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فسيلة - transplant
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هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات
It is a digital library containing thousands of Arabic videos in all fields.
قوائم تشغيل فسيلة
https://www.dailymotion.com/fasela/playlists
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LearningTranscript
00:00I am the great god Zeus
00:01They also gave you today the title of the great Greek god
00:05And the absolute master of the mountains of the first
00:07To make an important announcement
00:10And we go bankrupt, Zeus, for advertising
00:12We used to install the water heater for better performance.
00:14Washing dishes with cold water
00:15Hira, if you obey the great god again
00:17I'll lock you up in eternal hell.
00:19Is eternal hell warm and full of dishes?
00:20No, of course not.
00:21I'll eat you again so you can lock me up
00:22I decided that our son Hercules
00:24In the name of God, what God wills.
00:25He will complete his education at home.
00:27We will begin the homeopathic process.
00:29Yes, yes, yes, yes
00:30Hercules, who wasn't clean at first, all day
00:33I can't believe it, but the teacher will come and take him.
00:35You'll count it for me every day at home
00:36You are afflicted, my son
00:37I won't talk about you
00:38You want to cut me into a house in Moristan, Zeus?
00:40Hey Hira, listen to me
00:41International Teacher Fees
00:43My superiority remained my power as a Greek god.
00:44I will make him a student in the school of life
00:48My son, be a hero.
00:49Be a little bit
00:50What game are you playing?
00:51What are you playing?
00:51Dad is trying to make it work
00:52What do you do for a living?
00:53The ridge
00:54I'm trying to get the stew to order, Mindy.
00:55What's the meaning of "matraqa"?
00:56You are Hercules, my son.
00:58Go ahead, Amzoos
00:58Are you happy with this?
00:59This brought me the talk
01:00My son, this tarmac belongs to the god Thor.
01:02This is related to the Alexandrian myths.
01:04What about us?
01:04O river, does it heal?
01:06My son, we follow Greek mythology.
01:08What do Greek myths have to do with Norse myths?
01:11Here you go, Amzos
01:12Please go ahead
01:13That's it.
01:13And I learn in schools
01:14What if we stayed at home?
01:16That's why I want them out of here, Hera.
01:17The boy might succeed
01:19You haven't lost anything, have you?
01:20I'm the one who's going to suffer.
01:21Please, Hera
01:22I worked
01:23The machine worked
01:24The eternal bond succeeded
01:25Do you see, Dad?
01:26It's impossible for the mattress to come apart again.
01:28I will never leave you, my love
01:30I disagree
01:31Hera Arbuki
01:32The boy is losing his Greek identity
01:33He remained affected, like the Vikings
01:35Tomorrow, I'll consult with Halen.
01:37I don't agree, I don't agree.
01:39I'll get you a water heater
01:40Install the water heater
01:41Oh, I'll get you a water heater, right?
01:42Now
01:43Dad! Dad!
01:44Electricity is a gift!
01:46Dad!
01:48Dad!
01:52The session is adjourned!
01:59music
02:01Dear Music
02:02That's right, and may God's blessings be upon you in its episodes.
02:03He passed by again, hey
02:04Dear beautiful viewer, let me take you by the hand.
02:06Time before time and space before space
02:08The egret's mechanism was to live in the tamarisk and plant
02:10They are sitting in the large, stable areas.
02:11And among them was Corinth.
02:13The great mechanism of his time
02:14This allows my dear Nabuqa
02:15If one of his children
02:16He will seize his throne
02:17Here he will be terrified and lose his mind
02:19Whose son will overthrow me and seize my power?
02:21My dear, one of them will swallow them up, or another.
02:23How does Abu Ahmed swallow them?
02:24What is this, Babis chickens?
02:25Indeed, my dear, they swallowed them whole.
02:26The entrance is built
02:27His son is in his womb
02:28And Seidel feared
02:29The house is in a state of fear.
02:30Hedes Khashi
02:30My dear, he's spoiling his kids.
02:32Until he reached his son Zeus
02:33The one who was still in the wrap
02:34So Zeus hid it
02:36Even a brick in the roll
02:37So here went Corinth
02:38And the factory kept feeding a lot of children.
