how to draw minions coloring pages for kids
how to draw minions coloring pages for kids
how to draw minions coloring pages for kids
how to draw minions coloring pages for kids
how to draw minions coloring pages for kids
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Happy Birthday My Love | Birthday Whatsapp Status For Her - Duration: 1:08.
It feels amazing
to be inlove
with a girl who is beautiful
inside and out
You are the girl of my dreams
Who I thought never existed
I love you so much
I promise to make your day very special
And I promise to make your year even more special
Happy Birthday my love
Video messages for that someone special. Subscribe to our channel for more love messages like this.
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HOW TO IRON ON NAME LABELS | BACK TO SCHOOL | MRS JIBRIL - Duration: 1:31.
Hey lovelies welcome back to my channel today's video is going to be a really quick
one so i'll basically show you how to label your kids clothes especially with
school starting very close. So all you'll need is the clothing you have so
for me I'm using Esmael's hat to show you and then the iron on labels I bought
them from an online store and you also need some baking paper you can use any
baking paper that you buy from the supermarket. All I'm doing here is
I'm ironing hat I'm just making sure that it's nice and warm so you just iron it
your iron shouldn't be very high so just to medium and then I'm just checking
with my hand to see if it's warm enough now it's warm so the next thing you will
need to do is get your label, then just put the label wherever you want it
on the hat get the baking paper put that on top of the label and then you need to
iron as you can see I've already ironed it on and that's how it looks it's not
going to come out even with washing. That was it for today's very very short video if
you know someone whose kids starting school that might benefit from this
video make sure to share it with them and if you haven't subscribed yet to my
channel make sure to subscribe I'll see you in the next video bye
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NWR presents Micah P. Hinson (sub ita) - Duration: 15:19.
[music]
I started... my first interest in music started when I was probably
like eight years old I had a little Casio keyboard that would play
like these Walt Disney songs and that these little lights and so it would like
to show you how to play them and so at that young age I remember
you know, playing the Casio and having this feeling that I wanted to someday
like move people with music which is a very strange thing to think when you're
fucking 8 years old playing Walt Disney fucking songs you know um but so music
for me started very early like a desire to consume music and then my dad bought
me a guitar I was really shit my brother got really
sick, almost died, and he got really good and so I was like fuck you Josh
He's my brother and so I started playing more and then um and then around like the age
of 12, 11 I started writing songs and that's how it started you know so
I started you know let's say when I was 12 writing and the reason why I started is
because music felt like it was a something
I was supposed to do you know
it's a really big, it's a really loaded question
challenges
fucking challenges mental illness, trauma like deaths of very very
dear friends when I was young, I have a fucked up back I'm missing a disc in my spine
I was in a fucking van accident in Spain on tour playing "Trompe Le Monde" by
the Pixies and could have easily died on that trip
It seems with every record I've done
there has to be something traumatic that's happened to me
except like one record the news like I just got married so that wasn't like
traumatic or bad or anything you know and then with this new
record and I really kicked a um a twelve-year opium addiction and so
that's really positive you know um
but yeah those are the those are the
things that I've I've dealt with being a musician I suppose but I probably still
deal with those things if I if I wasn't a musician it's just a life isn't easy
you know it's a very difficult question man there's just been a lot of ups and
downs a lot of hard times a lot of good times but like I said I think the fact
that I'm still alive I'm still here and I'm still doing it means that I must
be offering the the world
something worthwhile you know
me and my wife the doctors told us that we couldn't have children um and so I
found myself in Santiago in the Basque Country where they say st. James is
buried and I found my after they said I couldn't have kids
I found myself me and my wife found ourselves in that city a whole lot in
just like a four month period um and every day I'd get up or three times a
day or fucking eight times a day I would go to I would go to the Cathedral and
think about miracles and think about, you know, spiritual things when we got home
from that last trip a month later we were pregnant with my first son so
miracles do happen and science is bullshit uh .
