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tv   Bares fur Rares  Deutsche Welle  January 10, 2021 6:30pm-7:30pm CET

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in the art of climate change. conference. what's in store. for the future. for tomato seeds to go to insight. into. welcome to a walk in the dark find out what these 2 were talking rivers are looking for in the forest later on in the show. hi everyone and welcome to this special edition of your acts as we explore the mysteries of the night i'm your host mainly here's a look at what's coming up. this german artist it manages to see the unseen
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. end of a look at an old submarine bunker in france which has a magical charm of itself. but 1st nightingales aren't the only creatures inspired by the night for their songs many musicians are also the most creative when other people are tucked away in their beds and that includes danish artist. for her latest album myopia she withdrew tourist studio alone except for instruments and composed during the night for 2 years well the results are melancholic pop songs but since the coronavirus pandemic put a stop to her world tour we met up with the singer and songwriter in berlin to hear why she prefers to create her music in the still of the night. when night falls in berlin only civil war starts during creative.
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team. the danish musician wrote most of her new album veiled here at night she walked the empty streets of her adopted hometown berlin in search of inspiration. i think i like the night because. i in no way turned. into epithets so. it's also a time when you're alone with your own thoughts he can't run away from. sort of the moment of truth and i. 'd
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will composers her songs by herself in her private studio. can get this feeling that you are left all alone and everybody's forgotten about. so in a way it can feel completely left i don't annoy and i think i like that after making music. she often starts with an improvised melody. wrote that and i thought oh my god that felt like a story like somebody. just telling a story like this to. construct
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astore around a melody and then there are holes. in the system that have jumping with it i'm going to. give you what i mean. the artist has released 4 studio albums since 2010 she hasn't burned up any charts but she's gained a worldwide following with her delegate often melancholy songs they've been streamed millions of times. a week she often writes her lyrics using a special technique putting them up on a cork porter's world. and found this technique you know start with the songs sometimes just a line just one line can take forever. and then this will make.
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us and sends us i feel like work within the song. she complements such classical instruments as the cello in piano with digital effects in her compositions sometimes her pitched voice is barely recognizable. the. often she spends months publishing in honing her sounds you know when you 1st. hear the song and somehow. just that close to that and maybe over at something else to plan. and then i'm happy. for live appearances she arranges her nocturnal solo sessions his concert pieces to be performed with several accompany mr pierce the rehearsals for a tour that was interrupted by the coronavirus epidemic we've been playing with
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other people. and they develop also on your ideas and you have like and that's the real rudiments of p.a.a. . in here think it's not a dream and so to me something real tangible. by a recorded day or night in a school transports listeners into a world if you're only dreaming sounds. the artist and our next report has put pape brushes aside in favor of light as his medium instead the work of have yet reality is based on geometrical light
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projections on various landscapes and then he uses photography to capture the images which resembles something out of this world if it sounds complicated that's because it is but we met up with rare in madrid to hear more about his artistic process. 3 dimensional sculpture holographic these terms describe the light installations by had getty and geometric shapes of the spanish artist's trademark he projects them onto landscapes with astonishing results it's not a moment or so i'm always seeking these almost magical moments in my works you know i'm trying to find out whether there is a harmonious relationship between geometry and nature or some morning. you know something a harmony that would move us emotionally and which goes beyond our normal perception of nature. riyad us career began in 2008 with
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a large solo photography exhibition in the rain as sophia in madrid since then he's carried out like projections in numerous public spaces and festivals. these installations are more than simple entertainment for him. when there are sometimes i feel the sort of reverberation which goes beyond our daily perception and beyond how we normally experience nature same worse than the us then there's not a lot those moments are precious and very fulfilling for me is. beneficial to even go so far as to say i live for these kinds of experiences. bebo but he said people experience is. elemental tranquil and any magic that's how the artist experiences unspoiled nature he tries to make this sensation visible in his
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projections and takes large scale photos of the results. and enough. at 1st glance the viewer sees these 2 crosses at 2 deaths. but they are actually part of a cube the corners of which i've removed. guess he'll like this but there's a shadow of that cube in the viewer's mind. and in a similar way there's an enterprise between the projected form and make sure you know. after finding a landscape d'anna starts designing his geometric forms in his madrid studio they follow strict mathematical rules he wouldn't think of using image editing software to superimpose them on a landscape photo he works on site. your syndicate.
