Skip to main content

tv   [untitled]    February 26, 2025 12:30pm-1:01pm AST

12:30 pm
media and was data, right, because for language and full vision for images and so text you have all this data on the internet for robotics versus data. there's no, there's no internet, all sort of what data, that free data from the web can be collected, labeled and used for basic training. now mixing generative a, i like open a eyes chat to be google's gemini, or deep 6 or one, the cost of millions to build and have already made sense of huge data sets, no need to start from scratch. so if i ask a robot he and you find who the coke can, i don't need robot data to identify radical can is on my table a ged for or like model can, can sort of show you in the image that radical ok. the result, a small team can build a robot that can navigate the world spot, what it's looking for and make decisions on its own. all in record time. for any 3rd, 4 to 4 on photos. we know this real life and know what days we are just
12:31 pm
training on an hour as an 0 was able to roll a little bit. you can see the difference between the days and days and the 13 minutes is able to bulk. now the fresh robot can focus on completing its tasks. it can even pack all that learning into a tiny box. this small ai identifies animals like deer that mike cross the train tracks, then it flashes lights or shouts at them. we analyze the end even movements. cytex in their behavior eating, sleeping. they are aggressive that ignoring the alarm and therefore, based on thoughts, we start getting different along the brain is on the device. the outdoors are full of challenges for robots, difficult terrain, changing sunlight, wins and weather easy for humans. hard for machines, this isn't the 1st robot that can play a sport, but it is learning as we're going and it's doing that thanks to a combination of in house and off the shelf
12:32 pm
a i products with the beyond the funding games. as the robots learn, the data they collect will serve other purposes elsewhere. the idea here is to go further on the break to of having robots gum the close of the human movements, the position of the gt office. that is the goal here. the robotic kitchen is about to get a lot more crowded. calling baker elders, era doha cutter. by the way, for more on the web, the summit being housing, sorry you can head online, our website is obviously runs on common there. of course, you'll find today's top stories and all the latest news stories on headlines are coming out of gaza. at this hour we will take a break, but in half an hour there will be more news announces 0 by the . this is took a, took a is the 1st country to develop
12:33 pm
a national sustainable tourism program in collaboration with the global, sustainable tourism cubs. village life here retains its job. every meal is like a feast from the farm to the table. hundreds of excavations and restoration works. this country is a place to slow down and enjoy the simple things coming to discover the natural, historical and cultural beauties. to 3 years ago this week, russia invaded ukraine, after more than a 1000 days defending their country and culture. what's been helping ukrainians fight on on these boards isn't this is this train the . 2 the
12:34 pm
guy who won this guy that was the need to be recording while from you cream, the told me we can do the session by the way up to a real cause that may be up to why was that we shut down the electricity. uh, the when conflict strikes lives are appended, torn apart, cuts short ukrainians know that all too well since rushes invasion. 3 years ago they've had to change plans, abandoned projects and to reinvent themselves many times over. some have been able to use their ours to cope and even inspire others to carry on. and we will focus on
12:35 pm
their stories today. joining us for that, we have vix, backend photographer and visual artist joining us from ukraine's capital keys, eating the mobile book a sound producer and singer with us today from louise. also in the v, usually at martin, a music therapist and on dea federal law. most actual artist, from car keys in the east of ukraine, who's joining us from good us in austria. thank you so much for your time today before we start the conversation. here are some figures to put this more into context since the stars of the war in february 2022, the united nations says almost 12000 ukranian civilians have been killed, including 622 children. 20000 people have reported the been injured for the un has specified the real number of casualties could be much higher. the war has
12:36 pm
also caused massive displacement. one 3rd of ukrainians have been forced to flee their homes with at least 3700000 currently displaced within the country. and more than 6700000 abroad. those numbers paint a very grim picture. obviously, a picture that you all know too well. can i also start by asking you what these past 3 years have meant to each one of you at a personal level? all the a if i could start with you. uh yes it's uh, 1st of all, thank you for um, letting us speak here. uh for me with the invasion um, everything changed quite drastically. and i had to leave my hometown where i was born and i knew where i had started being an artist and where i spend actually 1st
12:37 pm
3 months of war. i still have my family there and now i talk from the perspective of a displaced a refugee artist which cannot, you know, i'm not influence way. i'm and my arts. uh yeah. so it's changed quite quite a lot to and there is no um, you know, 100 percent. um. clear perspective of how the world will be for me in it the like next months it's it started to be like very difficult to planned nbc for and i'll ask for more about about the future. and i know i'm putting you all in the spot here because it is a difficult situation to put into words. but, vic, what about you, do you remember where you were back in the february 24? 2022. and what have been the hardest moments of these past 3 years?
