Knowde could make billions building the digital marketplace for the $5 trillion chemicals industry

Knowde could make billions building the digital marketplace for the $5 trillion chemicals industry

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Ali Amin-Javaheri grew up in the chemicals business.

His father had worked for Iran’s state-owned chemical company and when the family fled the country in the nineteen eighties during the Iran-Iraq war, they first settled in Houston where employers welcomed the senior Amin-Jahaveri’s experience.

Houston in the 80s was dominated by the petrochemicals industry and by the time the family later relocated to Washington State, Amin-Jahaveri was already deeply steeped in a world of covalent bonds, chemical cracking, and the molecular coupling and decoupling of matter.

For the former Texas chemical kid, moving to tech-heavy, rain-soaked Washington, dominated at the time by Microsoft, was a bit of a shock, the founder recalled. But it was the 2000s and everyone was in tech so Amin-Jahaveri figured that’d be his path too.

Those two worlds collided for the young University of Washington graduate in his very first job — his only job before launching his first startup — as a programmer and developer at Chempoint.

“Completely through happenstance I was walking around a certain part of Seattle and I walked by this building and it had all these logos outside the office. I saw this logo for a company called Chempoint and I was instantly intrigued,” Amin-Jahaveri said. “I walked up to the receptionist and asked what they were doing.”

In the summer of 2001, Amazon was an online bookseller a little over seven years old, the dot-com boom hadn’t gone completely bust quite yet and business-to-business marketplaces were a hot investment.

“It was a startup with just a handful of folks,” said Amin-Jahaveri. “There wasn’t a business model in place, but the intent was to build a marketplace for chemicals… The dot-com boom was happening and everything was moving on line and the chemicals industry likely will as well.”

Fifteen years later, Chempoint is one of the last remaining companies in a market that once boasted at least fifteen competitors — and the chemicals industry still doesn’t have a true online marketplace. Until (potentially) now, with the launch of Amin-Jahaveri’s first startup — Knowde.

A volumetric flask, used during the process of determining phosphorus content in crude edible oil, sits in a laboratory of the quality assurance department at the Ruchi Soya Industries Ltd. edible oil refinery plant in Patalganga, India, on Tuesday, June 18, 2013. Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg via Getty Images

For the vast majority of Americans, the chemicals industry remains a ubiquitous abstraction. Consumers have a direct relationship with the energy business through the movements of prices at the pump, but the ways in which barrels of oil get converted into the plastics, coatings, films, flavors, fillings, soaps, toothpastes, enamels and unguents that touch everyone’s daily life are a little bit less obvious.

It’s a massive industry. The U.S. accounted for 17% of the global chemicals market in 2017 and that percentage amounted to a staggering $765 billion in sales. Worldwide there are thousands of chemicals companies selling hundreds of different specialty chemicals each and all contributing to a total market worth trillions of dollars.

“The market is $5 trillion,” said Amin-Jahaveri. “Just to be super clear about that.. It’s $5 trillion worth of transactions happening every year.”

It’s no secret that venture capitalists love marketplaces. Replacing physical middlemen with electronic ones offers efficiencies and economies of scale that have a cold logic and avoid the messiness of human contact. For the past twenty years, different entrepreneurs have cropped to tackle creating systems that could connect buyers on one side with sellers on another — and the chemicals industry has been investors’ holy grail since Chempoint made its pitch to the market in 2001.

“The chemicals industry is the most interesting of all of them. It’s the biggest. It’s also the most fragmented,” said Sequoia partner Shaun Maguire. “There were three companies in the world that all did about $90 billion in sales and none of those three companies did more than 1.6% of sales of the entire industry.” 

Those kinds of numbers would make any investor’s jaw drop. And several firms tried to make a pitch for the hotly contested financing round for Knowde. Maguire first heard that there looking for funds to pursue the creation of the first true marketplace business for the chemicals industry through a finance associate at Sequoia, Spencer Hemphill.

Hemphill knew an early Knowde investor named Ian Rountree at Cantos Ventures and had heard Rountree talk about the new company. He flagged the potential deal to Maguire and another Sequoia partner. It only took one hour for Maguire to be blown away by Amin-Jahaveri’s pedigree in the industry and his vision for Knowde.

From that initial meeting in September to the close of the company’s $14 million Series A round on March 11 (the day the markets suffered their worst COVID-19-related losses), Maguire was tracking the company’s progress. Other firms in the running for the Knowde deal included big names like General Catalyst, according to people with knowledge of the process.