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remember meanwhile the right geometry compliments the place. you can't do that on a computer but when i finished a geometric form it will look like there's a key to another dimension but i want you can't get that effect on screen and you have to be in the place and experiment with the shape on site. yesterday mental or physical i'm. d.n.a. usually works with standard projectors which he arranges and adjusts in his studio to test out his projections on walls. this gives him a 1st impression. but about a water of course us prepare everything as thoroughly as i can but then when the distances are much further everything might change. sometimes the image on site will look completely different than what. conditions in the mountains outside madrid are ideal thanks to a full moon. has
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a natural light source for his long exposures together with his artistic process the resulting photo acquires a magical quality. we turn our attention now to another artist who like the musician on us although uses the night as her inspiration german painter silk aboard heads out into nature after dark too as she puts it see the unseen well even in the dead of night she still manages to bring nothingness to life in the landscape around her we went along with her to witness the results. through the night and outdoors. equipped only with a gas lamp a compass and a paints and brushes she seeks out isolated spots where she can paint the night sky . while most people lie snug in their beds she gets to work sometimes 3 or 4
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nights a week the circumstances allow. the thought me off their spot on my list i often ask myself why do i paint the night. but it's simply a realm of experience that daytime can't offer all the things i see in daylight or just so much distraction. and that night to see more surfaces than textures i see more nothing than anything. it's the. feeling that mists it's a seer and so i have the freedom to interpret it any way i want and i ended up at the subject she's painting this particular night is the vast complex of the law in a works there leipsic with all its refineries and chemical plants. why not mine is just so extremely illuminated.
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it's lit up like a festival in the past the lawyers told. not many places are truly dark at night since the introduction of electric lighting cities an industrial areas are as bright as day even in the dead of night. this light pollution or light smog the strips or sleep and the saurians many nighttime creatures. the mists walk on me violent i feel ambivalent about light smog because from an artistic perspective i find it interesting and attractive. but from the standpoint of reason of course i know it's a disaster but of course. the buildings of a former cotton mill in leipzig provide space for artists like the internationally acclaimed painter neo. borg also has her studio here she generally doesn't show up until the afternoon she sleeps through most mornings and often will make
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it's a bit before 4 am the next day. the works that take shape overnight in the field get their finishing touches here. and think when i start out i think this is crazy what am i doing this is absurd. but when i'm on site i forget about all the effort and i become part of the night. before last and i'm not. i'm absolutely fascinated by how the night swallows everything up looked on and suddenly makes the 10 people become intangible. when soca 1st started painting the night 10 years ago she was trying to find out how to perceive the surroundings. later she better own lightning books and paper the night sky in various places from portugal in the south of europe to denmark in the north. with dark ties in with
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a long tradition in the arts. silk of silk aboard can't even imagine painting anything but the night she'd like to put the northern lights over iceland on canvas. and the luminous and seeds off in the knees you or the darkest nights of africa or the bright starry skies over the atacama desert in south america. to paint the many faces of darkness more than one lifetime she says . if you would like to see long. versions of our euro max reports including travel videos and adventure sports then be sure to check out our you tube channel there is a closer look at what you find there. want to learn more about european lifestyle culture. and you from. your own mind. take the plunge. or. try. and play the word
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crazy join the race and destroy. your. subscribe so you don't miss it. what happens to cars when they are no longer fit for the road well they usually make their way to the junkyard 1st scrap metal others though might be abandoned in faraway places while 2 german photographers have made it their mission to track down these old unwonted vehicles and document their final resting place and they will travel far off the beaten path long after nightfall in their search for them. sneaking through the undergrowth at night looking for rusty cars. flown and tend to a box the older and more derelicts the car the better. like this ford town or 17 am
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from the 1960 s. abandoned in the middle of a forest. doesn't want to loose and it's quite emotional no cars have personalities a voice a face and eyes and that's why i feel closer to them than to other objects somehow . and they're a bit like skeletons like you find in archaeology the remains of a car of the. old this is me that's right and at some point what this was like a 2nd skin for someone. cars in their final resting place the 2 photographers have even published a book with 110 photos of forgotten car racks. they found them in abandoned garages barns and backyards amongst other places. and territory got to know each other while studying photo design in the late eighty's. they are always hunting for
