Articles by "Europe"

The Holderness family is back with their Christmas jammies, America 


You know those letters you get toward the end of the year from relatives or family companions you haven't found in a while, describing all the colossal things they've done that year?

All things considered, this is the video variant of that, and from a family you just know from the Internet.

The most recent occasion video from the Holderness Family — who is known for their amped-up, cheddar ified adaptations of pop melodies — is set to the tune of Kendrick Lamar's "i." It indicates Christmas festivities around the globe — and includes loads of mythical person themed night wear (which may sound commonplace in case you're knowledgeable in Holderness recordings). Set yourself up.

One of the highlights: They recall that time that SNL ridiculed

Mark Zuckerberg evolved from distant technocrat to dad and philanthropist


In the same way as other who met Mark Zuckerberg in the first years of Facebook, Reid Hoffman at first thought the originator was unfathomably savvy, yet not as a matter of course the most cordial or regular CEO.

"My early introduction of Mark was a calm, maybe independent super-canny understudy with an awesome feeling of specialized items," reviews Hoffman, the maker of LinkedIn and one of the soonest financial specialists in Facebook. With respect to his considerations at the time on Zuckerberg's authority aptitudes, Hoffman says basically, "Simply obscure; basically no information."

The information, to get Hoffman's term, streamed in as Facebook became throughout the years. Zuckerberg turned out to be an innovation visionary with outsized certainty. He overlooked calls to offer Facebook ahead of schedule for upwards of $1 billion and guided the youthful informal organization past the seething destruction of MySpace and Friendster and into wild rivalry with the business' greatest names.

For the greater part of that achievement, Zuckerberg in any case attempted to shake off his picture as a chilly and ferocious coder-turned-business visionary from the fictionalized film about Facebook's initial days, The Social Network. In broad daylight appearances, he frequently seemed to be firm and cumbersome, or more awful: a youthful and rude 20-something. In 2012, with a noteworthy IPO looking, he notoriously met brokers on Wall Street wearing a hoodie.

In the event that there were any waiting reactions as yet staying about Zuckerberg as a pioneer, on the other hand, they at long last dissolved away in 2015.

This was the year Zuckerberg opened up to the world and finished his change from a splendid however uncomfortable specialized visionary into an affable, motivating and very impactful business symbol. This was the year Zuckerberg treated the Facebook group more like special people as opposed to "clients" and acted like one himself.

Zuckerberg reported arrangements to assemble a gigantic $45 billion altruistic establishment, took an extremely open and generally exceptional paternity leave, talked up regularly about delicate individual and political issues and fashioned a more private association with the 1.5 billion-man Facebook group through month to month town corridors and book clubs — all while managing a record year for the organization's income and stock cost.

"It is an exceptional contextual investigation of significant grown-up advancement in office. What a change," says Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, a teacher at the Yale School of Management and creator of Firing Back: How Great Leaders Rebound After Career Disasters. "To end up Father of the Year and Philanthropist of the Year, it's unfathomable."

All the while, Zuckerberg not just laid the preparation for a positive legacy that could one day adversary Bill Gates; he further smoothed Facebook's way to more prominent global control.

Zuckerberg 2.0: More open and associated 

"We've been attempting to have a youngster for two or three years and have had three unnatural birth cycles along the way," Zuckerberg wrote in a July Facebook post. "You feel so cheerful when you learn you're going to have a youngster. You begin envisioning who they'll get to be and longing for trusts in their future. You begin making arrangements, and after that they're gone. It's a desolate affair."

The mixed post, in which Zuckerberg declared he and wife Dr. Priscilla Chan were expecting their first kid finally, was broadly applauded for its bizarrely authentic comments about unnatural birth cycles, not typically talked about openly.

It additionally spoke to a critical bring an end to from Zuckerberg's propensity for keeping his own life private even as he urged the world to share and share and share on the interpersonal organization he mad

Global nuclear watchdog votes unanimously to close book on Iran's nuclear past

Global nuclear watchdog votes unanimously to close book on Iran's nuclear past
VIENNA, Dec. 15 (Apsara Load) - The International Atomic Energy Agency, the world's atomic administrative guard dog, voted Tuesday to end its yearslong examination concerning Iran's past atomic action for pushing ahead with the understanding came to this year in the middle of Tehran and six Western forces - including the United States.

The IAEA, a 35-country part office, had been investigating Iran's atomic project over the previous decade to figure out whether the Islamic country was seeking after nuclear weapons. Tuesday, however, the organization's leading group of governors voted consistently to stop the test.

Rather, the IAEA chose to seek after usage of the atomic arrangement came to over the mid year, which looks to farthest point Tehran's atomic movement to serene purposes. In return, monetary approvals against Iran - adding up to about $100 billion in solidified assets - would be lifted.

The agreement was come to between moderators from Tehran and the United States, alongside five other Western associates.

"This shuts the board's thought of this thing," the IAEA's determination said.

The organization issued a report not long ago that finished up Iran looked for atomic weapons until 2009. From that point forward, however, the IAEA said, it discovered no confirmation that Tehran proceeded on that track past that point.

