#videos

anonymiss@despora.de

Dozens of #Capitol #riot defendants accused of trying to #delete #photos, texts

Source: https://thehill.com/regulation/court-battles/561465-dozens-of-capitol-riot-defendants-accused-of-trying-to-delete-photos

According to an analysis from The Associated Press, at least 49 people charged by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia have been accused of attempting to erase #online and #mobile #phone content from Jan. 6.

Investigators have been able to track down many of the pro-Trump rioters through photos and #videos posted to social media as well as #security footage and phone data placing individuals in and around the Capitol building at the time of the #attack.

  • Don't document your crimes online.
  • Once uploaded into the #cloud you can't delete it anymore.
  • Use encryption on your phone to protect your data.

#Trump #politics #justice #usa #technology #news #privacy #crime #Washington #video #photo

dezeen@xn--y9azesw6bu.xn--y9a3aq

Counterspace's Children's Courtroom installation "teaches children about the justice system"

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In the third of our series of exclusive video interviews with Sumayya Vally, the architect discusses how her studio Counterspace's Children's Courtroom project aimed to teach kids about the law, rights and equality.

The installation comprises a set of kids-sized furniture elements imitating furniture found in standard courtrooms.

It is used as an educational tool for children to learn about concepts related to the law, court procedures as well as their own rights and equality.

Children's Courtroom by CounterspaceChildren's Courtroom by Counterspace is a mobile installation and educational tool for children to learn about the justice system

"The project is designed as a stage set for teaching children about how the justice system works and preparing child witnesses for court," Vally explained in the video.

Made from wood and blue metal elements, the installation includes a witness stand, a defendant's stand, a judges table, seating for the accused, seating for the public and a courtroom entry arch.

It was created for the children's museum Play Africa at Constitutional Hill in Johannesburg, the biggest constitutional court in South Africa. However, it can easily be packed up so that it can be transported to other locations.

Children's Courtroom by CounterspaceThe project comprises children's furniture that imitates what you would find in a courtroom

"This piece had to be designed to be able to function at Constitutional Court, but also to be packed up onto a van and then unrolled on a parking lot in a very rural area or in a street in inner-city Johannesburg," the architect said.

"It's really important that the pieces are able to come together to function as a court for children but also that they can function in separate parts for different functions."

Counterspace has worked with Play Africa on a number of projects including an interactive exhibition on indigenous Ndebele art which teaches children about the mathematical concepts around geometry, pattern, depth perception and scale.

Vally is the architect behind this year's Serpentine Pavillion. She founded her Johannesburg-based architecture studio Counterspace at the age of 23 and is the youngest architect to receive the prestigious commission.

Children's Courtroom by CounterspaceThe installation was created for children's museum Play Africa at Constitutional Hill, Johannesburg, the highest court of justice in South Africa

Dezeen is publishing a series of exclusive video interviews with the architect. In the previous instalment, Vally discussed the studio's project Folded Skies, a mirrored installation exploring the complex geographies of Johannesburg.

Below is a transcript of the interview:


"Children's Courtroom is an installation that was made at Constitutional Hill, which holds the highest court of the land in South Africa and is also home to Play Africa, which is an organization that works with children from across Johannesburg.

"The project was done for Play Africa, and we often work with them on very quick, very inexpensive prototype projects.

"The project is designed as a stage set for teaching children about how the justice system works and preparing child witnesses for court.

"So this piece had to be designed to be able to function at Constitutional Court, but also to be packed up onto a van and then unrolled on a parking lot in a very rural area or in a street in inner-city Johannesburg.

"And it's really important that the pieces are able to come together to function as a court for children but also that they can function in separate parts for different functions."

The post Counterspace's Children's Courtroom installation "teaches children about the justice system" appeared first on Dezeen.

#all #architecture #education #videos #videosbydezeen #architecturevideos #counterspace #sumayyavally

dezeen@xn--y9azesw6bu.xn--y9a3aq

Ilse Crawford explores "useful design" in second episode of Braun's Good Design Masterclass

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Good Design Masterclass

Ilse Crawford discusses useful objects such as prosthetic hands, electric bikes and shavers in the second episode of Braun's masterclass video series that Dezeen is publishing as part of our collaboration with the German design brand.

Braun launched the Good Design Masterclass video series, which is led by British designer Crawford, to inspire "good design for a better future" and to mark its centenary. The second episode focuses on useful objects.