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a new motifs for their lost cars projects together. does photo stories around the world sometimes staging fast cult cars. leave us to phone takes photos for companies and experiments with artistic concepts. the last cars is a joint project which sometimes requires long trips. they keep the exact locations to themselves. we need to keep the locations a secret because otherwise the vultures will be circling the wrecks of the popular rare car the danger of it being taken apart clearly is very real somebody stripping . true. looking for car wrecks is often detective work on site. like here in the i phone south of cologne hoover sees the tip from a friend that an old ford town us disposed of sometime in the seventy's is
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supposedly located somewhere close. there was no waste disposal here who would waste wasn't picked up the industry there is this village's dump site a few people used to dump their waste there you can keep going down this road there used to be a really big dump site there this is they dump everything there is in cars bicycles anything. is missing today this would entail a hefty fine us with the if you put it. in the twilight hours the 2 photographers enter the forest. and move and need the darkness for their photos. only then can they completely control the lighting using torches and remote controlled flashes. going to give you that there's a certain dramatic an atmosphere about the situation which you want to support and at some point you realize that it's really beautiful to eliminate the interior of
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cars because they seem to come alive. here to a bart takes 4 shots using time exposures. the camera automatically lays them on top of one another. flown shines lights from different directions this analog technique is called light painting. it was as though if i have to make sure to create shadows was to eliminating all of this noise in order for it to get properly outlined. fashionable called. the process takes about 2 hours. the next day and take it or studio and. alone the finishing touches are made to the photo. just a little brightening is necessary. all other facts were done on site. by the done all of this can be worked on and we can create a reflective contemplate of mood. for thoughts
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a little bit apocalyptic this. rusty rock rediscovered and brought to life one last time before it's sent back to oblivion. and finally we head over to western france to dive down into a former submarine depot back in 1041 german occupying forces began building a gigantic structure in the port city of bordeaux and almost one and a half 1000000 tons of concrete were used to create it well it remained disused and an eyesore for many years and it was a bitter reminder of the war for the residents of the city but now this massive complex has been given a new function and is the setting for an amazing light show known as the best stand alone yeah we take a closer look. nights
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. and co-create they come together spectacularly inboard those best sounding me yeah well basins of night. the opening exhibition pays tributes to artists who stuff clint and. this it is to the multimedia show can immerse themselves in their acts. this is my 2nd time at the exhibition it's magical just magical. 2 dimensions. really immerse yourself in the zombie arts here in the dark surrounded by the lights with fabulous contrasts of color and also classical music it's just a very very beautiful vessel heard that it's a rehabilitation of this place with a magical effect but. the concrete giant evokes negative associations for many of borderless residents built by the germans during the occupation in world war 2 it
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provided space for 50 nudge submarines. now the structures being completely reinvented 12000 square meters of projection surfaces complemented by reflections of the water give the interior an if airy tale like to a tap a sphere the conversion cost over $14000000.00 euros. the 1st time i saw this building i was just overwhelmed by its gigantic dimensions and by its unique atmosphere mysterious almost frightening its but at the same time poetic that inspired us to do something with it right away it's the challenge lay in confronting this gargantuan almost hostile place with the aim of staging really impressive exhibitions your nose on your. 600000 cubic meters of concrete 20 into the structure. it covers some 10 square kilometer is of water.
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installing sophisticated audiovisual technology here was no simple task. in the produce so there are over $100.00 video projectors all of them are concealed from view and that was pretty complicated and they're heavy and had to be installed in the basins at different heights do it. now knights in music dominated venue that once stood for war and destruction a structure with a don't history has been given a bright future throughout. the tomb of some research to the submarine pens for over 10 years. after world war 2 with the bunker was forgotten it was a kind of poisonous gift to the harbor and the city and had virtually no function at all it just took some time until the turn of the century before the people of bordeaux could reconcile themselves with this former submarine base. today it's
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a very distinctive feature of a city. it's a feast for the senses and a concrete example of how it can give even tainted locations new perspectives. and a feast for the senses indeed and with that we round off the show but before we go don't forget to check out our website and follow us on social media for the latest from the world of culture and lifestyle from me and the rest of the crew here aaron thanks as always thanks for tuning in we'll see you can see.
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become a. footnote .
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what's going on here oh no. house of your very own from a printer. computer games that are healing. my dog needs electricity. shift explains delivers facts and show what the future holds oh yeah living in the digital world. shipped. in 15 minutes on d. w.