"The Agency has no sound signs of exercises in Iran pertinent to the improvement of an atomic touchy gadget after 2009," IAEA Director General Yukiya Amano said. "Nor has the Agency discovered any tenable signs of the redirection of atomic material regarding the conceivable military measurements (PMD) to Iran's atomic project."

Iranian authorities cheered the organization's choice Tuesday and said it will permit full usage of the atomic assention as ahead of schedule as one month from now, The New York Times reported.

"In light of this determination, it can be said unequivocally that the fake issue of alleged military measurements of Iran's atomic system, known as PMD, now fits in with history," Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif told the country's semiofficial Tasnim News Agency.

Iran's diplomat to the IAEA called Tuesday's vote "memorable," the Tehran Times reported.

"The fake issue of conceivable purported military measurements of Iran's atomic project has gotten to be history now," Zarif included.

Republicans in Congress, however, contradict the office's end the examination. Senate Republicans, who voted against the current year's atomic arrangement, additionally scrutinized the Obama organization for acting in a comparable way.

"I respect today's agreement," Secretary of State John Kerry, one of the mediators of the atomic arrangement, said Tuesday. "The concentrate now properly moves toward full execution of the [agreement] and its improved confirmation and straightforwardness administration."

Heavy Russia raids in Syria area where plane downed

Beirut  - Russian warplanes did substantial strikes in Syria's northern Latakia territory on Wednesday, a day after Turkey brought down one of Moscow's planes in the region, a checking gathering said.

Substantial Syria air strikes slaughter 8, wreck oil tankers: screen AFP

Warplanes accepted to be Russian likewise completed strikes close to the Turkish outskirt in northern Aleppo area, slaughtering no less than three individuals and setting land a few trucks conveying help and merchandise available to be purchased, the screen and activists said.

"Russian warplanes have since the previous evening been doing substantial air strikes on the Jabal Akrad and Jabal Turkman districts" in the north of Latakia territory, Syrian Observatory for Human Rights boss Rami Abdel Rahman said.

He said Russian planes had completed no less than 12 strikes in the territory since the morning, however had no data on any losses.

A media lobbyist on the ground affirmed the substantial strikes, which he said based on the Jabal Nuba zone where rebels on Tuesday annihilated a Russian helicopter that was compelled to make a crisis arrival by resistance fire.

One individual from the group was slaughtered however the rest were protected.

State TV reported that Syrian warplanes were likewise doing strikes in the north of Latakia, a beach front region that is to a great extent controlled by the administration.

Lately, administration powers have been pursuing savage fights against renegades in the northern piece of the area, making a few advances in Jabal Akrad and Jabal Turkman.

On Tuesday, Turkey shot down a Russian airplane over the territory, and revolutionaries killed one of the pilots as he parachuted down in the wake of shooting from the plane.

A second pilot was safeguarded by Russian and Syrian extraordinary powers.

Russia dispatched strikes in backing of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad on September 30, over a year after a US-drove coalition started strikes in the nation against the Islamic State bunch.

In northern Aleppo territory in the interim, obvious Russian air strikes hit the town of Azaz and the fringe zone around the Bab al-Salama crossing, the Observatory said.

The screen and nearby Syrian lobbyist Maamun al-Khatieb reported three individuals executed in the strikes, which likewise set flame to a few trucks stopped in a great deal not a long way from the intersection.

"Three individuals have been murdered and six harmed, the majority of them are truck drivers," Khatieb told AFP.

He said the trucks were conveying help and merchandise available to be purchased, and were stopped in a great deal where vehicles assemble in the wake of intersection the fringe, around three kilometers (1.8 miles) away.

The Observatory and Khatieb said the area had not been liable to air strikes by either Russian or Syrian war planes in some time.

Shocking news: A Young Lady Was Killed By Her Power Bank While In Her Sleep!

Nowadays power bank is a must have gadget, this small device can power your phone and other handheld devices anytime, anywhere. But unfortunately it can also be a dangerous thing for you and in your home. “Power bank can kill you,” yes, it can and a Nigerian woman became a victim of it recently.

According to mymobnet, the young Nigerian girl recharges her power bank and placed it on her chest and fell asleep.

As she was sleeping, the power bank overheated, burnt her skin three degrees deep then she got electrocuted and died on her sleep. Her parents found her dead the next morning with the device stuck deep in her upper right chest.





Let this be a warning to all of us not just the power bank user and owner that electronic devices are not to be taken lightly especially those that stored energy. And always remember to keep distance from these devices, importantly from combustible materials when going to sleep.


There are people who truly love to be unique, to be one of a kind. They build things or create something that is totally out of the box. It doesn't matter how it will look, what’s important is its distinctive from the others.  An eye-catching, an attention grabber, a centre of attraction straight out of a mad scientist lab like these personalize customize bikes.














Germanwings: No intact bodies found as investigators remove 400-600 pieces of human remains from French Alps crash site


Rescue workers examining the Germanwings air disaster crash site have found no intact bodies and up to 600 pieces of human remains, investigators have confirmed.

