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فسيلة - transplant
هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات

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Learning
Transcript
00:02Welcome?
00:05What is Kryptonism, Superman?
00:07You are speaking to any seat, Naga Jennifer
00:07I spilled kryptonite on myself and I'm still eating it
00:08Second, Superman
00:10Kryptonite, second
00:11You don't know
00:13I don't know what's wrong with you, kryptonite.
00:15Look, Superman
00:17This is the last time I'll sew your suit.
00:20He's just going to be a big-time jerk.
00:21If you go to the end
00:22I will not learn from the lesson
00:23information likepartisan
00:28Ajima
00:28Yes, thank you.
00:29I have feelings too.
00:31Oh, you beautiful
00:32Batman is not out of your mind
00:34It's natural for him to get humiliated and suffer.
00:35I feel sorry for him.
00:37Wow
00:37He's so soft, you feel sorry for him.
00:40And not on his money
00:42But I really pity his money.
00:44Many and poor
00:45I need someone to gather her up, write her down, and protect her.
00:49Ah ah ah, Umas, yanah, my sin is that you were born poor.
00:51And I use my power for good.
00:53Oh my sin
00:54You are poor and I don't like poverty
00:56Ykda yaamna
00:57Instead of supporting me
00:58Uncle, just support me with your hand.
01:00You spent your time doubting me, which blinded me.
01:02enough
01:03What's up?
01:04Shock Bank
01:05Yalo's idea is really good
01:06We are shocked by your bank
01:07The stream needs an image on the first thing
01:09But as for Taş, she tells them that we are the ones who told them
01:10Medicine and good deeds are from you
01:12My love, if you hold me accountable, you will be doing a good deed.
01:14Do any job, work is not shameful
01:21Hello?
01:22unless?
01:23Yes, what is Bat from?
01:25Right now, you're selling it?
01:27Right now, by God
01:28Okay, look
01:29I'll send you Superman with it
01:31Who is Superman that you're going to send with it?
01:32He buys us with his money, that spoiled orphan
01:34Abu Tariq Mazlam
01:35and balanced
01:36enough
01:38Don't take the thousand dollars that was his clothes
01:40Hitley Phone, this is a speeding phone
01:42Take it, uncle
01:43Hello?
01:44Hab'at Man Pasha
01:45Five minutes and be at your watch
01:47You have no problem, Fatem, may God protect him
01:48He told me, "Oh Fatim, but when I asked
01:50He told me, "Is that true?"
01:51Bruce
01:53where?
01:53He's been missing for a while now, we haven't seen him.
01:56Professor Batman?
01:59Professor B...
01:59but...
02:00You told me, where is the bank I'm robbing from?
02:10Welcome to a new episode of Al-Daheeh's religious program.
02:13If I asked you, my dear, about the coldest city in the world
02:15You will find it in the city of Iakotsk
02:16Hello Abu Ahmed, I know her
02:18Isn't this the city in Siberia where the temperature sometimes drops?
02:20Lesser, two springs in Hernheit
02:21He said no
02:22And you're so cool, my dear.
02:23So tell me, what is the most grammatical case of "dahr" in the world?
02:24What is the narrowest space in the world?
02:26In a city in Siberia
02:27Which is the coldest city in the world
02:29When photographer Stee Blanker showed it
02:30I was surprised to find he needed to wear layers of clothes on top of his...
02:33So that he can get out
02:34Camer discovered that the neighbors' visits there were very quick.
02:37People are afraid of freezing
02:38If you went down to meet your friends because you were bored at the coffee shop
02:41You're returning a bag of frozen Atayeb 12-piece
02:44Even the new Roll Flex photographer's camera
02:46I didn't escape the clock there
02:48The last one was a picture of 15 dinars only.
02:49Before the lava pan freezes
02:51Winter in Siberia is unbearable
02:53Rivers freeze
02:54Snowstorms are a daily routine.
02:57Neither calacatub nor calcin will help you
02:59Not even if you wear clothes that are too revealing
03:01The lizard is protein and the hyena is protein
03:03And the cold is the cold of the soul.
03:05And you are weak, poor, and a foreigner
03:09But let me tell you, this environment is harsh.
03:12My uncle discovered about this area
03:13Hunting tools that are up to 50,000 years old
03:16Blood, oh nations, if there are hunters in it.
03:18They settled this region in the Stone Age.
03:21Oh, this is Rasu, this is Abu Ahmed
03:22The people he sees in the cartoon are full of roles
03:23They were ordinary there
03:24This, my dear, is a very important bracelet.
03:26How did early humans tolerate the cold?
03:292017
03:30Its scientists discover a cave near the same area
03:32Those who found the tools of the enemy
03:3420,000-year-old sewing needles
03:36Here it will appear to the scientists
03:37What is the secret that made people
03:40In ancient times
03:40They live in a very cold place.
03:42The secret to simplicity was sewing the clothes.
03:44Well, man learned sewing
03:46The Stone Age is a period ranging
03:48From 10,000 years to 50,000 years
03:50At that time, humans used needles made of bone.
03:53So that they could sew the leather and dress it.
03:54Humans also developed sewing skills.
03:56They choose needles with eyes in them.
03:58You can find this in Siberia and in China.
