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tv   [untitled]    December 2, 2024 10:00pm-10:30pm CET

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leave, i'm afraid, i'll never see him again. no, when? oh, you lost under the stops december 18th. on d w. the, this is the, the news diesel. i top stores somebody's john. so it has an i'm a new 650000000 euro arms package for ukraine during a surprise visit to key. so a lot shots, a 2nd trip, best interest off of russia's old scanning, facing in 2022 events and wounded soldiers in hospital and promised ukrainian president full of them is that landscape a job. they would remain the country strongest supports in the city, and rebels are continuing to gain grounds and the country's north west staff to seize in control of the safety of a level in a surprise offensive. and that was bouncing in neighboring hama,
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pumpkins. some presidents, welcome to pharmacists, thousands of fleeting and seeking refuge in camps for the space people. serious government and his russian allies have been carrying out counter attacks. folks found him with his of lowest voting strikes across germany. both the off, the jump, the 2 hours of each shift to protest against white cuts of possible plants. closures comic just as a major restructuring program is essential to cut production costs. i mean, shrinking profit margins, thousands of jumps at stake. this is the, the news from that you'll find more on our website, d, w dot com the can you see what old car tires have to do with you production? here's a hand the on the,
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on the really indeed the snow on youtube. at the end of september, the hurricane heading slammed into the us state of north carolina. it cost blackouts across the state. but then something unusual started happening. not everyone was without power or something on that vehicle and it's gonna keep the lights on because the car battery started powering the hearns, it was a pretty cool solution to a pretty specific problem. but this could be the start of something much bigger. it turns out as a way to connect up thousands if not millions of costs like these into a single virtual power plant that can charge up and introduce cheap and give that power back when it's needed most. it's cold vehicles, a grid, and it's a pretty great solution to a lot of big problems from keeping your lights on to reducing your energy bill to making sure that the entire electricity grid keeps working properly. here's how it
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works and why it might not be long before it's everywhere. okay, to understand how this unassuming thing can do all that we 1st thing to talk about the grid. it's everyone's favorite, john global network of cables and power stations that lets us do pretty much everything in modern society. and the way it works is pretty simple, is the stuff that goes in from fossil fuel power plants and renewable energy. and the stuff that comes out, which is the electricity, the to charge a v and watched this video right now. it's the drop of grid operate is the balance that supply and demand perfectly. the way you can always provide the exact same frequency of electricity through this trying network. if too much that's going in the frequency could go up and fire appliances to little and it would go down causing blackouts. that take a look at how much electricity we typically use over the course of the day. this part right here called peak demand, is what usually messes everything up. that happens mostly in the evenings as we get back home from work and turn on all our appliances right at the same time. but the
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day solar energy is starting to fade out. and this is what happens when the old plug in our rebates. it's like every house with a navy doubles the amount of electricity is taken from the grid. multiply that by a few 1000000 cause and then add in the other big electric appliances that we need to start using like heat pumps. it's pretty clear that keeping everything perfectly balance is going to keep getting hotter and hotter. now that problem is typically dealt with by turning on more fossil fuel tile tends to meet demand, but that's bad for the final. and it's usually incredibly inefficient. we made a video about how much energy gets wasted this way. the other big solution that doesn't use fossil fuels is to build batteries that can store renewable energy during the day and put that energy into the create any evening or whenever it's needed most. guess for a lot of new batteries and going into electric vehicles. this is where the vehicles a grid of the 2 g comes in. the idea is that electricity flowed from the battery, the other chandra into the grid,
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and back again as needed. the principal for the quite simple that's robin book an entrepreneur who just launched the 1st b to g enabled cost sharing service in europe with $500.00 e v. so i can send electricity back into the grid when they're not being used. if there's a lot of renewables, then you're tractor, car dash notes, can you disrupt your car? that works because during the day the vehicles can charge up whenever electricity is cheap and demand is low without putting extra stress on the grid. then in the evening when peak demand arrives, grid operators can tap into those costs as extra capacity to send back into the grid on days with a lot of sun and wind. this can actually even make you a bit of cash. in some countries, good operators will pay you to charge you. your call is a need somewhere for that extra energy to go to keep everything balanced. then you can sell it into the electricity market in the evening. and now this will sounds cool for the policy in your driveway. it becomes a really big deal in this thousands, if not millions of cause with this capability. all those batteries suddenly start to function like
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a virtual power plant. let's say that isn't much renewable energy today, or people are using a lot of electricity. instead of turning on a back up fossil fuel power plant, grid operators can send out a signal to this huge network of car batteries. if you can send just enough electricity back into the grid to keep everything balance until the demand goes back down or renewables keep back in. just to get an idea or like 8000000 cars. now going to 9000000 in the lunch. and it's just like 2000000, or most of them being directional. you can, you have enough batteries for the entire reduction to month. so you can just, you can shut down dash forever. so why is this already everywhere? well, there's the obvious thing, cost b, g only works with a special by directional in photo, which would even need to be built into the call all the charge of when they made that and also need software and hardware to communicate with the grid operators. and for home charging, you'll need a small electricity made this contract, the amount of electricity going both ways. all of that needs to meet extremely high
