Thứ Bảy, 5 tháng 8, 2017

Youtube daily google Aug 5 2017

Hello everyone

I am going to show you that how can you download any video from any website by using chrome

Before doing anything i need you to go to more tools and then extensions

and make sure that the developer mode in enabled in your Google chrome

So now lets get started

Vishal Videos intro (song - Desmeon - Hellcat [NCS Release])

Btw this video is all about idm internet download manager

and if you already have it and can not download the videos

then obviously you can uninstall it and follow with the video procedure

Firstly, you need to download IDM from the link given in the description

I have already downloaded the file and also extracted it

Then you need to run idman setup and then install it

You can cancel the pop up for registration of idm

Now you need to patch the idm

Just go to the patch 2 folder and run 32 bit or 64 bit version as per as your windows

I am going to run 64 bit version

And then just hit next

and hit install

and it's all done

Let me close the page that is opened after idm is patched

Ok finish

Guys if you face some error like this, abort it and go to the task manager

And find if idm is running in the back ground and right click on it and hit end task

And then you need to repatch it and it will be all good

Now when you will open the idm, it will be fully cracked

Guys next thing you wanna do is to go to the extensions of google chrome

and find if IDM Integration Module chrome app is installed or not

If it's not there you have to go to the program files

and then IDM folder

and find the file ending with .crx extension

and then drag it on the chrome and hit continue

Ops there's a error, let me try it again

Hit add extensions then and now you will have it

Now you can download any video from any website in any format or resolution it is available in

Firstly let me show you the most common example of Youtube

You will have this blue bar on top of every video that you might find on the any website

You just need to click on it

and then you will have different resolutions of that video that it is available in

Click on any resolution and start the download

Guys this will work on any website not just youtube

So that is it for this video guys

If you like this video then hit the red subscribe button

That will be really very appreciable

and thanks once again

For more infomation >> How to download videos from any website on google chrome 2017 - Duration: 3:25.

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CHỊ GOOGLE BÌNH LUẬN LMHT CỰC BỰA [1] - HUNI BỊ GAY (ft CROWN)??? - Duration: 10:03.

For more infomation >> CHỊ GOOGLE BÌNH LUẬN LMHT CỰC BỰA [1] - HUNI BỊ GAY (ft CROWN)??? - Duration: 10:03.

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The Developer Show (TL;DR 078) - Duration: 2:32.

For more infomation >> The Developer Show (TL;DR 078) - Duration: 2:32.

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Managing Focus - A11ycasts #22 - Duration: 7:24.

For more infomation >> Managing Focus - A11ycasts #22 - Duration: 7:24.

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Facebook vs. Google: The Battle of Self Projection versus Who We Really Are - Duration: 3:02.

Google, I think, is a revolutionary data set.

I call it digital truth serum because people are so honest to it and they confess things

that they might not confess to anybody else to that little white box on a search engine.

Facebook is different.

Facebook is digital 'brag to my friends about how good my life is' serum, where people try

to make themselves look good on Facebook.

So if you compare two magazines, The Atlantic Monthly and the National Enquirer; The Atlantic

Monthly is kind of an intellectual, highbrow magazine, with poetry and philosophy and political

theory.

And the National Enquirer is a lowbrow trashy magazine, with celebrity gossip and rumors

and stuff like that.

And on average the National Enquirer sells more copies than The Atlantic Monthly, but

on Facebook The Atlantic Monthly is 45 times more popular than the National Enquirer because

everybody wants their friends to think they're reading The Atlantic Monthly.

They don't want their friends to think they're reading the National Enquirer which makes

them seem less impressive.

And people exaggerate their financial situation.

Circus Circus, a budget hotel in Las Vegas, holds about the same number of people as the

Bellagio, a luxurious hotel in Vegas.

But people are about three times more likely to check-in to the Bellagio than Circus Circus.

So I think on Facebook you get bombarded with these images: Oh, all my friends are staying

at the Bellagio.

Well, you know, about the same number of them are saying at Circus Circus, they may just

not be posting that on Facebook.

And I think it's interesting to compare these two sources, Facebook and Google: Facebook

where you're showing off to your friends, Google where you're just getting the information

you need.