04:00From about 45,000 years ago
04:01Know that the one who calls you is calling you to join her.
04:03This has existed for 45,000 years
04:05We also see the clothing industry in Europe
04:07It began approximately 26,000 years ago
04:09The needles will start to develop one by one
04:11Not just for making clothes
04:12But to change the shape of history
04:14A very important invitation, my dear
04:16In the history of man and the history of civilization
04:18The history of knowledge and the history of every need
04:20If we don't prefer Belbeis
04:21Relying on basic needs
04:23It doesn't work with harsh sales tactics.
04:25The one we want to live in
04:26According to historical determinism
04:27In a moment of bloodshed, a person had to wear
04:29And from that moment, my dear human, my ear wore
04:31According to anthropologist Justin Bradfield
04:34One of the most important questions in the history of all humanity
04:36What technologies have helped humans?
04:38fifty thousand years ago
04:39If they migrate from Africa and settle in another continent
04:42I read a very difficult and variable passage.
04:44And all of this happens without anyone being arrested.
04:46Her title is "The Origin of Sewing Techniques"
04:48In Eurasia and North America
04:49It is likely that human ability
04:52On the condition that they sew their clothes
04:53Especially in difficult conditions
04:54That's the reason they stayed
04:56We humans are in control of this planet.
04:58We're here because we're going to sew.
05:00Sewing didn't just help people.
05:02If he goes to difficult, remote places
05:04He will be able to attack you and survive
05:05No, this also helped him to establish a community.
05:08In these places, according to the same study
05:09Some of the sewing tools they found
05:11It wasn't just the clothes
05:12No, that contained embroidery and jewelry-making tools.
05:14It means drawings, engravings and sequins
05:16The issue also touched on aesthetics.
05:18Just like you make a milk-based dessert
05:20Or a more elegant robe for a king
05:22Here, clothes transform from a tool for success
05:24Just a means to achieve his goal
05:26Because of your need to distinguish yourself socially
05:28Distinguishing between men and women
05:29Distinguish between king and ordinary
05:31It creates a social identity within each member of the tribe.
05:34Your clothes started speaking for you.
05:36Oh Abu Ahmed, all this because of the stitching I do on the clothes?
05:38All of this happened because of the needle's movement in the fabric.
05:40My dear, please don't be alarmed by these actions at all.
05:43According to anthropology
05:45Sara Virts
05:45The act of sewing is evidence of the evolution of human capabilities.
05:49From the Paleolithic era
05:50They think in a more complex way.
05:52What is called in English began to happen
05:55Human calming abilities
05:57It began when he rubbed two stones together.
05:59He will set off fire
05:59He hunts, hunts, eats, and makes up a story that you, the mastermind, are the one telling.
06:01But my dear, when you sew
06:03So you need to think in a complex way.
06:04First, you need to think about my fabric.
06:06What is the appropriate fabric?
06:08Not everything can be sewn and worn.
06:09You also need to do a fine needle test.
06:11Then you start to stabilize the needle's movement inside the tissue.
06:15And please decide
06:16It is a complex process, both in its conception and its execution.
06:18This complex thinking
06:19He will continue to develop our capabilities until we reach the modern human.
06:22The one who built on these abilities in thinking
06:24Until he was able to create civilization
06:25Oh, Abu Ahmad, I mean sewing tools
06:27She deserves to be put in a candy box.
06:29This is for the dear Arab viewer who doesn't know what's happening in Egypt.
06:32You come and open
06:33The box of chocolates that you didn't have in
06:34Make sure you get delicious sweet chocolate
06:37And what's this you're talking about?
06:38Needles and sewing bobbins?
06:39That's how Egyptian mothers are.
06:40They always give you false hope with closed boxes.
06:42It doesn't have the things you want.
06:43The chocolate box means sewing kit
06:44Honey pickle jar
06:46Tom's Ice Cream Box
06:47Manga is a matter of religion
06:48Seven bottle, 100 carafe seven
06:50Because we just filled it
06:51From the tap
06:52The tap we turned on isn't producing water.
06:54But, my dear, there's always a problem.
06:56The development of sewing tools suddenly stopped.
06:58After the prescribed injections
06:59The subject will remain unchanged for thousands of years.
07:02And he preferred the topic as it was.
07:03Until the Industrial Revolution came
07:04In the eighteenth century
07:05When your lover, friend, and friend of the James Watt program
07:08The development of steam engines
07:09Then an infection appeared all over the world.
07:11And this, my dear
07:12Anything that can be handled by hand
07:14She continued to deal with the place
07:15That's when the infection appeared
07:16To transform everything manual into mechanical
07:18So our man rested his hand
07:20The engine is what started.
07:22And here, my dear, are the inventors thinking.
07:24How can we simulate the process of sewing this hand?
07:26But mechanically
07:281755
07:29The German Charles Friedrich takes
07:31patent
07:32For the first needle designed for cosmetic sewing
07:35Charles left the needle for years
07:37One above and one below
07:38Because you normally
07:39She is forced to lower the needle into the fabric
07:40And the tooth turned again
07:42Fabric side
07:43So you can take out the needle and make your stitch
07:45That's it
07:45It's different here, my dear.