But at this church
there's a
statue of Saint James and there's 24 musicians around him like all
getting ready, like tuning up or sitting around you know
and as soon as James
lifts his hands the Apocalypse the biblical Apocalypse will begin
I don't know how I feel about a bit of biblical Apocalypse but I firmly believe that
Apocalypse is a it's an important thing to live your everyday life like let's
say you're like in a relationship and your girlfriend or boyfriend doesn't
like a certain thing you do if you don't have the sense of apocalypse if you
don't shed that skin
and become a better person then the love that you have
between in that relationship isn't is not gonna last and so I think in a the
idea of an apocalypse of shedding your skin like a snake should happen probably
every day if you want to you know if you're striving
to be a good human
Well everybody is recording their music on computers and
everything's modern and all this stuff and so I decided that I would get 24
musicians together and I'll never let them know who I'll never let the world
know who they are and we all made promises to each other that we would be
anonymous we recorded in a barn in East Texas
before the recording I didn't let
any of them hear that because those songs one day in the barn we rehearsed
and then the next day we recorded the whole album so we recorded it in 24
hours and so actually the musicians only really knew the songs for I guess like
48 hours you know um but it worked out really well because like on some songs I
might have like 12 guitars and for bass players and or on other songs I might
have like 5 drummers and even though they didn't know and they might be
making mistakes here and there there was so many of them that all their little
mistakes or all the little ways that they played it all came together in this
uh this beautiful way I felt um and so it was just important to me to
gather human souls in the same place and create something I mean I had written
the songs but create something new together you know it didn't involve
computers and it didn't involve practicing and it didn't involve we were
making music we were all improvising at the same time
I'm really happy I'm really happy with it
and it could have been a fucking disaster and it maybe is a bit of a
disaster but it's a beautiful disaster in my opinion you know I really like it
a lot but yeah that's not that that's how the record was done
um and that just seems with some interviews I've done and people I've
talked to that's a it's very it's a very uncommon way of doing stuff nowadays you
know which is a shame but that's just that's just the way it is you know
I've never contacted record labels I've never contacted like anybody in the business
or whatever um and
I went through like a period of homelessness and wrote some
really good songs
some of them like ended up on "The Gospel of Progress"
and actually a lot of them something about a lot of my other records too um
but I didn't know, I was living I in Austin, Texas I had no job
my life is going fucking nowhere and a friend of mine he played one of my songs
on the BBC and some record labels heard it and they liked what they heard and
My life it went from like I was going nowhere fucking fast to do within weeks
they paid for my passport they paid off warrants for my arrest
because the state of Texas wanted me for some illegal shit they bought my plane
ticket and I went to London for a bit and then they shipped
me up to Manchester where I recorded the "Gospel of Progress"
Maybe that's the advice I would give artists is: fuck fame, fuck having your
name known. None of that in the end matters what truly matters is is a is
the Art and even above that it's the culture of art and another piece of
advice is: people need to stop shamelessly promoting themselves like
the whole Facebook thing and the Instagram and the Bandcamp and there's
just something about it to me that just seems
very cheap um let's say like
Van Gogh he's a true artist I'm not in that category he's a true artist but he
didn't spend his life worrying about being famous or worrying about promoting
his art or that type of thing but here we are we have museums for him and
he's one of the most famous fucking artists that we have in the
you know people know who Van Gogh is you know when you are promoting yourself so
much and you're you're posting so much on social media and you're doing all
these things you become one of everyone and when you become one of
everyone you in a sense become nothing
and so when you step away and you do
things in a different way and you don't follow the pack of sheep I think
greater and greater things can can happen you know
I don't how to tell a person
how to start how to make money from music
or to make a living um but even if it gets
to that point and people are able to do that and God bless them for doing that
to be able to keep that up is fucking daunting man and I made a lot of Records
and I've been doing this for quite some time you know and uh in the fact that
