Allen Young

Allen Young

An Asian-American man focusing on publicly promoting and advancing AI, robotics, biotech, and nuclear-fusion powered outer space tech read less
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Episodes

Outer space immigration in America
Aug 29 2023
Outer space immigration in America
https://youtu.be/r-w-J1Ww4oo I look at the three major phases of the immigration to America when I study America in my Unified Humanity Science. The three major phases of the immigration to America is roughly divided by the advances in human transportation technology. America's national developments and transformations have been decided by the advances in human transportation technology. If and when nuclear-fusion powered outer space tech gets realized, Americans will massively expand into outer space and transform and develop America yet again, especially in outer space. The first major phase of the immigration to America happened with sail boats up until the early 1800's. The European sail boat technology advanced enough by the late 1400's during the Renaissance, it enabled Christopher Columbus to cross the Atlantic ocean to discover America, Vasco da Gama to sail around Africa to reach India for spice trade, and Ferdinand Magellan to circumnavigate the Earth by ship; up until the early 1800's, the Spaniards, the French, the British, the Irish, and the Germans immigrated to America, in sails boats that took four-month ocean crossing journey from Europe to America. The second major phase of the immigration to America happened with steam boats up until the early 1900's. Between the early 1800's to mid 1800's, the European steam boat technology advanced enough to cross oceans and completely replace sails with steam propulsion. The late-19th century steamship ocean crossing from Europe to America took less than a week. The Scandanavians, the Southern and Eastern Europeans, and the East Asians immigrated to America on steam boats between early 1800's to early 1900's. The third major phase of the immigration to America happened with commercial airplanes, which took less than 48 hours to transport a human being anywhere from Earth to America; this is the latest phase of the immigration to America that is still ongoing. The Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 removed the race-based discrimination in immigration to America, and allowed the peoples of non-Western and Northern European ethnic groups to immigrate to America. My bet is that the fourth major phase of the immigration to America will happen with nuclear-fusion reactors propelled interplanetary spaceships, which will take only several days to transport a human being from Earth to another planet in the Solar System, such as the terraformed life-supporting Venus that humans can live on indefinitely. America will expand its territory to outer space, and own the planets and planetary moons in the Solar System, and different peoples will immigrate to the outer-space American territories.
Java Spring Boot reference doc 3.1.2 outline (pt8)
Aug 29 2023
Java Spring Boot reference doc 3.1.2 outline (pt8)
https://youtu.be/wGRvIfimZy4 The Spring MVC sub-section of the “How-to” Guides section has the following sub-sub-sections: Write a JSON REST Service, Write an XML REST Service, Customize the Jackson ObjectMapper, Customize the @ResponseBody Rendering, Handling Multipart File Uploads, Switch Off the Spring MVC DispatcherServlet, Switch off the Default MVC Configuration, Customize ViewResolvers The Jersey sub-section of the “How-to” Guides section has the following sub-sub-sections: Secure Jersey endpoints with Spring Security, Use Jersey Alongside Another Web Framework The HTTP Clients sub-section of the “How-to” Guides section has the following sub-sub-sections: Configure RestTemplate to Use a Proxy, Configure the TcpClient used by a Reactor Netty-based WebClient The Logging sub-section of the “How-to” Guides section has the following sub-sub-sections: Configure Logback for Logging, Configure Log4j for Logging The Data Access sub-section of the “How-to” Guides section has the following sub-sub-sections: Configure a Custom DataSource, Configure Two DataSources, Use Spring Data Repositories, Separate @Entity Definitions from Spring Configuration, Configure JPA Properties, Configure Hibernate Naming Strategy, Configure Hibernate Second-Level Caching, Use Dependency Injection in Hibernate Components, Use a Custom EntityManagerFactory, Using Multiple EntityManagerFactories, Use a Traditional persistence.xml File, Use Spring Data JPA and Mongo Repositories, Customize Spring Data’s Web Support, Expose Spring Data Repositories as REST Endpoint, Configure a Component that is Used by JPA, Configure jOOQ with Two DataSources The Database Initialization sub-section of the “How-to” Guides section has the following sub-sub-sections: Initialize a Database Using JPA, Initialize a Database Using Hibernate, Initialize a Database Using Basic SQL Scripts, Initialize a Spring Batch Database, Use a Higher-level Database Migration Tool, Depend Upon an Initialized Database The NoSQL sub-section of the “How-to” Guides section has the following sub-sub-sections: Use Jedis Instead of Lettuce The Messaging sub-section of the “How-to” Guides section has the following sub-sub-sections: Disable Transacted JMS Session The Batch Applications sub-section of the “How-to” Guides section has the following sub-sub-sections: Specifying a Batch Data Source, Running Spring Batch Jobs on Startup, Running From the Command Line, Storing the Job Repository
Veins of the human body (v2) (pt6)
Aug 29 2023
Veins of the human body (v2) (pt6)