Families at the site are even having to go through the ordeal of providing DNA samples to experts based in a make-shift laboratory set up across two hotels in Barcelona, where the loved ones of the crash victims are staying.

Police have also confirmed that no intact bodies have been found at the French Alps crash zone as they seek to identify the 150 victims of the disaster who died.

In a bid to identify the victims, families are being asked by officials if they can recall what clothing their loved ones may have been wearing while on board the doomed flight.

They have been asked if their late family members may have had any distinctive features such as tattoos.

Experts have also been recovering DNA samples from household items of the victims for further examination.


FOR LATEST UPDATES ON THE CRASH FOLLOW OUR LIVE BLOG

Reports have claimed that Lubitz suffered depression since investigators confirmed that he deliberately locked his captain out of the cockpit before flying flight 4U9525 into the French Alps.



More than 30 people were left injured after a “massive gas explosion” ripped through a New York apartment block causing it to partially collapse.

Firefighters and paramedics rushed to the scene shortly before 3.30pm in Manhattan's trendy East Village amid reports more than a dozen people were trapped.

Specialists teams join emergency crews including rescue dogs.

Thick grey smoke billowed in to the air covering much of the Big Apple's famous city skyline as firefighters struggled to contain the flames.

As many as 30 people were reported to be injured.







 Rare cancer leaves a man with huge hole in his face

Doctors have told a dad nothing more can be done to stop a rare form of cancer which has ruthlessly destroyed his features.

Raymond Martin is facing a bleak future after the disease left him with a gaping hole in his face.

It marks the end of a long struggle for the 64-year-old, known to friends as Marty, who has put up a tireless battle against its devastating destruction.

The grandfather, of Scotswood, Newcastle, has facial angiosarcoma, a cancer of the inner lining of blood vessels, reports the Newcastle Chronicle.

He had been due to undergo surgery in the past few weeks but the cancer has now spread to such an extent that surgeons say there is nothing more that can be done.

Daughter Nicola Borthwick, 42, said: “They’ve told us nothing more can be done now.

“We only hope that Marty’s story raises awareness and prevents anyone else undergoing what he has had to suffer.”

The nature of his condition means Raymond has been left stuck in his Newcastle home where he has been cared for by wife Alice, 63.

The family say they are rallying around the great-grandfather to support him.

But all medics can do is help change Raymond’s bandages and keep him as comfortable as possible.

Raymond’s problems first started when he noticed a spot on his face but thought nothing about it.

After the spot started to spread, the dad went to see his GP who suggested it could be a rash or infection and he was prescribed a course of antibiotics.








Giant US warship drops

The USS Theodore Roosevelt is 1,092ft long, weighs 100,000 tonnes and has a crew of 5,226 who are set to give local economy a boost

Hundreds of people have lined the coast to view a giant US aircraft carrier arriving for a five-day visit.

The 100,000-tonne ship USS Theodore Roosevelt has anchored off Stokes Bay, Gosport, Hampshire, as it is too big to sail into Portsmouth Harbour.

The promenade was packed with visitors wanting to get a glance of the 1,092ft-long carrier which is affectionately known as the Big Stick.

The ship, which is making its first port of call in its round-the-world deployment, is substantially larger than the Royal Navy's next generation of carriers which weigh in at 65,000 tonnes.

More than 5,000 sailors are set to swamp Portsmouth during the visit, giving a boost to local businesses.

The visit forms parts of an ongoing partnership between the Royal Navy and US on carrier operations until the first of the new carriers, HMS Queen Elizabeth, enters service in 2017.

Among Roosevelt's 5,226 crew are six Royal Navy aircraft handlers who are honing their skills ahead of serving aboard the first of the new carriers.






Pilot Killed in Crash of Small Plane Near Van Nuys Airport Identified

A small plane crashed in an intersection after departing Van Nuys Airport Friday afternoon, killing the aircraft’s pilot.

The plane went down at Hayvenhurst Avenue and Vanowen Street (map), just south of the small airport in Los Angeles’ San Fernando Valley.

A small plane crashed in Van Nuys on Jan. 9, 2015. (Credit: KTLA)

The Los Angeles Fire Department was called to the scene at 1:14 p.m., and the one occupant on board was determined to be dead, according to the department’s Erik Scott.

The pilot was identified as 47-year-old Alberto Enrique Behar of Scottsdale, Arizona, Lt. R. Hays with Los Angeles County Coroner’s Office said.

Behar was a professor at Arizona State University as well as a member of the Mobility and Robotic Systems Section at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, according to his online biography.


The plan did not collide with any vehicles, structures or people on the ground, authorities said.

“It could have been a lot worse,” police Sgt. Barry Montgomery said. “The citizens in this area really were fortunate that it wasn’t a more tragic incident.”

The fixed-wing aircraft was down in the middle of the intersection, and firefighters appeared to have placed a sheet over a body, aerial video from Sky5 showed. The aircraft’s cockpit was destroyed










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