12:38 pm
of course i don't always. yeah. i remember because it's like it was a traumatic you know, period in life of many agreeance of all ukrainians. and i have been in kias from the beginning on the full scale invasion. i'm still there. i, i mean, decided the shock i felt this, you know, really like the profound apathy. well, when doing our, do you know that the, the art felt like it's not, it's not the main thing. know who you know and when, when it comes to survival. so what you know, little by the way that you try to, to, to make your way to you, you have to what i learned is that you have to adapt. that's the, i think that's the, the important um word for this. you have to adapt to this.
12:39 pm
it is very difficult to adapt to isn't that because you guys are all going to tell me more about die, but you read that. can i ask you the same? how has the war affected you personally? i met store a movie so i guess it wasn't as stressful for the people who were in the east part of the brain or you know, but it was still the 1st couple of days. it was like so much stress because of the unknown because you don't know like how it's if they can like bring a bomb on us like, you know, in the next minutes or whatever as versus was like advocacy as well. but in a couple of days, what changed it, it was this amazing unity of people that there was like a lot of volunteering activities that put my mind off. you know, the, the fact that there is a war that much to get pick a deal that i'm united with the,
12:40 pm
my own people from different cities. you know, the fact that the volunteering still going off course, but it was such a like force that you can see that together with your own people, you can withstand that. like it was really powerful. who knew the what about you? how has this war shaped your life recently? oh yes, of course. i remember the beginning of the world was very scary for me and my family though, still i was in leave and i decided to go to poland for some time for a couple of months. but then i realized that i have to be at home. i have to do anything i can do to for 4 people uh,
12:41 pm
to help people and the way i can do it. and so i returned and started working as a site, but the best music therapist with the different categories over the quotation. uh and yeah, it is, it, it's hard to uh, to realize that a lot of, uh, friends, a lot of um, the people that i knew are the on the boards on the front, on the front lines and one line. yes. and some of them are there are injured or even that it's very sad. and this is, this is something that is really hard to realize. oh, yeah. and i, i imagine that it's also hard to come to an anniversary like this, right? 3 years on all the or you mentioned how the war has obviously impacted you as
12:42 pm
a person, but also the worst that you do in there is this particularly touching clip of a piece that you did. i want to play it to our viewers and then get you to explain a little bit more. take a look, g o u d the solutions or the sirens. i mean, once you hear them in your car, really forget the how can you, i was a part of your desire here to really document this moment. this feeling this fear. it wasn't the desire. it was the necessary thing to do to just stay sane and not to, you know,
12:43 pm
lose your mind. like the artist is where i am. i do art to reflect on things to communicate my feelings. and that's what i begin to do and to share with people how i feel through are like someone does it through music . so i'm going through literature i do like these visual art. and this was just the way to process stuff um, but also to, you know, share with people the emotions and kind of a solid arise because we, the 6 we feel they are very similar like of a ride from experience to experience. but in general are similar and to share them it was just to the, um like way not to for you alone in these to to feel um
12:44 pm
kind of for like there are people around to who who share the same thing so that you do or is this, this scared us, you awkward as angry as you are and like through are like, what are these skin do? they can express this, these feelings. they could put them in the words or in the images. and so like in a very uh, touching emotional a way. so that's why i mean, i was worked for me. yeah. i was extremely exhausted because i, i remember seeing children doing exactly that in the metro stations around keys just just putting their, their hands and, and singing to themselves not to hear those sirens in an attempt to fight the fear . i guess the, vic, you said something that i also touched me a lot and you, you mentioned this again at the start of the war really made you question your work
12:45 pm
and, and, and your, your, your passion for, for art you said that you've had felt almost depressed and your work actually helped you to get back on your feet. i'm out of that. came a project that you were still working on under the provisional title of hell was full. can you tell us more about this project? uh yes, the the, the project keller school is the portrait project of ukrainian defenders on the soldiers, paramedics, any military people with whom i met and put under them for this project. so it's still ongoing, but you're showing now and my previous project, which i did actually had the beginning of the full scale invasion, which is called pete to me i, i made this book. it's published already last year. and that