https://youtu.be/X3R7hr-DZ1g Left and right brachiocephalic veins (previously called innominate veins) are drained to by internal thoracic vein (previously known as the internal mammary vein), supreme intercostal vein (also known as highest intercostal vein), vertebral vein, subclavian vein, pericardiacophrenic veins, internal jugular vein. Internal thoracic vein (previously known as the internal mammary vein) is drained to by anterior intercostal veins, superior epigastric veins, left superior intercostal vein; subclavian vein is drained to by axillary vein, dorsal scapular vein, external jugular vein; axillary vein is drained to by lateral thoracic vein (sometimes debatably referred to as the long thoracic vein) which is drained to by thoracoepigastric vein. Azygos vein is drained to by right superior intercostal vein, bronchial veins, intercostal veins and posterior intercostal veins 5-11, accessory hemiazygos vein (also called the superior hemiazygous vein) and hemiazygos vein (also known as vena azygos minor inferior), superior phrenic vein. Vertebral column (also known as the backbone or spine) veins include vertebral venous plexuses (which include external vertebral venous plexuses [extraspinal veins], internal vertebral venous plexuses [intraspinal veins]), spinal veins (also known as veins of the medulla spinalis or veins of the spinal cord) (which include posterior spinal veins, anterior spinal veins [also known as anterior coronal veins and anterior median spinal veins]), basivertebral veins, intervertebral veins. Veins of the human-body abdomen and pelvis include to azygos vein system, IVC (inferior vena cava vein) (systemic circulation), and portal vein (also known as hepatic portal vein [HPV]) (hepatic portal system or portal venous system). Azygos vein system is drained to by ascending lumbar vein which is drained to by subcostal vein. IVC (inferior vena cava vein) (systemic circulation) is drained to by other veins that drain to IVC (inferior vena cava vein) or left renal vein, and common iliac veins. Other veins that drain to IVC (inferior vena cava vein) or left renal vein includes inferior phrenic veins, hepatic veins, right suprarenal vein, renal veins, right gonadal vein, lumbar veins, common iliac veins. Hepatic veins are drained to by central veins of liver (also known as central venules), liver sinusoid; gonadal veins include ovarian vein for women and testicular vein (also known as spermatic vein) for men, pampiniform plexus for men. Common iliac veins are drained to by unpaired vein that drains to common iliac veins, internal iliac vein (also known as hypogastric vein), external iliac veins.
Why Americans complain: complaining American psychology
Aug 28 2023
Why Americans complain: complaining American psychology
https://youtu.be/bHhaf1WtKAI An American citizen who complains about the American capitalism doesn't move to a communist country, because he or she wants the benefits of the American capitalism. The American citizens who complain about America, on the social media and in person, would not move to their ancestors' home countries because they want what America offers and gives to them. A Euro-American who complains about America would not move to Europe; some who do move to Europe then complain about Europe on what Europe lacks that America has. An African-American complaining about America would not move to Africa; some African-Americans who move to Africa come back to America after a few years because they realize that they prefer America. A Chinese-American complaining about America would not move to China, maybe because China is an authoritarian nation with much lower GDP per capita than America. So, what is up with complaining about America while choosing to stay in America instead of moving to some other country? What is the psychology behind complaining about America while staying in America? Why don't the American complainers just move to another country, especially their ancestors' home countries? My supposition is that the American complainers want America to be the way that they want; that's why they complain about America; the American complainers essentially say I want America to be the way I want, but it's not that. The American complainers don't care about other countries and other peoples; they care about their own realities in America, and they want their own realities to improve in America. The people born in America do not consider how bad and inadequate and tragic life is in many other countries; they just think and talk about what they don't like in America in their own American realities. An American woman complaining about the high cost of education in America is not thinking that in many countries, women are prohibited from getting education and having certain jobs due to sexism; for example, in Israel, women are prohibited from being a judge in the Rabbinical or religious courts that handle personal status matters, even in this day and age, because of the strict religious mandates in Israel in the Jewish religion. An American complaining about America's high medical costs is not thinking that more than half of the entire humanity do not have any access to medical services at all, simply because the modern biomedical services are nonexistent in many places in humanity. What the American complainers really want is better things for themselves, in America. The American complainers want lower housing costs in America; the
Java Spring Boot reference doc 3.1.2 outline (pt7)
Aug 28 2023
Java Spring Boot reference doc 3.1.2 outline (pt7)
https://youtu.be/w0_wkOUopcw The Spring Boot AntLib Module sub-section of the Build Tool Plugins section has the following sub-sub-sections: Spring Boot Ant Tasks, Using the “findmainclass” Task The Supporting Other Build Systems sub-section of the Build Tool Plugins section has the following sub-sub-sections: Repackaging Archives, Nested Libraries, Finding a Main Class, Example Repackage Implementation “How-to” Guides section covers Application Development, Configuration, Embedded Servers, Data Access, and many more. “How-to” Guides section has the following sub-sections: Spring Boot Application, Properties and Configuration, Embedded Web Servers, Spring MVC, Jersey, HTTP Clients, Logging, Data Access, Database Initialization, NoSQL, Messaging, Batch Applications, Actuator, Security, Hot Swapping, Testing, Build, Ahead-of-time processing, Traditional Deployment, Docker Compose. The Spring Boot Application sub-section of the “How-to” Guides section has the following sub-sub-sections: Create Your Own FailureAnalyzer, Troubleshoot Auto-configuration, Customize