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. motorsports is it still a man. no way. to compete in a race car driving. and they are winning. our own motor sport expert consensus the fastest female race car driver is a long time ok let's read. in 30 minutes on d w. i was here when i arrived here i slept with 6 people in a room. it was hard i was fit. i even got white hair. learning benjamin language head no nothing this gives me
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a little push to make it to in truck loads of say you want to know their story the license her fighting and reliable information for margaret. it's about billions. it's about howard. it's about the foundation of the new world order the new silk road. china wants to expand its influence with this trade network. but in europe there's a sharp mornings come whenever exception money from the new superpower will become dependent on the commitment of a big name the chinese state has a lot of money at its disposal of the focus and that's how it's expanding in asserting its status and position in the world to. china's gateway to europe. starts feb 19th on d w. let me get. this
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is do w. news live from berlin indonesian teams recover what's thought to be the engine of a passenger plane that plunged into the java sea with dozens of people on board it comes just hours after they locate the flight data recorders also on the show voters in kyrgyzstan choose a new president after a violent protest out of the country's previous government in october early results show a landslide victory for the frontrunner was promising a fresh start and an end to corruption.
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omarion evanston welcome indonesian search teams have located the flight recorders of a passenger plane that crashed into the java sea on saturday 62 people were on board the boeing 737 aircraft authorities now hopes the black box data will clarify why the plane came down just minutes after taking off from jakarta. looking for clues to make sense of tragedy indonesian search and rescue teams sort through debris found by divers in the java sea. body parts and children's clothes were among the 1st items retrieved from the water. authority has also located the plane's black box recorder confirming the debris is from the missing boeing 737500
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. still hoping for unlikely good news the relatives of the 62 people on board meets with authorities where they handover d.n.a. to help identify potential victims. to work with. the no 4 people on the plane you know what we've seen the cutscene her husband lives and works here so his wife and 3 children planned to visit and holiday here in pontianak but it ended like this. in the syrian air flight left to carter airport on saturday down for a 90 minute journey to pontiac now. but lost contact only minutes after takeoff data from online service flight radar $24.00 shows the plane suddenly losing altitude and speed boats will continue to search the ocean as authorities try to
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piece together what happened to flight s.j. 12. for the latest we're joined now by journalist chris now. who is in jakarta. so the black boxes have been located what happens next. yes black boxes has been located a navy ship detected the signal from both. look at to be gone transmitted from was flight that got it got it and placed it got there and it was also confirmed way that day for us that being said you know this to see if it is from the asian pull off and across the business you bet. the next challenge is to find an. bull's black box this. although it mainly in the shell of what i heard it's only on less than 20 minutes that's all
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wrong about what they made us. this said the man that is quite big and also. with the cotton physically the man of the good but. it also may be but it under this had been but the navy commander said that. he said optimistic that they would be found soon and then hopefully tomorrow. all right said the black boxes it's hoped it will contain data that could shed light on what caused the crash but have authorities found any other clues that could explain what happened. yes i have been in contact with one of the investigated of. labor the floor of that of that these. accident. at a profit seems to be break on impact with what so we will rule out
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that the possibility all. broke up so some of the acts but also state that is supposedly the of the saudi and it by law because and where they also might be contributing in the accident because of the way that is. quite thick cloud and if you danes but of course we doubt the. black box being in that band and it's still too early. journalist press now. reporting for us from jakarta thank you very much you're welcome. preliminary results in kyrgyzstan's presidential election are pointing to a landslide victory for the populist candidate setter of he's received nearly 80
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percent of the votes in the early count. has been the interim president since the collapse of the previous government prompted by violent protests last october he's promised and to corruption in this central asian country which is a close ally of russia a referendum on expanding presidential power is also being held today. for more i'm joined now by our correspondent emily sure win in moscow to emily you've just come back short time ago from reporting in carrick how low to you so sutter pato he does appear to have huge lead in the presidential election in kyrgyzstan tell us why he seems to appeal to so many voters. well on the one hand he is very popular as we've seen now but you would think he would be more of a divisive figure after all he was actually in prison for kidnapping charges
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charges of kidnapping an official in kyrgyzstan until protesters and his supporters freed him during the recent protests he is considered a nationalist and he's kind of been presenting himself in this campaign as really a man of the people not someone who's part of the political elite he's from the countryside which is where he's also very popular in kyrgyzstan and he's been promising reform and also to kind of get rid of the corruption within politics which in kyrgyzstan has been known for being kind of a battle between different families different clans and political groups so he's promising to to get rid of all that now his critics say he's a thorough tarion but in bishkek a lot of the people i spoke to said that he's just what they want he's someone who can provide stability and a strong hand right now we should also mention that they're voting the citizens are