02:40So he went around with his head wrapped in a brick.
02:41Because Zeus brings about a miracle
02:43And Corinth strikes pebbles
02:44Of course, so that the legend can continue.
02:45Zeus grows
02:46And he succeeds in seizing power
02:47Benbo the mighty Coronos
02:48After a major battle
02:50And Zeus becomes the new ruler of the gods.
02:52Therefore, he rules the whole world.
02:53From the top of the Qalamah Mountains
02:55In the story of Zeus, my dear
02:56The land is giving birth to a new croak
02:57With the new generation of gods
02:59I'm telling you this story, my dear
03:00Not so I can tell you about Zeus and Cronus
03:02And that's not how it is with Ahmed El-Awady
03:03I just wanted to tell you about Atlas.
03:05Yes, Abu Ahmed knows.
03:06Isn't that the map guy?
03:07I'm an old revelation
03:07No, my dear, this is Atlas.
03:08The maps were originally named after him
03:10God Atlas
03:11This is the one who became the son of his brother Corinth.
03:13The one who is considered Zeus' cousin
03:14Theoretically, he was from the new generation.
03:16But instead of having sex with Zeus
03:17He joined the armies of his mighty uncle, Corinth.
03:20After the battle
03:21I will judge with the ancient gods
03:22And judge her, my dear, with the wisdom of the strong.
03:24Since Zeus won
03:25Physus told Atlas that he carried the sky on his shoulder.
03:27He prefers it like that, bent over and swaying.
03:29So that he may be forbidden, O challenge of Zeus
03:31Because Ahmed is young
03:31Why did Atlas choose to stand behind the man with the lock?
03:34Why doesn't he fight alongside Zeus?
03:35Why would my son stand with an older generation?
03:37Against cousin
03:38Aziz, that's honestly an important question.
03:39But I will continue with the Greek worldview.
03:41And I'll ask a completely different question.
03:42Now Atlas is required to remove the sky.
03:44correct?
03:44So where is this sky?
03:45So, Atlas, I'm spinning, where will he go to get it from?
03:47Where is the Queen of Heaven?
03:48Meaning, should I carry it in a bag or lift it with a rope?
03:50He does not raise it to a level or a tube.
03:52Our question, dear sky, is: where will it be removed from?
03:54The ancient world, my dear, could not see the sky.
03:56As we see it now
03:57He didn't have the same concept of our sky.
03:59They thought, my dear, that the sky was a ball too.
04:01A shared ball in the center with the ground
04:03So-and-so, you see Atlas carrying it in those statues?
04:04It is the sky, not the Earth.
04:06But the question remains
04:07Where is the starting point of the sky?
04:08By God, my dear, the old world
04:09Which consisted of reading the three
04:11Asia, Africa, Europe
04:12He was sure of one thing only.
04:14He sees with his own eyes the end of everything at this point.
04:16This is the end of Africa, this is the end of Europe
04:18And the beginning of the sea where the sun rises every day
04:21He thought this was the end of the world.
04:23As long as the end of the earth remains the beginning of the sky
04:25Of course, my dear, they didn't know he was across the sea.
04:27You have two large continents, all of them.
04:29Hodge Bamburger in Fifty States
04:32The American Cup is being played at dawn, no one sees it.
04:35A whole life beyond this point
04:44You are far away, Atlas de Abwahmiyat
04:44One second, Abu Hamiat, do you really believe that the Atlantic Ocean
04:48Named after the god Atlas
04:50What was the problem with?
04:51Ah, that's why he's chewing on the last of Africa and the last of Europe.
04:55So you took me around and got me a family certificate
04:59Who said it? The Greeks
05:00And the sound of it is clear, and in the language
05:02You're looking for people's symptoms
05:04Amshan tells me that you are the Atlas, named after her, Atlas.
05:06My brother, you've ruined your bankruptcy with content that's doing this to you.
05:08By God
05:09My dear, I'm just teasing you.
05:10Today we're going to talk about one of the most important oceans in the world.
05:13He started creating with me in the air
05:13The Atlantic Ocean literally means the Sea of Atlas.
05:16The mountains in Morocco, right up to the Atlantic Ocean, are called the Atlas Mountains.
