also explained how to draw

every feature from different angles.

Links for the book and for the materials I use, are in the information below the video.

Let's draw the planes of the cheek and jaw,

and it's ready!

This method also works for women's heads.

Let's draw one!

The bone structure in a woman tends to be less prominent and it is softer.

It is almost impossible to draw a beautiful woman if the proportions and feature placement

is not accurate.

I made a new layer to dim the structural sketch.

In a woman you can make the brows slightly higher and the nose and ear

slightly smaller.

Let's draw the jaw a little bit more rounded than in a man, good.

And add some hair.

The neck, cheek, a little bit more detail to the ear, bones and hair.

And its ready!

Please let me know if this was helpful at all.

And if you enjoyed it please give it a LIKE! share it to your friends

and subscribe to Fine Art-Tips.

And I will see you on Tuesday ;)

Subtitled by Grethel Trejo

For more infomation >> How to Draw the Head from Any Angle - Loomis Method - Duration: 6:05.

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Stan Lee: Look Back On The Life Of The Marvel Comics Legend | TODAY - Duration: 3:55.

For more infomation >> Stan Lee: Look Back On The Life Of The Marvel Comics Legend | TODAY - Duration: 3:55.

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Monica Lewinsky On Why She's Speaking Out In 'The Clinton Affair' | TODAY - Duration: 3:44.

For more infomation >> Monica Lewinsky On Why She's Speaking Out In 'The Clinton Affair' | TODAY - Duration: 3:44.

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El Chapo 'Always 1 Step Ahead' Says Ex-DEA Agent | TODAY - Duration: 3:41.

For more infomation >> El Chapo 'Always 1 Step Ahead' Says Ex-DEA Agent | TODAY - Duration: 3:41.

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Bryan Cranston Talks Broadway's 'Network' And 'Breaking Bad' Movie | TODAY - Duration: 7:14.

For more infomation >> Bryan Cranston Talks Broadway's 'Network' And 'Breaking Bad' Movie | TODAY - Duration: 7:14.

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Netflix CEO Reed Hastings Thinks: "We Suck" -- That's a Good Thing - Duration: 5:04.

David Gardner: Great Quotation No. 3: Great Quotation No. 3 comes from one of my favorite CEOs;

maybe one of your favorite CEOs, too. I won't even name him yet.

Maybe you can guess from the quote itself. This is like a paragraph -- several sentences strung together.

He begins, "I see all the imperfections in Netflix.

I see all the things that aren't working. At the office I'm the one that says, 'We suck.

Don't get me wrong.

We're better than everyone else, but we suck compared to what we are going to be.'

Of course, in general, I'm constraining myself from saying these things because they are

too easy to take out of context.

But as an entrepreneur, that's how you have to look at your product.

Compare yourself to what you want to be, what you will be, in five years, and that should be

so much better than what you have today."

So yes, you've probably guessed by now that's the CEO of Netflix, Reed Hastings.

And what's fun about that quotation -- I'm going to say a little bit more about it as

an entrepreneur in a second -- but what's fun about that quotation is he didn't say it

last month or last year.

I pulled that quote in 2013, dropped it into my Evernote file and saved it until today

to share it with you, because it's kind of fun, now, since it is five years after he said that quote.

And by the way, if you want to read that whole article, it was an interview with him.

It's at TheNextWeb.com.

If you just google "thenextweb" [all one word], "Reed Hastings," "2013" you'll see the article

I'm talking about entitled, Inspiring Entrepreneurs: What Netflix CEO Reed Hastings has learned

in his business career.

But that was published just about five years ago this month, and so Reed was thinking about

what Netflix is today when he said that.

And if you think back to where Netflix was in 2013, it was definitely on a comeback.

It was already a winner and a great winner from the previous decade.

But do you remember Qwikster in 2011 and how badly Netflix got thrown for a loop?

A self-inflicted wound, really, by in part CEO Reed Hastings who acknowledged his mistakes

at the time and since has described it as just one bad chapter in Netflix's history.

But I love the quotation not just because this has been one of the best stocks you

could have owned over the last five years; but of course I love it as a fellow entrepreneur

and I know many of you are entrepreneurs listening, as well. And so don'tcha love it?

We see all the imperfections -- we should anyway -- in the things, the widgets that

we're creating. The products and the services.

We see all the things we should that aren't [with Reed Hastings] working.

At the office we're the ones that say, "We suck!" I certainly think you should be.

You don't want to say it too loud and, as he said, you don't want to say it out of context.

If you say it all the time somebody will start quoting you from The Wall Street Journal

or Fortune magazine and all of a sudden you'll generate a headline about

how much your company sucks, in this case.