it's still fucking scary
I think art and fear are a very thin line it's like the
yin and yang you know like to be an artist like on the one hand you have to
have a foot like in reality but then on the other hand you have to have a foot
in the unknown of what the possibilities could be you know but Beowulf like going
back to like these really heroic stories of heroes and the hero he'll always you
know like go down like into a cave and there'll be a dragon and the dragon can
kill him but if he kills the dragon the dragon's skull will be made of like
it'll be a diamond a huge diamond skull and so I think with with music and with
art and maybe with life but we're talking about art now is that you go
down into that cave and there's the fear of failure there's the fear of living of
it not working out and that fears is the dragon-slaying you
you know it burning you to death but there's that hope that you can go down
there into the depths of fucking hell in the depths of mystery and you might
actually slay the dragon and you might be able to to come out of the underworld
with something invaluable you know because we all want to come out of the
cave with the fucking with a diamond skull you know what I'm saying we all
can't do it but but that's the that's the hope you know and not just again but
not just in art, like, in life and relationships and in so many things we
go into these things with the possibility of failure but we do these
things because the opposite of failure is this success and whether success for
some people might be money for success as being a good person all those things
are and are encompassed in that you know I just hang out with my kids and my kids
I'll talk about anything so I speak to them about these very heavy concepts but
they're so young they don't know what the fuck I'm saying you know but a lot
of times I'll like my son I'll speak up these heavy things to him that are in
the world and spirituality and it's good to have
you know people like that around that you can speak of really heavy, high fucking
concepts and they don't understand it but in their innocence they can
tell you things you can learn things from them that you might not ever have
thought of you know
those are the only concerns in life men: death, Art and taxes
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Patriots players explain what they do the night before the Super Bowl - Duration: 8:48.
ATLANTA – Most fans probably think the Saturday night before the Super Bowl has to be the most stressful night of the players' lives
That it's a night of tossing and turning in bed while thinking about what they'll be playing for on Sunday, how big the stage will be, and how fortunate they are to be living their dreams
So I decided to ask members of the New England Patriots this week about how they will actually spend this Saturday night
What are their routines? How easy is it too sleep? How darn stressful is it? But instead of stress, what I found out was it will be a night full of chocolate ice cream, Fortnite, and episodes of popular Food Network shows like "Chopped" and "Guy's Grocery Games
" Here are their stories. Julian Edelman: 'A little melatonin' "Eat. Then we have meetings, usually
Go over the game plan, go over the whole call sheet. And then I take a little melatonin, like cherry juice
They have these melatonin cherry juices, it's supposed to be good for anti-inflammatory
"And then I pass out. I like to be in bed by 9 and watch some TV. Catch a flick and then end up falling asleep
" Rob Gronkowski: 'You gotta take it all in' Brett Davis-USA TODAY Sports "We have meetings and stuff and final walk-throughs where we're bringing it all together to make sure we're all on the same page
Get a nice dinner. Probably watch a movie and get a good night's sleep – that's the most crucial
"I wouldn't say it's the easiest night to sleep but you gotta treat it like any other game and keep your mindset in and keep your routine going like any other time
"It's overwhelming every year because it's a once in a lifetime type of opportunity and now this is my fifth time here and it's pretty spectacular to be part of it
Every single year no matter how may times you've been you don't take it for granted because you know how hard it is to get here and you know how much work you put in and then you're season can be over just like that
You gotta take it all in, you gotta enjoy it." RelatedSuper Bowl 2019 gameplan: How we'd put Tom Brady in position to win his sixth ring Phillip Dorsett: 'Chocolate ice cream' "I'm relaxed
I just try to get sleep. I like sleep. I mean, you think about (the game) but you try not to make it any bigger than what it is
I mean honestly, I'm the same guy. I do the same thing every game – I have a routine
I'm a routine-orientated guy. "I eat junk food the night before a game. I eat chocolate ice cream
I do it before every game. That's the only night I eat ice cream… I like chocolate
I started doing it in college. We had really good chocolate ice cream in our team hotel in college and I just kept doing it