05:19Because beyond these mountains and beyond the ocean shore
05:21The shoulders of Atlas begin, the one who contracted to share the sky
05:24But generally the Atlantic Ocean
05:25I didn't want to be a prisoner of this myth for long.
05:27The Greeks, with their culture and myths about the gods, have long since passed away.
05:30Nothing remains of the legend except the oath.
05:32But the irony is that this ocean is due to its important location
05:34It was part of a larger myth
05:36The Atlantic Ocean is a water barrier separating the decisions of the New World and the Old.
05:41Like any other respectable environment, I put his profile on the NN link.
05:43But the Atlantic was truly special; it was the dividing line between the Old World and the New World.
05:47Because it was the water barrier that Christopher Columbus crossed
05:50So that it would be among the first European settlements to set foot on the new land.
05:54Did you step on this?
05:54Columbus, my dear, covered the distance between Europe and America in two months.
05:57That means about 60 days by sailing ship
06:00And in that number, 60 days, he conquered the Atlantic Ocean in 60 days.
06:03Despite the long distance, which extends for about 3000 miles
06:06The hardship and fatigue that accompany this type of journey
06:09However, Columbus's voyage marked the beginning of the largest colonial movement in human history.
06:13The white man, my dear, expanded and expanded and expanded
06:16The Abyssinians were quarantined from the Old World to the New World like a bus.
06:19Adventurers, warriors, and imaginative people
06:21Two people seeking new opportunities and a better life
06:23The land of Simi Bakr is full of challenges.
06:26Her land, my dear, is still good, its colonization is not yet complete, it has not yet been restored to it.
06:30Even my dear America, the superpower we know today
06:32The embryo is still developing.
06:34And its Syrian rope is the Atlantic Ocean
06:36Columbus's voyage was initially a sea bridge between America and Europe.
06:39It was the beginning of an increasing chamber movement
06:41This movement required a stable and continuous means of transportation.
06:44Especially after the European companies were formed directly in America
06:47A new nation began to form from the new immigrants.
06:49So now there's a nation in the East that exports migrants.
06:51And a nation in the West welcomes them
06:53They are two nations with a bridge between them, going back and forth. What would happen between them, my dear?
06:56Take this, Abu Hamad: regional scientific wars and conflicts, gunfire, and rudeness.
06:59Of course, my dear, but it's also a business.
07:02Once trade began between the new nation and the old nation
07:05I secured the permanent caravan routes between East and West
07:07Which began in Spain with what is called the Western Andean Fleet
07:11West Andes Fleet
07:12These caravans were the first trade route between ancient and modern science.
07:15It links Spain with its colony in America
07:17This line continued for more than 200 years.
07:19Trade coming and going on board sailing ships
07:22After Spain, my dear, came Portugal.
07:24The one whose colony was in Brazil
07:25After them came France, Britain, and the Netherlands.
07:28And all countries to colonize the new science
07:30It is more than 3,000 miles away from him.
07:32But those 3000 miles, if we covered them in 60 days
07:34That means the limit will be 50 miles per day.
07:36or 2 miles per hour
07:38I know, my dear
07:39What is the normal walking speed of a human?
07:41three miles per hour
07:41It means the day a person walks
07:43He'll walk faster than the ships
07:45We carried this Shiani
07:46Why did we make ships faster?
07:47Our Atlantic Ocean knows this.
07:49Hey, my friend, we humans mistook ships before we understood how they worked.
07:52No, I'm busy. We said okay, we won't play around with it.
07:54Go Normandy
07:55Row and find my friend
07:56The Egyptians blasphemed during the year of the wood's barrenness
07:58They traveled with it 4000 years BC
08:00My dear friend, by the way, they were very lazy
08:01They don't need to row to move around on the Nile
08:03I want to move from Al-Saeed to North Egypt
08:06He just needs to get into the vehicle
08:07The direction of the Nile is towards Al-Bahla, moderate
08:09He wants to go back again, Meliuterum, and raise the sail.
08:11Thank you, Tiki Tiki Tiki Tiki Tiki
08:13Metro line
08:14The most famous vehicle in the world is the ancient Egyptian vehicle.