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standards expected of both cause and anything that connects to the grid. one trial had an upfront cost equivalent to $5600.00 euros per participant. but that same child found that the annual revenue from storing cheap electricity and selling back into the grid was anywhere between 40800 years. so if those initial costs get cheaper, it could be profitable, much faster. then there's the battery problem. batteries degrade the more you charge and discharge them. using them as a pack for the grid would result in them charging and discharging a lot more frequently than they would from being used normally. and as an easiest battery degrades the distance, it can travel on a single charge, also known as its range, gets worse. so it's a comedy factor, as we're already competing over the range of that cause adding indeed to g isn't very appealing. the advocates that this isn't a problem with the new types of batteries that will be coming this down to the new easy. it's just the mind, phosphate batteries are typically able to go from full to empty and back up to full
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again, not as a cycle. well them $3000.00 times, which is more than double the amount of today's most common batteries. but once you get past the cost and battery problems, is the question of whether it's even legal, where you live in most places right now, there isn't any way to actually sell energy back into the grid from your call. and that's because regulate is interested in the idea, but pretty nervous about how to actually make it work. remember how important it is to keep everything balanced? well, controlling power plants. so wind farms is a little bit easier than thousands, if not millions of cause and charges distributed around the country, which only to be able to communicate with each other and the grid perfectly. it's your crowd to come to a battery on wheels. it's a complete new function of the car. and with that also risk risk and hold on. so if something goes wrong, then everyone is looking at the car. there are some promising things on the horizon . does it propose low in california to require by directional charging an old new eaves at some point in the future?
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and germany is vice chancellor told german media that the regulations needed to allow by directional charging would be in place by january 1st 2025. but it's going to take a long time for the types of cause you can buy will make any difference. that's especially true because unless you live in your own standalone house with a personal chombo, this technology doesn't really make any sense yet. right now, most egos do tend to earn their own home or live in the suburbs which makes the 2 g a bit easier in the show to them. but if you live in a high density city in an apartment block, there are only so many public charges for you to leave you a call plugged into a month. so until we figure that out, there's another way to make a lot of vehicles in the city by directional very quickly. and that's by converting these and these, and these big plates of vehicles with big batteries already sit around for most of the day and organized and operated on regular schedules. that's what the all the i did in the u. k. earlier this year, converting to waste collection trucks into by directional vehicles with batteries 6 times larger than the typical calm. this small scale public trial approach is
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a way to convince manufacturer is regulated. so you can see humans that this technology can work and is a good idea. they want to 1st decline it in a controlled environment. so it's, it's not a technology. you just add to a car and give it to the market. you really have to be in control also as a karmic or the word might have. the biggest impact is where the most the visa coming online. and that's china. these are a big priority for the chinese government. that's ilario and soccer, who spent over a decade researching chinese industrial and climate policies. so all the incentives are there, right? they cannot make consent of the political incentive. they want to make this work. the country has started its own v t g trials, and the number of cities setting up by directional charges and converting bust weights in order to test how easily the technology can integrate into the grid. but mazzocco says if china decides to make the 2 g a priority, all that test infrastructure could very quickly become to know that he's been
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traditionally a china has been quite good at allowing so local level experimentation. that's worked very well in the the, the industry, the trade system is very good at investing in infrastructure. so if there is something physical to be built, then i think you'll be a lot easier to see that happen. chinese or to make is like, be id already have some models with, by directional charging. and that's putting a lot of pressure on manufacturers and both europe and the united states to keep up the 1st regions of trying to slow down the rise of chinese, the imports through tax. so making that costs b t g compatible to give them the competitive edge. and so while it won't happen overnight, the days of seeing all causes just cause might soon be coming to an end. despite the high costs and regulation barriers, a lot of big players in the industry are seeing the potential for technology like b to g to change the way we think about how and when we use electricity. that could make a big difference for our wallets and the stability of all those cables,
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keeping all lights on. because if we do manage to electrify everything and the grid is going to need all the help you can get. so let us know what you think and the comments below. do you on your next call to be to g compatible. and from all videos like this, subscribed to all channel the