I had a big game after the first time but there have been plenty of games where I probably didn't have a good game so it's not really superstion or anything like that
I just do it." Patrick Chung: 'I like to watch Chopped' "I just watch 'Modern Family,' Food Network … I like 'Chopped,' hopefully 'Guy's Grocery Games' is on
I like to watch 'Chopped' and wonder, 'Damn, how am I gonna make something out of this?' And I just try to ease my mind, man
Just chill out, have some juice and relax." Dont'a Hightower: 'I'm playing Fortnite' "It's not really different (than a regular night before a game)
I don't really have a crazy routine that I do, besides meeting and chilling or relaxing or whatever
Usually if it's a home game, I'm playing Fortnite, so I'm relaxing and I'm unwinding
Some dudes are playing spades or cards or whatever and we're just in there hanging out
We put in the work all week so we're just trying to unwind and relax." Hightower brought his gaming system with him to Atlanta and when asked if he'd be playing Fortnite this Saturday night he smiled and said, "Probably
" RelatedChiefs' Travis Kelce on what went wrong against the Patriots Nate Ebner: 'Kick up the feet' "I mean, it's the same as it is every week for me
I treat it the same as any other game. This is not the time to start to try a bunch of different stuff
Freaking out is not going to do anything. Your sleep is important for you – it's a long game
So it's important to be as rested as possible so I just try to do whatever I can to calm myself and get a good night sleep
Trust that you've done enough of your studying and whatnot and get some good rest
Watch some TV, kick up the feet, just try to get comfortable and get some good sleep
"You think about (the Super Bowl) a little bit but again, it's one of those things you could waste all your energy laying in bed thinking about stuff that's not even happening or you could relax your mind and wait because you know you can't control anything or change anything right then and fall asleep
" Rex Burkhead: 'Just lock in mentally' Brett Davis-USA TODAY Sports "Just lock in mentally, kind of go through the plays again and making sure I'm locked in on my assignments and then just try to relax
Get as much sleep as possible because it's a long day leading up to the Super Bowl and you're going to be antsy until you go to that stadium
"Last year I actually slept pretty good. It's a long week so you're kind of tired anyways and once you get some rest you're feeling good for the game
" Lawrence Guy: 'I just relax' "Saturday night we go through our film session, finish it off
For me, I just relax. The game is a game. Big game, regular game… games are games
It's going to be decided by who plays more technically sound and who plays the hardest down-by-down football
So I just pretty much relax, enjoy it, get a good night's sleep, get up and get a good breakfast
"If you want to watch a show, watch a show. Watch a movie. I go to sleep around 10:30-11
"It's really easy to sleep. I tell the guys it's just another game. I know what type of game it is but when you step on that field everything gets ignored
You don't see the fans, you don't hear all that. You just see the person in front of you who you're gonna compete against
What happens in the game, somebody's gonna win, someone's gonna lose. So when you look at that atmosphere, it is what it is
" James White: 'It's that easy' "I just relax in my room, watch a little film and go to sleep," he said with a laugh
When asked if it was that easy, he laughed again and said, "Yup, it's that easy
" Gallery Ranking coaching matchups in all 53 Super Bowls: Where does Belichick-McVay land? view 50 images
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My Journey as a Self-Taught Software Engineer - Duration: 11:22.
I was not interested in computers when I was growing up.
It's a lot of …
[music interlude]
Hi my name is Lynda, and welcome to this video. I'm going to be talking about, what the
title is. My journey as a self-taught software engineer.
Context: I currently work as a backend software engineer and it's been quite some time so
I thought it would be interesting to share my journey with you.
A little bit of a disclaimer. I did study Computer science with Statistics.
So, I have a CS degree. And, if you're wondering how I'm self-taught when I have a CS degree,
it's part of the video. Let's dive right into it.
[Voice] Were you interested in computers growing up?
No, I was not interested in computers when I was growing up. Because like, I didn't
have access to computers. there was just, nothing. I didn't even have access to games.
I didn't have games, I didn't play games while growing up and there was really just
no digital stimuli for me. I loved writing, I loved storytelling, which is kind of what
I am doing now I guess. But yeah, I was really just removed from the digital world. the extent
of my knowledge about computers when I was a growing up and when I was a kid was that
well, they exist.