07:46If you go down with the needle's point and twist it
07:48no
07:49No, you'll go down with the needle's point and come back up with it again.
07:51But what about the second age?
07:53The truth is that Frederick's invention had no practical use.
07:56But over time he began to guide the inventors
07:58When the needle moves vertically
08:00Up and down by years
08:01A machine might appear that helps her join the stitch.
08:04Without human intervention
08:05Because of the year 1830
08:07French tailor Barthélemy Timoney
08:09He invented the first sewing machine that sews over fabric.
08:12The Timoner machine was introduced to the world for the first time
08:14Chain stitch sewing technique
08:17If you look at the video, my friend, you'll find it at the top
08:19The threads intertwine and form a chain.
08:21It seems very magical
08:22While the secret to the whole matter
08:24mechanical
08:24Thanks to the existing ring below
08:26You receive our thread from the needle
08:27She's the one who does the stitch for you.
08:29When the needle comes out upwards
08:30The loop begins with a second stitch.
08:31And so on and so forth
08:33A process that prefers to repeat automatically
08:34Each stitch pulls the loop before it.
08:36To make stitches
08:37A continuous line shaped like a chain-like support
08:39That, my dear, was a revolution.
08:40Because it was much, much faster
08:42From hand sewing
08:43This made Timoner do
08:4480 sewing positions
08:46And the factory opens
08:46And the demand for his place is increasing.
08:48Especially when I receive an order from the French army
08:50He makes his military uniform.
08:52O Abu Ahmad
08:53You will find a flag with the other
08:54Ershan's work met
08:55Come on, my dear, the sample is so ugly that it
08:57Timeless
08:58Going back in time
08:59And he influenced the people
09:00Because, my dear
09:01A group of saboteurs
09:03They will burn down the factory
09:04Yalawi
09:04Tamounin himself
09:05They miraculously escaped death
09:07Yalawi
09:07He told him
09:08O Throne and the two sons of Abu Ahmad the destroyers
09:09Those who could have said the man
09:11Upon arriving at this factory
09:12The truth, my dear
09:12The one who did this
09:13There were dozens
09:14tailors
09:15manual
09:16French
09:16They were afraid for their jobs
09:18From the new invention
09:19Those who will be home
09:20They will decide whether to stop by force.
09:22Are you going to find someone to replace me?
09:23Okay, and I swear I'll set you on fire.
09:24This, my dear
09:25It will create many inventors
09:26They are afraid if they hide in the sewing
09:28So we make the invention and then they come and kill me?
09:30No, I don't love
09:30There were also people who considered it forbidden
09:32She is working on new inventions in sewing.
09:34Like the American swindler
09:35Walter Hunt
09:36The one whose development was halted when she was a seamstress
09:38When I explained it, I convinced him.
09:39This could make him
09:40It cuts off the livelihood of poor tailors
09:42Malwi Al-Shughl
09:42But Hamad, don't take it personally.
09:44It is clear from his words
09:44The bullet has been fired.
09:46The one who invented the work
09:47What was Moinin, my dear?
09:48It was a very basic machine
09:49And Gaza, the series we explained
09:51And its machine
09:52He was still at the beginning
09:53It's still early days
09:54The stitching wasn't strong.
09:55It was easy to undo
09:56Because the whole process
09:57It relied on the thread
09:58If you hold the end of the thread
09:59You will be able to undo all the stitching
10:00This made the machine suitable for cosmetic sewing.
10:03Just a machine to remove clothes
10:05Not for sewing
10:05We still need a method
10:07Don't undo the stitching
10:08And her stitch will be stronger
10:09And here comes the role of a man named Elias Hawi
10:11The footman was invented by McCain in 1846
10:14You use two threads for sewing, not just one.
10:17This, my dear, will be called a closed stitch.
10:19Loxstitch
10:19All we need are two separate spools of sewing
10:22One is ordinary, and the other is a hut tomorrow.
10:24As you can see here, my dear
10:25The needle passes through the fabric underneath
10:26Then the hut is run through the entire spool of thread
10:29Through a ring in the upper pulley
10:31The day I took the line from here
10:32The needle then looks up immediately.
10:33And the second line is drawn
10:35And thus we have works to match between the two lines
10:37And we made the first stitch
10:38That's why we call it the lockstitch
10:40He will be dealing with a competition featuring Elias's machine.
10:42The one that deals with two stitches
10:43And in this presentation, his machine
10:44You will count five hand-sewings
10:47The dear hut confirmed very
10:48But the problem was that she was working the stitch in only one direction.
10:51His party still needs fairness and development
10:53Final and final development
10:55Hey, from the New World
10:56Specifically, the state of Boston, USA
10:58Where a person lived
10:59You may have heard his name
11:00Isaac Singer or Isaac Singer
11:03Singer, my dear, was a failed actor forty years
11:05He decides to quit acting and focus on his inventions.
11:07The man had some basic experience with the machine.
11:09And he's still using a machine that digs into the nose
11:11But my family, in the name of God, God willing, no one will buy it at all
11:13The owner of the workshop where Singer used to work
11:15In his machine, he will tell him
11:16Yasta, why don't you just look at that sewing machine?
11:18It's not working properly, no one wants to buy it.