12:46 pm
was the, the, the project that, uh, that actually touched touch the war to, you know, uh huh. um, at the end of this, in this particular project that you've been working on now there wasn't just one image that stuck with us. um, you went into people's homes and there is this one shot of the gun. they're lying on the bed. this is part of an intimate space for someone. right. and you you were talking to people that were coming and going from salt lives. how difficult was it to convince them to let you do this work? they were probably tired, right? have seen and gone through so much. was that the most difficult to actually approach them and, and, and get them to let you in as well. actually, the, the difficult part is to arrange all the, you know, all the meetings because like military people is very, very, you know,
12:47 pm
fast and they shouldn't be like at 5 in the morning tomorrow somewhere, you know, so it's kind of that was the biggest one of the biggest problem challenges of this project, but um, yeah, i mean i started this project from my, uh, friends that the fight me on the front lines. so it was kind of a, you know, like the soft entrance into this project and then little by, little as i started to photography other people, other soldiers. and what many people might not know about ukraine and you're bringing soldiers. um is that they come from all walks of lives, right? because they were doctors before or i don't know, painters or mechanics. they weren't necessarily trained to be military. and because of the invasion they were just called to, to join the army and,
12:48 pm
and many have responded and 89. your husband, i believe, has also been fighting his, joined the army. and you also said that the war has major question whether to continue working with music in the midst of something so grave and urgent. eventually we incorporated some of these conflicting feelings into your work. and there's this one particular song that you reported that caught our attention. i wanted our viewers to take a listen. the it's quite a bit. right, but it speaks about something very dark,
12:49 pm
which is the experience of war. can you tell us about the importance of conveying this message like this? to me? yeah, uh, so my friends, uh, b l from uh, the 20th way, recording the song together with, uh, she suggested that we could do something together because the brand names like feel us really well. and like they have a similar story to your training. you know, when they were getting into their independence and they, you know, they feel it. so um, why we decided to do it a beach is because their world becomes more and more tired of ukraine. so we thought okay, we have to train people somehow to get them to listen to the message. so with these games, this idea of like a beat music with a serious message. so it's like it becomes a bit sarcastic. and it's like actually quite weird to listen to such
12:50 pm
a beat music with this said message. and i creates the um, you know, streaming of conflicts inside the song itself. but we felt that it is fun and people started dance into it and then listening to the words, then it would create conflict in themselves so that it would get them to may be like, listen to us and you have to be more interested in what's happening in any train because it was in august 2022 when people already started being tired of and using your grades. so now it's even worse. and it puts you guys in a very difficult situation, obviously because not only are going through an invasion that you're, you also have to convince people to, to, to remember you into remember your flight. and i think by now everybody is fully aware of how important it is a work that you do in terms of conveying that message in terms of building some bridges and creating and put the you yeah. can you tell us about the importance of
12:51 pm
art through dramatic processes such as war displacement and how we can help cope with the stress? but also hill me? well, i can say that with the beginning of the full scale invasion, the people's level of unexpired the panic attacks and different feelings of fear increased significantly. and i can say that music in particular and art in general can really help people to cope with, such as strong different hard feelings. and you know, and i mean, i work mostly with music and i can say that music and art in general has this on a direct accessed to our unconsciousness. when you're working,
12:52 pm
when you're working with music, how, how effective do you, do you see how do you have like, i don't know, some, some stories of patients that you saw actually kind of come back in. because obviously you're so in the midst of the trauma, right? is not like the trauma has ended, you're still experiencing all distress you. oh yeah. sometimes it's really hard to work and because people are very vulnerable and you know, you have to work and just to see that feeling feeling the, the, as the level of their, their feelings. and i can say that as thinking, for example, helps very much you know, as, as like a mother i, things and other by to her child enters child starts coming down the same, the music in adulthood. sometimes where it's the same way. people start
