It's already a little odd that there's a talking Pikachu in Detective Pikachu.
I mean, in the 2 decades that Pokémon has been a thing, fans know what Pikachu is supposed
to sound like.
Heck, Ikue Otani's role as Pikachu is so ubiquitous that it's replaced the normal
cry Pikachu has had in the main games.Yet here's this gruff Pikachu upending everything.
That said, it is the exception as Tim and Detective Pikachu meet a normal Pikachu in
the game.
Well, normal in that it sounds like all the Pikachu we've known.
But it turns out that this one is special too.
We can infer from Detective Pikachu's line that this Pikachu talks about his trainer
and their dreams.
And Detective Pikachu says…
Yeah, it's pretty easy to assume that this is Ash's Pikachu from the anime.
He even says Pikapi at one point which has become understood amongst fans as Pikachu's
way of saying Ash's name, or Satoshi in Japanese.
So what's this mean for the anime?
Could Ash and Pikachu visit Rhyme City at one point and actually cross paths with Detective
Pikachu like this?
We kinda doubt.
This is more of a fun Easter Egg and an acknowledgment that this is how Pikachu is supposed to sound.
Still, it's a fun scene to include.
Thanks for watching and be sure to subscribe to GameXplain for more on Pokémon and other
things gaming.
For more infomation >> Does Detective Pikachu Take Place in the Anime's Universe? (Easter Egg) - Duration: 1:43.-------------------------------------------
Space Guns Don't Work (But We Built One Anyway) - Duration: 5:55.
[♪ INTRO]
A lot of our ideas about the future come from popular works of science fiction,
like how the Star Trek communicators of the 1960s became the cell phones of the '90s.
But go back to the 1800s and some of the most important stories about space travel
had nothing to do with rockets, like you'd think they should.
Instead, authors like Jules Verne and H. G. Wells
thought we'd get things into space with… guns. Really big guns.
If you think about it, it makes a lot of sense.
Things need to go very fast to reach space, and bullets are very fast. So, voila!
Unfortunately... the physics don't really work that way.
But that definitely hasn't stopped us from trying to build space guns of our own.
Obviously, guns differ from rockets in a bunch of important ways.
They're an example of what's called ballistic flight, which means that, once a projectile's launched,
only external forces like gravity and drag can affect its trajectory.
Guns are an advanced form of creating ballistic flight, but the basic idea goes back to the days
of things like trebuchets and, you know, just, like, throwing rocks.
All of that is different than something like a rocket, which can be steered in flight.
What guns have going for them, though, is simplicity.
We've been using the same basic design for hundreds of years and,
by now, we understand pretty well how to build something efficient and reliable.
They're also pretty cheap, since you get to reuse the barrel and just replace the propellant,
like gunpowder, after each shot.
Still, guns do have some major downsides as a launch tool.
To get to space, you need to go really, really fast,
and the payload in a gun just gets one shove to get it going that quickly.
So the acceleration experienced is incredible.
We're talking about thousands of times more g forces,
or thousands of times the regular force of Earth's gravity, than when riding on a rocket.
Which is not great if you're an astronaut who suddenly doesn't have a skeleton.
Reaching those speeds so quickly also really heats things up,
meaning your payload needs to be basically fireproof.
The real kicker, though, is all the pesky physics.
At the end of the day, it's actually impossible to fire something from the surface
directly into orbit around the Earth.
See, you can think of an orbit like a closed loop around the planet.
If you fire a projectile from the surface, that loop is guaranteed to intersect the Earth,
meaning your projectile will crash into the ground.
Meanwhile, after a rocket launches, it fires its engines to creates a new loop,
and an orbit, that doesn't intersect with the surface.
Because they don't have a propulsion system of their own,
ballistic projectiles just can't do that.
Of course, none of this has actually stopped us from building enormous guns to try it out.
Because, pff, who needs science?
In the 1960s, Project Harp, or the High Altitude Research Program,
was our first attempt to reach space with a gun.
The U.S. military was racing to improve early intercontinental ballistic missiles,
and they needed a cost-effective way to test how designs reentered the atmosphere.
With Project HARP, they aimed to reuse the leftover barrels of battleship cannons
to launch payloads high into the sky.
These massive guns were eventually built in Arizona and Barbados,
and they were used to fire more than 200 payloads, each weighing about 180 kilograms.
At peak efficiency, a HARP gun launched one of these objects at more than 2100 meters per second,
fast enough to reach an altitude of about 180 kilometers.
That's about the same height as Alan Shepard's historic Mercury mission
and is definitely into space.
But that gun also had a heck of a kick.
The payload experienced around 25,000 g's at launch,
so its electronics had to be encased in solid plastic blocks to avoid breaking apart.
Unsurprisingly, it wasn't a sustainable idea,
but these guns did help us study the Earth's upper atmosphere, so it wasn't a complete waste.
Some tests released objects that left smoke trails and
that helped scientists track the movement of high-altitude air currents.
After that, the space gun idea was continued in California in the '80s
with Project SHARP, or Super HARP.
