• How to Win (100 Cheat-codes for Life)

    This is a collection of the most valuable 100 pieces of knowledge which you can use to win at life.

    #alux #fineliving #luxury #futurebillionaires #inspire #wisdom #selfhelp #personaldevelopment #learn #lifetips #billionaires #winatlife #cheatcodes #howtowin
    How to Win (100 Cheat-codes for Life) This is a collection of the most valuable 100 pieces of knowledge which you can use to win at life. #alux #fineliving #luxury #futurebillionaires #inspire #wisdom #selfhelp #personaldevelopment #learn #lifetips #billionaires #winatlife #cheatcodes #howtowin
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  • Andrew Garfield Dishes His Random Facts You Never Knew | Bustle

    Is it normal to fall in love with Andrew Garfield after watching this interview? Asking for a friend.

    This charming and talented actor already has a lot of heart-eyed fans, some of whom have even followed him home. (Please, don’t follow him home). Lucky for us, we get to see Garfield portray composer Jonathan Larson in ‘Tick, Tick… Boom!’ in select theaters and on Netflix this month. He sings, he plays piano, and he will probably make us cry.

    In this video, Garfield joined Bustle to give some insight on random facts we might not have known about him. Check it out to learn more about his worst fear, best quarantine purchase, and his first kiss… which involved 16 more people than average. Garfield shows that stars are just like us: He plans on meditating but instead scrolls through his phone first thing in the morning. He also shares that he is neither a morning nor a night person and is just “very tired all the time.” Same, Andrew Garfield, same.

    #AndrewGarfield #RandomFacts #Bustle #celebrity #lifestyle #tips #inspiring #stories #interview
    Andrew Garfield Dishes His Random Facts You Never Knew | Bustle Is it normal to fall in love with Andrew Garfield after watching this interview? Asking for a friend. This charming and talented actor already has a lot of heart-eyed fans, some of whom have even followed him home. (Please, don’t follow him home). Lucky for us, we get to see Garfield portray composer Jonathan Larson in ‘Tick, Tick… Boom!’ in select theaters and on Netflix this month. He sings, he plays piano, and he will probably make us cry. In this video, Garfield joined Bustle to give some insight on random facts we might not have known about him. Check it out to learn more about his worst fear, best quarantine purchase, and his first kiss… which involved 16 more people than average. Garfield shows that stars are just like us: He plans on meditating but instead scrolls through his phone first thing in the morning. He also shares that he is neither a morning nor a night person and is just “very tired all the time.” Same, Andrew Garfield, same. #AndrewGarfield #RandomFacts #Bustle #celebrity #lifestyle #tips #inspiring #stories #interview
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  • Why don’t we cover the desert with solar panels?
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    Dan Kwartler Explore what would happen if we covered the Sahara Desert in solar panels, and the possibility of it solving our energy crisis.

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    Stretching over roughly nine million square kilometers and with sands reaching temperatures of up to 80° Celsius, the Sahara Desert receives about 22 million terawatt hours of energy from the Sun every year. That’s well over 100 times more energy than humanity consumes annually. So, could covering the desert with solar panels solve our energy problems? Dan Kwartler digs into the possibility.

    Lesson by Dan Kwartler, directed by Christoph Sarow, AIM Creative Studios.

    #teded #education #solarpanels #heat #solar #desert #sahara #electricity
    Why don’t we cover the desert with solar panels? -- Dan Kwartler Explore what would happen if we covered the Sahara Desert in solar panels, and the possibility of it solving our energy crisis. -- Stretching over roughly nine million square kilometers and with sands reaching temperatures of up to 80° Celsius, the Sahara Desert receives about 22 million terawatt hours of energy from the Sun every year. That’s well over 100 times more energy than humanity consumes annually. So, could covering the desert with solar panels solve our energy problems? Dan Kwartler digs into the possibility. Lesson by Dan Kwartler, directed by Christoph Sarow, AIM Creative Studios. #teded #education #solarpanels #heat #solar #desert #sahara #electricity
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  • This Entrepreneur Is Scrubbing CO2 From The Atmosphere By Giving Rocks "Superpowers" | Forbes

    Here’s a cool idea: Use hot rocks to fight global warming. Heirloom superheats limestone to extract its CO2 and stores the gas far underground. The treated mineral then acts like a wrung-out sponge, reabsorbing greenhouse gases from the air. “We give rocks superpowers to scrub CO2 out of our atmosphere,” says Noah McQueen, who earned a Ph.D. in chemical engineering from the University of Pennsylvania. McQueen and cofounder Shashank Samala have raised a $53 million round and signed carbon offset deals with tech giants Microsoft, Stripe and Shopify.