11:20I swear, if my hands could develop it
11:21It's not very good, I don't use it anymore
11:23It's not expensive anymore, it's from the workshop.
11:24Here, my dear Singer, he'll look at him and say to him
11:26Do you want to get rid of it with a sewing machine?
11:27Do you want to get rid of the one thing?
11:29Which makes women silent
11:30Oh man, you fool
11:31This sentence, my dear, does not appear
11:33This is part of Singer's thinking
11:34The one whose thinking and imagination are always linked
11:36Sewing is an activity for women.
11:37This is the one who plays a very big role in our situation.
11:39Singer after studying the machine
11:41Not just fix it
11:42This also created a more efficient and improved model of it.
11:44Singer will simply take the ideas of everyone who came before him.
11:46And create it with some
11:47He comes up with ingenious solutions for every problem they face.
11:50The Singer sewing machine will use foot pedals.
11:52In motion control
11:53He will also add a pedal to his machine.
11:55It controls the needle speed.
11:57And this, my dear, solves a big problem.
11:58Because the sewing machine is a manual labor machine
12:00This required a great deal of effort.
12:01And it slows down the process itself.
12:03But after the invention of the pedal of the man
12:04The user is able to use his leg as well.
12:06In operating the machine
12:07This saves the hands energy for sewing and moving the fabric.
12:10You can see the DJ from above.
12:11And under the leg of Lynch
12:12Therefore, the production process became faster and more efficient.
12:15Also with the pedal
12:16The seamstress who uses a sewing machine
12:17He can fix the fabric with his hands in a better way
12:19So here
12:20Fewer mistakes can occur during sewing
12:22And after just 18 days, the changes Singer made
12:24He will receive a patent for his machine.
12:27And the year 1851
12:28He will establish the company I Am Singer & Co
12:30In partnership with attorney Edward Clare
12:32And the machine will come out, the one that's lit
12:34Or the Singer sewing machine
12:35In the year 1852
12:36To achieve overwhelming success
12:38And the machine is still in use today.
12:40Singer sewing machine
12:40Hey, I'm telling you
12:41The ordinary amis is made by hand
12:43On average, it requires about 20,000 stitches.
12:45And the average stitch length of a professional seamstress
12:48Performance in the job
12:4935 stitches per minute
12:51It means a seamstress who makes one Amis piece by hand.
12:53She needs 14 hours of work from her time.
12:56Now then
12:56How many stitches per minute does a Singer sewing machine do?
12:583000 stitches per minute
13:00to imagine
13:00I praise the tailors if they make the same shirt
13:03In just one hour
13:04And with a lot of effort, I turn over a lot
13:05Instead of taking 14 hours
13:06And a great effort
13:07For the second sports party
13:09In 400, Singer said
13:10The effort is repeated
13:11Two thousand professional tailors
13:12This machine made sewing faster.
13:14Twenty times more than before
13:15Honestly, my dear
13:16Everything was going well and perfectly fine.
13:18There's just one thing Singer forgot
13:19He actually invented parts or solutions
13:21It improved the performance of the existing sewing machine.
13:24But he didn't choose Aziz, who was from the same group.
13:26He told him
13:27And this is different, Abu Ahmed
13:28Let me tell you
13:28Forced to believe that we are in 2018
13:29However, America and Europe are a source of enjoyment.
13:31They had implemented a system for protecting inventions.
13:34Singer was using patented technologies
13:37For example
13:38The pointed, pierced needle
13:40Which is the advantage because it will make the stitch of a Singer sewing machine.
13:42Here are the American and international sewing manufacturing companies.
13:46They'll keep pointing at each other.
13:47They accuse some of being a matter of inventions and fabrications.
13:49And here, my dear Ahmed, is a Singer sewing machine that needs sewing.
13:52He will enter into many legal battles.
13:54The press will call it the sewing machine war.
13:56Oh, what happened to Abu Hamid?
13:58No need, my dear, take five pills.
14:00My dear, the food is complete.
14:02The legal battle is ongoing, as the company lawyers have stated.
14:06God willing, it will remain that it's all stolen from each other and copied from each other.
14:09So we're going to have lunch and a dinner party.
14:11Everyone will bring their own invention, and we will all use each other's inventions.
14:13That's how we all work, sell, and chase after it.
14:15Indeed, companies will build their huge factories.
14:17And she begins manufacturing her machine.
14:19She tries to sell the machines to clothing companies.
14:21Your uncle Singer, my dear, just like I told you
14:22He couldn't imagine that anyone other than women would use those sewing machines.
14:25That's why he was ready in Rabat al-Buyut
14:28Mohammed, don't take it personally, let's disagree.
14:29Because I see Tank Company every day 4-11
14:31Let me tell you, what they're doing is the Beto C strategy.
14:35This is despite the fact that he could create a large share brand.
14:38However, it's not profitable, meaning it's not lucrative.
14:40Why would I go and sell to people and individuals?
14:43Each one of you buys me one device
14:44Instead of me going to sell to a company or factory that takes hundreds
14:48It's very difficult for us to make large profits unless we convince a very large number of women in America.
14:52They are the ones who bought this machine.
14:54Indeed, my dear, that is a very good idea.
14:55At that time, housewives used to sew with their own hands.