08:16Egyptians traveled by boat more than 4000 years BC
08:19While the Qawarin of Al-Taf, which we began to know about at the hands of Archimedes
08:22It began around 200 BC
08:24My dear, at that moment, water or any liquid or gas
08:27Even the wind pushes any object placed in it upwards.
08:30Let yourself go and the water will lift you up
08:31Mia's role is actually to market food on the roof
08:33But sometimes that strength isn't enough to keep you afloat.
08:35Even the nail that sinks in the water
08:37The truth is, he pushed upwards, but with less force than his weight warrants.
08:40The result of this power dynamic is that he is my beloved, not me.
08:42You, and you remain in love, my dear
08:43It pushes upwards with a force equal to the volume you removed from the air.
08:46Which is your body size
08:47Up until the seventeenth century, ships could only float.
08:50It means displacing a mass of water whose weight is greater than the weight of the entire ship.
08:54The question is, is this enough for the ship to move forward?
08:57The answer is no
08:57This move, my dear, is a completely different matter.
08:59We didn't build the ship to float.
09:01We made it so it would work
09:02So we need something to push and propel it forward.
09:05Very complex technology
09:06Which was available to propel the ship until the 19th century
09:09My dear, it was a technology called wind.
09:11God willing, the ship will float.
09:13And the wind, God willing, will push it.
09:15This sail works to catch and tame the wind.
09:18But my dear friend, you don't know that wind isn't the best thing to rely on for steering ships.
09:21However, it rarely means that ships don't come to what they desire.
09:24You know the big controversy over the desire for ships.
09:26But that was the one who was taking
09:27We had no choice but to steer the sail to capture the wind's energy.
09:30The vehicle is driven in the desired direction.
09:32Sometimes the wind is very weak.
09:34So weak that sailors have to use oars.
09:37And sometimes it's too strong.
09:39So powerful that it capsizes the vessel
09:40So we need to gather the sails until things calm down.
09:42And sometimes ships are also wrecked because they succumb to powerful aircraft.
09:45Which you can throw at the rocky islands
09:47As I told you, the trip could have lasted two months or more.
09:50This means there's a high probability that the weather will change during this period.
09:52Sailing trips have always been more like an adventure.
09:54And flights don't always arrive at their destinations.
09:57But this is the only way to operate the ship legends.
10:00Fatar ya hizizi li laya kadha lidayat al-qaran 19
10:02The Atlantic barrier retains its prestige
10:04Uncle Atlas was still in good health and strong.
10:06Sometimes ships are allowed to pass, and sometimes they are not.
10:08Until the invention that would deliver the first blow to the legend comes along
10:11When the ship carried the first human-made machine
10:13It shook the prestige of the ocean and made it speak in street language.
10:16He's a fool in his own eyes
10:17It is he, my dear, your beloved, my beloved, and the beloved of James Watt.
10:21steam engine
10:25The steam engine began to propel ships with new, steady, and powerful energy.
10:29The ship Ma Beach not only floats, but it's also starting to propel itself forward.
10:32With strong, continuous, and steady progress in the direction of the destination she is going to
10:35We don't need air and we're not afraid of the waves.
10:37The first steamship built to cross the Atlantic
10:39It was built by the English company Great Western Steam Ship in 1838
10:43SS Great Western
10:45SS is short for Steam Chip.
10:47This was the beginning of a new era
10:49In the Lord, between the Old World and the New World
10:51That's because it shortened the journey time from two months to just a few days.
10:54For the first time, the transition between the Old and New Worlds
10:57He no longer needs a whole season.
10:59Northeasterly wind and low pressure system in Ema and Sami
11:01Lower the sail and raise the sail, and the world knows
11:04Great Western used to cover that distance
11:06Approximately 16 days from east to west
11:0813 days from west to east
11:10Oh, that's strange, there's nothing else.
11:11Chery Azizi, approximately 120 passengers
11:13Thus, the first shipping line was secured.
11:16Stable and fast, it passes through the Atlantic
11:18The famous line that she built after him
11:20The most luxurious and magnificent ships to cross it and reach the other side
11:22What kind of ships are well-known? Like the Titanic.
11:24Those who tried to cross it but were unsuccessful
11:26All of these were ships that breathed life into major European and industrial nations.