Sequoia wound up leading the Series A deal for Knowde, which also included previous investors Refactor Capital, 8VC, and Cantos Ventures.

The tipping point for Maguire was the rapid adoption and buy-in from the industry when Knowde flipped the switch on sales in early January.

An employee of International Flavors and Fragrances (IFF) picks up perfume components on December 8, 2016 at the company’s laboratory in Neuilly-sur-Seine, near Paris. / AFP / PATRICK KOVARIK (Photo credit should read PATRICK KOVARIK/AFP via Getty Images)

For at least the past fifty years, the modern chemicals industry has been defined — and in some ways constrained — by its sales pitches. There are specialty manufacturers who have hundreds of chemicals that they’ve made, but the knowledge of what those chemicals can do is often locked inside research labs. The companies rely on distributors, middlemen, and internal sales teams to get the word out, according to Maguire and Amin-Jahaveri.

The way that things are done is still through field sales teams and product catalogs and brochures and face to face meetings and all that stuff,” said Amin-Jahaveri. “This industry has not evolved as quickly as the rest of the world… And we always knew that something has got to give.”

One selling point for Knowde is that it breaks that logjam, according to investors like Maguire.

“One of the references said that they had a bunch of legacy flavors from the seventies,” Maguire said. “It was a  Madagascar Vanilla that none of their sales people had tried to sell for 25 years… By putting them on Knowde the sales numbers had gone up over 1,000%… That company does over $5 billion a year in sales through flavors.”

The change happened as the old guard of executives began aging out of the business, according to Amin-Jahaveri. “Between 2002 and 2012 nothing happened.. There was no VC money thrown at any type chemical company and then it started changing a little bit,” he said. “The first domino was the changing age demographic… these consumer product companies kept getting younger.”

Amin-Jahaveri’s previous company grew to $400 million in revenue selling technology and services to the chemicals industry. It was back-end software and customer relationship tools that the industry had never had and needed if it were to begin the process of joining the digital world. Knowde, according to Amin-Jahaveri, is the next phase of that transition.

“Our plan is to connect the chemical producers directly with the buyers,” Amin-Jahaveri said. “And provide all the plumbing and storefronts necessary to manage these things themselves.”

All that Knowde needed to do was collate the disparate data about what chemicals small manufacturers were making and had in stock and begin listing that information online. That transparency of information used to be more difficult to capture, since companies viewed their product catalog as an extension of their intellectual property — almost a trade secret, according to Amin-Jahaveri.

Once companies began listing products online, Amin-Jahaveri and his team could go to work creating a single, searchable taxonomy that would allow outsiders to find the materials they needed without having to worry about differences in descriptions.

Knowde has broken down the chemicals industry into ten different verticals including: food, pharmaceuticals, personal care, houseware goods, industrial chemicals. The company currently operates in three different verticals and plans to extend into all ten within the year.

Amin-Jahaveri knows that he’s not going to get a meaningful chunk of business from the huge chemical manufacturers like BASF or Dow Chemical that pump out thousands of tons of commodity chemicals, those deals only represent $2 trillion of the total addressable market.

That means another $3 trillion in sales are up for grabs for the company Amin-Jahaveri founded with his partner Woyzeck Krupa.

While the opportunity is huge, the company — like every other new business launching in 2020 — is still trying to do business in the middle of the worst economic collapse in American history. However, Amin-Jahaveri thinks the new economic reality could actually work in Knowde’s favor.

“It’s going to be one more trigger event for these chemical companies that they have to go online,” he said. The personal relationships that drove much of the sales for the chemicals business before have dried up. No more conferences and events means no more opportunities to glad-hand, backslap, and chat over drinks at the hotel bar. So these companies need to find a new way to sell.

Maguire sees another benefit to the movement of chemical catalogs into an online marketplace, and that’s internal transparency within chemical companies.

“Even the biggest companies in the world do not have an internal search feature even for their own chemicals,” said Maguire. “I talked to two of the biggest companies in the world. In the case of one chemist who is a friend of mine. If you are trying to formulate some new concoction how do you find what chemicals you have in the company? If it’s in my division it’s pretty easy.. If I need chemicals from another division… there’s no way to search it right now.”

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via TechCrunch https://techcrunch.com

May 1, 2020 at 12:05PM

A Clever DIY Hands-Free Sanitizer Dispenser

A Clever DIY Hands-Free Sanitizer Dispenser

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To the man with a hammer, everything looks like a nail. To the guy who owns a PVC pipe distribution company, well…

By the way, I love how he touches the thing with his hands first.

