Thứ Ba, 24 tháng 10, 2017

Auto news on Youtube Oct 24 2017

so so my youtube channel my youtube channel just brand new channels telling

me I don't got a content I'm like what you talking about ain't got no content there two

videos on that bad boy right there I haven't got no content so what I'm gonna

do I'm gonna Google that bad boy look at that bad boy fire what the blood clot is

going on so there it is why does my youtube channel say no how the content

look somebody did a YouTube video about it I watch it or check this right I'm

gonna click this right here let's see what happens here what's going on oh

what's going on OHP they help me you know play nothing

it this general says you have no content we went search on what China I can give

you a bunch of people who say got pissed off and do some googling and now the

sudden is working it's like a miracle

For more infomation >> My YouTube Channel says No Content - Here's What I Did - Duration: 0:56.

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What if Google Was A Country? - Duration: 8:02.

As consumers experience the modern day phenomenon of hyper-connectivity, tech companies are

being scrutinized for the incredible monopolies they are building.

In August this year, Google was accused by an academic writing for a Google-sponsored

Think Tank of having such a monopoly, and he was subsequently fired after he aired this

criticism.

While we enjoy, and perhaps sometimes dislike, having thousands of virtual friends while

we share our opinion and habits with servers in data centers the size of small villages,

the tech giants behind our new addiction are becoming rich to the nth degree.

As you know from some of our other shows, tech companies stand tall as some of the wealthiest

companies in the world.

Critics tell us we need to harness their power lest they gain too much control over the populace.

Today we'll examine tech power, in this episode of The Infographics Show, If Google

was a country.

Don't forget to subscribe and click the bell button so that you can be part of our

Notification Squad.

Let's first have a look at how Google Incorporated got off the ground.

If you visit Google's company site and hit their history tab, the first thing you'll

see are two young men that barely look past their teen years sitting in a messy office

full of computer parts.

Those two men are Larry Page and Sergey Brin.

Brin was a student at Stanford University and Page was on his way to becoming a grad

student there.

Working from their dorm rooms, they came up with an idea of how to categorize pages on

the World Wide Web.

It was their first search engine and it was called Backrub.

Thankfully they soon had some sense and changed the name to Google.

The name was a play on the word "Goo-gol", which is the number one followed by 100 zeroes.

What it really signified is that Google was intended to deliver reams of information.

Google's one and only intention before it branched out into such things as self-driving

cars and futuristic glasses was "to organize the world's information and make it universally

accessible and useful."

Their idea was a success and soon Silicon Valley's venture capitalists were throwing

money at the pair.

The company grew at a rapid pace and soon had to move to a much bigger headquarters

which they named the "Googleplex", located in Mountain View, California.

Today Google is much more than just a search engine.

It offers a multitude of web-based products, advertising services, communication and publishing

tools, tools for developers; it guides us around the world with its mapping products,

as well as giving us operating systems – notably Android – web apps, email, a ton of hardware,

self-driving tech, as well as owning the website you are currently watching.

This is why Google, or its parent company, Alphabet, has a valuation of 676 billion dollars.

Only Apple can beat that, with a valuation of over 800 billion.

Let's now try and put that into perspective.

If Google was a country and its net worth was compared to a country's nominal GDP,

Google would be the 19th largest economy in the world after The Netherlands, and just

beating Switzerland.

Basically, if you wanted to buy Google, you'd need the entire Swiss GDP and a bit more.

If we look at revenue alone, Google earned about 90.2 billion dollars last year.

That would still make Google a pretty big country, putting it in 65th place in the world

in terms of GDP.

That would be just below Ukraine and just above Slovakia.

In 2016, Fortune magazine listed Alphabet as the world's 8th most profitable company.

In total it netted 16.3 billion dollars.

This puts Google the country about the same as the world's 115th richest country in

terms of GDP, which is Bosnia and Herzegovina.

But that country has 3.5 million people to share its GDP with; Google only has 72,053

employees it must support.

This would make Google the 14th smallest country in the world, with a population slightly less

than the country Dominica.

The GDP of Dominica is 525.4 million dollars.

What we are saying is that if Google was a country, it should be almost utopian with

that amount of cash.

So, where does all the money go?

Does Google embrace an equitable spread of wealth?

It would only be right to call the Chief Executive of Google a kind of king, as companies are

generally not run like democracies.