11:29For its quality, speed, and luxury
11:31Every country arrives with a ship more cunning than the one before it.
11:33To assert its control and prove that it is worthy of its use
11:36And she is the lady of Europe, the life that knew how to tempt him.
11:38The year of Atlas, my dear, has begun to fade.
11:40Ships, my dear, are like confectionery.
11:42Moving between two parking spaces, one going and one going
11:44Users of the Katro on Hamak Atlas
11:46To the point that an honorary medal called the Blue Sash was created
11:48Blue Ribbon
11:49The fastest steamship will regularly cross the Atlantic
11:52And the beginning of it is that it is implemented on the basis of a dispute.
11:54Although it is unofficial
11:55However, the secret to its appeal was its important symbolism.
11:57Conquering the Atlantic Ocean
11:59The ship that takes the blue scarf
12:00It remains a source of national pride for her country.
12:02They brought a medal.
12:03Britain, for example, if it had been the German ship
12:05SS broke William Negros
12:06She wore the blue scarf
12:08By reaching the average transatlantic crossing speed
12:10For 22 knots
12:11Or the equivalent of 41 km/h
12:14So, my dear, it would take you 6 days to cover the distance.
12:16Of course, my dear, you know that England is from us and with pictures from
12:18At that time, my dear, Britain built a ship called the RMS Mauritania
12:21I made it especially so you could get the blue scarf
12:23And indeed, it was successful in 1907.
12:24Her name is Aziz, and she succeeded in crossing the Atlantic.
12:27In 4 days and 10 hours
12:28So that you, dear Britain, may take the blue scarf
12:30For 20 years
12:32And my dear, steamships preferred to achieve record-breaking numbers.
12:35It reduces the time it takes to cross the Atlantic.
12:37Until I reached a record of 3 days, 10 hours and 4 minutes
12:41It means whoever has time to change the weather and Uncle Atlas has time to get angry
12:44This is the stone grocer, he's been gone for 5 days and nights
12:46Because of my dear friend, he caught up with the ship's protector.
12:48Aziz's name is a US ship.
12:501952
12:51And she still keeps the blue scarf to this day, my dear.
12:55And so steamships remained the mistress of the Atlantic
12:58Since the 19th century, without rival
13:00All this, my dear, where is the walking?
13:01Until a new invention came along
13:03The control or dominance of steamships began to threaten
13:06On the Atlantic cruises of Amur
13:08So, all of this you want to learn about the Atlantic?
13:10One year, Abu Hamad, I know you're talking about her invention.
13:19As I told you, my dear, as soon as we discovered Archimedes' principle
13:22Humans knew that, theoretically, we couldn't fly.
13:25The rule was simply that
13:26If you could, my good man, you would remain afraid of the wind.
13:28Hydrate, or in Archimedes' terms, float.
13:31Perhaps the first people to know this fact
13:32They were Chinese 300 years before Christ
13:34The rule, my dear, was simple.
13:36According to our work Archimedes
13:37The hot air is less intense than the cool air next to me.
13:40So it rises
13:41This means the hot air will be above the cool air.
13:43That's why, my dear, the air conditioners are upstairs and the heaters are downstairs.
13:46Because the liquid air will rise since it is denser than the hot air.
13:50He'll come down on us and refresh us
13:53But heaters are for hot air.
13:54So it remains made under
13:55Because the hot air would be coming out from below, because he was afraid.
13:58Look up like that
14:00And the day when the clock strikes, we will push it
14:02Going back and forth, pushing
14:03The Chinese are also being treated with a sad attitude.
14:05Skylanter
14:06Sky Lamp
14:07A balloon behind and a small lamp
14:09The air inside the balloon heats up
14:11The whole body becomes the sum total of its people's desires.
14:14It rises upwards
14:15The Chinese would release it into the air above
14:17To celebrate
14:17And we also brought them here to scare the enemies.
14:19But sadly, no one could have imagined
14:21This balloon can carry something heavier than that.
14:24Years pass and we arrive in Europe in the 1880s
14:27And we get to know the French brothers, Müntgolfier and the Brothers
14:30Those who thought
14:30Why don't we make a balloon out of hot air that can lift respectable weights?