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might seem easy. how much can we do simultaneously? multitasking these, the modern methods. because if we do too much at one video all wrong, we mess things up, risking brain damage. so let's stop this self sabotage humans and multitasking watch. now on youtube, v. w documentary, the untold story is going to be the scientists. yeah. repos. every weekend on d w what do you see? it really is possible to reverse age researchers and scientists all over the world. for you know,
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cause of the cool. cool, great. but it's just me of the to discuss to make new or hidden information or a fact or
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a secret tenant people thinks is basically what it means. and i want to tell you something i want to tie something. i'm in a restaurant awful chemistry. i'm the last one he has to me. she walks in. he sits across from me. he says, this is the worst thing you could ever hear from an ex the okay. is that like this later? i'm from the country. don't say, well county and i never thought that this could happen to me. my number's on that
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is gonna happen. i was 25. so it was a few years ago. it was the 1st time the 1st time being with a guy the 1st time died ever. you know, and i was angry. i'm ok now though i was angry because of that. yeah. everybody. oprah winfrey, that was the only time that i remember hearing about it was own oprah winfrey and maybe that's my fault. maybe i'm very sheltered, obviously for i just never talk to wasn't my reality african, you know, the mailbox i left off. obviously instead of having sex reassignment, it was all very new to me. i never was in the sign in the doctor's office or anything. i've never once even seen a sign. we were at white, we were drinking, i broke down, he broke down, right in front of me. he was sobbing. he was sobbing uncontrollably. i've never seen a product got out. i've never seen another car, like i said, what's wrong?
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what's wrong with you. you might think and a he just told me he just stayed kindly and we were having sex with each other obviously. but he himself was out in the dark about this whole thing. i don't think he even realized how he said, impacted me. i want to find out what's happened there is he's also given me a story. i haven't given it to you and it's going to move through all of our buddies . okay, we're going to share it and doing that, we're masking him. we're blowing his identity obviously. so nobody can really imagine too much of bodies like because, well, many is here at the maximum. he's there the next minute. and it's kind of like the way a volume is going to have 2 people and ones that are focusing on the virus or focus on the live experience, the human detail of what happens to our so okay. i, we do have one more time. yeah. all right, 123, the
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i grew up in a cancer state in dublin and we were very poor family like my mom basically raised 5 of us. i always felt like the outside her and my family, cuz i was always a bit more feminist one. they were into sports, i was into books, wasn't until i started developing friendship or the career people that i was going to career places that i was going have clubbing for united. just because that's like this is home. to say it was a new world opened up to me, it's kind of an understatement. i got to understand actually, you know, i come here and make some steps there. is that normally to being on the sexual but then enjoying the clearness of the credit as well. a system really fun tie him up
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in years of repression. there wasn't one thing that it would have changed if in my college years from like, you know, 18 to 21 was the height the then i went from a very for sexual health check to find out more to tell this story. the drug of is robbie lauder, i'm shonda i sat down and the consultant was looking at this computer for a few minutes. and then she turned to me. she said probably last time you came back here. you're going to h i v tests. and i said, yeah, the normal blogs, she said when it came back positive. no, not good. you were 21. uh, yeah, i have no clue. i need a kid to be existed norton's,
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i don't know if it was denial or just something that didn't impact. so it didn't happen during the voter. you had to make funny phone calls. i certainly knew the 5 and i should a 100 didn't know anything about the driving cars. we never had those discussions. so i was kind of kept up at night because of my own huge ivy and diagnose as well as like if i didn't know anything they don't and i know had to be effective my immune system. so i decided to meet with them face to face sean being one of them just to say go get checked. although i have support there from friends and family discount. so alone, that was a shock, a lot of stuff to show that i haven't shared it again. so those 2 there for us is obviously we're making a piece of work that's not gonna take the disclosure in oregon today. and something
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i love us just to came to the front of our lines all the time is the fact that every line on every star read i arizona encounter with the text. it's based on an experience. it's a true story. it actually happened to somebody and just with regards to how we're going to work, it's totally fine with those that you don't necessarily want jump with the people and how they are in real life. that's totally okay. and when we kind of have you represent them, you know, and you'll learn from our line. and for example, it's totally okays with me that the audience are looking at a woman from government. because i probably as a young woman who was also negotiating a similar circumstance. so we're keeping those 2 kind of balls in here. and robbie has introduced me to a lot of the people whose stories were going to town and they would love to be able to tell those stories themselves. but unfortunately, a lot of them feel as though they conduct the moment. i was wondering, i'd be lucky maybe wants to kind of just sharing it a bit though, just not someone who was living with h o d and ireland today, like kind of a little bit about that stigma and white is blocking people from, you know, telling their own stories themselves. yeah. which is huge, crushed and she never put them alternately. i think that so many people in orland