The staff don't control matters.

The CEO does, but he or she can't do very much without the board's consent.

We could call the board the advisers to the king.

So, our King is called Sundar Pichai, an Indian American man that married into the Google

family.

As always, these days, the king is controlled by many people and some invisible hands that

orchestrate matters behind the scenes.

The other big players behind the scenes in the Google country are Eric Schmidt, Executive

Chairman of the Board of Directors; Sergey Brin as President, and Larry Page as CEO of

Alphabet.

We could say that Pichai is a smaller player than the others, but as we said there are

always powerful behind-the-scenes players in any government or monarchy.

But do these guys share the wealth with the average Joe in the Google country?

First of all, we should know that a lot of money goes into future developments and acquisitions.

In fact, it's said that Google has been buying about one company a week since 2010.

One of Google's most famous and costly acquisitions was YouTube, which cost Google a whopping

1.65 billion dollars back in 2006.

It's thought that YouTube is now worth more than 70 billion dollars, so Google the country

got a lot richer.

The leaders of country Google have also made some bad moves, which includes buying Motorola

for $12 billion, and then selling it for $3 billion two years later.

So, the biggest wages at Google go to the big players, but not the two founders, who

each receive just one dollar a year!

But don't feel too bad for them just yet.

These guys discovered the country and then left it to other people to run it.

They don't get salaries, but they are very wealthy because they get money from stocks.

According to Forbes, Page is worth 45.1 billion dollars, making him insanely more wealthy

than Google the country's average worker.

Brin is worth almost the same with 43.4 billion dollars, and what's a couple of billion

to these two.

They even have private planes that have runways in NASA, where no other planes are allowed

to land.

The king of Google, Sundai Pichar, is said to have earned a total compensation of 200

million dollars in 2017.

Eric Schmidt is said to earn more than 120 million a year and former business officer

Omid Kordestani was pulling in over 130 million a year before he went over to Twitter.

So yes, Google is an oligarchy but its top staff do ok too.

Pay scale sites say that directors of engineering receive 571,000 dollars a year, much more

than the average American with an advanced degree, which is around 70,000 dollars a year.

A director of Product Management at Google will get about 409,000 dollars a year, and

a Senior Research Scientist will receive more than 300,000 dollars a year.

But these are the top positions.

What about your average programmer?

According to Glassdoor, they get in the region of 120,000 dollars a year, but that can go

up quickly as you rise in the engineering ranks.

Accounts managers get around 80,000 dollars, higher than the US national average of 60,000

for that job – according to Glassdoor.

The same website says Google's cleaners get around 50,000 dollars a year, which seems

very high.

In all, Google UK said the average wage throughout the whole company was around 206,000 dollars

a year.

This means wages in Google the country are much better than any country's average wage.

Maybe that's what you'd expect from a small country with massive wealth.

Workers also receive full benefits at Google, dogs run around on the office floor, snacks

are everywhere, there are gyms, massage, and amazing death benefits for those left behind

if you die on the job.

Sounds like heaven, but when Business Insider asked what it was like working in country

Google, some of the replies were less than positive.

"All those perks and benefits are an illusion.

They keep you at work and they help you to be more productive.

I've never met anybody at Google who actually [took] time off on weekends or went on vacations,"

said one person.

Another complaint was lack of diversity, which follows the tech initiative to seemingly go

after young white men.

"They hire the same person over and over again," said one person.

Google was recently investigated by the US labor office for gender discrimination, but

then later was famously accused by an employee of forcing the diversity issue too much.

If Google really was a country, 75 percent of the population would be male; there'd

only be about 2 percent of African-Americans, 4 percent Hispanic, and about a third of the

population – based on US staff – would be Asian.

That would mean that our country would be made up of mostly young white men, many of

whom would be nerds, according to Business Insider.

In conclusion, if Google was a country, its citizens would no doubt live in comfort and

be well-off.

There would be no poverty, but people would do little else but work.

Even though they would be taken care of, in essence they'd be slaves for a few men at

the top of the Google food chain.

Google the country might be like living in ancient Sparta, if you just switch fighting

for programming.

So, would you want to live in Google the country?

Let us know in the comments!

Also, be sure to check out our other video called McDonalds vs Burger King?!

Thanks for watching, and, as always, don't forget to like, share, and subscribe.