14:34Of course, because Balloon Day can hold weights
14:36It should have been very large.
14:38I feel the amount of hot air is very large.
14:40So you can lift a considerable weight and fly with it.
14:43But let me tell you, it wasn't easy.
14:44When this idea was presented to King Louis XVI, he refused.
14:47He told them it was impossible for people to remain in a place where no one from my people could rise to the heavens.
14:50We don't know what effect this has on him as a living being.
14:52We're not swans, guys
14:53We fly however we want
14:54Glory be to God, my dear Louis 16, he was the first of his people.
14:57Come on, my dear, his people were not merciful to him.
14:58So, the French photos, my dear
15:00They cut off his head and his fur
15:02And anyone who puts pressure on him, and anyone who films him too
15:04The important thing is that the king suggested that you, people
15:05Since you built with color
15:07And a hybrid into which you put humans
15:08Why don't we put people
15:09She was sentenced to death
15:11He was dead, and his grandfather was dead.
15:13By God, if they die
15:13Any oil we get rid of
15:14What are we afraid of?
15:15What are we afraid of?
15:17By God, if they went out and died
15:19They remain and have paid the Ashmawy's wages
15:20And I'm telling you, a human can't fly.
15:22But what remains
15:22If they went up and flew
15:24So the experience is a marriage
15:24And man is useful for flying.
15:26Just a little while, my dear, and they'll be down.
15:27They brought them Ashmawy
15:28We'll give him the wages we saved in the previous issue.
15:30And they executed many
15:31Of course, my dear
15:32The two brothers, producers of Al-Fardoul
15:33They were driving them crazy
15:33Because honestly
15:34It is impossible for them to tarnish honor.
15:36The first people to fly in the world
15:38For one criminal
15:39And he's not just a criminal
15:39He is a criminal and sentenced to death
15:41I wish he was even free
15:42This is a criminal
15:43The first two brothers suggested that we, guys
15:45No criminals
15:46We'll put animals instead of humans.
15:47We'll put a goat, a duck, and a rooster.
15:49The goat is stingy
15:50Human anatomy
15:51If a man is healthy
15:51We will remain, God willing.
15:52We'll bring back baskets
15:53And the duck flies anyway
15:54Flo the balloon
15:55Blue has a secondary effect on the passenger.
15:56We'll find out.
15:57By God, this will happen to her
15:58As for the rooster
15:58Jay Ziad confirmed
15:59And the necessary words were needed in the matter.
16:00But he screams like a human.
16:01Indeed, my dear
16:02Malik agrees
16:03On September 19, 1783
16:05The first living organisms ever to take off
16:08A goat, a duck, and a rooster
16:09Kasab Dyke joke
16:10The goat, the duck, and the rooster
16:12Follow, my dear humans, to fly
16:13Stop, my dear
16:14Owner Louis and owner
16:15His wife is Meriq Antontz
16:16The owner of the place where they can make a living
16:17They eat cake
16:17They eat everything they like
16:18And around them were dignitaries and notables
16:20and a few Parisians
16:21Every league, my dear, two stops
16:22And they applaud in amazement
16:24They were spectators of the flight solution
16:25Which lasted more than 8 minutes
16:27It covered a distance of 2 miles
16:28It rose 1500 feet above the ground
16:30It means, my dear, about
16:31Half a kilometer above ground level
16:33500 meters
16:33This is fast flying, my dear.
16:35Even after that, my dear
16:36The goat, the duck, and the rooster
16:38Safe travels
16:38After the owner's experiment was successful, he agreed
16:40On human flight
16:40And Yten Montgolfer got
16:42One of the two brothers
16:42In honor of being the first human
16:44It rises above the Earth's surface
16:45And the fourth living organism
16:46After the duck, the goat, and the rooster
16:47Okay, Abu Hamad
16:48So you mean we're this balloon?
16:50When he flies
16:50Let's put up some sails
16:51He was able to cross the Atlantic Ocean
16:53Steamships are glazed
16:54Okay, Abu Hamad, we put our trust in God.
16:56Explain, O God, and complete.
16:56Could you please stop being so virtuous?