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also voting today not just for president but also on changes to the constitution and these changes would in fact limit the power of parliament on the one hand and boost the powers of the president on the other hand is shifting back to authoritarianism to people just want a strongman. it does seem that they want the strongman particularly after this recent revolution which is one of 3 in the last 15 years the experts that i spoke to and also many activists that i spoke to. say that they're very concerned not only that this referendum can give the president more power perhaps dangerously more power but also about the fact that many of the articles in this new constitution could mean new restrictions on democratic rights like freedom of speech i spoke to one group of activists who have been taking to the streets every week to protest against these constitutional reforms which they see as
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a path to dictatorship but on the other hand things change really quickly in kyrgyzstan as i just mentioned those 3 of evolutions and one expert i spoke to said you know if people are unhappy with what happens in this election and in the referendum people will just take to the streets again and we might see another revolution as soon as. a militia and thank you very much. all right let's get a check now of some of the other stories making news around the world more than 2 weeks after the refugee camp and leave of bosnia burned down hundreds of migrants are now moving into heated tents provided by local authorities the stranded migrants had to endure freezing temperatures for days before their new camp was set up. around 3000 people have rallied against coronavirus restrictions in the czech capital prague many of the protesters ignored social distancing rules and did not
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wear masks organizers say government measures have triggered a rise in unemployment and poverty. while the coronavirus pandemic has brought economic upheaval into many people's lives but for sex workers it's meant a choice between no income and serious new health dangers max under reports from belgium she says she loves her job but for bilgin 6 recruit life has become an uphill struggle. i guess i want to know is also you know day is a challenge i notice that every day i'm getting stomach cramps because the situation is so stressful because if i get caught i'll lose everything if i get find out today tomorrow and be in the street the national and i think the 27 year old left her job to begin sex work full time a year ago letting strangers into her home was never entirely safe but by defying
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the lockdown ban on prostitution now she's taking an even bigger gamble sit back and i go to see. if. it isn't like aids for example where you can just wear a condom and be protected end of story it's much more delicate it's like playing russian roulette but the end of the day i'm an adult and i'm choosing to take the risk so are my clients on their own do would a common point so this she says she has no choice but to keep working like many others she operates under the radar because there's no legal recognition for self employed sex workers that means no state benefits for income she'd lose during lockdown well prostitution continues behind closed doors the windows here against red light district remain empty buying and selling sex isn't illegal in belgium but making money from the sex work of others this campaign is warned this gray zone offers fertile ground for discrimination if a sex worker wants to have a loan an insurance if she wants to rent
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a house she doesn't have payslips to show how much she earns. if she goes to a bank and the bank has some suspicions the bank will say like ok maybe you're a sex workers and if you're a sex worker we will not give you a loan we'll give you an account we will give you insurance because then we are punishable by law there is hope for a change in policy belgium's new government has vowed to improve the living and working conditions of sex workers but some more this misses the point entirely support organization for women working on the streets of brussels wants to see the evolution of prostitution. taking the inside from what we see on a daily basis prostitution is sexual violence and it's sexual exploitation and women are women and children boys and girls of our. main victims of a fit all she also wants things to change but for her the priority is legal
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recognition to give thousands of sex workers here the security to weather future crises the people at the heart of it say this debate can take place without them. at least 4 people have been killed in the heaviest snowfall seen in spain in decades prime minister petra sanchez is that peeling to people to stay indoors with much of the country at a standstill emergency crews have rescued more than 2000 people from their stranded vehicles. storm filomena brought 60 centimeters of snow to madrid the most the spanish capital has seen in half a century despite widespread disruption many came out to enjoy the free conditions with mass snowball fights breaking out in the city center raising concerns about social distancing not being maintained. but there's been quite a concentration of people it's
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a shame because with the pandemic i don't think that is the most prudent thing at the moment but. there aren't enough shovels and a lot of young people are just throwing snowballs when they could be helping we're lacking leadership from the politicians. the army has been mobilized to lead the clear up with assistance from hundreds of civilian volunteers the focus is on keeping access to hospitals clear as many are due to receive deliveries of covert 19 vaccine the worst of the storm may be over but weather experts are warning people to be aware of bitter cold over the next few days. we must take extreme precautions and all our daily activity the snow fall it hit the peninsula with unusual force is now being followed by a cold wave with minimum temperatures never reached here before that requires particular caution and patience the government is organizing convoys to carry
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vaccines and food supplies to areas cut off by the snow fall and the goods mare is warning residents that for much of the next week it will remain difficult to get around. they're up to date now on t.w. news up next is our technology series shift america evans team from the advantage news team in berlin thanks for watching. why are people forced to hide in trucks. there are many places. there are many cancers. and there are many stores.