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May 1, 2020 at 08:40AM

Cars & Trucks Waffle Maker

Cars & Trucks Waffle Maker

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Cars & Trucks Waffle Maker

 | Buy

This unique waffle maker is ideal for both kids and adults who love their wheels. Instead of cranking out ordinary waffle-shaped waffles, it makes seven edible cars, trucks, and buses. We can’t quite figure out their makes and models, but they’re all just as delicious as they crash into your mouth. (Thanks, Linda!)

fun

via The Awesomer https://theawesomer.com

May 1, 2020 at 10:15AM

British Museum launches revamped online collections database early with 1.9M images

British Museum launches revamped online collections database early with 1.9M images

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On Tuesday, April 28, the British Museum announced that it is the latest institution to make digitized images of its various collections available for free online. The ‘revamped’ online collections database now contains 1.9 million images that are offered to the public under the restrictive Creative Commons BY-NC-SA 4.0 license, which allows for non-commercial use with attribution.

According to the announcement tweet from British Museum, its team expedited the release of this new online database so that the public can browse the museum’s collections while in quarantine at home. The launch follows similar big digitized collections launches from institutions like Paris Musées and The Smithsonian.

This revamp simplifies things for public users who are no longer required to register in order to use the images. Going forward, anyone can browse the online collections database and download any of the 1.9 million images for non-commercial use with attribution. Each image is scanned at a high-resolution; the online viewer enables users to zoom in on objects to view fine details.

According to the British Museum, this collection features two million years’ worth of history that spans six continents. The museum digitized nearly 4.5 million objects, making it the largest online collection of its kind. British Museum explains that its revamped interface not only provides access to these images for free but also makes it easier for the public to find the specific items they’re looking for.

The online collections are vast, including everything from ancient Egyptian sculptures to Assyrian artifacts, Greek objects, Iranian jewelry, artwork from the Roman Empire and much more. Viewers can sort through the content based on collection galleries, as well as searches using museum numbers, persons, places and keywords.

This launch is a welcomed addition to the growing body of digitized artifacts and other works made available to the general public online. However, the release isn’t without criticism. Unlike The Smithsonian and Paris Musées, both of which released their online collections with Creative Common 0 licenses, the British Museum’s collection is made available under the CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license.

Author and activist Coro Doctorow highlighted some of the concerns related to this in a recent tweet thread, pointing out, among other things, that UK law states that copyrights can only subsist in cases where the work is ‘original in the sense that it is the author’s own ‘intellectual creation.” Among other things, the nation’s copyright law [PDF, page 3] notes that it’s ‘unlikely that what is merely a retouched, digitised image of an older work can be considered as ‘original.”

Critics have also pointed out that Wikimedia Commons only allows images that aren’t ‘subject to copyright restrictions which would prevent them being used by anyone, anytime, for any purpose,’ meaning the British Museum’s digitized collections can’t be included in the Commons catalog.

Despite these concerns, the revamped database is a step in the right direction. The British Museum has been commended for the effort it put into this launch — not just for the high-resolution images and scans of the content, but also the number of tools and information the museum provides for each listing.

The database includes the name(s) of the original excavator who discovered the items, where the object was found, the materials it is made from, the technique used to craft it, its size and weight, its present condition, where it was acquired, its registration number and more. The collection is available here.

Via: ianVisits

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April 30, 2020 at 11:26AM

Robot Hummingbird Films Butterflies

Robot Hummingbird Films Butterflies

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Robot Hummingbird Films Butterflies

Link

Nature photographers John Downer Productions flew a realistic, robotic hummingbird deep into a forest packed with hundreds of millions of monarch butterflies. The drone captured amazing footage of the swarm as they awoke from their long winter’s nap in Mexico. From the BBC Series Spy in the Wild.

fun

via The Awesomer https://theawesomer.com

April 30, 2020 at 11:15AM

What to Do With an Old Nintendo Wii: 12 Fun DIY Ideas and Projects

What to Do With an Old Nintendo Wii: 12 Fun DIY Ideas and Projects

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Over 100 million Nintendo Wii consoles were bought between 2006 and 2013. As such, there’s a good chance you own one. Your old Nintendo Wii is probably stuck at the back of a cupboard or acting as a particularly expensive doorstop.

After all, so many new consoles have come along to replace it. But does your old Wii console really have to sit unused? No!

If you’ve been wondering what to do with your old Nintendo Wii, here’s a list of ways to repurpose it.

