people blogs for South KoreaArchive 2018

To Our Daughter
#1People & Blogs

To Our Daughter

Directed by Tyler Ross @wttyler\nMusic by Jacob Wilkinson-Smith @mybestfriendjacob_

Channel

Kylie Jenner

Views

35.8M

Do you hear Yanny or Laurel?
#2People & Blogs

Do you hear Yanny or Laurel?

The internet is split on whether they hear Yanny or Laurel in a viral audio clip. What do yo hear?https://abc7.la/2wKS1AF

Channel

ABC Television Stations

Views

7.9M

$3 Fries Vs. $100 Fries
#6People & Blogs

$3 Fries Vs. $100 Fries

Follow us on Instagram: @BuzzFeedWorthIt https://www.instagram.com/buzzfeedworthit/?hl=en Friendship = Potato Watch on Hulu: https://hulu.tv/2DUZ20N Watch on Amazon Instant Video: http://amzn.to/2s4ggaA Check out our BuzzFeed Original Series Channel on Roku: http://bit.ly/2DUnOlEWorth It Food lovers Steven Lim and Andrew, along with their cameraman Adam, embark on the ultimate food adventure in BuzzFeed’s hit series, Worth It, trying delicious foods at three price points: affordable, middle tier, and luxury. At the end of the episode, the gang decides which item is the most “worth it” at its given price. Credits: https://www.buzzfeed.com/bfmp/videos/49768Check out more awesome videos at BuzzFeedVideo!https://bit.ly/YTbuzzfeedvideohttps://bit.ly/YTbuzzfeedblue1https://bit.ly/YTbuzzfeedvioletGET MORE BUZZFEED:https://www.buzzfeed.comhttps://www.buzzfeed.com/videoshttps://www.youtube.com/buzzfeedvideohttps://www.youtube.com/asishttps://www.youtube.com/buzzfeedbluehttps://www.youtube.com/buzzfeedviolethttps://www.youtube.com/perolikehttps://www.youtube.com/ladylikeBuzzFeedVideoBuzzFeed Motion Picture’s flagship channel. Sometimes funny, sometimes serious, always shareable. New videos posted daily!Love BuzzFeed? Get the merch! BUY NOW: https://goo.gl/gQKF8mMUSICLicensed via Audio NetworkSFX Provided By AudioBlocks(https://www.audioblocks.com)Only YouLicensed via Warner Chappell Production Music Inc.Get StickyLicensed via Warner Chappell Production Music Inc.Monkey Funk_30EditLicensed via Warner Chappell Production Music Inc.Monkey Funk_MainLicensed via Warner Chappell Production Music Inc.Savoir Faire_MainLicensed via Warner Chappell Production Music Inc.Genesis_MainLicensed via Warner Chappell Production Music Inc.STILLSDollar BillTetra Images/Getty ImagesEXTERNAL CREDITSCosta Andrianoswww.poutineville.com/en/home.html+Stephanie Audethttps://www.lov.com+Steven Fretzhttps://eattopround.com

Channel

BuzzFeedVideo

Views

3.9M

Primitive Technology: A-frame hut
#7People & Blogs

Primitive Technology: A-frame hut

I built an A frame hut as a large work space for projects. First I made a celt hatchet to cut timber for the hut. The axe head was made of amphibolite and the handle was made of a species of wattle. For the hut the floor plan was 4 X 4m. The height of the ridgeline was 2 m above the ground. +A post was planted in the ground to support the ridge pole at the back of the structure and an A frame was put in the front to support the ridgeline. The rafters of the hut were then attached to the ridgepole. Palm fronds were then collected, split and lashed to this frame. The dome hut was disassembled and its thatch was added to the structure. Approximately 1200 fronds were used in total. For the ridgeline, thatch was lifted in place and rested on without lashing it down. Instead, pairs of sticks lashed together were lifted in place sitting over thatch preventing it from blowing away. These are known as “jockeys” as they resemble a rider sitting on a horse.\nA wall of wattle and daub was built at the back of the structure. Wooden poles were planted into the ground and lawyer cane was woven between them. Soil was dug from around the hut forming drainage trenches while also supplying the mud used to daub the wall. No fibre was added to the daub, just straight mud. Pegs were stuck into the wall to form a convenient rack to hold the stone axe off the ground when not in use. Later, pegs were added to support the fire sticks too. A bed was made by hammering in wooden stakes and lashing timber to the frame. This was covered with palm fibre to act as bedding. Atherton oak nuts were then collected and eaten/stored in a pot. Latter, heavy rain fell testing the huts ability to shed rain. The hut stayed dry while the water flowed off the thatch and into the drainage trenches left over from digging the mud for the wall.\nThe A frame hut is a simple shelter that can be built quickly and simply. It’s basically a large roof built directly on the ground. The shape is strong and should resist strong winds. This hut is the biggest one I’ve built on this channel and could fit both the tiled roof hut and wattle and daub hut inside it with room left over along the sides. It requires no scaffolding or ladders to build. A person can walk right down the centre without ducking while the sides that are too low to stand in are used for storing firewood, tools and other things. A fire lit in the entrance will greatly reduce the number of mosquitoes in the hut though it will get smokey occasionally. To reduce smoke, a small stove could be built to burn the wood more efficiently. A chimney and fireplace could be built also, but would take more time.\nWordpress: https://primitivetechnology.wordpress.com\nPatreon page: https://www.patreon.com/user?u=2945881\nI have no face book page, instagram, twitter etc. Beware of fake pages.