the Environment or ApplicationContext Before It Starts, Build an ApplicationContext Hierarchy (Adding a Parent or Root Context), Create a Non-web Application The Properties and Configuration sub-section of the “How-to” Guides section has the following sub-sub-sections: Automatically Expand Properties at Build Time, Externalize the Configuration of SpringApplication, Change the Location of External Properties of an Application, Use ‘Short’ Command Line Arguments, Use YAML for External Properties, Set the Active Spring Profiles, Set the Default Profile Name, Change Configuration Depending on the Environment, Discover Built-in Options for External Properties The Embedded Web Servers sub-section of the “How-to” Guides section has the following sub-sub-sections: Use Another Web Server, Disabling the Web Server, Change the HTTP Port, Use a Random Unassigned HTTP Port, Discover the HTTP Port at Runtime, Enable HTTP Response Compression, Configure SSL, Configure HTTP/2, Configure the Web Server, Add a Servlet, Filter, or Listener to an Application, Configure Access Logging, Running Behind a Front-end Proxy Server, Enable Multiple Connectors with Tomcat, Enable Tomcat’s MBean Registry, Enable Multiple Listeners with Undertow, Create WebSocket Endpoints Using @ServerEndpoint
Veins of the human body (v2) (pt5)
Aug 28 2023
Veins of the human body (v2) (pt5)
https://youtu.be/95ecJ2tYptk Left and right brachiocephalic veins (previously called innominate veins) are drained to by vertebral vein, and other veins that directly drain to brachiocephalic veins. Vertebral vein is joined to the deep cervical vein by occipital vein which drains to suboccipital venous plexus (occipital emissary vein, which passes through the condylar canal, drains to occipital vein); suboccipital venous plexus drains to vertebral vein; deep cervical vein (also known as posterior vertebral vein or posterior deep cervical vein) drains to vertebral vein. Other veins that directly drain to brachiocephalic veins include inferior thyroid veins (which are drained to by inferior laryngeal vein), thymic veins. Veins of the human-body thorax (or chest) and vertebral column include thorax (or chest) veins, and vertebral column (also known as the backbone or spine) veins. Thorax (or chest) veins include heart veins, lung veins, and superior vena cava (SVC) vein. Heart veins include coronary sinus vein (which drains to right atrium), and small cardiac vein (also known as the right coronary vein) (which drains to coronary sinus). Coronary sinus vein is drained to by great cardiac vein (also known as left coronary vein) (which is drained to by left marginal vein from left ventricle), posterior vein of the left ventricle, oblique vein of the left atrium (also known as oblique vein of Marshall) (which drains from left atrium to coronary sinus, and is connected to ligament of the left vena cava [also known as fold of the left vena cava, or vestigial fold of Marshall]), middle cardiac vein. Small cardiac vein (also known as the right coronary vein) includes anterior cardiac veins (also known as anterior veins of right ventricle) (which drain blood from the anterior portion of the right ventricle into the right atrium) (which may sometimes be drained to by right marginal vein). Lung veins include pulmonary veins (which drain from lungs to left atrium). Superior vena cava (SVC) vein is drained to by left and right brachiocephalic veins (previously called innominate veins) and azygos vein.
Java Spring Boot reference doc 3.1.2 outline (pt6)
Aug 27 2023
Java Spring Boot reference doc 3.1.2 outline (pt6)
https://youtu.be/O5nwZIF-hwo The Deploying to the Cloud sub-section of the Deploying Spring Boot Applications section has the following sub-sub-sections: Cloud Foundry, Kubernetes, Heroku, OpenShift, Amazon Web Services (AWS), CloudCaptain and Amazon Web Services, Azure, Google Cloud The Installing Spring Boot Applications sub-section of the Deploying Spring Boot Applications section has the following sub-sub-sections: Supported Operating Systems, Unix/Linux Services, Microsoft Windows Services The Efficient deployments sub-section of the Deploying Spring Boot Applications section has the following sub-sub-sections: Unpacking the Executable JAR, Using Ahead-of-time Processing With the JVM GraalVM Native Image Support section covers Create a native executable from your application using GraalVM GraalVM Native Image Support section has the following sub-sections: Introducing GraalVM Native Images, Developing Your First GraalVM Native Application, Testing GraalVM Native Images, Advanced Native Images Topics. The Introducing GraalVM Native Images sub-section of the GraalVM Native Image Support section has the following sub-sub-sections: Key Differences with JVM Deployments, Understanding Spring Ahead-of-Time Processing The Developing Your First GraalVM Native Application sub-section of the GraalVM Native Image Support section has the following sub-sub-sections: Sample Application, Building a Native Image Using Buildpacks, Building a Native Image using Native Build Tools The Testing GraalVM Native Images sub-section of the GraalVM Native Image Support section has the following sub-sub-sections: Testing Ahead-of-time Processing With the JVM, Testing With Native Build Tools The Advanced Native Images Topics sub-section of the GraalVM Native Image Support section has the following sub-sub-sections: Nested Configuration Properties, Converting a Spring Boot Executable Jar, Using the Tracing Agent, Custom Hints, Known Limitations Spring Boot CLI section covers Installing the CLI, Using the CLI, Configuring the CLI, and more. Spring Boot CLI section has the following sub-sections: Installing the CLI, Using the CLI. The Using the CLI sub-section of the Spring Boot CLI section has the following sub-sub-sections: Initialize a New Project, Using the Embedded Shell Build Tool Plugins section covers Maven Plugin, Gradle Plugin, Antlib, and more. Build Tool Plugins section has the following sub-sections: Spring Boot Maven Plugin, Spring Boot Gradle Plugin, Spring Boot AntLib Module, Supporting Other Build Systems.