[Voice] What was your motivation for learning to code?
My motivation for learning to code was different things and it was like a gradual progression.
And I'll explain. I began to study Computer Science as I mentioned earlier and there was
no big deal behind the decision. My mum thought it was a good idea and I agreed with her and
I was like, okay, maybe this is going to be interesting to learn. Now, as part of my course,
we had programming as part of the curriculum and erm, the way that they worked was that
you basically had to study on your own. [pause] as far as I remember, it wasn't possible
to learn programming from the classes. for many reasons, my own experience was that I
had to go back home with the programming text book that I had or with my computer which
I had at that point, and, try to figure out things.
Essentially, what I am saying is that for the first few programming languages that I
learned, they were motivated by passing courses, because I wanted to have good grades,
which is why I always insist that I am one hundred percent self-taught, because I am!
[Voice] What were your first programming languages?
Well, so, since I was studying, they were
basically the ones that we did in school first, so there was Qbasic and there was Assembly
language, then there was C++ and there was Java. At the point where we started doing
C++ was when my interest in programming really was sparked. But still in relation to passing
my courses. At that point I didn't have more than a passing interest. Then we started
to do Java. And Java was the first programming language that I fell in love with. I had this
book on Java that I got from someone. It was like a soft copy of a Java book and I was
determined that I was going to go through this book from start to finish. Because I
was like I am going to learn Java and I am going to build wonderful things with it.
[Voice] When did your Career begin?
I would say my career really began when I
discovered the web. Here's how it happened
So I am in this period where I am learning Java and I'm really obsessed with Java I'm
sleeping and dreaming code I'm writing code in my dream. that was like, the height of
that phase [giggle] And I saw this website that somebody built
I remember thinking, you can do that with code?
I was blown away and it was the interface that got to me. I just wanted to be able to
do something that beautiful. It was like boom! light bulb. this is what I want to do. this
is what I want to do with my life. I really want to emphasize the fact that I was really
drawn in by the interface, like the way it looked, and that's when my career really began.
After discovering that I wanted to do web stuff, I started learning how to develop for
the web. now, I was still in school at this point and I had to take out time to focus
on learning web development. and when I first began web development, And when I first began
web development, I started with bucky's tutorials on erm, HTML, CSS, Javascript, PHP
and I kind of learned Full stack at the time when I was learning because I really was focused
on creating things. I wasn't really focused on learning programming for the sake of learning
how to program. I was just thinking about the fact that I wanted to be able to I wanted
to get to the point where I could make a working beautiful website. that's what I wanted.
It was kind of like relatively easy for me to start doing stuff that motivated me to
continue even more. so I mentioned my motivation for learning to code before now which is to
pass my courses, but my motivation for starting web development was the desire to create things
[Voice] So what did you do next?
Well, I started practicing. I kind of knew
that to get to where I wanted which is to be able to get a job after school I needed
to practice so I started doing lots of practice projects on my computer…I started erm, learning
even more, getting more books, getting more videos and just learning and learning and
practicing and practicing so it was kind of like this approach where I wanted to do something
and well, I had to learn how to do the thing. There was a lot of practice. I was tormenting
my friends with my practice projects and trying to get them to look at it and that's pretty
much what I did.
[Voice] what was getting your first job like?
Before I got my first job, I had of course been learning for a while and I had been practicing
for a while and I considered myself someone who could code and I could. But there was
also tons of things I didn't know. As part of the requirements for applying to
my first job, I had to do this task and it required me to use Git it required me to set
up stuff on my machine, it required me to use External APIs in ways that I hadn't
used them before then and it was like whoa, there's so many things to learn [giggle]
But thankfully, I was used to having to learn things to make them work and I had just so
much confidence about the fact that I would be able to figure things out eventually and
I did get the job so yeah but iiiiit was quite a trip yeah
[Voice] What other programming languages have you learned?
Other programming languages I've learned since then include, Python, Objective-C for iOS
and Swift for iOS too. I've worked with some Javascript frameworks like Node.js Angular,
little bit of React and I've done more and more web development with PHP. I don't do
a lot of frontend. I've kind of gravitated towards the backend.