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make up your. claim. made for mines. shift special how fighting will change our lives. gene is a quantum leap in technology it'll facilitate the internet of things and self driving cars but this new generation of wireless networking technology machines can communicate with each other. stuff is excited about the switch. he knows 5 g. will revolutionize data transmission. it's not just that smartphones will connect faster to the internet and with other devices. it's got connectivity altogether it
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is being overhauled this is the most important change. crucial 5 g. one in our autonomy is communication between separate and. self driving vehicles will be called fit for the road and 5 g. will make virtual reality applications the internet of things smart factories and other new tech which more mainstream fast wireless networking technology connects to servers. which are sometimes located far away on another continent. but this is much too slow for autonomy vehicles and similar applications if you have. 5 g. on the other hand taps into decentralized processing power by using small servers connected to the network. this trustingly decreases response times armed latency.
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the goal is to reduce response times to below 5 milliseconds. virtual reality applications will build on these ultra fast response times which is good news for good stuff who's looking forward to the more tactile internet even tele surgery performed remotely across vast distances could become possible. smartphone technology would change to. the plan is for numerous small antennae to optimize our connections so we can receive personalized data packages. signals can be pinpointed amplified or dialed down as needed. this will help reduce our exposure to radio frequency radiation. to achieve higher data transmission speeds 5 g. will use more of the electromagnetic spectrum.
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stuff can't wait for his new 5 g. phone. with it can be able to simulate asli download and upload data. another perk of accelerated 5 g. data transmission speeds. thinks it is an electrical engineer and researcher he's been coordinating the 5 german it a major technology think tank with 600 scientists since 2014. what's fighting about. vs. evil radically change our lives if i get the question is whether people will realize 5 to technology said player. or in an autonomous taxi without a driver to step to the theater there are lots. of technology that's come up instead of 5 g.'s more like a discrete facilitator working in the back row it in from you but it will all
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become an essential element of our future life of doing it one of 5 g. lab germany's research areas is the tactile internet. 5 g. will offer lightning quick response times ideally as low as one milli 2nd r 1000 a 2nd. a 5 g. connectivity a top tile glow from be able to transmit precise movements to a robot and vice versa. virtual objects will feel like the real deal. creating a new interface between humans and machines. of we're not with we have found is that this millisecond that everyone talks about matters a lot if you play an instrument let's say we pluck a string but the sound doesn't reach our ear within 3 milliseconds be feel disconnected from that instrument called b. touch something in a virtual environment and receive instant haptic feedback from
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a so called i'm told and then this will also feel real to us and it often this can from a. british university of carving trees are getting a little bison 5 technology in its own network the decision has made milk learning much easier during the coronavirus pandemic. assistant professor voyagers teaches according to me seminar. he takes his physiotherapy students out an immersive virtual reality journey inside the human body. and students to be immersed within the body within a blood vessel within the muscles in the bones to everest perience something more than they call it in their traditional textbooks. this is possible thanks to the university's very own 5 g. network in combination with cloud x.