Veins of the human body (v2) (pt4)
Aug 27 2023
Veins of the human body (v2) (pt4)
https://youtu.be/wNHFpMlZKm4 Cerebellar veins consist of superior cerebellar veins, inferior cerebellar veins (dorsal cerebellar veins). Dural venous sinuses (also called dural sinuses, cerebral sinuses, or cranial sinuses) include To COS (confluence of sinuses) (also known as torcular Herophili, torcula, or confluens sinuum in Latin), To CS (cavernous sinus), To IJV (internal jugular vein). COS (confluence of sinuses) (also known as torcular Herophili, torcula, or confluens sinuum in Latin) is drained to by superior sagittal sinus (also known as the superior longitudinal sinus), straight sinus (also known as tentorial sinus or the sinus rectus) (which is drained to by inferior sagittal sinus [also known as inferior longitudinal sinus]), occipital sinus. CS (cavernous sinus) is drained to by sphenoparietal sinus, superior ophthalmic vein (which is drained to by ethmoidal veins, central retinal vein [also known as retinal vein], nasofrontal vein, vorticose veins [referred to clinically as the vortex veins]), inferior ophthalmic vein; two intercavernous sinuses connect the two cavernous sinuses across the middle line. IJV (internal jugular vein) is drained to by sigmoid sinuses (also known as the pars sigmoid) which are drained to by transverse sinuses (left and right lateral sinuses) (petrosquamous sinus, if present, opens into the transverse sinus); superior petrosal sinus drains to transverse sinus; inferior petrosal sinuses drain to IJV (internal jugular vein) (basilar plexus [also known as transverse or basilar sinus] connects the two inferior petrosal sinuses); internal auditory veins (also known as veins of labyrinth) end in the posterior part of the superior petrosal sinus or in the transverse sinus; condylar emissary vein connects the suboccipital plexus of veins with the sigmoid sinus. Facial vein (also known as anterior facial vein) and common facial vein include frontal vein (also known as supratrochlear vein), supraorbital vein (which drains to angular vein), angular vein (which drains to facial vein), superior labial vein (which drains to facial vein), inferior labial vein (which drains to facial vein), deep facial vein (which drains to facial vein). Other veins that directly drain to internal jugular vein include lingual veins (which include and are drained to by dorsal lingual veins, deep lingual vein, sublingual vein), pharyngeal veins, superior thyroid vein (which is drained to by superior laryngeal vein), middle thyroid vein (also known as vena thyreoidea media in Latin).
Why narcissism, psychopathy and Machiavellianism (Dark Triad personality traits) are needed
Aug 26 2023
Why narcissism, psychopathy and Machiavellianism (Dark Triad personality traits) are needed
https://youtu.be/Fxu89q2v0N8 Why are narcissism, psychopathy and Machiavellianism—the so-called Dark Triad personality traits—needed for success in a diverse, dog-eat-dog society? Why does a complex human world require narcissism, psychopathy and Machiavellianism for success? Why do human masses crave for narcissistic, psychopathic, and Machiavellian leaders? In the most diverse and dog-eat-dog nations, narcissistic, psychopathic, and Machiavellian people become the greatest leaders. For example, the Ancient Roman Empire had Julius Caesar as its greatest leader, who was narcissistic, psychopathic, and Machiavellian to no end. The people in a position of power, the powerful people are all narcissistic, psychopathic, and Machiavellian, in one way or another. The people in a position of the greatest power, the most powerful people are the most narcissistic, psychopathic, and Machiavellian. In my Unified Humanity Science, I link human pscyhology to human outcomes. I have this conjecture to prove or disprove in my Unified Humanity Science: the more complex and diverse a human environment is, such as in an empire, the more narcissistic, psychopathic, and Machiavellian personality traits are needed for leading and maintaining that human environment. Empires with diverse peoples and colonies are founded and managed by narcissistic, psychopathic, and Machiavellian leaders; that is no coincidence. Narcissism allows and enables being self-centered and pursuing one's goals with determination and resolution against all odds and oppositions. Psychopathy allows and enables setting and pursuing extreme goals, unreasonable goals, for the maximum human achievements. Machiavellianism allows and enables one to devise and employ any means necessary to achieve one's objectives. Hence, the greatest human achievements cannot be without narcissism, psychopathy and Machiavellianism! In my Unified Humanity Science, I will QMASP (Quantify, Model, Analyze, Simulate, and Predict) the exact causes and consequences of narcissism, psychopathy and Machiavellianism at the human-brain tissular, cellular, subcellular, molecular, atomic, and subatomic levels.