"Fundamentally, 'useful' is about functional things that people really need," said Crawford in the video. "Genuinely useful design creates the building blocks of our lives."

"Sometimes, 'useful' can make things more convenient. But it can also improve lives in quite profound ways."

Braun Good Design MasterclassThe VanMoof S3 bike aims to be "the sustainable future of mass transportation", according to Crawford

One example of useful design featured in the video is the VanMoof S3 electric bike, which Crawford described as a "beautiful piece of functional design". The design aims to be "the sustainable future of mass transportation", according to Crawford.

"This is a municipal object, it's a commuter tool," she said. "And you see it in what is in front of you. It is sturdy, everything is integrated into the frame, everything is embedded. And when they develop new models, they don't mess around with new styles or novelty. Every upgrade is based on improving the functionality of this bike."

Braun Good Design MasterclassÖssur's i-Limb Quantum is a myoelectric prosthetic hand

Another example of useful design featured in the video is the i-Limb Quantum prosthetic hand by Iceland-based company Össur.

The device is myoelectric, which means that it can be operated with the electrical signals generated by a person's muscles to enable the user to regain the functionality of a missing hand. Crawford described the design as "unashamedly robotic" and said it is something the user would want to show off.

"This really has been a shift from the times when to have a prosthetic limb was a matter of shame and social stigma to today when a prosthetic is not only functionally useful – technological shifts have made it a wonderful accessory in terms of dexterity – but also a thing of beauty," she said. "So it's now also useful from a social point of view – it's something to be proud of."

Braun Good Design MasterclassBraun's Parat BT SM 53 electric shaver (right) could be powered using the cigarette lighter in a car

The third design Crawford discussed in the video is Braun's Parat BT SM 53 electric shaver by Dieter Rams and Richard Fischer, which she said is an example of how usefulness shifts and changes over time.

Crawford described the shaver as "a pioneer of the unplugged lifestyle" because it could be powered via the cigarette lighter socket in a car.

"But, of course, 'useful' is not something that is pinned down in stone," she said.

"Tastes shift, values shift. And, of course, change continues. Because now beards are back so now there are new typologies for clippers and trimmers. So what is useful is continually tied into the cultural and social shifts of any time."

Braun Good Design MasterclassBraun's Good Design Masterclass series is led by British designer Ilse Crawford

This is the second episode of Braun's Good Design Masterclass. In the first episode, Crawford discussed "simple design".

Dezeen editor-in-chief Marcus Fairs also spoke to Crawford about the masterclass series in a live talk that we broadcast this week.

Next week, Dezeen will publish the final episode of the Good Design Masterclass series, which is also available to watch on Braun's website.


Dezeen x Braun Good Design Masterclass

This article was written by Dezeen for Braun as part of ourDezeen x Braun Good Design Masterclass partnership. Find out more about Dezeen partnership content here.

The post Ilse Crawford explores "useful design" in second episode of Braun's Good Design Masterclass appeared first on Dezeen.

#dezeenxbraungooddesignmasterclass #design #videos #ilsecrawford #braun #designvideos

dezeen@xn--y9azesw6bu.xn--y9a3aq

Blue bubbles helped "make the cause of climate change visible" say visualisers behind viral video

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Still from data visualisation by Real World Visuals showing New York City's emissions

A 2012 animation showing New York City being buried under a mountain of giant bubbles allowed people to appreciate the scale of carbon emissions for the first time, according to its creators Real World Visuals.

Released in 2012, the computer-generated timelapse shows the city being buried under a mountain of bubbles representing the city's 54 million tonnes of annual CO2 emissions.

"Carbon emissions are invisible and that's a core part of the problem," said Real World Visuals co-founder Antony Turner. "If carbon dioxide was purple, we would start taking notice."

Making abstract concept of emissions more understandable

In the video, the communications agency depicted the city's annual emissions as 54 million bubbles, each ten metres in diameter, which gradually subsume the city.

Nine years later, the iconic image of the blue mountain towering above the Empire State Building remains one of the highest-ranking climate change images on the internet.

Despite the fact that the three-minute video features almost no audio, it has been viewed almost half a million times on YouTube and was picked up by outlets including the Guardian and Scientific American.

The simple animation helps to make the abstract concept of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e) emissions more understandable to the general public.

