Thứ Năm, 1 tháng 3, 2018

Youtube daily Mar 1 2018

Nick Junior's Junior Gamers.

Hi, I'm Junior Gamer Mateo.

Let's play the Top Wing Virtual Training Missions game!

I get to train like a Top Wing cadet.

Oh yeah!

I can be any of the cadets.

OK, let's start with Swift.

I like a challenge, let's jet!

I'm flying the Flashwing and collecting tokens.

Whoa, this turbo booster helps me go so fast!

Yeah!

Gotta watch out for that storm cloud!

Slick!

Turbo loopy loop time!

- Awesome! - Got it!

Wow, I got so many training tokens!

I earned a Top Wing training badge!

Up next, Brody.

Surf's up!

Whoa, watch out for those waves!

- Quick, grab that token! - Yahoo!

Don't fall off!

Woops, now that's a wipe out!

- Primo! - Yeah!

Now I'll play as Penny in the Aquawing!

This is so cool!

- Aqua booster! -Wee!

Whoa, more tokens!

Gotcha!

Another Top Wing training badge!

Thanks for helping me!

Next, I'm playing as Rod!

Roadwing time!

Let's cock-a-doodle-do this!

Ah, jump over those logs!

Oh yeah!

Whoa, so many tokens!

We earned all of our training badges,

that was so awesome!

Thanks for helping me earn my wings,

see you on the next mission!

You can play the Virtual Training Missions game

On NickJunior.com and in the Nick Junior app.

For more infomation >> Top Wing: 'Virtual Training Missions' Official Game Walkthrough ✈️ | Nick Jr. Games - Duration: 1:47.

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15 Greatest Inventions Discovered By ACCIDENT - Duration: 7:52.

• How did someone revolutionize kitchen cutlery by trying to create a better gun?

What common household chemical was discovered by dropping a vial on a pair of shoes?

Here are 15 examples of people making mistakes that worked out better than if they'd been

successful.

15 – Saccharin • The discovery of the sugar substitute

saccharin was a lucky accident that could just as easily have killed the scientist who

discovered it.

• Ira Remsen wasn't working on a sugar substitute in his lab.

He was working on a number of things, including a coal tar derivative.

• One day, Remsen forgot to wash his hands, after, you know, handling dangerous chemicals.

And then he ate lunch, and noticed the bread roll he was eating was unusually sweet.

• He traced that flavor back to the chemical he was working with, and that became saccharin.

14 – Synthetic Mauve Dye • As a student at London's Royal College

of Chemistry in 1856, William Henry Perkin was given a simple task as homework.

• He was to synthesize quinine – a drug used to treat malaria.

Quinine was could only be made with extracts from exotic trees, so Perkin was trying to

find a cheap way to synthesize it.

• Like the guy who invented saccharin, he turned to coal tar, the byproduct of Victorian-era

gas lighting.

After a few experiments... he failed.

• What he made was definitely not medicine... but he did revolutionize the artificial dye

industry, and create the color mauve, a vivid purple not cheaply available anywhere else.

13 – Teflon • This discovery came as a result of a failed

attempt to discover new chemicals to use for food refrigeration.

• In trying to create this new refrigeration agent, he used dry ice and accidentally converted

the gas he was working with to a strange white powder.

• No, not THAT kind of white powder.

• He tested the powder and found that it was heat-resistant and that other substances

would not stick to it.

• After some refinement, that powder became Teflon.

12 – Olestra • The goal was a simple one – create a

substitute that could be used in snack foods to make them still taste great, but not cause

any weight gain.

• That's the dream.

The discovery was Olestra: a fat substitute that would pass through the intestines without

ever being absorbed into the body.

• Like many fat substitutes, the result was uncontrollable diarrhea, which wasn't

an acceptable tradeoff for most people.

• Luckily, the core ingredient of Olestra – sucrose polyester – has found a second

life as an effective machine lubricant.

11 – Post-it Notes • This is the result of basically trying

to do the exact opposite thing at 3M.

An engineer at 3M was trying to create a super-strong, aerospace-quality adhesive.

• Instead, he created an incredibly weak adhesive that left no residue when peeled

off.

• At the time, the adhesive was seen as useless and shelved.

It wasn't until 5 years later that another 3M engineer applied the adhesive to small

strips of paper as page markers, and the idea took off.

10 – Fireworks • Here's the story of what must have been

either a hilarious or a terrifying kitchen accident in 10th-century China.