14:57Finally, she discouraged the shirt
14:58Luxury cut pants
14:59That famous piece of stone you know
15:01And that's it
15:02But we sew all our clothes with a special machine.
15:04for him?
15:05Shall I tell you, my dear, that Singer is a man of amulets?
15:07Did you see how the machine problem was solved?
15:09Here he will try to solve the problem with a brilliant business solution.
15:12His company will begin Mayo, named after the enemy, with marketing.
15:14Simply put, we will target the elite of society.
15:16If this class bought everyone, they would sell and want to sell like them.
15:19So you buy it just like Qadiya Ghalib does with the water.
15:21Mayu Hills for 20,000 pounds and everyone is buying
15:23You, son, have twenty thousand pounds?
15:24No, Abu Ahmed, but Al-Shazly had made a deal for his brothers.
15:27This was Singer's same thinking.
15:29If the generous members of society buy it from me, everyone will buy it from me.
15:31And indeed, he will target the wives of the most respected men in the cities.
15:35For example, the wives of clergymen and synagogue preachers
15:38The classes are not necessarily rich
15:39But they need to save money
15:41Therefore, we need a sewing position.
15:43At the same time, my dear, they are causing losses to society.
15:45That's why the company sold the place to these people for half price.
15:49Also, Singer's location made a showroom.
15:51Her place was worn out
15:52But it's not just any showroom.
15:53Luxurious connection, land, raw
15:55Furnished with luxurious carpets
15:57And a buffet full of cold drinks and appetizers
15:59Shurum Deh is attractive to the singing class.
16:01Also, my dear, rent a place on the famous Broadway Street
16:04The one who is featured in the most important theaters in America
16:06He made the models very beautiful.
16:08They sew using the shop's battery from the outside.
16:10The show and the concept of the models.
16:12Let's not limit the topic of sewing to poor women.
16:15I'm talking about all the women, one by one.
16:17They started buying the place and competing for it too.
16:19A buying trend has emerged.
16:20Singer's advertisements will say
16:22Any woman can now earn a thousand dollars a year
16:25The idea is here, my dear
16:26All the companies were targeting factories
16:28As for Singer, they used to write on their product
16:31It's only supplied by the manufacturer of the house ties directly.
16:34So you're going to go and focus on the business model?
16:37Successful and proficient, double and all that
16:38But you'll call me a big market
16:40I play alone in it
16:42Suddenly, my dear, a large and vast market was brilliantly created.
16:45Each family was convinced that it was in their best interest to save money.
16:47And her eyelashes separate themselves
16:49Especially since buying eyelashes wasn't easy back then.
16:51There's no such thing as going down to buy clothes
16:53That's how we, with a little marketing, created demand for the product.
16:56Because of the time of day, people were ready to buy this product.
16:59This is where the price problem arises, my friend.
17:03The price of the machine, my dear, at that time was $100.
17:05Oh Abu Ahmed, this is so cheap!
17:07My dear, I'm telling you this happens at a certain time
17:09The entire American family earns $500 a year.
17:12That's roughly two full months' salary
17:14Here are some of Singer's most important achievements.
17:16This is the invention of the idea of ​​the Bay Now B-Lter influence.
17:20In 1856, Singer's was the first company in the world to sell by acid.
17:25If she had cut it, my dear, it would have been known then.
17:27But only between grocery stores and their customers, and on a very limited scale.
17:30Apartment about the point
17:31You needed to have a good reputation and be well-known in order to be able to achieve anything.
17:35Here, Singer Company will rent out the sewing space so that the family in need only pays a deposit of $5.
17:40That was the average half-week wage
17:42The rest is affected monthly, meaning approximately three or five dollars each month.
17:46And at the end of the machine's operation, it remains their property.
17:49This method will be called lease-to-own.
17:51Okay, great! We processed the order, the customer is ready, and we set the prices low so the customer would buy.
17:57Excellent design
17:58It bothered me
17:58What was Singer in its early days was a huge, heavy machine.
18:02Designed for a large factory or tailoring shop
18:04Made of cast iron
18:06Her weight was about fifty kilograms
18:08Oh, Abu Habidi, what's all this about?
18:09This needs Randy Orton
18:10That's why
18:111856
18:12The company produced the first generation designed exclusively for family use.
18:16It is light in weight and small in size.
18:17And it has decorations like that
18:18The housewife's taste is forgetful
18:19Not only that
18:20Singer may be the first company to establish the concept of customer service.
18:24God is sufficient for me, I am your agent, Singer.
18:27The company was selling to the Sboom
18:28And the machine is installed for him
18:29And he also learned how to use it.
18:31Why is Singer's marketing so lucrative?
18:32He would call and check on the machine and the customers
18:34From time to time
18:35Singer used to repair machines in homes.
18:37If the customer requests this
18:38Some sources say it was the first sewing company
18:41The first company in the world to offer a warranty on its products
18:44It adheres to the idea of ​​returning or replacing a machine
18:47Or there's a problem with it
18:47All of this made ordinary people feel that they were dealing with other people just like themselves.
18:51Not an economic entity within a giant corporation
18:53Their relationship with each other is severed
18:55Once they buy the Pontoon
18:56The point of all this is that Singer was training ignorant people and women on his machines.