Channel

Primitive Technology

Views

3.7M

Lễ đón U23 Việt Nam đã về đến sân bay!!
#8People & Blogs

Lễ đón U23 Việt Nam đã về đến sân bay!!

u23 vn\nu23 viet nam\nu23 việt nam\nu23 việt nam vs u23 quata\nu23 viet nam vs u23 qatar\nu23 viet nam vs u23 uzbekistan\nu23 viet nam tin tuc\ntin tức u23 việt nam\nu23 việt nam vs ăn mừng\năn mừng chiến thắng u23 việt nam\nan mung chien thang\nchung kết u23 việt nam\nchung ket u23 viet nam\nthong tin u23 viet nam\nhoãn trận chung kết u23 việt nam

Channel

Channel Cây Dừa

Views

3.6M

Primitive Technology: Lime
#9People & Blogs

Primitive Technology: Lime

At the old hut site (the new one being temporarily cut off by flooding) I made lime mortar from the shells of rainforest snails by firing them in a kiln, slaking them in water, mixing them into lime putty. Limestone is basically calcium carbonate (CaCO3). The general source of lime is limestone and various other calcareous minerals, though shells, egg shells and coral are other sources of lime (for more information see video on Corporals Corner channel: https://youtu.be/tOhAfaFboNU). When heated above 840 degrees Celsius, the lime decomposes into calcium oxide (CaO) or Quicklime and releases carbon dioxide (CO2). When water is added to the quicklime it becomes calcium hydroxide Ca (OH)2 or lime putty. From here the calcium hydroxide can then be shaped into a form and allowed to set. Carbon dioxide enters the lime putty as it dries causing it to turn back into calcium carbonate. The new calcium carbonate has then set, remaining solid and water resistant. \nIn my local geography, calcareous rocks such as limestone are absent leading to a difficulty in acquiring the feed stock for lime making. However, I was still able to make lime by collecting the shells of large terrestrial snails that are native to the rainforest here. The unoccupied shells of these snails were gathered up and stored at the hut. Fire wood was gathered and packed neatly into the kiln. Importantly, the firewood was stacked on top of the grate rather than underneath it in the firebox as is the normal procedure for firing pottery. Using an ordinary updraft pottery kiln in this configuration allows it to reach much higher temperatures than would be possible during normal use. The wood was lit from above and the fire burned down towards the grate. Alternate layers of shells and wood were added on to this burning fuel bed. After adding the last layer of wood to act as a “lid” to prevent heat loss from above I left the kiln to finish on its own, unsupervised. The whole process took about an hour and a half.\nWhen the kiln had cooled down a few hours later, I took out the calcined shells. Not shown in the video was the fact that some shells got so hot, the dirt stuck to them turned into slag and fused to them, possibly with the lime acting a flux lowering its melting point. This extreme heat (+1200 c) should be avoided as the over burnt lime becomes “dead lime”, unable to slake in water. Most shells were still useable though. They were taken out of the kiln and had water added to them. An exothermic reaction then ensued. Heat was produced as the lime quicklime turned into slaked lime. The water heated up creating steam and the shells decomposed into a white paste. The paste was stirred and crushed pottery was added to it as an aggregate (sand is normally used for this, I just had a lot of old pot sherds lying about to dispose of). This lime mortar mixture was then formed into a block shape and left to dry. It took about a week and a half to set as we have had extremely humid, wet weather. The block was observed to have set demonstrating its properties.\nWhat I created is actually lime mortar, typically used for mortaring bricks and tiles together. It’s basically the ‘Glue’ that holds together the building blocks of masonry structures. From my research 20 kg of lime mortar is used on a 1 m square section of brick wall. 5 kg of lime to 15 kg of aggregate (sand, grog etc.) per a 1 m square section of bricks. The shells, though large, are not terribly abundant. A method for finding shells efficiently needs to be made before considering making lime mortar in this fashion. From my experience sand bars in a creek sometimes accumulate snail shells from higher up in the mountains. In these spots, water velocity decreases and shells in the water tend to drop out of the water column. Additionally lime may be partially replaced with ordinary wood ash in mortar without a corresponding decrease in strength. To conclude, making lime in a land without limestone is possible but can be problematic when trying to do so on a large scale.

Channel

Primitive Technology

Views

3.3M

ㄹㅇ내 여자친구 개 쩌는듯..
#10People & Blogs

ㄹㅇ내 여자친구 개 쩌는듯..

#남순 #서윤 #남서윤 #야방데이트 #데이트\n\n아프리카TV 방송국♥ http://afreecatv.com/wnnw\n인스타그램 팔로우♥ wnnw2\n페이스북 팔로우♥ 남순(박현우)\n아프리카/유튜브 광고문의 ☞ vm222@naver.com\n★편집요청 문의 ☞ 플러스톡 @남순/ sullena@naver.com

Channel

Namsoon 남순

Views

3.3M