Install Homebrew on Your Old Nintendo Wii Console

Incredibly it’s not difficult to find new uses for your Nintendo Wii. After all, like any game console, it’s basically a computer hooked up to your TV. While this doesn’t mean much in normal circumstances—you’re locked to Nintendo-approved activities—jailbreaking the Wii extends the possibilities considerably.

Jailbreaking is remarkably simple. Our guide to installing the Homebrew Channel on the Wii with the LetterBomb hack shows you how. Once you’re done with that, head back here to find some new uses for your old Wii. Anything that can run on the Homebrew Channel can be installed from its repository of software, or downloaded to PC and copied to your Wii’s SD card.

Before you start, make sure you have a USB keyboard attached. This will help you to make the most of these new Nintendo Wii projects.

1. Install Homebrew Wii Games and Apps

One of the main reasons to use Homebrew is to install additional software. Among the list of titles available is a host of games. Some of these are original creations, while others are ports of open source games from other platforms.

Simply browse the list in the Homebrew Channel (HBC) and install the software. Moments later, it will be ready to use.

2. Develop Your Own Homebrew Games

You don’t have to rely on software already created by the community—you can make your own. A vast collection of homebrew games is available in HBC, and anyone can develop their own to share.

For details, check the list of Wii development tools available to download and install. These typically run on Windows or Linux PCs, with a few supporting Macs. When you’re done, upload games (or other software) to the HBC community for others to use.

3. Turn Your Old Wii Console Into a Children’s Media Center

Your Wii is permanently hooked up to your television; your computer probably isn’t. So why not use your Wii to play videos on your TV? These days media center apps (such as YouTube and Netflix) aren’t available for the Wii—but you can use WiiMC.

A media center suite for the Wii, WiiMC is easily set up via the Homebrew Browser. WiiMC can browse media shared over a network or stored on a SD card or USB hard drive. Note that WiiMC has limitations, however.

High definition (HD) video won’t play on the Nintendo Wii due to hardware shortcomings. Other drawbacks include a lack of 5.1 surround sound. This makes a Nintendo Wii running WiiMC more suitable for children than adults.

4. Use Your Wii to Play DVDs

With WiiMC installed you can also play DVDs on your Nintendo Wii. This will not work on newer Wiis, but if you bought an early model you’ve got yourself a DVD player.

This is significant because by default the Nintendo Wii doesn’t play DVDs. Despite using DVD data discs and having all of the necessary hardware to read DVD videos, the feature was disabled.

Resolutions of up to 1280×720 will play on the Wii, depending on video format. Note that while DVDs can play, CDs won’t.

5. Turn Your Wii Into a PC With Wii-Linux

Another amazing way to take advantage of the HBC on your Wii is to turn the console into a PC.

Wii-Linux can be installed via the Homebrew Channel, allowing PowerPC-compatible Linux applications to run. Many distributions for the Wii are available, including ones based on Debian, Gentoo, and Arch Linux.

For the best results (including Wi-Fi and USB support) Wii-Linux should be installed using the BootMii exploit.

Wii-Linux is also known as GC-Linux and as such can run on a Nintendo GameCube.

Not keen on Linux? The Wii can also run FreeBSD.

6. Install Minecraft Server on Your Old Wii

Not only can your old Wii run Linux, it can also host a Minecraft server. Want to play Minecraft network games? You’ve already got the hardware to do it!

This video outlines how the Minecraft server Java edition can be installed on the Nintendo Wii. Surprisingly, the result is a smooth hosting experience, although we expect that multiplayer would be limited to under 10 players.

It’s not a massive surprise that Minecraft server can run on the Wii. The modest Raspberry Pi can also host Minecraft network games.

Own multiple Wiis? You can also install a dedicated version of Minecraft, called WiiCraft.

7. Control Your PC with WiiVNC

VNC is one of the easiest ways to control one computer with another.

It’s not just limited to computers, however. You can install VNC on tablets and phones, for example. You can also stick it on your Wii if you’ve installed the Homebrew Channel.

Think WiiMC is too limited as a media player? Simply run content on a PC, VNC to it, and stream the content to your TV through the Wii. This project uses WiiVNC, available to install from HBC.

8. Use Your Wii as an Alarm Clock

An old Nintendo Wii can even get you up in the morning. The Strobe Alarm Clock is a homebrew project that lets you run a clock in full screen view.

Just remember to leave the Wii and your display switched on at bedtime!

9. Keep Time With a Wii Metronome

If you’re a musician, having a metronome to hand might be useful. While you can get metronome mobile apps, one running on your Wii is easier to control thanks to the Wiimote.