The regular HARP guns used gunpowder, but Project SHARP was a light gas gun,
meaning it propelled objects using hydrogen compressed by a piston.
Its goal was to launch small projectiles into space, for real this time,
but the projectiles only got about a quarter of the velocity they needed.
Still, that was good enough for them to plan the final version,
which would've had a barrel about 3.5 kilometers long.
Unfortunately, the planned gun cost more than a billion dollars and was never approved.
And, although some companies have tried to resurrect the idea over the years,
we never really got serious about trying again.
With enough money, determination, and propulsion systems,
maybe someday we could build a functioning space gun.
But all told, ballistic flight just hasn't proven to be an effective way to get to space,
and its opportunity might be gone forever.
The great promise of a space gun has always been that it launches things cheaply,
but with the advent of reusable rockets like SpaceX's Falcon 9, even that advantage is disappearing.
Modern rockets can carry more stuff, do more kinds of missions,
and offer a gentle ride to space, all without breaking the bank.
So space guns might be out. But hey, we'll never stop shooting for the stars.
Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow Space!
Over the years, people have thought up all kinds of wacky ways to get to outer space,
including space guns and even giant elevators.
And believe it or not, we've looked at the science behind that one, too.
You can learn all about space elevators, and whether they'd work,
over at the main SciShow channel.
[♪ OUTRO]
-------------------------------------------
Lawmakers Just DISMANTLED Dems – Restore MAJOR American Right Effective IMMEDIATELY! - Duration: 5:20.
Lawmakers Just DISMANTLED Dems – Restore MAJOR American Right Effective IMMEDIATELY!
For eight years, former president Barack Obama disregarded and destroyed all that is sacred
to our country, and got a lot of liberal lawmakers on board with this plan to dismantle America
piece by piece.
President Donald Trump has worked diligently to put it back together and has just a masterful
job in doing so.
However, Democrats weren't ready to relinquish the control, even after having lost so much
of it, and have been fighting for months over one major decision, which they just lost.
Republican lawmakers succeeded in defying their liberal counterparts over the one major
demand that's most important to them.
Now, Democrats will be reminded of that defeat every time they see huge signs that will now
be going up everywhere after the newly approved rule that's effective immediately.
While this may not be the final piece to the puzzle to put our country back together again,
it's most certainly the biggest as all else hinges on it.
One of the key elements to destroying our Christian nation was to remove God from every
facet of society.
Obama succeeded in doing that under the guise of "separation of church and state," which
ultimately proved to only apply Christianity, which was often replaced with other beliefs
taught in classrooms, such as Islam and even Satanism.
Bibles were not allowed in classrooms, "In God we Trust" was removed from the Pledge
of Allegiance recited daily, and students who silently prayed from their desks were
punished for it.
The rapid and continual moral and behavioral decline in society that ensued was no coincidence.
More shootings occurred on campuses since then, which was always, and still is, blamed
on the weapon rather than the root of the issue.
Where God isn't allowed, evil flourishes.
The state of Florida has seen this first-hand in the aftermath of the Parkland, Florida
school shooting, and were quick to make an important decision that's long overdue and
has nothing to do with guns.
Orlando Sentinel reports what lawmakers in their state just made mandatory in every classroom:
Every Florida public school would need to display "In God We Trust" in a "conspicuous
place," under a bill the Legislature will soon send to the governor's desk.
The requirement, which had passed the House last month, had looked dead in the Senate.
But then it was added to a separate, lengthy and controversial education bill (HB 7055)
that both chambers approved Monday.
If Gov. Rick Scott signs the 207-page proposal, all public schools — and any other buildings
used by local school boards — would need to display "In God We Trust," the state
motto.
The measure was sponsored by Rep. Kimberly Daniels, who runs a Christian ministry.
This move against the liberal left is well played since they have spent the last three
weeks since the shooting demanding something be done to stop these attacks.
Their argument almost entirely surrounded guns and ignoring the Second Amendment.
However, disregarding our God-given constitutional rights doesn't make Americans safer.
These lawmakers just proved the importance of the document our forefathers created based
on the foundation in which our Christian nation was built on.
Bringing God back into the classrooms is the first step in preventing these atrocities
from happening.
"This motto is inscribed on the halls of this great capitol and inked on our currency,
and it should be displayed so that our children will be exposed and educated on this great
motto, which is a part of this country's foundation," Daniels said when asked about
the bill (HB 839).
"Something so great should not be hidden."
"In God We Trust" has been part of Florida's state seal since 1868 and on the state flag
since 1900, but has been the state motto only since 2006, according to the Florida Department
of State, Orlando Sentinel explained.
What's particularly impressive, is that Daniels, who sponsored the bill, is a Democrat
and wasn't afraid to go against the biased beliefs of her party to do what she truly
recognized was right and missing.
This is true politics, the way that it was supposed to done, to better citizens and our
nation, not make decisions or take stances simply to be divisive and combative.
Naturally, not everyone is so understanding or really cares about solving problems and
restoring communities as Daniels is.
A Monroe County mother in Florida who belongs to the education advocacy group called Common
Ground, complained that the bill is unnecessary and too costly to taxpayers.