Java Spring Boot reference doc 3.1.2 outline (pt5)
Aug 26 2023
Java Spring Boot reference doc 3.1.2 outline (pt5)
https://youtu.be/T8vLHaF-U2w Production-ready Features section has the following sub-sections: Enabling Production-ready Features, Endpoints, Monitoring and Management Over HTTP, Monitoring and Management over JMX, Observability, Loggers, Metrics, Tracing, Auditing, Recording HTTP Exchanges, Process Monitoring, Cloud Foundry Support. The Endpoints sub-section of the Production-ready Features section has the following sub-sub-sections: Enabling Endpoints, Exposing Endpoints, Security, Configuring Endpoints, Hypermedia for Actuator Web Endpoints, CORS Support, Implementing Custom Endpoints, Health Information, Kubernetes Probes, Application Information The Monitoring and Management Over HTTP sub-section of the Production-ready Features section has the following sub-sub-sections: Customizing the Management Endpoint Paths, Customizing the Management Server Port, Configuring Management-specific SSL, Customizing the Management Server Address, Disabling HTTP Endpoints The Monitoring and Management over JMX sub-section of the Production-ready Features section has the following sub-sub-sections: Customizing MBean Names, Disabling JMX Endpoints The Loggers sub-section of the Production-ready Features section has the following sub-sub-sections: Configure a Logger The Metrics sub-section of the Production-ready Features section has the following sub-sub-sections: Getting started, Supported Monitoring Systems, Supported Metrics and Meters, Registering Custom Metrics, Customizing Individual Metrics, Metrics Endpoint, Integration with Micrometer Observation The Tracing sub-section of the Production-ready Features section has the following sub-sub-sections: Supported Tracers, Getting Started, Propagating Traces, Tracer Implementations, Integration with Micrometer Observation, Creating Custom Spans, Baggage The Auditing sub-section of the Production-ready Features section has the following sub-sub-sections: Custom Auditing The Recording HTTP Exchanges sub-section of the Production-ready Features section has the following sub-sub-sections: Custom HTTP Exchange Recording The Process Monitoring sub-section of the Production-ready Features section has the following sub-sub-sections: Extending Configuration, Programmatically Enabling Process Monitoring The Cloud Foundry Support sub-section of the Production-ready Features section has the following sub-sub-sections: Disabling Extended Cloud Foundry Actuator Support, Cloud Foundry Self-signed Certificates, Custom Context Path Deploying Spring Boot Applications section covers Deploying to the Cloud, and Installing as a Unix application. Deploying Spring Boot Applications section has the following sub-sections: Deploying to the Cloud, Installing Spring Boot Applications, Efficient deployments.
Veins of the human body (v2) (pt3)
Aug 26 2023
Veins of the human body (v2) (pt3)
https://youtu.be/nN6JBTcwFWc Superior mesenteric vein include right gastro-omental vein, ileocolic vein, right colic vein, middle colic vein. Ileocolic vein include appendicular vein. Splenic vein include left gastro-omental vein, and inferior mesenteric vein. Inferior mesenteric vein include left colic vein, sigmoid veins, superior rectal vein. Veins of the human-body head and neck include external jugular vein, internal jugular vein, and left and right brachiocephalic veins (previously called innominate veins). External jugular vein is drained to by retromandibular vein (also known as temporomaxillary vein, posterior facial vein), and other veins that directly drain to external jugular vein. Retromandibular vein (also known as temporomaxillary vein, posterior facial vein) is drained to by maxillary vein (also known as internal maxillary vein) (which is drained to by pterygoid plexus), superficial temporal vein (which is drained to by anterior auricular veins). Other veins that directly drain to external jugular vein include posterior auricular vein, transverse cervical veins, suprascapular vein, anterior jugular veins (which communicate by jugular venous arch vein [also known as venous jugular arch vein]). Internal jugular vein is drained to by diploic veins and brain, facial vein (also known as anterior facial vein) and common facial vein, and other veins that directly drain to internal jugular vein. Diploic veins and brain include cerebral veins (which drain blood from the cerebrum of the human brain), cerebellar veins (consist of the superior cerebellar veins and the inferior cerebellar veins [dorsal cerebellar veins], which drain from cerebellum and drains to dural venous sinuses), and dural venous sinuses (also called dural sinuses, cerebral sinuses, or cranial sinuses, which receive blood from the cerebral veins, and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) from the subarachnoid space via arachnoid granulations, and mainly empty into the internal jugular vein). Cerebral veins include superficial cerebral veins and deep cerebral veins. Superficial cerebral veins include superior cerebral veins, superficial middle cerebral vein (also known as superficial Sylvian vein), inferior cerebral veins, inferior anastomotic vein (also known as the vein of Labbe), superior anastomotic vein (also known as the vein of Trolard). Deep cerebral veins include great cerebral vein (also known as the vein of Galen), internal cerebral veins (which include basal vein, deep middle cerebral vein [also known as the deep Sylvian vein], superior thalamostriate vein [also known as terminal vein]).