Maybe both.

• The cook took saltpetre, sulfur, and charcoal – three common cooking ingredients at the

time – and accidentally lit fire to them.

The result was a burst of colorful sparks.

• He experimented further and discovered that if he lit those ingredients in the hollow

of a bamboo shoot, it created a powerful explosion out the end.

9 – Inkjet Printer • This is one of the messier accidental

discoveries you'll find.

• It came about when a Canon employee set a hot soldering iron down next to his ink

pen.

• Soon, the ink pen heated up and started squirting ink out the end.

• Once the employee realized the ink explosion happened because of the heat, he got to work

putting that principle into action for inkjet printers.

8 – Slinky • This is one of the most famous "oops"

inventions of all time.

• James Wright was trying to invent springs that would stabilize instruments on naval

ships while sailing.

• He knocked one off a shelf, and it started doing the now-famous "Slinky walk."

• Wright saw that, played with it a bit, and decided to run with it as his new business.

7 – Pacemaker • The man who created the pacemaker was

the owner of over 150 patents by the time of his death.

• But by far the most important is the pacemaker – an invention used to save and improve

the lives of 600,000 people every year.

• Of course, what he was TRYING to invent was a device that would RECORD heart rhythms.

But he made a mistake in adding an extra electronic component, and the result was a device that

CREATED a heart rhythm instead.

6 – Stainless Steel • In 1912, Harry Brearly was trying to create

a new type of steel for use in guns.

The rifling marks in guns would wear down over time, making the barrel eventually too

big for the bullets.

• Brearly was trying to create a type of steel that wouldn't wear down.

And he failed.

Badly.

Repeatedly.

• And his failures would rust and corrode over time, because steel, being primarily

made of iron, would rust just like iron.

• But one of his failures didn't rust.

It stayed shiny and pristine, even months after creating it.

Brearly had discovered rustless steel, which he immediately set to using in cutlery.

5 – Coca-Cola • The famous story is that the namesake

of Coca-Cola comes from two of its original core ingredients: Cocaine, and the Kola nut.

• That's true, and as a result, the drink was originally sold as a medicinal tonic – a

drink to give people energy.

And it probably worked to some extent, since the Kola nut is rich in caffeine, and cocaine

is... well... cocaine.

• However, in 1898, Congress passed a tax on the sale of all medicines.

So after that, Coca-Cola was no longer marketed as a medicine, and was simply sold as a drink.

4 – Scotchgard • Usually, dropping a vial of chemicals

onto a pair of shoes in the lab means you get rid of the shoes.

And maybe your feet.

• But that's exactly what happened in 3M's lab in 1952, when Patsy Sherman was trying

to develop a new type of rubber to use in fueling lines for jet aircraft.

• An assistant dropped one of the components, spilling it on his white canvas shoes.

Water, oil, and all known solvents washed right off of the shoes when they tried to

clean them up.

• That discovery led to the development of Scotchgard, the versatile fabric protector.

3 – Safety Glass • Another example of a dropped vial resulting

in something amazing.

• In 1903, Edouard Benedictus accidentally knocked a glass flask off his shelf.

It hit the floor and broke, but did not shatter, and mostly maintained its shape.

• He found out that the glass had previously held cellulose nitrate, a clear liquid that

had evaporated and left a transparent film.

• Because the flask looked clean, the assistant returned it to the shelf.

And that transparent film that held the glass together was the key ingredient in the discovery

of safety glass.

2 – SMS Texting • Technically speaking, the technology originally

used for text messaging has existed since 1984.

• SMS was initially used as a method of communicating network statuses between administrators,

and while the technology existed for 8 years prior, the first actual text message was sent

in 1992 – from a PC.

• In 1993, Nokia created the first commercial handset capable of sending text messages,

and in 1997, they developed the first phone with a full keyboard.

1 – LSD • Sandoz was the same Swiss chemical company

that accidentally discovered saccharin.

• But this discovery was a bit... different.

• In 1917, Sandoz created a pharmaceutical department, setting out to work on ergot – a

fungus found in tainted rye.

• Ergot, in small doses, had medicinal properties.

In large doses, it caused convulsions and death.

Symptoms of ergot poisoning were so severe, they are presumed to be behind the accusations

of witchcraft driving the Salem Witch Trials.

• The research on ergot eventually led to the development of LSD, which had no discernable

medical use.