But I think the key is that you're always looking to improve -- and especially if you're

a visionary like Reed Hastings, or like some Motley Fools I know, or like you --

because I bet I'm speaking to some visionaries out there, then you're seeing.

You know what you're trying to become, and so you're guided by a sense of what needs to be fixed.

And a restlessness, if you will.

A desire to get there and to be that thing years from now that you will be.

And now we can look backwards five years after Reed said that this month and see how Netflix

is kind of king of the world these days.

I'm a regular listener of many Motley Fool podcasts, and I think a recent Market Foolery

was entitled something like, Netflix, [Destroyer] of Worlds within the last week.

You can hear that podcast from our Market Foolery team, but that is kind of how Netflix

is acting these days.

And I like to think, before we move to Quotation No. 4, that Reed Hastings still thinks the

exact same thing today.

Don't you think Reed might still say the exact same thing?

That here in 2018 he sees all the imperfections in Netflix.

He sees all the things that aren't working at the office, and he's still the one saying, "We suck!"

I'd like to think that he is and I'm going to be really interested in seeing what Netflix

becomes over the next five years.

So yes, Great Quotation No. 3; this one's for the entrepreneurs, whether you are one

or just have one in spirit inside you. It's for all of us entrepreneurs.

Constant improvement and always striving toward the vision that you see, whether it's your

own company or a company that you work for; always looking to get better.

And it's always inspiring to see people say that and then actually do it for all of us.

It's even more inspiring when you own shares of the companies that go on to do that as

they win, and I know I'm speaking to many fellow Netflix shareholders.

For more infomation >> Netflix CEO Reed Hastings Thinks: "We Suck" -- That's a Good Thing - Duration: 5:04.

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Jazz Music: Best of Jazz Music Playlist 2018 and Jazz Music Playlist Youtube - Duration: 3:30:19.

Title: Jazz Music: Best of Jazz Music Playlist 2018 and Jazz Music Playlist Youtube

For more infomation >> Jazz Music: Best of Jazz Music Playlist 2018 and Jazz Music Playlist Youtube - Duration: 3:30:19.

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Democrat Kyrsten Sinema Wins Arizona Senate Race | TODAY - Duration: 2:21.

For more infomation >> Democrat Kyrsten Sinema Wins Arizona Senate Race | TODAY - Duration: 2:21.

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See Craig Melvin Sing Hits With Darius Rucker | TODAY - Duration: 5:41.

For more infomation >> See Craig Melvin Sing Hits With Darius Rucker | TODAY - Duration: 5:41.

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What's Eating Kraft Heinz Stock? - Duration: 2:33.

Chris Hill: A bad year for Kraft Heinz just got a little bit worse.

Third quarter sales came in lower than expected.

Shares of Kraft Heinz falling on Friday, Ron, and hitting a new 52-week low.

Ron Gross: They have really been struggling with the trend towards fresher, healthier,

more natural foods. It's showing up in the numbers.

They did manage to eke out an overall revenue increase of 1.6%, but they have higher costs

-- marketing, hiring, new product costs really are weighing on that income statement.

Their adjusted EBITDA was down 16% in the U.S., which is obviously very important to them.

Adjusted earnings fell 6%.

They're guiding us to expect some relief from some of these cost pressures.

I think we have to wait to see how that plays out.

You have top line weakness, you've got pressure on margins.

Never leads to goodness on the bottom line.

We'll have to take this quarter by quarter, but I don't see this abating anytime soon.

Hill: Yeah. And, Jason, when you look at what the stock is doing, I don't personally feel any pressure

to jump in here. Jason Moser: No.

I don't think I'd ever feel any pressure to jump in there.

Correct me if I'm wrong, was it Berkshire that made a big investment in Kraft?

Gross: You're correct.

Moser: They're probably sitting there thinking, "I should have listened to those guys from

Motley Fool Money and invested in McCormick instead," because McCormick and French's and

Frank's Red Hot, those things are just on fire, baby!

Matt Argersinger: Whoa!

Yeah, I think the problem with Kraft and others is that the importance that consumers used

to place on those brands, and the marketing budgets that companies like Kraft could put

behind those brands, it's no longer that important anymore in the FMCG -- fast-moving consumer goods --

category that's in vogue right now.

And that's just because with consumers, it's more about efficiency and delivery and things like that.

Generic brands and others seem to fit that just fine.

They're not really distinguishing between brands anymore.

Gross: Right. The Kraft Heinz merger, I think, made sense.

They were able to squeeze out about $1.8 billion of costs there.

That made sense. But now, where do you go from here?

You have to get on the right trends or you're going to continue to suffer.

Moser: What was that thing I saw the other day, millennials are apparently killing American cheese?

Did anybody else see that? Gross: No, I don't even know what that means.

Argersinger: It makes sense! Moser: Google it, I swear I saw it!

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