    #forbes #superpowers #carbon #rocks #CO2
    This Entrepreneur Is Scrubbing CO2 From The Atmosphere By Giving Rocks "Superpowers" | Forbes Here’s a cool idea: Use hot rocks to fight global warming. Heirloom superheats limestone to extract its CO2 and stores the gas far underground. The treated mineral then acts like a wrung-out sponge, reabsorbing greenhouse gases from the air. “We give rocks superpowers to scrub CO2 out of our atmosphere,” says Noah McQueen, who earned a Ph.D. in chemical engineering from the University of Pennsylvania. McQueen and cofounder Shashank Samala have raised a $53 million round and signed carbon offset deals with tech giants Microsoft, Stripe and Shopify. #forbes #superpowers #carbon #rocks #CO2
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  • Heat Check Podcast: Takeaways from Miami Heat media day and first team practices

    NBA media days took place earlier this week and training camps across the league are underway.

    On a new episode of the Miami Herald’s Heat Check podcast, Anthony Chiang and David Wilson went through their top takeaways from the Miami Heat’s media day and the first few training camp practices at Baha Mar resort in the Bahamas.
    Heat Check Podcast: Takeaways from Miami Heat media day and first team practices NBA media days took place earlier this week and training camps across the league are underway. On a new episode of the Miami Herald’s Heat Check podcast, Anthony Chiang and David Wilson went through their top takeaways from the Miami Heat’s media day and the first few training camp practices at Baha Mar resort in the Bahamas.
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  • The intensity of the action epic “The Woman King,” starring Viola Davis and now in theaters, is balanced out with moments of levity, particularly in this training montage that sets up two key characters.

    Nawi (Thuso Mbedu) has been dumped by her father at the palace in the Kingdom of Dahomey in 19th-century Africa. She is taken in and trained to become a part of a group of female soldiers. The woman leading the drills is Izogie (Lashana Lynch), whom Nawi ultimately tries to emulate.

    “We’ve seen training montages before and they’re always fun and exciting,” the director Gina Prince-Bythewood said, narrating the scene. “What is going to make this one different?” She said putting the focus on the story of female warriors was “the element we haven’t seen.”

    Prince-Bythewood’s approach, one she employed in her previous action film, “The Old Guard,” was to have actors perform their own stunts. In this sequence, that means performers have to pull off a flip in a couple of wrestling scenes. First, it’s Lynch flipping Mbedu, which Prince-Bythewood said came with a caveat: Mbedu would only agree to being flipped six times. But apparently the sixth time was the charm.

    “You see it, she gets trucked,” Prince-Bythewood said.
    The segment where Nawi gets to pull the same maneuver on Ode (Adrienne Warren), a fellow trainee, came with a surprise.

    “The beauty of that moment, is at the end of the wrestling, Ode shoves Nawi,” Prince-Bythewood said. “That was not scripted. That was two actors so in the moment.”

    Read the New York Times review: https://nyti.ms/3dm6Dwu
    Subscribe: http://bit.ly/U8Ys7n

    More from The New York Times Video: http://nytimes.com/video

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    Whether it's reporting on conflicts abroad and political divisions at home, or covering the latest style trends and scientific developments, New York Times video journalists provide a revealing and unforgettable view of the world. It's all the news that's fit to watch.
    The intensity of the action epic “The Woman King,” starring Viola Davis and now in theaters, is balanced out with moments of levity, particularly in this training montage that sets up two key characters. Nawi (Thuso Mbedu) has been dumped by her father at the palace in the Kingdom of Dahomey in 19th-century Africa. She is taken in and trained to become a part of a group of female soldiers. The woman leading the drills is Izogie (Lashana Lynch), whom Nawi ultimately tries to emulate. “We’ve seen training montages before and they’re always fun and exciting,” the director Gina Prince-Bythewood said, narrating the scene. “What is going to make this one different?” She said putting the focus on the story of female warriors was “the element we haven’t seen.” Prince-Bythewood’s approach, one she employed in her previous action film, “The Old Guard,” was to have actors perform their own stunts. In this sequence, that means performers have to pull off a flip in a couple of wrestling scenes. First, it’s Lynch flipping Mbedu, which Prince-Bythewood said came with a caveat: Mbedu would only agree to being flipped six times. But apparently the sixth time was the charm. “You see it, she gets trucked,” Prince-Bythewood said. The segment where Nawi gets to pull the same maneuver on Ode (Adrienne Warren), a fellow trainee, came with a surprise. “The beauty of that moment, is at the end of the wrestling, Ode shoves Nawi,” Prince-Bythewood said. “That was not scripted. That was two actors so in the moment.” Read the New York Times review: https://nyti.ms/3dm6Dwu Subscribe: http://bit.ly/U8Ys7n More from The New York Times Video: http://nytimes.com/video ---------- Whether it's reporting on conflicts abroad and political divisions at home, or covering the latest style trends and scientific developments, New York Times video journalists provide a revealing and unforgettable view of the world. It's all the news that's fit to watch.
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