19:00This system has left many generations
19:01She only knows how to sew with Singer sewing machines.
19:04They were two letters, my dear Perboa Zabur
19:05Birbuh
19:06To Trale
19:06Singer has become the world's largest sewing machine company.
19:09It manufactures more than 110,000 sewing machines annually.
19:13She has an army of 3,000 sales staff in America alone.
19:16In short, Singer didn't just develop sewing.
19:18He treated it as a mechanical invention in a large industrial form.
19:21Rather, it transforms it into a profession and a source of income for individuals.
19:23And if you look closely at this, my dear, you'll find something nice.
19:26People were afraid of this sewing machine.
19:28Let him replace her, change her job, and take job opportunities.
19:32However, the impact of sewing machines was much greater than that.
19:34The sewing machine that was supposed to take from people's work
19:37Many housewives have the opportunity to work
19:40Not only that
19:41There will start to be people working around this business.
19:43Some people are in distribution, some people are in all settings, and some people are in sales.
19:47No, my dear
19:48To help you understand the point of view that says, "Guys, don't be afraid of AI."
19:51AI, as it will take from jobs
19:54These are much more jobs
19:56We'll see, of course. Maybe this is the historic moment that's been sitting there.
19:59A simple invention
20:00I evolve over time
20:00Here are the roles of each individual in society for the better
20:03Provide job opportunities for vulnerable groups, such as women.
20:06That's why
20:06The New York Times will write about the Singer sewing machine in 1860.
20:09She says that this invention liberated our mothers and daughters.
20:12Thanks to Singer, the seamstresses are now family and earning better money.
20:15They said that what Singer had done was liberate the women.
20:17Here's my old woman
20:18An important question arises
20:19Is the sewing machine really a woman's heat?
20:21If we look at the working conditions of women in sewing factories
20:24Before the Industrial Revolution
20:25There was a situation where women and children were working in a very crowded and unhealthy environment.
20:29They work 18 to 20 hours every day
20:31It was during holidays and festivals, and sometimes they had to work shifts on top of each other.
20:35All this just to provide for the singing women
20:37Clothes on the spot
20:45London Garment Factories
20:47Don't get upset
20:47That's not my words, my dear.
20:48This is what was reported in the Jumaa Child Labor Reports of 1843.
20:51Then someone comes along and tells you about nostalgia, about the old days, and where are the good old days?
20:54And my dear, the profits were only for those who were happy, and the rest were working for them.
20:57Imagine working 18 to 20 hours a day
20:59To make Gunilla the princess
21:01Let me also tell you that the nature of sewing work is Muslim in nature.
21:04Depends on shopping seasons and fashion seasons
21:06Nothing is certain within three months.
21:08Meaning the seasons of the days of the year
21:09And this made us
21:10Many women, when laid off from their factories, resort to professions like prostitution.
21:13As for the sewing machine, when the blessing came
21:15I provided a very great service to the ladies
21:18And it saved them the physical effort of doing it.
21:20That's why
21:21The sewing machine advertisements at that time used to say
21:22The machine required use and provided ample physical effort.
21:25So much so that any small child could operate it.
21:28Many women after harsh working conditions
21:29What I explained to you
21:30She appreciated that it was finally family cooperation
21:32You can supervise the house without doing any degrading job.
21:35And without a veil, she does not leave her house.
21:36Fajr Azizi in any Arabic movie
21:38Any six parts of the work of a seamstress will die
21:40Sensitive and honored
21:41Sewing machines in general, and Singer in particular
21:43Let the women work and earn a living.
21:44Without relying on men
21:46That's why
21:46Many sources mention Turbot as this invention.
21:48Very significant changes have occurred
21:50For example, the courage of a woman demanding her rights
21:53Mahst khalas
21:54It's all over now.
21:55Going to work 28 hours a day
21:57Those who are working in the factory
21:58And she was able to work from home
22:00And she makes good money
22:02So you can butt heads with the man
22:03And she tells him no
22:04We need to negotiate about this and that
22:05It can improve claims
22:06By voting, for example
22:07Without a stable source of income for women
22:16Unfortunately, things aren't that simple, my dear.
22:18Take care, my dear
22:19We are talking here about housewives.
22:21Not factory women
22:22The factories will remain in the same situation as before.
22:24Except it's worse
22:25The factories were the first place I learned about sewing machines.
22:27and its speed
22:28Because it doesn't need all this labor.
22:29And a very large number of seamstresses were staged
22:31In Contec America
22:33The situation before the sewing machine
22:34It was a factory
22:35Alvin manual sewing workshop
22:37They produce 9600 Ames per week
22:40After this machine
22:401860
22:41Four hundred sewing only
22:42Those who worked on the machines
22:43They produced 10,000 Ames per week
22:45The result is here
22:46The factory at that time laid off 1600 workers.
22:48So that the factory owner can save money
22:50Tam Hilu Abu Hamid Dalal Rab'amya Khayata
22:52Zabanah is getting snarky now
22:53And they took other people's money
22:54Dear Tayeb, Ghamil, and Fella
22:56And God knows your story
22:57It's like you're not here
22:58It's like you're in paradise
22:58The truth, my dear, is that it's not a limitation.