Metronome lets you specify a custom beat, from 30 to 300BPM. Simple and easy to use, this is a great idea that is effectively implemented.

10. Explore the World With WiiEarth

Love exploring the world using software like Google Earth? With WiiEarth you can do the same thing from your couch, using only your WiiMote.

This service uses map data from both Google Maps and Bing. Cycle between the options using the 2 button on your WiiMote to if something isn’t working. It’s a great way to quickly show someone directions or explore what your town looks like from the sky.

11. Install Emulators to Play Classic Games

Via the Virtual Console, Wii users already have access to a vast library of classic console and arcade games. Want more titles? With a little work you can emulate classic consoles including the NES and Game Boy Advanced.

MAME arcade emulators, PlayStation 1, and all Sega consoles can also be emulated on a Nintendo Wii running Homebrew.

Check our list of the best emulators you can run on the Nintendo Wii for full details.

12. Run DOS Software on Your Wii

It isn’t just retro console games you can run on a Nintendo Wii with the HBC. A version of DOSBox has been released for the Wii, which means hundreds of classic PC games will run.

So long as you have a keyboard and mouse connected to your Wii, these games should work with little issue. You’ll mostly be limited to mouse-driven adventures and strategy games—first person shooters don’t run too well in DOSBox on the Wii. Fortunately, most of the ones you want to play will run straight from HBC.

Check the DOSBox Wii compatibility list for full details about which games you should take the time to install.

12 Awesome Things You Can Do With an Old Wii

This is only a sample of what your Wii can do, of course: there is a lot more quality homebrew software out there, and if you know what you’re doing as a programmer you could probably make more. The only real limit is imagination.

  1. Install independent homebrew community games
  2. Develop your own indie projects
  3. Turn your Wii into a media center
  4. Play DVDs on the Wii
  5. Install Linux and use the Wii as a PC
  6. Host Minecraft network games
  7. Remotely control your PC over VNC
  8. Use the Wii as an alarm clock
  9. Install a metronome for music practice
  10. Explore with WiiEarth
  11. Play classic console games
  12. Run old PC games

It’s a good idea to regularly visit the WiiBrew wiki page for the latest homebrew releases for the Nintendo Wii. Meanwhile, if you also have the Wii’s successor, find out how to make the Wii U useful with homebrew.

Image Credit: Carlos Gutierrez/Flickr

Read the full article: What to Do With an Old Nintendo Wii: 12 Fun DIY Ideas and Projects

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April 29, 2020 at 01:02PM

8 Inexpensive Upgrades for the Remington 870

8 Inexpensive Upgrades for the Remington 870

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With more than 11 million built, it is safe to say the Remington 870 is a very popular shotgun choice.

This does not mean it comes from the factory perfect or exactly how you want it.

Below, you will see a list of eight ways to upgrade your 870 without hurting your credit card.

1. Magpul MOE M-LOK Replacement Forend

This drop-in forend has three great benefits. It is lighter, with much greater texture for more sure manipulation.

Both the front and rear have positive stop points to keep your hand from sliding off under stiff actuation, especially in wet weather.

Lastly, the M-LOK slots allow for direct mounting of accessories if that is a desire.

2. Uncle Mike’s Swivel Cap Set

Most 870’s do not have a simple option for mounting a sling. For a few dollars, it becomes a lot simpler to transport your shotgun on your shoulder.

Anyone who has turkey hunted without a sling, knows how much of a juggling act it can be with your seat, your pack, your assortment of calls and the shotgun.

This swivel cap set makes life a whole lot simpler.

Uncle Mike's Shotgun Swivel Cap

3. Aimtech Scope Mount

This is a must-have for those wanting an optic on a Remington 870 that is not drilled and tapped.

Whether you are turkey hunting, deer hunting with slugs or mounting a red dot for home defense, on those guns without the option, this is a simple fix.

Aimtech Remington 870 Scope Mount
 

4. Remington Supercell Recoil Pad

This recoil pad has a tough outer skin for long life. Below that skin, is a thick, highly aerated foam that is full of millions of little air bubbles.

These air bubbles act as mini shock absorbers as they each flatten under recoil, spreading the load and increasing the duration of the impulse.

Remington claims up to a 54 percent decrease in felt recoil.

My shoulder is not calibrated that finely, but my sight re-acquisition times improved greatly and the recoil impulse feels much more like a push than a punch, even with three-inch slugs.