16:57And fighting her is a question of information.
16:58I'll come to you
16:59The balloon up to this moment
17:00It was exactly like a ship
17:01Before the invention of the steam engine
17:03Something is floating
17:04Or the air will blow it away.
17:05But it still needs something to push it.
17:07And push it forward
17:08The balloon, my dear
17:08Up to this moment
17:09It was exactly, exactly
17:10The ship was similar to the ship before the invention of the steam engine.
17:13Just a need to extinguish in the air
17:14A balcony without a purpose
17:15Nice, you stood up there looking at people.
17:17But what do you want?
17:18You're burning with desire, needing strength to push you forward.
17:20Okay, Abu Ahmed
17:21What is the effect of air on ships?
17:22In the case of the balloon, my dear
17:23This air issue
17:24Unfortunately, it's no good.
17:25The air is pushing the balloons together.
17:27Because the balloon itself is lighter than air
17:28And then it was filled with hydrogen.
17:30So it became lighter and lighter
17:31That means no one will be able to direct the balloon
17:33In the same way as ships
17:34The balloon, although it was
17:35A very cool invention at the time
17:36People gave up in the 18th century
17:37They still don't know about landline phones.
17:38They fly and reach the clouds
17:40But the balloon's ability
17:41He has a personality and goes in a certain direction.
17:43He relied on himself
17:44Zahle was something else entirely.
17:45The balloon is preferred for long ropes
17:47For entertainment and to impress the public
17:48Usually, we also connect it to a certain thing.
17:50So we don't lose it when a little wind comes.
17:52Of course, if someone suggested the idea of crossing the Atlantic to me
17:55And the house of the canter
17:56The one tied with a rope
17:57I'll tell him that's science fiction.
17:59We don't know if Al-Mashifi is in a specific direction.
18:00We'll cross an entire ocean with it, 3000 miles.
18:02But despite this
18:03Man tries to
18:05He learns from his journey in shipbuilding
18:06The French pioneers preferred to continue
18:08They made balloons that work by hand
18:10It has an oar like a ship's oar
18:11But it's a fluttering oar
18:13And from this design action, we succeed.
18:14But on a simple basis
18:16Muscle strength will not be enough
18:17To burn a large balloon
18:19At a respectable speed
18:20We needed a fan, my dear.
18:21Let me tell you, my dear, I'm taking you by the hand, and we're going somewhere.
18:23We as humanity need a fan
18:25You can decorate this balloon
18:26In the direction we want
18:27It runs on a similar engine.
18:29like a steam engine
18:30For example
18:31The same thing happened with the ships.
18:32Indeed, the French engineer is coming
18:33Henry Giffard
18:34It was made in 1852
18:36First cigar-shaped balloon
18:38Balloon with motor
18:40Its greenery is three fortresses
18:41And he works with the spit
18:42Hoping that we can reach
18:44For the full control stage
18:46In the direction of movement
18:47Indeed, my dear
18:47The balloon is successful and grows to about 17 millimeters.
18:50But at a speed of 6 miles per hour
18:52Of course, my dear, the speed is insufficient.
18:54To overcome wind speed
18:56It means Hashuka Hawa Hijo
18:57They will change the direction of the balloon with a small change
18:58But of course, at that time we could say
19:00The experiment was successful, at least partially.
19:02The solution, of course, is that we need a bigger engine.
19:04Abu Thalatha Hisn, this is the last assignment
19:05We want to travel around the ocean
19:06And Ahmed, while you were telling the episode like that
19:08I have a serious idea in my mind
19:08Since we are imitators
19:10What happened on the ships
19:10Why don't we get a steam engine?
19:11The ship's stuff, and we put it in the balloon.
19:13My dear friend, the steam engine is completely dead.
19:15We're really lucky we managed to take one of them out
19:18three horses
19:18Let me tell you, we needed more than thirty years after that.
19:21Just so we know how to install a new engine
19:23three horses
19:23But this time it was an electric motor powered by batteries.
19:26And this was in the most famous balloon
19:28La France
19:28La France
19:29Two French engineers also designed it.
19:31You wouldn't believe why, my dear, the French love balloons and celebrations.