[Voice] What is being self taught really like? Being self taught is a lot of practice and
learning. that's the way that I can describe it best. I just practiced my head off
[smiling] and I learned and I learned and practiced, like, actively.
In many of the cases, I wasn't practicing towards anything, I was just practicing because
I knew I wanted to get better I wanted to be great at programming and that was like
something that pushed me through my practice. It's also a lot of [deep breath] confusion,
its a lot of… it's something that requires a lot of will power in general because I mean
if you do not have motivation like if something specific isn't motivating you, you also
have to power through the erm ups and downs of learning to program on your own and just
having difficulties and having to figure it out and having to know that no matter how
difficult this thing seems, I can figure it out
Being self taught built my confidence when it comes to learning things, right now I there's
nothing I don't believe I could learn. I don't ever feel like this is such a complicated
concept or something I can't learn. I've learned over time that when I have a problem
in front of me that I do not know how to solve then I just have to hack away until I come
to the solution. and that's how I approach things and I I really give credit to being
self taught. erm, in terms of helping me think this way.
Another thing about being self taught is you can kind of, figure out your own path towards
learning, you can figure out what works for you best, that's one of the things I actually
like about being self taught. I also think erm just the fact that you make a lot of mistakes...
and just a lot of avoidable mistakes means that you get to learn so much more.
[Voice] How have you stayed up to date with trends in software?
Just in general, if you write software, there's going to be a lot of things to stay up to
date with. and the trends move faster than you can possibly move.
When I was first learning how to code, I kind of started out at a worse off place because
I was learning with outdated material. I know that now, in retrospect, but I didn't know
that then because I was basically just this person that was coding on her own, you know,
I didn't really know anything.
but even now that I'm aware of trends and I'm aware of how things move, it can be
very challenging to stay up to date with trends and especially when you are self taught. In
my case, it was because like there was no person or there was no teacher that actually
knew more than me and that would tell me this is how you do things now, or these are the
latest technologies for achieving this thing that you want to achieve. staying up to date
with trends is very active effort. Like, it's not something that happens organically and
so I have had to be very intentional about learning things and finding out what's in.
It's obviously not everything that I have the bandwidth [short giggle] to stay up to
date with. I very much believe in depth and I think that
the way that I learn best and the way that I function best if when I stay up to date
with just certain things. certain things that are relevant to what I do and so this makes
it easier for me I feel to stay up to date with trends. I think it is really important
to prioritize and also be very active. this is how it has been for me.
[Voice] Would you recommend being self-taught?
The answer is yes. But I think that if the
path that you prefer to follow or that you have like your only choice, is to be self-taught
I think that's completely fine. If you have means to get some kind of training that involves
people that can guide you through software, it might be a little easier like and save time.
It might also cost you money.but yeah.
There are two resources that I always recommend to people who want to be self taught software
engineers or who want to learn to code, they are free code camp which is at freecodecamp.org
or udacity at udacity.com and I think they're awesome. Of course there are tons of resources
on the internet but like these two are great, and there's probably other great ones too,
just talking about the ones I have experience with.
I just wanted to take about one last thing. Where my career is and plans for the future.
Now It's been about six years since I started learning how to code for the web. and it's
been four years since I started working since I got my first job and I am currently in my
third job so I think my career is going fine. I definitely want to learn a lot more things.
I want to write even more code. I already write a lot of code because I work as a software
engineer and I have to write code for a living but erm in general, I'm still very much
into writing code and still very much into software. I'm a backend engineer for now..
I mean that might change, I don't know, things change. the primary thing is that I
still write code and I'm still going to write a lot of code.
And it's a wrap! It's the end of the video! I'm really glad to have done this. Let me
know what you thought of my journey and let me know what you think of this video and if
you liked this video, give it a thumbs up, and leave a comment, I would love to hear
from you and I will see you in my next video, hopefully I am going to make a next video.
Bye!
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