So one of the comparisons I talk about in the book is the ways people describe their

husbands on the two sources.

The top ways people complete the phrase 'My husband is...' on Facebook is: my husband

is the best, my best friend, amazing, so cute and awesome.

And on Google the top ways people describe their husband—also one of them is 'awesome'

so that checks out—but the other ones are: a jerk, gay, so mean and annoying.

So that's kind of the difference between what people are saying when they're trying

to impress their friends and what people are saying when they're trying to get information,

and maybe being, I think, more honest.

Alcoholics Anonymous has this phrase: don't compare your insides to other people's outsides.

And I think the 21st-century big-data version of that would be: don't compare your Google

searches to other people's Facebook posts.

For more infomation >> Facebook vs. Google: The Battle of Self Projection versus Who We Really Are - Duration: 3:02.

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Why Google is like truth serum for our most personal thoughts - Duration: 2:55.

JUDY WOODRUFF: Seth Stephens-Davidowitz has used data from Google to measure all sorts

of human traits, from racism, to depression and insecurity.

He has written a book called "Everybody Lies."

And, tonight, he shares his Humble Opinion on how what we see posted on social media

often has nothing to do with the real picture.

Have a listen.

SETH STEPHENS-DAVIDOWITZ, Author, "Everybody Lies": I have spent five years studying human

beings' darkest and weirdest thoughts.

And it actually made me feel better.

I have analyzed Google search data to learn who we really are, and I frequently found

out the world doesn't work like I thought it did.

We consistently lie to friends, family members, doctors, and surveys.

But we are remarkably honest with Google.

Google serves as digital truth serum, as a modern-day confessional.

So, where do you think anxiety is highest in the United States?

Cities with overeducated, overthinking intellectuals?

Not true.

Google searches show us anxiety and panic attacks are highest in rural areas with more

people with fewer years of schooling.

How about this one?

Where do you think racism is most prevalent in the United States?

I thought it would be the Deep South.

Again, not true.

The most common racist searches are for jokes mocking African-Americans.

These searches are made the most in Upstate New York, Western Pennsylvania, and industrial

Michigan.

What percent of Web site visits look for ways to change one's body are done by women?

What's your guess?

Ninety percent?

In fact, men are almost as likely to visit sites looking for weight loss or plastic surgery.

Here's one that you will never guess.

What is the most common search in India that begins "my husband wants"?

Got your guess ready?

It is, "My husband wants me to breast-feed him."

Of course, you would never see this on someone's Instagram feed.

On social media, people try to make themselves look good.

"The National Enquirer" sells more copies than "The Atlantic Monthly," but "The Atlantic

Monthly" is 45 times more popular on Facebook.

I guess people want their friends to think they're more intellectual than they are.

When you study enough Google search data, it's hard to take the cultivated selves we

see on social media too seriously.

Sometimes, it's interesting to compare people's Google searches to social media posts.

Consider how people complete the phrase "my husband is."

First, on social media posts, when people are presenting an image to their friends,

the top five ways to complete this phrase are "the best," "my best friend," "awesome,"

"amazing," and "so cute."

Now, on Google, where people are anonymous, one of the top five is also "awesome," so

that checks out.

The other four, "mean," "a jerk," "gay," and "annoying."

There's a popular saying in Alcoholics Anonymous: Don't compare your insides to other people's

outsides.

As we move our lives online, I propose a new mantra: Don't compare your Google searches

to other people's Facebook posts.

JUDY WOODRUFF: Seth Stephens-Davidowitz.

For more infomation >> Why Google is like truth serum for our most personal thoughts - Duration: 2:55.

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Climate and Technology: An Interview with Al Gore - Duration: 6:12.

For more infomation >> Climate and Technology: An Interview with Al Gore - Duration: 6:12.

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Google Photos: Sharing made easier (short) - Duration: 0:16.

You take great photos, but you barely share any of them.

This epic shot of your buddy?

Forgot to send it.

If only something could say, "Hey!

Eric looks great in these.

Do you want to send them to him?"

Well, it can.

With Google Photos.

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