America is not utopia for everyone: America is Darwinian nation, American Dream is competition
Aug 25 2023
America is not utopia for everyone: America is Darwinian nation, American Dream is competition
https://youtu.be/QVL_HVoDk30 The American Dream is a nationally and globally institutionalized and sanctioned marketing tool for making the American people and other peoples to produce and consume enormous quantities and varieties of goods and services for the sake of the American and global capitalism. The American Dream must be, because capitalism must be institutionalized and vigorously pursued at all times, and poverty and laziness and incompetence must be condemned and shunned. In truth, an institutionalized capitalism, such as the American capitalism also known as the American Dream, is a brutal economic game that creates many losers as well as many winners. Playing the game of capitalism is constantly running on a treadmill and lifting weights, economically and financially, constantly exerting maximum efforts to produce and consume to the maximum extents possible. If you do not like or cannot perform to the rigors of the demand imposed by the American capitalism, you end up being an economic and financial loser in America. In truth, America is not a utopia for everyone: America is a Darwinian nation, and the American Dream is a cut-throat competition. America is a great nation only for those who are fit for the American capitalistic and democratic system. America allows wealth disparity because it is a capitalistic nation; America allows opposing voices because it is a democratic nation. If you don't want wealth disparity and opposing voices, what you want is a communistic nation ruled by a dictator in which everyone is poor except a very small number of communist leaders, and nobody is allowed to have any voices at all except the voices allowed by the communist party. If you're in favor of dictatorial communism, then you would hate America's guts, like many dictatorial communist peoples have done in the past and are still doing now. America is not a utopia for everyone. America is an unapologetic and ruthless Darwinian capitalistic nation in which only the most fitting in the environment can survive and thrive. America's wealth comes from its intra-national and international cut-throat competition, not from ease and comfort. In truth, the American Dream is not ease and comfort; the American Dream is prevailing in the American and global dog-eat-dog competition. America never was a nation of ease and comfort for everyone; America always was a ruthlessly and unapologetically competitive nation in which only the strong and capable survived and thrived. One must give one's absolute best everyday in America, if one wants to survive and thrive in America; otherwise, one wouldn't stand a chance in America.
Java Spring Boot reference doc 3.1.2 outline (pt4)
Aug 25 2023
Java Spring Boot reference doc 3.1.2 outline (pt4)
https://youtu.be/5UPDiXluIf4 IO section has the following sub-sections: Caching, Hazelcast, Quartz Scheduler, Sending Email, Validation, Calling REST Services, Web Services, Distributed Transactions With JTA. The Caching sub-section of the IO section has the following sub-sub-sections: Supported Cache Providers The Calling REST Services sub-section of the IO section has the following sub-sub-sections: RestTemplate, WebClient The Web Services sub-section of the IO section has the following sub-sub-sections: Calling Web Services with WebServiceTemplate The Distributed Transactions With JTA sub-section of the IO section has the following sub-sub-sections: Using a Jakarta EE Managed Transaction Manager, Mixing XA and Non-XA JMS Connections, Supporting an Embedded Transaction Manager Messaging section covers JMS, AMQP, Apache Kafka, RSocket, WebSocket, and Spring Integration. Messaging section has the following sub-sections: JMS, AMQP, Apache Kafka Support, RSocket, Spring Integration, WebSockets. The JMS sub-section of the Messaging section has the following sub-sub-sections: ActiveMQ Support, ActiveMQ Artemis Support, Using a JNDI ConnectionFactory, Sending a Message, Receiving a Message The AMQP sub-section of the Messaging section has the following sub-sub-sections: RabbitMQ Support, Sending a Message, Sending a Message To A Stream, Receiving a Message The Apache Kafka Support sub-section of the Messaging section has the following sub-sub-sections: Sending a Message, Receiving a Message, Kafka Streams, Additional Kafka Properties, Testing with Embedded Kafka The RSocket sub-section of the Messaging section has the following sub-sub-sections: RSocket Strategies Auto-configuration, RSocket server Auto-configuration, Spring Messaging RSocket support, Calling RSocket Services with RSocketRequester Container Images section covers Efficient container images and Building container images with Dockerfiles and Cloud Native Buildpacks. Container Images section has the following sub-sections: Efficient Container Images, Dockerfiles, Cloud Native Buildpacks. The Efficient Container Images sub-section of the Container Images section has the following sub-sub-section: Layering Docker Images Production-ready Features section covers Monitoring, Metrics, Auditing, and more.
Veins of the human body (v2) (pt2)
Aug 25 2023
Veins of the human body (v2) (pt2)
https://youtu.be/A1Ia0lscPAE Orbital veins include superior ophthalmic vein, and inferior ophthalmic vein. Superior ophthalmic vein includes nasofrontal vein, ethmoidal veins, lacrimal vein, vorticose veins, ciliary veins, central retinal vein, episcleral vein. Azygos vein includes posterior intercostal veins, and veins of vertebral column. Posterior intercostal veins include intervertebral vein. Veins of vertebral column include anterior internal vertebral venous plexus, which include basivertebral veins, anterior spinal veins, posterior spinal veins. Veins of upper limb include subclavian vein, axillary vein, superficial veins of upper limb, deep veins of upper limb. Axillary vein include subscapular vein, circumflex scapular vein, lateral thoracic vein. Circumflex scapular vein includes thoracodorsal vein, posterior circumflex humeral vein, anterior circumflex humeral vein. Superficial veins of upper limb include cephalic vein, basilic vein, median cubital vein, dorsal venous network of hand. Deep veins of upper limb include brachial veins, ulnar veins, radial veins. Inferior vena cava vein include inferior phrenic veins, lumbar veins, ascending lumbar vein, hepatic veins, renal veins, right suprarenal vein, right ovarian vein, right testicular vein, common iliac vein, internal iliac vein, external iliac vein, veins of lower limb. Renal veins include left suprarenal vein, left ovarian vein, left testicular vein. Right testicular vein includes pampiniform plexus. Common iliac vein includes median sacral vein, iliolumbar vein. Internal iliac vein includes superior gluteal veins, inferior gluteal veins, obturator veins, lateral sacral veins, vesical veins, middle rectal veins, internal pudendal vein, posterior labial veins, posterior scrotal veins. Internal pudendal vein includes deep veins of clitoris, deep veins of penis, and inferior rectal veins. External iliac vein includes inferior epigastric vein, deep circumflex iliac vein. Veins of lower limb include superficial veins of lower limb, and deep veins of lower limb. Superficial veins of lower limb include great saphenous vein, and small saphenous vein. Great saphenous vein includes external pudendal veins. Deep veins of lower limb include femoral vein, profunda femoris vein, popliteal vein. Popliteal vein includes sural veins, anterior tibial veins, posterior tibial veins. Posterior tibial veins include fibular veins. Hepatic portal vein includes cystic vein, para-umbilical veins, left gastric vein, right gastric vein, superior mesenteric vein, splenic vein.