23:00The Ramamiya who remained
23:01They were asked to cover a bigger task.
23:03They still had larger quantities.
23:04They have to finish it within the same working hours.
23:06The strange thing here is that the machine kept covering
23:07Many times the old quantities
23:09This means that working hours should be limited to family hours.
23:10According to the American historian
23:12Fruitak 1
23:12The devices that provided ignorance
23:14It increased the workload required of the women.
23:16Simply put, if I could do a thousand Ames in an hour
23:18So I can also employ women
23:19Except they have no rights.
23:21Of course, 10 hours
23:21Then I'll earn more
23:23People mean, you can vote
23:24Technology can make life easier for humans.
23:26But the truth is, as long as this technology
23:28It creates a system where every concern and goal is focused.
23:31And near a snake only
23:32Humans have never known this technology.
23:33It will make him comfortable
23:34Because, my dear, we as humans
23:35Truly grateful
23:37Not just for technology
23:38Technology helps
23:38But also for practical organizations
23:40Historically, unions of any body
23:43It helped that the worker had a maximum AF
23:46Sometimes, of course
23:478 hours of work
23:48Sometimes it means
23:49According to Hussein's heart
23:50Judy Lunn and Robert Macintosh
23:51The invention of sewing
23:52A pot that provides inside the women
23:54But he was unable to change the culture of society at that time.
23:56The society where men worked
23:58Their salaries are higher than women's.
23:59The society where men are rewarded
24:01Higher than women
24:02Even if they share the same longing
24:03For example, I
24:04Tailoring fees for men
24:05It was ten dollars a week
24:06In the case of women
24:07Their wages were $1.50
24:09four dollars a week
24:10At most
24:10Suddenly millions of female workers
24:12They found the place and took their job
24:13and the bonds of the houses
24:14They even sewed them at home.
24:15And here are the women without
24:16They couldn't find any alternative professions
24:18That's why
24:18For example, you might encounter a famous figure at that time.
24:19He was saying
24:19Mary Stitch Day or Hours
24:21I mean, marry my tailor and die
24:23Or see the worst
24:24And the worst of all, of course, during this period
24:26Moral deviance
24:27The difference in human vision
24:29The one who made sewing possible
24:29The solution is that she liberated the women.
24:31Their circumstances were no worse
24:32It will not only affect millions of women worldwide
24:34But it will affect Singer itself.
24:36The most important company that linked him to its production and the six
24:38We were going back to Singer, my dear.
24:39I missed you, Abu Hamad Singer
24:40Oh, and what did he do now?
24:41I'm telling you, Abu Hamad
24:42Why don't you come back and finish the Singer story?
24:44Dear hump from care
24:45On July 23, 1975
24:47Isaac Singer dies
24:48Masha, Abu Hamad
24:49Okay
24:50Hamad is telling you the story, and you're not finishing it.
24:52Oh my dear, I'm telling you
24:53Of course Singer dies
24:54The story of the deviant ends, in the eyes of some.
24:56In the view of others, inventions are forbidden.
24:58There were people who saw Shaifa as self-made
24:59He started it from Sefl
25:00And some people see him as a failed actor
25:02And he was a womanizer who married three women.
25:04There isn't a single person in it who knows her worth
25:05As a result of his numerous relationships, he has more than 20 children.
25:08He is dear to me, but people can't stand him.
25:11From the people's perspective, he is important.
25:13Gandhi, for example, says that he is the owner of the greatest invention in mankind.
25:16Quickly, my dear, I'm just as surprised as you that it came from Ghandi.
25:18The owner of the world's most famous off-shoulder shirt praises clothing and tailoring.
25:21Singer will leave his company
25:22Not only that, but she's successful.
25:23It is the first American multinational company
25:27After opening its first branch in Istanbul in 1866
25:30She opened a factory in Glasgow, Scotland in 1867
25:34With Singer's death, he will take over his partner Edward Clarke's management.
25:37With the decrease in machine prices
25:38Demand for the machine will start to increase
25:40To the point that the company would manufacture 500,000 machines by 1880.
25:44And we reached the twentieth century, thank God.
25:46The company was producing 2 million machines annually.
25:49It dominated 80% of global production
25:51All of this, my dear, will continue to go very well until World War I.
25:55When the Russian authorities confiscated a very large number of Singer sewing machines
25:58So that she can use it in tailoring her military uniform.
26:01The company was surprised that the market was at a standstill.
26:03The state of war is preventing people from buying.
26:05The production of Singer factories changed during the government's term
26:07Let her win more than 5,000 contracts from the British government at that time.
26:11But, my dear, their factories are now required to produce ammunition instead of sewing machines.
26:16Just like what happened in Toyota
26:17What's up, Abu Hamid?
26:18They are trying to convert their factories from sewing machines to ammunition production.
26:21This, my dear, is a principle that Singer famously emphasized.
26:24I wasn't interested in hacking; I was only after the money.
26:27Is that what he said, Abu Hamid, or is he just like you?
26:29Post Montash, which is on Facebook, he didn't say it
26:31No, dear, he actually said that.
26:32Singer's principle, my dear, was a very useful principle.
26:34I started this sewing business in Mecca so I could make money from it.
