Freedom Come
2015 District 3, Senior High School All District Honors Chorus.
By: russell336
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Freedom Come
2015 District 3, Senior High School All District Honors Chorus.
By: russell336
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RickWells.US - Newt Gingrich Iowa Freedom Summit 2015
By: Rick Wells
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RickWells.US - Newt Gingrich Iowa Freedom Summit 2015 - Video
Rick Santorum - Iowa Freedom Summit
via YouTube Capture.
By: Caffeinated Thoughts
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You dont have to be among the 1,200 people with a ticket to Saturdays Iowa Freedom Summit to have a front-row seat for the event featuring 23 prominent Republican Party figures, in whats being billed as the first major event in the Hawkeye State before next years caucuses. The summit is being live streamed online, courtesy of the Des Moines Register.
The Iowa Freedom Summit, which kicks off at 9 a.m. CST, is expected to run all day, with the 23 speakers being allotted 20 minutes of time with U.S. Rep. Steve King, R-Iowa, who is hosting the event, according to NPR. You can watch the entire event online here.
About a half-dozen possible 2016 GOP presidential nominee contenders are scheduled to appear at the Iowa Freedom Summit. Among the speakers are Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee and former Texas Gov. Rick Perry. Other influential Republicans, like 2008 GOP vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin and 2012 Republican candidate Newt Gingrich are also confirmed speakers at the Iowa Freedom Summit. You can check out the full list of speakers here.
This is the first year the Iowa Freedom Summit is being held. The conference is being described as the first major Hawkeye State event before next years caucuses and a launch point for new ideas as we head towards [sic] 2016.
The Freedom Summit will focus on how we can get America back on track by focusing on our core conservative principles of pro-growth economics, social conservatism, and a strong national defense, according to the events website. This must-attend summit in the Hawkeye State is free to the public and will be held at the historical Hoyt Sherman Place in Des Moines nearly a year before the pivotal Iowa Caucuses.
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Call of Duty: Online "CYBORG ZOMBIES" - NEW "DEUS EX" MODE GAMEPLAY #1 (COD Online Zombies)
Call of Duty: Online "DEUS EX" ZOMBIES Gameplay! Part 2 - http://youtu.be/-hRPgucUJ-U SUBSCRIBE for more VIDEOS! - http://bit.ly/VNLqYy Call of Duty Online (also known as CODOL and Call.
By: MrDalekJD
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Call of Duty: Online "CYBORG ZOMBIES" - NEW "DEUS EX" MODE GAMEPLAY #1 (COD Online Zombies) - Video
Cyborg #39;s moments
Best moments from me gaming.
By: The Real Cyborg
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Lego Green Lantern Vs Cyborg
By: jacob chakalaka
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Orange County, California, beaches and shopping
Arrival to Orange Countey, California. Hanging out with the dogs. Sunset on Laguna beach. Priceless! New Port beach. Visiting Irvine Spectrum Center - Shoppi...
By: Anastasija Milojevic
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Beaches And Stampy Got Married!
By: DylanRMovies
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Aboriginal Astronomy (BBC World Discovery Radio)
Hosted by Robert Cockburn Were Australia #39;s prehistoric Aboriginal people the world #39;s first true astronomers, predating European and ancient Greek and Indian ...
By: Duane Hamacher
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Brooks Willmon, 3, of Farmington, looks through a telescope set up outside for Family Astronomy Night Saturday at the Farmington Museum. (Alexa Rogals The Daily Times)
From left, Clint Leahar, Ethan Leahar, 3, and Nicole Leahar, of Farmington, make a kaleidoscope Saturday during Family Astronomy Night at the Farmington Museum. (Alexa Rogals The Daily Times)
FARMINGTON Eloria Tucker doesn't usually like astronomy.
In fact, the home-schooled student opted to take an anatomy course while her friend, Tori Klitze, learned astronomy.
"We had to do a lot of reading," she said. "It was boring."
But Saturday night, Eloria enjoyed participating in astronomy-related science activities at the Farmington Museum during Family Astronomy Night.
The program is in its second year and has attracted large crowds both years.
Cherie Powell, the education coordinator of the Farmington Museums System, said the event aims to get people excited about science particularly space exploration.
Activities included making "space" snacks like pudding, making kaleidoscopes, looking through a telescope or participating in a mock "space walk" with tasks to complete while wearing "space" gloves.
Nicole and Clint Leher took their son, 3-year-old Ethan, to the event after seeing a listing for it in an online calendar.
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Forgotten Truths (feat. Steo)
Forgotten Truths (feat. Steo) Artificial Intelligence Metalheadz Ltd Released on: 2015-01-12 Composer: Glenn Herweijer Composer: Zula Warner Featured Artis...
By: Artificial Intelligence - Topic
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Artificial intelligence at Davos
FT columnist John Gapper reports from the World Economic Forum in Davos on the debate about whether machines will soon be clever enough to replace humans. Fo...
By: Financial Times
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Davos 2015 - A Brave New World
How will advances in artificial intelligence, smart sensors and social technology change our lives?
By: World Economic Forum
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The Outer Limits is Mother F #39;n Scary
Hilarious clip from Across The Pond podcast. Rum explains why he is afraid of the Outer Limits, the overwhelming sense of humans wanting to integrate with technology, and creating artificial...
By: Rumandapples
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Mark Kermode reviews Ex Machina
Caleb, a 24 year old coder at the world #39;s largest internet company, wins a competition to spend a week at a retreat belonging to the company #39;s reclusive CEO, Nathan. But when Caleb arrives...
By: kermodeandmayo
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Alicia Vikander in Ex Machina: 'a note-perfect depiction of ever-so-slightly unnatural movement'.