Java Spring Boot reference doc 3.1.2 outline (pt3)
Aug 24 2023
Java Spring Boot reference doc 3.1.2 outline (pt3)
https://youtu.be/lw2_VEkwgx0 The Creating Your Own Auto-configuration sub-section of the Core Features section has the following sub-sub-sections: Understanding Auto-configured Beans, Locating Auto-configuration Candidates, Condition Annotations, Testing your Auto-configuration, Creating Your Own Starter The Kotlin Support sub-section of the Core Features section has the following sub-sub-sections: Requirements, Null-safety, Kotlin API, Dependency management, @ConfigurationProperties, Testing, Resources The SSL sub-section of the Core Features section has the following sub-sub-sections: Configuring SSL With Java KeyStore Files, Configuring SSL With PEM-encoded Certificates, Applying SSL Bundles, Using SSL Bundles Web section covers Servlet Web, Reactive Web, Embedded Container Support, Graceful Shutdown, and more. Web section has the following sub-sections: Servlet Web Applications, Reactive Web Applications, Graceful Shutdown, Spring Security, Spring Session, Spring for GraphQL, Spring HATEOAS. The Servlet Web Applications sub-section of the Web section has the following sub-sub-sections: The “Spring Web MVC Framework”, JAX-RS and Jersey, Embedded Servlet Container Support The Reactive Web Applications sub-section of the Web section has the following sub-sub-sections: The “Spring WebFlux Framework”, Embedded Reactive Server Support, Reactive Server Resources Configuration The Spring Security sub-section of the Web section has the following sub-sub-sections: MVC Security, WebFlux Security, OAuth2, SAML 2.0 The Spring for GraphQL sub-section of the Web section has the following sub-sub-sections: GraphQL Schema, GraphQL RuntimeWiring, Querydsl and QueryByExample Repositories Support, Transports, Exception Handling, GraphiQL and Schema printer Data section covers SQL and NOSQL data access. Data section has the following sub-sections: SQL Databases, Working with NoSQL Technologies. The SQL Databases sub-section of the Data section has the following sub-sub-sections: Configure a DataSource, Using JdbcTemplate, JPA and Spring Data JPA, Spring Data JDBC, Using H2’s Web Console, Using jOOQ, Using R2DBC The Working with NoSQL Technologies sub-section of the Data section has the following sub-sub-sections: Redis, MongoDB, Neo4j, Elasticsearch, Cassandra, Couchbase, LDAP, InfluxDB IO section covers Caching, Quartz Scheduler, REST clients, Sending email, Spring Web Services, and more.
Veins of the human body (v2) (pt1)
Aug 24 2023
Veins of the human body (v2) (pt1)
https://youtu.be/6ERqFvK50Ek This is my second overview on the veins of the human body—with the full human-body vein names—for my biotech R&D, especially in human longevity biotech and other medical biotechnologies. Wikipedia is used as the main reference. I haven't had the time to check the proper pronunciations, so I'll improve my pronunciations in the next version, and mispronounce some, if not all, words in this version. The human-body veins include veins of the heart, pulmonary veins, superior vena cava (SVC) vein, inferior vena cava vein, hepatic portal vein. Veins of the heart include coronary sinus vein, which include great cardiac vein, oblique vein of left atrium, middle cardiac vein, small cardiac vein. Superior vena cava (SVC) vein includes brachiocephalic vein, internal jugular vein, cerebral veins, orbital veins, azygos vein, veins of upper limb. Brachiocephalic vein includes inferior thyroid vein, inferior laryngeal vein, pericardial veins, pericardiophrenic veins, bronchial veins, vertebral vein, deep cervical vein, internal thoracic veins, supreme intercostal vein. Vertebral vein includes occipital vein, and anterior vertebral vein. Internal thoracic veins include superior epigastric veins, musculophrenic veins, and anterior intercostal veins. Internal jugular vein includes lingual vein, superior thyroid vein, middle thyroid veins, sternocleidomastoid vein, superior laryngeal vein, facial vein, retromandibular vein, external jugular vein, dural venous sinuses, diploic veins, emissary veins. Lingual vein includes dorsal lingual veins, sublingual vein, and deep lingual vein. Facial vein includes angular vein, supratrochlear veins, supra-orbital vein, external nasal veins, deep facial vein, external palatine vein, submental vein. Retromandibular vein includes superficial temporal veins, middle temporal vein, transverse facial vein, maxillary veins, pterygoid plexus. External jugular vein includes posterior auricular vein, anterior jugular vein, suprascapular vein, transverse cervical veins. Dural venous sinuses include transverse sinus, confluence of sinuses, marginal sinus, occipital sinus, petrosquamous sinus, sigmoid sinus, superior sagittal sinus, inferior sagittal sinus, straight sinus, inferior petrosal sinus, superior petrosal sinus, cavernous sinus, sphenoparietal sinus. Cerebral veins include superficial cerebral veins, internal cerebral veins, veins of brainstem, cerebellar veins. Internal cerebral veins include basal vein, and great cerebral vein.