Still from data visualisation by Real World Visuals showing New York City's emissionsThe animation shows New York being buried under a mountain of blue bubbles representing its carbon emissions

"Part of the problem is that some people are very cut off from quantitative information," said the agency's creative director Adam Nieman.

"You put numbers and graphs in front of people and they bounce straight off."

This is compounded when it comes to the issue of atmospheric carbon, he argues, which is "a problem with an invisible cause".

"Our [aim] is to make the cause of climate change visible because very few other people are approaching it like that," Nieman added.

Viewers can relate to spheres on a physical level

Based in England, Real World Visuals was originally founded in 2009 under the name Carbon Visuals with the aim of visualising imperceptible environmental challenges such as emissions, air pollution and ozone depletion.

The New York City emissions animation, which the agency created for the Environmental Defense Fund, is its most successful project to date.

Since it was published, the city of New York has managed to decrease its carbon emissions slightly to 50.7 million tonnes of CO2e in 2017 and committed to becoming carbon neutral by 2050.

Still from data visualisation showing the rate of global emissionsReal World Visuals has also used the blue spheres to represent the rate of global emissions for the 2018 G7 Summit

Meanwhile, Real World Visuals has used the same blue spheres to show the carbon footprint of entire countries from Ireland to the United States, as well as visualising the rate of all global emissions – 112 million tonnes of CO2e a day – for the G7 summit in 2018.

The agency has also been using the spheres to demonstrate how much carbon can be captured and stored in timber building elements or aquatic "blue carbon" sinks such as salt marshes and peatlands.

"We've been doing this for a long time so we've thought through all of the different ways you can show quantities of carbon dioxide gas," said Nieman.

"And the nice thing about spheres is you can relate to the shape," he added. "Because you can relate to it on a physical, visceral level, people were responding to it."

Showing emissions in real-time

Real World Visuals calculated that each tonne of CO2 would fill a sphere with a diameter of 10 metres.

New York City emissions amounted to two of these bubbles every second in 2010, which is the year the animation's data is based on.

The video initially shows these spheres ballooning up in real-time, before visualising the emissions that are generated after an hour, a day and ultimately a year when a panoramic view from the Statue of Liberty shows the city's skyline buried underneath a mountain of the blue balls.

"A really powerful way to turn an abstract number like 54 million tonnes a year into something that people can relate to is to show it in real-time," Neiman explained.

"A day is a period of time that we can imagine and feel like we inhabit. A year is an accountancy term but it's not something we can relate to that well."

Using a mountain of smaller spheres rather than one large sphere to represent the emissions helps to give viewers a more accurate sense of scale, Neiman said.

"As human beings, we're quite good at estimating discrete quantities but we're really bad at comparing volumes," he said."If you put two spheres with twice the volume next to each other, people will think that they're pretty much the same."

Prompting rather than answering questions

Contrary to most data visualisations, which Neiman says provide answers to specific questions, Real World Visuals hopes to provoke questions instead.

This is achieved by stripping back any evaluations of the data and letting the visuals speak for themselves. The New York animation, for example, is presented without any context about climate change.

"People responded by saying 'this is rubbish because climate change isn't real', which is an interesting response because we didn't mention climate change at all," Neiman explained.

"We just said: this is the carbon dioxide that is entering the atmosphere as a result of human activity in New York City. We didn't say this is a lot, we didn't say it's good or bad. And that provoked lots of discussions."


Carbon revolution logo

Carbon revolution

This article is part of Dezeen'scarbon revolution series, which explores how this miracle material could be removed from the atmosphere and put to use on earth. Read all the content at: www.dezeen.com/carbon.

The sky photograph used in the carbon revolution graphic is byTaylor van Riper via Unsplash.

The post Blue bubbles helped "make the cause of climate change visible" say visualisers behind viral video appeared first on Dezeen.

#carbonrevolution #interviews #graphics #all #design #videos #graphicdesign #animations #designvideos #climatechange #datavisualisations

New York City's greenhouse gas emissions as one-ton spheres of carbon dioxide gas
dezeen@xn--y9azesw6bu.xn--y9a3aq

Ten-storey stainless-steel apartment block built in 28 hours

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10-storey stainless-steel apartment block in 28 hours

Chinese company Broad Group has erected a modular 10-storey apartment block, named the Living Building, in just over a day in Changsha, China.

A timelapse released by Broad Group shows the 10-storey building being erected in China by a large team of workers and three cranes in 28 hours and 45 minutes.