Remington 870 SuperCell Recoil Pad

5. HiViz Front Sight Shotgun Bead

For those of us with less than perfect vision, this is a replacement for the front bead on those shotguns with a screw-in bead.

Check your shotgun first to confirm this, as some are and some are not. But if applicable, this “bead” jumps out at you and greatly improves both accuracy and acquisition time.

HiViz Screw In Shotgun Bead Sight
 

6. Carlson’s Seven-Shot Magazine Extension

This magazine extension is a plus-three extension. It brings the capacity up from 4+1 to 7+1.

Whether you are running your 870 in 3-Gun or a home defense scenario, this is a welcome increase in round count.

Installation is as simple as unscrewing the stock magazine cap, removing the stock spring and follower, replacing with the new spring and follower and screwing the extension into place.

I would suggest the addition of the next item as well, but that is optional.

Carlson's Remington 870 Magazine Tube Extension

7. GG&G Replacement Aluminum Follower

One of the most common failure points of the Remington 870 is caused by the degradation of the plastic follower.

When it gets gouges or the plastic starts to deteriorate due to age or use, it doesn’t follow properly.

When it gets off-kilter, jams happen. This replacement follower has a stainless steel exterior for a lifetime of gouge resistance.

The red center portion is aluminum and is painted bright red for quick visibility.

8. Wilson Combat Jumbo Head Safety

The factory safety is very functional, but is slow and requires fine motor skills.

The Wilson Combat upgrade greatly increases the surface area of the safety and makes the manipulation a gross motor skill for increased speed when it really counts.

Wilson Combat Jumbo Remington 870 Safety

Remington 870 Upgrades: Conclusion

It certainly isn’t mandatory to purchase all of these options. Some make for more convenient use, such as the sling and magazine extension tube.

Others make it easier to hit, like the fiber-optic bead or the scope mount. Yet others make for a safer shooting environment, like the over-sized safety and recoil-reducing butt pad.

Who doesn’t want the more reliable functionality of the steel and aluminum follower?

For those of you who broke your wooden forend and need to put a laser on the replacement, Magpul’s forend has you covered too.

While not exactly as mix and match as the AR platform, the Remington 870 has these and dozens of other options to enhance your shotgun shooting fun.

What upgrades have you added to your favorite shotgun? Why? Let us know in the comments below.

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April 28, 2020 at 08:47AM

Fictional Land Vehicle Comparison

Fictional Land Vehicle Comparison

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Fictional Land Vehicle Comparison

Link

Thanks to MetaBallStudios, we know how big starships and robots are relative to one another. Now, we can see how earthbound vehicles stack up in this comparison video, which looks at the sizes of everything from Ant-Man’s microscopic van to the wheeled city of London in Mortal Engines. We had no idea that an AT-AT was bigger than Gundam.

fun

via The Awesomer https://theawesomer.com

April 27, 2020 at 04:15PM

MySQL Workbench 8.0.20 has been released

MySQL Workbench 8.0.20 has been released

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Dear MySQL users,

The MySQL developer tools team announces 8.0.20 as
our General Availability
(GA) for MySQL Workbench 8.0.

For discussion, join the MySQL Workbench Forums:
http://forums.mysql.com/index.php?152

The release is now available in source and binary
form for a number of
platforms from our download pages at:

http://dev.mysql.com/downloads/tools/workbench/

Enjoy!

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April 27, 2020 at 10:50AM

Learn How to Draw From Disney Animators Through These Free Videos

Learn How to Draw From Disney Animators Through These Free Videos

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Image: YouTube/ Disney Parks

If you’ve been using some of your at-home time to learn how to draw, Disney Parks has a number of videos that might help.

The Park’s “How to Draw” series on YouTube offers videos on how to draw everyone from Elsa and Anna from Frozen to classic characters like Donald Duck and Goofy.

Each video is hosted by an actual Disney animator. Some of the videos are around five minutes, while other more complicated characters can take over 20 minutes to learn. Participating just requires you have a piece of paper and something to draw with.

In total, the playlist has 42 different character videos, so there’s a ton of variety to choose from. you can check out the full list here.

Instructions are presented in a way that they could be done by older kids as well as adults, so it could make for a fun afternoon for aspiring younger artists in your home as well.

I watched a handful of these today, and a number of the animators, especially the guy doing that Elsa video, have a Bob Ross quality to them that make them relaxing to watch, even if your finished drawings end up being better suited for the garbage can than the big screen.

geeky,Tech,Database

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April 26, 2020 at 03:29PM