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are silent about the status because society has silenced us. and i think, you know, in this whole work that we're doing, it's and answering to really big questions. you know, the 1st question is a health society side of things. how are they making us keep our secret? and the 2nd question is, what are we to as a people living in this country, allowing society to say, we have to keep the secret. and so i suppose that's a good opportunity to hear from the transcripts that we have yet to hear from the women via the testimonies that they've and very generously given us. my own doctor said to me, i'd rather tell you you're hate to. i'd be positive, been diabetic because it's more manageable. i don't know how you get that message out to the general population. i know it would surprise not people. if i came in, people don't see healthy young women like me, i'm pink, they could be h, i v positive for it could be literally, i mean, 6 months after i was diagnosed,
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i got into a bad relationship. it was really abusive. so i haven't been any one since i'm a strong person. i've always been independent. i think myself, i am so lucky. he wants to be with me even though and page i'd be positive. but now i actually feel someone shut it off me because i'm h i v positive it kills me that i can't talk better with people. not that i want to talk better way everybody. sometimes i just wish i could tell me that because we're really close. but i know it would just break his heart, so i won't ever called a man or woman. he was the same as me tray was duty. we both to parts in rid of him, power that lives. it's great. i'm always trying to show, or there are positives, finish. have all these free friends now and why never would a man a 10 sometimes. it's just,
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it's very moving because you still want to slink and she says it and really simple there. yeah. you know, like very, really simple, like that's just a reality. like we're just i have been to farming as a dry character and calls data for almost 30 years. and i like to say that i'm the most beautiful woman in the world, in my price range. and that's very beta, that's kind of a side the i grew up in the air of clear pop, you know, with people like boy george and dad, the revised be shiny like 2 little queer kid like me. apart from those people. there wasn't much else on off or in does land in the 1980s. the
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church was still very strong. when i was a kid to be homosexual with jail illegal. when i was teenager, even when i came out, it was still a legal. i've lost friends over the years and even more recently and check the related illness. and what i understood when i came out on scene and started meeting and gave people who are a bit older than me was how many people they knew and how many people they had lost in 1982 aids was something called a broad. now you can catch it here, and the number of 8 cases is doubling every 9 to 12 months with the global academic scores on growing affective action is to be hindered. complacency, body aids is frantic. here's some sound. if i have a snake put them in the past to can i remember shocking television ads that were really terrifying and the messaging all being about gay man and drug
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users. and those were 2 things that you just really didn't want to be today. if you play around the stakes up to lie, because your gambling with age meet an age kataria. and although condoms give some protection, just one activity to call us may give you age and leads to death. leaving around is a gamble, casual sex spread aids. there was really nobody in ireland if i were having this aids epidemic, but absolutely nobody is sick. it's very strange. the only person i can actually think of is tom, again, t the dice man. he was one of the few out there, clear people that i knew existence. so i was upset with him and her member as a teenager, as soon as i was kind of free to get on the bus and go to town and my own, one of this things that i be going to do is try to find the dice,
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man i'm always trying to get a wink or get him to blow case. let me get some kind of special acknowledgement because i felt like, you know, he sees me like he knows about me. he was just, you know, following his passion and, and making it work. and i think that influenced me usually everything that happened to me after that the, i think there's like a lot of images online. yeah. there's one image that i think that stands out to me more than the others just because there's a few reasons. if the all white book and i think yeah, that's really powerful greece and also that is great black cars. and i'm really interested in the plot guys because i think it's a great way to, you know, the old fashioned way to just get the message. i have that. so i haven't that. so i
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love the image because it's when the actual dice man shop is still open, which is where he got his name. he went down to the shop just by the people in the street, the address and everything. the address? yeah, that's the street gaming. yeah. there's lots of good stuff. i love the transgressive stuff. like the mona lisa. it's amazing. i'm the show girl because they're kind of confrontational, especially in that. yeah. 1980, you know, and i got some pictures here and we have never faced slow. okay. yeah. okay, click jessica. this is oh yeah. this is the one. and i love this whole look. i love the color. i love divide and what i was thinking was instead of blood that we could use lipstick cases useful? yeah, it's romantic. it's what i'm calling macro mancy. i was so even though it's like the dice mans to fine. yeah. i want to do something really loving. yeah, unless i have just love it is amazing for the jeff and i'm worth street as
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a vampire. yeah. and it's magic up because people are terrified into lives. it all the same time the elderly people squealing like children. yeah. it's my number. you know, if i guess the dad that he talks to this older guy who separate a child by him and he bought some a couple of times and make some of that. but then the last thing that old guy says is something like to be careful not to get a piece of advice. it was yeah, it was maybe a little too late for the yeah the i made it.

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