• The lab discontinued testing, but the researcher himself, Albert Hoffman, continued

experimenting on it – using himself as the test subject.

For more infomation >> 15 Greatest Inventions Discovered By ACCIDENT - Duration: 7:52.

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Are you ready for mosquito season? - Duration: 1:15.

For more infomation >> Are you ready for mosquito season? - Duration: 1:15.

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Kim Kardashian Calls Out YSL for Copying the Saint Pablo Tour - Duration: 1:04.

What up guys, Frazier here for Complex News.

Looks like Kim Kardashian is not too thrilled with the folks over at Saint Laurent after

noticing they might have drawn some, uh, "inspiration" from her husband's Saint Pablo Tour set design.

Kim called out similarities in the lighting used in Saint Laurent's show and that from

Kanye's famous floating stage in 2016.

On Instagram Kim posted side by side images for comparison with the passive aggressive

caption "Cute YSL."

Kanye already has a pretty contentious relationship with Saint Laurent.

In one of his most infamous onstage speeches, he revealed "I Am a God" was inspired

by Hedi Slimane trying to quote "control" him, dictating that he could only attend Saint

Laurent's fashion show if he didn't go to others.

He also name-checked Hedi Slimane in an instant classic outburst during his generally classic

2013 interview with Zane Lowe.

Of course, Hedi isn't actually with Saint Laurent anymore, he left to head up menswear

at Celine.

But apparently, old feuds die hard.

At the moment, the Wests haven't gone in further but something tells me this probably

won't be the last we here of this issue.

For any updates, subscribe to Complex News on YouTube.

For Complex, I'm Frazier.

For more infomation >> Kim Kardashian Calls Out YSL for Copying the Saint Pablo Tour - Duration: 1:04.

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Group wants surveillance planes back over Baltimore - Duration: 1:57.

For more infomation >> Group wants surveillance planes back over Baltimore - Duration: 1:57.

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Cincinnati program begins enhancing Avondale - Duration: 1:28.

For more infomation >> Cincinnati program begins enhancing Avondale - Duration: 1:28.

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STAN! Not Satan! Kelly apologizes to Stan - Duration: 0:30.

For more infomation >> STAN! Not Satan! Kelly apologizes to Stan - Duration: 0:30.

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Harford County school community meets over safety concerns - Duration: 1:50.

For more infomation >> Harford County school community meets over safety concerns - Duration: 1:50.

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Maryland braces for strong winds - Duration: 2:03.

For more infomation >> Maryland braces for strong winds - Duration: 2:03.

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How Much Of Trump's Agenda Is Already Complete? Hint: More Than Reagan's - Duration: 2:31.

How Much Of Trump's Agenda Is Already Complete?

As critics of President Donald Trump explain it, he's accomplished absolutely nothing

since entering office while causing a whole bunch of unnecessary problems.

Back on Earth, the story is quite different.

Trump is plowing through the items on his agenda in impressive fashion.

As the mainstream media and Democratic leaders obsess over wild conspiracy theories and the

never-ending stream of gossip that emanates from the nation's capital, Trump and company

are busy working and actually getting things done.

Washington Examiner has the details on exactly how much has been accomplished by Trump thus

far.

With unprecedented speed, the Trump administration has already implemented nearly two-thirds

of the 334 agenda items called for by the Heritage Foundation, a pace faster than former

President Reagan who embraced the conservative think tank's legendary "Mandate for Leadership"blueprint.

Thomas Binion, director of congressional and executive branch relations at Heritage, said

that Trump has implemented 64 percent of the "unique policy recommendations" from the

group.

We're not talking about a few meaningless bullet points that cater to the very few either.

Trump has managed to affect meaningful change that has improved the fortunes of our nation

as a whole.

At this stage of his presidency, Reagan had completed 49 percent of the Heritage policy

recommendations.

"We're blown away," Binion said in an interview.

Trump, he said, "is very active, very conservative, and very effective."

What's more, he said, Trump hasn't just focused on one agenda area, but he and his

team have pushed through administrative moves on foreign policy, deregulation, immigration,

tax reform and health care, moves often ignored by the media.

In the run-up to the 2016 presidential election, Trump jokingly remarked that folks were going

to get sick and tired of winning under his leadership.

A little over a year into his first term in office, it's quite refreshing to note that's

at least an option.

As the commander-in-chief himself may say, he's managed to deliver on his promises

in a big league fashion.

What do you think about this?

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