26:37If I get bored, I'll go for something else right away.
26:38Actually, my dear, at this time Singer sewing machines won't break down, but
26:41But ultimately, you will face the explosion of the dilemma.
26:43The question that has haunted the machine since its invention
26:46Woman's question
26:47After the Arab war ended, Singer companies resumed production of sewing machines.
26:50As expected, once the war is over, sales will increase.
26:53But what happened in 1929 was that the sales of all sewing companies plummeted.
26:58And at the forefront of them, of course, is the Singer company.
26:59All of this happened because of Flapper
27:01Flapper is a word that describes the women's liberation movement in America.
27:04The new generation in America rejected the traditional role played by housewives.
27:08She washes, cooks, cleans, sews, and is always complaining.
27:11World War II will kill millions of men.
27:13This, my dear, will make women realize their place and role.
27:16At that time, many companies were forced to hire women instead of men.
27:20Because many of them died in the war
27:21Or they just went to war
27:22Of course, after the end of the war
27:23It's harder for these women to return to their homes and serve their husbands.
27:26What they knew was that they could work abroad and make their own money
27:28And with the end of the war, Baqawsh were able to return home as before.
27:31They don't even work long hours in sewing factories.
27:33Okay, this is a piece of Full Time
27:35And they kept ordering shawarma every day
27:36Here, Singer will be forced to shut down its factories.
27:39Especially after we entered the Second World War
27:41And it will resume producing ammunition and utilize its massive factories.
27:44And its large number of workers
27:45In order to win contracts with the US Department of Defense
27:48And suddenly, a sewing machine manufacturing company
27:50It will contribute to the design and manufacture of parts for US Air Force aircraft.
27:55Even when Singer faces challenges in the ready-made clothing industry
27:58Which appears to them as a strong and fierce competitor
28:00Just as they appeared for manual machines
28:02The ready-made clothing industry will become more widespread with the rise of shops and malls.
28:05Singer will be ready for an expansion move
28:07In non-sewing activities
28:09Like the accounting, aviation and defense industries
28:12You will then begin to face greater competition in Europe and Japan.
28:15Those who started to increase their market share
28:17And they offer the company as a gift
28:18Because of the year 1999
28:20Singer declares bankruptcy and restructures its assets
28:23To continue producing today under the name
28:26SFB Worldwide
28:27The current owner of the Singer brand
28:30Singer, my dear, has managed to save herself many times.
28:33Sometimes through innovation, and sometimes by changing activities.
28:35And finally, adapting to a world that changes day by day
28:38But at the same time, she wrote the story of an invention.
28:40He will save the stadium at times
28:41But he will also enslave them at other times.
28:43Newspapers will celebrate him in the years to come.
28:45And in other years you will present feminist movements
28:47The question remains, ultimately.
28:48Did the Singer sewing machine really possess that immense power?
28:51To write an important chapter in the history of women and the world?
28:54Sewing began as a free human invention
28:56From the circumstances surrounding him
28:57No, not every sin is in it.
28:58Nature and climate
28:59The seamstress also made them take the world and read the Burda
29:02And he makes it with his own hands
29:03The invention of sewing helped humans
29:05If they develop their intellectual and cultural activity
29:07This is in addition to their cognitive abilities.
29:09Which allowed them to control the Kokum
29:10But sixty
29:11This invention was unable to change many social conditions.
29:14Humans created it themselves.
29:15Such as working conditions in factories and the exploitation of women
29:17The difference in wages between them and men
29:19Let me summarize this paradox for you in a sentence.
29:21Diane Douglas says it
29:25The seamstress wasn't the one who created the young girls in society.
29:28Humans are the ones who make them
29:29In the end, my dear
29:29Inventions are not what enriches societies.
29:31Our thoughts on each invention
29:33She is the one who can make invention our lifeline.
29:35Or transform its features
29:36Things like speed and efficiency, for example
29:38A weapon against us
29:38It establishes completely unfair conditions.
29:41Many feminist movements consider
29:42Singer and his invention
29:43They increased the injustice already inflicted on women.
29:45While Singer Company
29:46It's like any other venture capital company.
29:48A company whose goal is to make a profit
29:50The man himself says so
29:51He didn't try to put anything on it.
29:54If this profit didn't come from sewing
29:56We'll get him with ammunition
29:57We'll bring him by air.
29:58God willing, we will sell our Flamingo cheese.
29:59It remains to change the postage of any invention in our favor
30:01It depends on people and their continuous monitoring.
30:03The idea behind this invention
30:04How does it change the structure of society?
30:06And he changes the circumstances of his companions
30:08For better or for worse
30:09And this, my dear, is cooked up with every invention.
30:10With a needle, with a rocket
30:11That's all, my dear.
30:12Our brother, and no harm to our brother
30:13Don't you see the limit that passed?
30:14See the next limit
30:14You'll find sources on YouTube.
30:16Subscribe to the channel
30:16Finally, my dear, I have some advice for you
30:18If your life company
30:19I found her returning home late
30:20I asked her where she had been.
30:21She told you she was at the tailor's
30:22Try to end reality in the easiest way possible
30:23Which is mostly imaginary
30:24Hamdi's aunts appeared in more than 140 films.

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