According to the company, this is the "world's shortest construction period" for a building of this scale.

Tower built from stainless steel modules

The apartment block was assembled from standard container-sized modular units that were made in a factory by Broad Group and have a stainless steel structure.

Each module is 12.19 metres (40 feet) long, 2.44 metres (eight feet) wide and three metres (10 feet) high.

The container shaped modules stacked with one wall of each unit folding down to become a floor plate and create a column-free space that is 12 metres by 4.8-metres. Windows and balconies fold out from the unit to enclose the spaces.

"10 storeys can be erected in one day"

The modules are transported to the site with all the electric and internal finishes complete meaning that installation can happen rapidly.

"Extremely simple onsite installation: Just tighten bolts and connect [the] water and electricity, as fast as 10 storeys can be erected in one day," said the company.

The video shows the fully completed apartment block simply furnished with white walls and timber window frames and flooring.

Each of the modular units was made with walls and floors built from a stainless steel slab that is formed of two stainless steel plates separated by hundreds of stainless steel tubes.

According to the company, these B-core slabs are 10 times lighter and 100-times stronger than "conventional" floor plates.

Company claims system could be used for 200-storey skyscrapers

According to the company, the construction method could also be used to build public buildings or even skyscrapers.

"It is perfectly suitable for luxury residences, 200-storey skyscrapers, and also idea for public and residential buildings," said Broad Group.

Broad Group is a Chinese manufacturer of air conditioning units that has expanded into modular construction. In 2012 Broad Group unveiled plans to build a 220-storey skyscraper, which would be the tallest building in the world, from modular components in seven months.

However, the construction of the building stalled shortly after it began amid safety fears and a lack of government approval. It was later reported that the building's foundations had been repurposed as a fish farm.

The post Ten-storey stainless-steel apartment block built in 28 hours appeared first on Dezeen.

#all #architecture #residential #news #videos #china #modulararchitecture #architecturevideos

prplcdclnw@diasp.eu

youtube-dl Is Not Gone

This headline had me really worried.

https://torrentfreak.com/riaa-takes-down-popular-open-source-youtube-dl-software-201024/

However, youtube-dl is not gone. It's only gone from GitHub, which all right-thinking projects have already left, anyway. (Check out https://codeberg.org/).

We can install youtube-dl now the way we always have.

sudo curl -L https://yt-dl.org/downloads/latest/youtube-dl -o /usr/local/bin/youtube-dl
sudo chmod a+rx /usr/local/bin/youtube-dl

As someone pointed out to me a while back, you can also install it in distros where ~/bin is in PATH like this.

curl -L https://yt-dl.org/downloads/latest/youtube-dl -o ~/bin/youtube-dl
chmod 755 ~/bin/youtube-dl

This allows you to update youtube-dl without using sudo. We update youtube-dl with youtube-dl -U. It's necessary to update youtube-dl often.

See https://yt-dl.org/ for more info about youtube-dl.

#privacy #surveillance #freedom #youtube #youtube-dl #download #downloads #video #videos #invidious

mollusky@social.gibberfish.org

I just wanted to point out a Youtube channel that deserves more attention. For years now I have relied on user Derek Banas for learning a wide range of topics including computer programming, personal fitness, musical instruments and more. He makes high quality tutorials that I'd say are largely unmatched when it comes to free educational content on-line. Derek deserves a shout out for his work and I hope sharing this helps get him more subscribers and donations.

Derek Banas on Youtube

#programming #computers #education #videos #tutorials #fitness #music #code

tani@diasp.org

invidio.us

is an open source webapp. invidio.us offers an alternative front-end to YouTube

*to watch videos without G tracking.*

https://github.com/omarroth/invidious

It says on the page: "Invidious is what YouTube should be."

https://www.reddit.com/r/SideProject/comments/8wvazc/invidous_alternative_frontend_to_youtube/

Just replace youtube.com by invidio.us:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kMOWCZkU_QM
https://www.invidio.us/watch?v=kMOWCZkU_QM

If you right click the video, there is a "Save video as" option.

The site also works without javascript.

There are add-ons available which redirect Youtube URLs to invidio.us (userscript) or replace YouTube embeds with invidio.us embeds (userscript).

#invidio.us #invidious #youtube #hooktube #google #gevil #linux #gnu #gnulinux #hackernews #security #privacy #javascript #noscript #scriptsafe #video #videos