Cause of politics (Unified Humanity Science)
Aug 23 2023
Cause of politics (Unified Humanity Science)
https://youtu.be/mjDwJfxrmYs Humans are unique and strange animals in the sense that humans create and enforce rules for governing their behaviors. Humans are individually and collectively self-programming and self-enforcing. At any given place and time in humanity, human brains think what the right way to live in that place and time is. The human notion of what the right way to live life constantly evolves in different places and different times. Civilizational and cultural wars happen to prove which human notion and way of life is superior hence right, and which is inferior hence wrong. Humans are political creatures because humans have strong convictions about what's right and wrong for them, and humans want to pursue what they believe is right for them. A political issue is what a group of human beings feels very strongly about. A political policy is a stance on a political issue. A politician promotes and pursues a number of political policies, and the supporters of the politician votes for the politician to implement the politician's political policies. In Unified Humanity Science, I look at politics as the collective manifestations of the evolving human morality, sense of right and wrong, in a society. Extreme polarity is required in politics to get voted, because human brains notice and get excited or repelled by extremes; humans do not want boring and dull issues that do not move their hearts and soul and mind. Human brains want contentious issues, extreme issues, exciting issues, not boring and dull issues; because of that, politics must be extremely contentious to be noticed and to induce people to take political actions. Politics works in cycles; liberalism rises, when conservative politics cause perceived damages and harms; conservatism rises, when liberal politics cause perceived damages and harms. In Unified Humanity Science, I look at politics as a cyclic clockwork of collective human brains. In Unified Humanity Science, I will QMASP (Quantify, Model, Analyze, Simulate, and Predict) how politics exactly work in human brains at the human-brain tissular, cellular, subcellular, molecular, atomic, and subatomic levels. Moreover, in Unified Humanity Science, I will QMASP and commercialize the most effective and efficient ways to politically influence and lead people.
Java Spring Boot reference doc 3.1.2 outline (pt2)
Aug 23 2023
Java Spring Boot reference doc 3.1.2 outline (pt2)
https://youtu.be/SFK5yJbFHz0 The Running Your Application sub-section of the Using Spring Boot section has the following sub-sub-sections: Running From an IDE, Running as a Packaged Application, Using the Maven Plugin, Using the Gradle Plugin, Hot Swapping The Developer Tools sub-section of the Using Spring Boot section has the following sub-sub-sections: Diagnosing Classloading Issues, Property Defaults, Automatic Restart, LiveReload, Global Settings, Remote Applications Core Features section covers Profiles, Logging, Internationalization, Task Execution and Scheduling, Testing, and more. Core Features section has the following sub-sections: SpringApplication, Externalized Configuration, Profiles, Logging, Internationalization, JSON, Task Execution and Scheduling, Testing, Docker Compose Support, Creating Your Own Auto-configuration, Kotlin Support, SSL. The SpringApplication sub-section of the Core Features section has the following sub-sub-sections: Startup Failure, Lazy Initialization, Customizing the Banner, Customizing SpringApplication, Fluent Builder API, Application Availability, Application Events and Listeners, Web Environment, Accessing Application Arguments, Using the ApplicationRunner or CommandLineRunner, Application Exit, Admin Features, Application Startup tracking The Externalized Configuration sub-section of the Core Features section has the following sub-sub-sections: Accessing Command Line Properties, JSON Application Properties, External Application Properties, Encrypting Properties, Working With YAML, Configuring Random Values, Configuring System Environment Properties, Type-safe Configuration Properties The Profiles sub-section of the Core Features section has the following sub-sub-sections: Adding Active Profiles, Profile Groups, Programmatically Setting Profiles, Profile-specific Configuration Files The Logging sub-section of the Core Features section has the following sub-sub-sections: Log Format, Console Output, File Output, File Rotation, Log Levels, Log Groups, Using a Log Shutdown Hook, Custom Log Configuration, Logback Extensions, Log4j2 Extensions The JSON sub-section of the Core Features section has the following sub-sub-sections: Jackson, Gson, JSON-B The Testing sub-section of the Core Features section has the following sub-sub-sections: Test Scope Dependencies, Testing Spring Applications, Testing Spring Boot Applications, Testcontainers, Test Utilities The Docker Compose Support sub-section of the Core Features section has the following sub-sub-sections: Service Connections, Custom Images, Skipping Specific Containers, Using a Specific Compose File, Waiting for Container Readiness, Controlling the Docker Compose Lifecycle, Activating Docker Compose Profiles