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our technology students can stream virtual reality content in real time and even when many devices are connected response times or mean like mean fast 5 g. almost why didn't the chub the information goes down so with forgery we know the chips fairly big and lots of information go goes down the tube with 5 g. that chub might wind up by about 10 times so we get far more information down which means we can get lots of very good visuals happening in real time between the lecture and the student. students can use their smartphones to stream letters a useful feature but social distancing is key. to teach students in a range of settings so they don't all have to be in the same classroom they could be across a compass and we can interact with them and have a 2 way discussion. because of the pandemic many students are working by themselves . to niggle virtual reality seminar on campus is
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a welcome change. in the riemann learning come because i but it makes it more exciting and interesting and therefore you want to learn online and it's makes your quality of work still really high even though you know physically in uni you learn are not to me very practically. in the past before k.v. thomas we were kind of using each other as models to identify kind of brain structures and muscles and this is. showing that same structures but in a much more detailed close up fashion. marking wires and it's called leagues hope they can develop many more innovative teaching methods like this using 5 g. technology. but are there health risks linked to this new mobile network technology some people are convinced there are. 2
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scientists agree. so is unofficial as critical of 5 g. technology she doesn't think we need it. just scared of 5 g. because mobile network technology generally is a health risk and find even more so it hasn't even been properly studied there it's just a few preliminary studies and those have alarming finding us that scares me and we're basically guinea pigs. so it's on a and other activists want to make people in the city of hyper aware of the danger of. radio frequency radiation her husband hans-peter fishback a similarly concerned to keep their family safe the parents do what they can to shield their home from radiation. actually we've thought about ways to protect ourselves and are all through. hanspeter measures outside radiation levels and has wire mesh in place to shield his family home from radio waves the fish baths are
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especially cautious about protecting their daughters monica and sagna from exposure inside the home everyone uses ether net cables to access the internet sources of electromagnetic radiation like why fiber tears aren't allowed. sagna does have her own smart phone but her parents have her using an internet cable to go on line. this great closer which but i and i don't think this works for all smartphones and it took awhile until my father found out which adapter i needed to make it work but yet i'm happy with it. many studies and books have been published on the effects of mobile phone radiation on the human body some say these prove the technology poses a significant health risk others highlight methodological shortcomings and the research for example in a major u.s. study that showed that radio frequency radiation caused cancer and rats germany's
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federal officer radiation protection says this finding tells us nothing about the impact of radiation exposure on humans as the rats were subjected to radiation 20 times higher than the permitted limits for humans the german agency does not classify high frequency electric magnetic fields as a health risk. to learn more reporter funk that take met with environmental epidemiologist machin husky at the swiss tropical and public health institute and basil. hosley is a renowned expert on mobile phone radiation. their dollar concerns were the $1000010.00. that's being installed people think this will lead to more radiation but is that really the case in this moment at the moment at 1st you could think there is more radiation but actually the opposite is true it means anyone using a mobile phone will be exposed to less radiation because phones will have better reception so phone signals don't have to be a strong and scientists far which reduces over already i mean there are real till the recent large scales thirty's on bret that seem to show radiation causing tumors
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how can that be explained while there are inconsistency is also in the study that the 1st tumor that was found was a schwannoma of the heart which does not occur humans there are very few cases worldwide where it has been found the 2nd point is that the rats in the study were exposed to far higher radiation levels apparently it also benefited the rats scientists as they live longer and seen at the ceiling again the rats exposed to radiation live longer than those that were not that rarely gets mentioned when you get home finish because he said that there is a long term study on occurrences of brain tumors that spans the mobile phone era of can all but this here are brain tumor incidence is sweden you can see that the curves remain constant for everyone below the age of 76 nothing has changed in the past 40 years you can see an uptick in the age brackets above 79 and i think that's
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has to do with people growing progressively older after a few months these are all because one ages the risk of developing a brain tumor increases and promoted. as is but the picture is unclear from critics who smartphone radiation seem to have that back there are gods and one of the but the other side says there is no hope risk then argue a clear causal link cannot be established for me personally here is a thought to many epidemiological studies with the testicle data from many countries in australia england scandinavia in the shadow in the. it should go higher brain tumor incidence and. the risk were as a critic say the data should show this so i'm feeling a bit more relaxed though that i've researched this.
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other sports is it still a man's. no way. to compete in race car driving. and they are winning. our as motor sport expert. female race car drivers all the time ok let's. move on to w. carted off under terrible conditions drunken cattle and into animal transport trucks for days at a time without food and water. a team of reporters follows the trust to russia central asia or north africa they want to find out who's responsible for this animal cruelty. in 48 minutes on d w literature invites us to see people in particular that i like to see
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some stupid strong minds strong and growing up. my objective is to share work and. to do the books on youtube. led. live. lives. we are living during the most extraordinary time in history. passport photo from the.

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