At a key moment in novelist-turned-film-maker Alex Garlands provocative sci-fi flick, a naive young computer programmer asks the Colonel Kurtz-like creator of an impressively human artificial intelligence why he chose to sexualise his robot; to give it a gender, an attractive face, a flirtatious manner. The two-part answer is telling first, that everything in nature is gendered, that all thoughts and actions are (on some level) driven by a reproductive urge, and no biogenetic impulse exists without a priori acknowledgment of attraction. For a machine to attain the status of singularity (the point at which the human and artificial become indistinguishable) it must have a sexual component. And second, hey, its fun a primary pleasure that only the obtuse or uptight would wish to ignore or deny.
The same answer could be given to explain the form of Garlands directorial debut, a dazzlingly good-looking technological thriller that occasionally dresses its weightier questions of the nature of intelligence both artificial and natural in the clothing of a somewhat salacious exploitation movie, replete with titillating displays of synthesised (female) skin and generically disavowed voyeurism. Yet at its heart is an ironic absence of sexuality, a detachment from desire similar to that exhibited in Jonathan Glazers Under the Skin, in which Scarlett Johanssons predatory alien inhabits the form of an alluring young woman in order to prey, Species-style, upon unsuspecting humans. Just as Blade Runner wondered whether its lifelike replicants could really fall in love, so Ex Machina spirals obsessively around the question not of artificial intelligence but artificial affection, worrying away at the authenticity of attraction as an indicator of consciousness itself.
Related: Alex Garland on Ex Machina: I feel more attached to this film than to anything before
We first meet Domhnall Gleesons wide-eyed, lonely IT waif Caleb from the wrong side of a computer terminal, receiving a message that tells him that he has won first prize. It looks like spam, but the workplace reaction announces that this is something more akin to finding the golden ticket in one of Willy Wonkas chocolate bars. With admirable concision and clarity, Garland whisks Caleb to the vast estate of his CEO Nathan (Oscar Isaac), Norwegian landscapes providing a suitably anonymous remote backdrop for the bosss imposingly modernist hideaway. Here, Caleb is to perform a Turing test (which crucially began life as a gender-identifying party-game) on Nathans latest creation; an elegant robot named Ava with humanoid face and hands affixed to a cyborgy body structure that allows us (literally) to see right through the artifice of its humanity. When Caleb complains that the test will be flawed because he can see that his subject is a robot, Nathan (who shows signs of having gone native in the absence of human company) replies that the real test is whether Ava can pass for human despite the knowledge that she is anything but. In short, will Caleb fall for Ava in the same way that Joaquin Phoenixs Theodore fell for Samanthain Her, his ardour undiminished by the absolute awareness that she is an operating system. And will she respond in kind?
The idea may be an old one but its execution is fresh and vibrant enough to conjure an attractive illusion of originality. Key to the films success is a trio of impressively nuanced performances that keep us constantly guessing as to each characters true motivations. As the perpetually drunken and bullish Nathan, Isaac is a mass of conspiratorial contradictions, his smile deliberately duplicitous, his self-mythologising manner carefully conniving, his dancing (to Get Down Saturday Night) genuinely alarming. At first glance, Gleesons Caleb seems Nathans polar opposite, an awkward geek out of his depth amid the sterile grandeur of his hosts home. Only when Ava enters the equation do Calebs true colours start to show, Alicia Vikanders note-perfect depiction of ever-so-slightly unnatural movement (think of Yul Brynners walk in Westworld dialled down by about 99%) triggering unsettling responses. Blending balletic physical performance with Double Negatives excellently rendered computer graphics, Vikanders Ava beautifully blurs the line between mecha and orga (in the lexicon of Spielbergs AI), inflecting the most natural gestures a tilt of the head, a roll of the wrist, a flicker of a smile with a hint of artifice, subtly accentuated by a whispered symphony of gyroscopic noise.
As for Garland, we should not be surprised that he approaches his directorial debut with such confidence and wit. After all, he has tackled these themes before in the living/dead juxtapositions of his 28 Days Later screenplay, in the conscious/unconscious dichotomies of the novella The Coma, and (most significantly) in the playing-God inhumanities of Never Let Me Go, which he adapted for the screen from Kazuo Ishiguros novel, and to which this alludes in a recurrent motif about automatic art (from robot reproductions to Jackson Pollock) and the search for evidence of a soul.
With its reflective surfaces, glacial soundscapes, and Kubrickian geometric compositions, this is knowingly seductive sci-fi cinema, its slyly subversive allegiances hidden by the two-way mirror of the silver screen, its androids dreaming of much more than mere electric sheep.
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Piaggio Aerospace, nuovo stabilimento a Villanova d #39;Albenga
Il nuovo stabilimento Piaggio Aerospace a Villanova d #39;Albenga (SV)
By: Svolta Savona
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Piaggio Aerospace, nuovo stabilimento a Villanova d'Albenga - Video
#101-#2 Aerospace Center Defense F-15 S/MTD 37257 points ACE COMBAT INFINITY
#101-#2 Aerospace Center Defense F-15 S/MTD,Lv.10 LAGM,Lv.5 37257 points http://acecombatinfinity.com/
By: FREE COMBAT
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#101-#2 Aerospace Center Defense F-15 S/MTD 37257 points ACE COMBAT INFINITY - Video
Scientists under Attack Genetic Engineering in the magnetic Field of Money TRAILER
Scientists under Attack Engineering Genetic in the magnetic Field of Money Money Bought Scientists GMO Foods GMO #39;s Science Professor Crops Genetically modified organisms Government foods...
By: Truth-worx Cornelia
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Scientists under Attack Genetic Engineering in the magnetic Field of Money TRAILER - Video