12:53 pm
coming to their excessive emotions, you know, and they began be start feeling this belonging to the community. so they feel that are understood and they know that uh or sometimes they have to find you meaning. so because i have experience working with different categories of people and some of them or for example injured or some of them lost their homes or lifestyle. and it is really hard to find new meaning on this slide because you know, it is, we have to admit that some of them i cannot leave the way of a leave to absolutely to many people have lost everything, right? not only property, but loved ones and is very difficult to come back from the us. um, i wanted to get
12:54 pm
a sense from all of you um where to from here. i mean, uh many of the people i imagine ukraine wont reporting during the war while i asked about the future. often told me this one thing about the future being on hold on all the or you, you just mentioned something very similar to the stars of the show and, and you posted another piece that you worked on on instagram and it's a very powerful piece. i will not try to say it in your brain in there, but it translates as face hope and width in a play on words from the saying that basically convey is that all people need is face hope and love you said ukrainians have been forced to replace love with weapons and that hope was also being taken away pretty soon. you would be only left with face. um, are you worried about what comes next? a yes, of course i am worried especially in the light of the recent events about them.
12:55 pm
like all these, uh, peace talks or whatever because ukrainian so obviously don't just one to the war to stop but the work to stop in, in proper way. so that we don't have a war again in a year or 2 in the largest scale. we just one piece and justice and, and the, um like the recent events bring us a really lot of, uh, anxiety. uh, but at the same time i don't, i don't see at least in my bible uh, in my, my, my friend simone, my family. and among other people whom i know the some, you know, thoughts that we should keep up, we shoot, accept the all the ceasefire under any circumstances. you know, like, because everyone knows that if we surrender,
12:56 pm
it will end up things for us forever. there won't be like any independent country su crane, and i, for example, won't have any place to come back really. even if it's like the my c d 's not destroyed to, to, if it's occupied by russia, it will be like horse to destroy it. i will start to say your thoughts on very important points. they are in terms of, of, on justice accountability for there to be peace. and i, i imagine that this is shared by many of our panelists here today as well. but i wanted to because we're almost out of time i wanted vic and irina to also way in i, i just wanted to a sense of you guys in terms of where to, from here, every now you mentioned so many other competing crisis. what do you expect? would you hope for ukraine? and i just hope that the people realize that, you know,
12:57 pm
um the word is still happening and that we still need help and that we would and of course we will try to find our cells. but it's too complicated for us to fight, brush it all by ourselves. and there is a really nice message that says that the process stops fighting. the war will stop . but if you brain instead of fighting your actual ok by ukraine and form it to your so i just hope that, you know, it's not only us once it's the piece and together with justice only together with justice and nicole and debility, not on the us, but supports us, i hope the vic, final word from you in that just says like what, what from top of my mind to, you know, like you kind didn't started to start this or, you know, what can be ended before i should just pulls its forces back. so yeah, so just there's the message that ukraine still needs to support, you know,
12:58 pm
in this even this critical year. uh huh. vic irina all. yeah. and you will the thank you so much for your time. thank you for being part of the stream today. and thank you all for tuning and do stay in touch with us on social media. use a hash tag or to handle a g stream for that. take care. and i'll see you soon. the i have the right, the boy costs anyone i want to. and the state has no business getting involved in that gods chosen and blessed us because we protect israel. i want to continue. do want to state level all that i can't support the 3 part series explodes, the implications of us and people who called lower the freedom of speech and 1st amendment rights more about the issue whatever i'm looking for. so my thing for talk to, in, quote, on which is 0,
12:59 pm
the colleges here with the, the, there's no limit to how a dream continue to study in your own event, you know, counter and things the,
1:00 pm
the, the hello 0 venue. it's great to have you with us. this is the news, our life from the coming up in the program today. i'm us says it's reached a deal for the release of the more than $600.00 pallets and prisoners. it is real refuse to hand over last week the israel's army has bombed what it says or military bases. and command center is in 7th, syria and outside damascus.

0 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on