It's a comical assertion from a liberal since Democrats have proven to never care
about dolling out tax funds by the handful to a long list irrelevant and unimportant
causes.
The upset mother/advocate lawmakers should not take up bills that "fail to address
real issues in education and waste taxpayers' dollars and time."
Sure, there will be a nominal cost to schools districts to display this motto, but is nothing
compared to the cost of life by keeping it off campus.
what do you think about this?
Please Share this news and Scroll down to comment below and don't forget to subscribe
Top Stories Today.
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Chase Pay | How to Set-up & Use Chase's Mobile Payment Platform - Duration: 5:19.
Hi there, it's Ernest from Trip Astute. In this video, we're exploring Chase Pay -- a
new service from Chase Bank that lets you pay online and in stores without
your credit card in hand.
(light chiming music)
In a previous video, we reviewed the second quarter
rotating bonus categories for the Chase Freedom and discussed how Chase Pay is
one of the 5% bonus categories. It seems like Chase is really trying to promote
their service, especially given the growth of mobile payment platforms
like Apple Pay, Android Pay, and Samsung Pay. So I think a lot of folks, including
myself, have wondered, "how does it work? Is it like Apple Pay or Android Pay?" Not
quite, to be honest. When using the app, it's more like a cross between Apple Pay
and paying with your Starbucks app, where you have to use a QR code that's scanned
by the cashier. This means that the number of places that can accept the
payment is limited but will likely grow over time. To activate Chase Pay, you can
either download the Chase Pay app from the Apple or Google App Store and login
with your Chase account username and password, or just go online and click on
the Chase Pay link in the right hand column of your account. You'll need to
determine which card will be your default card. You can then use Chase Pay
in two ways. If you look at the list of larger merchants that accept Chase Pay,
you'll see that they either accept it online or via the Chase Pay app. If they
accept the Chase Pay app, it means that you can pay in the store using the QR
code that's generated by the app. For example, eBags is listed as a store that
accepts Chase Pay online, whereas Best Buy is listed showing that
they accept the Chase Pay app. If we try to purchase an item from eBags.com, then
you'll see that we're given the option to use Chase Pay as the method of
payment. When we click on the link, we're then asked to log into our Chase account
to authorize the payment. To show how the app works, we made a small purchase
at Starbucks. You basically launch the Chase Pay app and select what card you
want to use, and then the screen displays a QR code. Once the QR code is read,
your transaction is approved. It's pretty easy and
seamless. So before you jump in and start using Chase Pay, here are a couple things
to keep in mind. Number 1: Chase Pay doesn't work with business accounts and
profiles. This really annoys me. I basically had to rely on Fiona's phone
to show you how it all works because I couldn't get my Chase Pay app to activate.
What I found out was that since I have my business and personal profiles merged
online, I'm unable to use Chase Pay. When they combined my account,
they basically moved all my personal accounts into my business one, which
means that the account registers as a business profile. Chase customer support
did offer to separate my accounts again, but I decided against it because I like
having that combined view. I don't know why Chase isn't allowing their business
accounts to use Chase Pay. Business account users still can't use Apple Pay either
on their Business Ink cards, so it doesn't really make any sense. But I'm
hoping they change it soon. Number 2: Cashiers often mistake Chase Pay with
Apple Pay or Android Pay. Don't be surprised if you have to tell cashiers
how to process your Chase Pay payments. When we tried to use it,
the cashier instructed us to hold the phone next to the reader, like you would
for Apple or Android Pay. We had to insist that they scan the QR code. Once
they did it worked, so just know that the technology is still a bit new so you
might have to explain how Chase Pay is different than other payment platforms
when making a purchase in store. Number 3: Check offers in the app. The Chase
Pay app will show offers that you can take advantage of, as well as local
merchants that accept Chase Pay. Fiona noticed that she had a $10
welcome offer loaded on her app for using Chase Pay for the first time.
Number 4: Redeeming points for gift cards. While I don't recommend doing this
since you can often get more value using your points for travel, you do have the
option of redeeming points toward gift cards which can be then directly loaded
into the app as an e-gift card. It looks really convenient, but again, if you're
trying to get the most value for your points, I suggest redeeming them for
travel. Number 5: If you have a Chase Freedom Card, make sure you activate the
bonus category. Chase has been offering a 5% bonus for Chase Pay this
past quarter and continue to offer the bonus from
April to June 2018. If you have a Chase Freedom Card, make sure you also activate
the bonus category. If you need more information, check out our video on the
quarter two rotating bonus categories. Have you used Chase Pay? If so, did you
use it online or on the app? Please share your experience below in the comment
section. If you're interested in applying for Chase cards or any other credit
cards, please check out our credit cards offers page. We've partnered with credit
cards.com to link you to the latest credit card offers. Trip Astute does get a
commission if you use our link. It doesn't cost you anything extra, but it's
an easy way to support the channel and help us to continue building content
like this video. If you enjoyed this video or found it useful, please hit the
"like" button and consider subscribing. Also, sign up for our newsletter on our
website for travel articles, updates, and giveaways.
Until next time, travel safe and travel smart.
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