See you next time!

For more infomation >> What if Google Was A Country? - Duration: 8:02.

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What Gal Gadot Was Like Before The Fame - Duration: 5:01.

Gal Gadot's career has reached new heights: she's smashed box office records as Wonder

Woman, and she's made history for being the first non-American to assume the role.

Here's what Gadot was like before all the fame, and what she had to go through to achieve

the A-list status she holds in Hollywood today.

Wonder girl

Gadot was born and raised in a small town in the center of Israel …

"My hometown."

"Which is?"

"Rosh Ha'ayin!"

She told Rolling Stone in August 2017 that she had a sheltered life in her little Israeli

hometown, saying, "There was no TV-watching.

It was always 'Take a ball and go play.'"

Gadot describes her young self as, quote, "a good girl, a good student, a pleaser" as

well as a tomboy.

Gadot says she and her sister were taught by their parents to be tough, and to believe

in themselves.

In a March 2016 interview with Glamour, she also revealed she was the type of child who

loved to perform and get noticed.

"My mother always tells this story: I was five.

They had a party, and they'd put me to bed.

I heard everyone on the rooftop, and I went upstairs.

No one paid any attention to me, so I took a hose and sprayed everyone … I loved the

attention.

But I never connected all the dots that maybe I should be an actress."

Athlete and Amazon

It wasn't a huge stretch for Gadot to step into a role as physically demanding as Wonder

Woman: she's been an athlete all her life, telling ESPN in May 2017 she played tennis,

basketball, and volleyball as a teen, and danced for more than a decade.

In a July 2015 interview with Vanity Fair, Gadot spoke about her dancing dreams, and

how it almost became her career: "I was a dancer for 12 years — ballet, hip-hop, modern,

jazz.

I thought that I wanted to be a choreographer."

Pageant years

As a teenager, Gadot received offers to work as a model, but instead decided to work at

Burger King, telling Rolling Stone that, at that stage of her life, she didn't like the

idea of posing for money.

However, her fast food career was short lived: after graduating from high school, her mother

decided to apply on her behalf for the Miss Israel beauty pageant.

To her surprise, Gadot was crowned Miss Israel in 2004, when she was just 18.

"(speaking Hebrew)"

She went on to compete in Miss Universe that same year, and didn't even make the top 15

— but that's just what she wanted.

Gadot told People in June 2017 that she really hated being in the competition, and she actually

tried to lose, choosing to go makeup-free on occasion, showing up to events late, and

giving terse responses to the judges ...

"I even remember Paula Abdul, she was one of the judges there, and she was asking me

a question, and I was like, 'I'm sorry, English … not so good."

Warrior training

Like all Israeli citizens, Gal Gadot served her mandatory two years in the Israel Defense

Forces, where she was a combat trainer.

She has spoken about her time in the military on multiple occasions — and was even part

of Maxim magazine's 2007 "Women of the Israeli Army" spread — and she says her experience

helped shape who she is today.

She told Glamour, "I wish no country had the need for an army.

But in Israel serving is part of being an Israeli.

You've got to give back to the state.

You give two or three years, and it's not about you.

You give your freedom away.

You learn discipline and respect."

Breakthrough

Gadot spoke to W magazine in June 2017 about how becoming an actress came as a bit of a

surprise to her.

Her first acting opportunity came about when a casting director asked her to audition for

the role of a "Bond girl" in Quantum of Solace.

Gadot was hesitant to even audition: she was studying law and international relations at

the time, and thought she was, quote, "way too serious and smart to be an actress."

The script was also entirely in English — a first for Gadot, who had previously only acted

on Israeli TV.

Even though Gadot didn't end up getting the part, her connection with the casting director

ultimately landed her a recurring role in the Fast and Furious franchise, thrusting

her into the Hollywood spotlight.

A look ahead

Gadot signed a multi-project deal with DC Comics' parent company Warner Bros, which

means that she'll be appearing in Justice League in 2017, Wonder Woman 2 in 2019, and

Flashpoint in 2020.

If she ever gets a break from filming, she says she may just go back to school to get

a degree — but it's no longer law that interests her.

In a 2015 chat with Interview magazine, she said, "I would love to go back to school and

maybe study film or art history or something more in that direction.

It's not for me to be a lawyer, because I don't like conflict."

"Or maybe not?"

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