19:33Constitutional amendment
19:34The important thing is that they were in the year 1884
19:36They succeeded if they let the ball go to France
19:38It makes a full loop, about five miles long.
19:41It starts from a specific area
19:42Then he goes round and round and returns to the same point.
19:44Be careful
19:45This is a tyranny in the era of Azal
19:46If he's not focusing, he should focus with me.
19:47I brought a balloon
19:48His plane is in the air
19:48And I controlled it
19:49And I walked according to my mood
19:50Once in the direction of the wind
19:51And once vertical, away from the wind
19:52And once against the wind direction
19:54Faster than the fastest delivery in the country
19:55Come on, Hamad
19:56Give it to him
19:57Let's take him to the Atlantic Ocean
19:58Consider it a wind for the United States of America
20:00As long as we know how to control the direction of the balloon
20:01His flight remains above the ocean
20:03Hassan with a beautiful witness
20:03Let me tell you that this
20:04He was an electrical editor
20:05If you decide to cross the Atlantic Ocean
20:07With an electrician
20:08Battery operated
20:09I know we'll need
20:10How many batteries?
20:11Absolutely impossible
20:12Despite the success of the experiment
20:13Unless he's still not very sure
20:15On modifying the Atlantic Ocean
20:16The engines in our hands
20:17Whether steam-powered or electric
20:18If you crossed the Atlantic
20:19He'll swallow it like Jack swallowed it
20:21And we'll go back to laughing at Uncle Atlas.
20:22Dol Aziz III Min
20:23It's not a joke
20:24I am tired, thank God.
20:25Don't interfere with the part you're telling us.
20:27The engine that will solve the crisis
20:28The law of historical determinism
20:29And the law of the Dabke circles
20:31You know, my dear
20:32From the engine that entered and solved it
20:33internal combustion engine
20:35Intercept Compression Engine
20:36Do you know who this is?
20:37Who is it, Abu Hamid?
20:37Your car's engine
20:38I don't give away a car, Abu Hamid
20:39The one who had the security back to push the balloon with greater force
20:42Continuous and light energy
20:43Of course, Abu Hamid, the one who invented this engine
20:46French man
20:47He invented the balloon with an internal motor.
20:49And the people dispersed
20:51No, my dear
20:52Brazil
20:52His name is Alberto Santos
20:53All its letters are pronounced with a very specific rule.
20:55but
20:55Let me tell you frankly,
20:56He lived in France
20:57This man carried a balloon with a four-stroke engine
20:59One fan is spinning
21:00He works from home.
21:01That means you can predict his future.
21:03He let him go and set off
21:04A practical and efficient engine
21:05Mr. Alberto Santos Tarbe
21:06On October 19, 1901
21:08Around the Eiffel Tower
21:09And he also did a full rotation
21:10She tells her 700
21:11All this, my dear, in 30 minutes
21:13To prove it with conclusive evidence
21:14The balloon is now tamed.
21:16And humans now
21:17They can control it completely.
21:18And also with a lightweight engine
21:20He can push it forward for hours and days
21:22Despite, my dear
21:23The Great French Terrace
21:24In the guided balloon
21:25Let's call it from this very moment
21:27Airship
21:28The girth
21:28However, the first real airship
21:30Used in transportation
21:31And not for experiments
21:32The German engineer will invent it.
21:33Count Ferdinand
21:35Von Zeppelin
21:35In conjunction with the French experiences
21:38With internal combustion engine
21:40Made by Ahmak Zeppelin
21:41First airship
21:43Used in transportation
21:44with SL Z1
21:46A ship equipped with two gasoline engines
21:48The ability of one of them
21:49In the name of God, what God wills
21:5014 horsepower
21:51It flies at a speed of 17 miles per hour
21:53After that
21:53In a few years
21:541906
21:55Zeppelin collaborated with MyBig
21:57famous German
21:58To crack the airship
22:00LZ2
22:01Which was equipped with two engines, Maybag
22:03each one of them
22:04125 horsepower
22:06We want to, we didn't say we're not talking about good things
22:08We're now talking about the Sablat.
22:09Zeppelin continued
22:10In manufacturing his engineering miracles
22:11One and the other
22:13It works like an iPhone.
22:14LZ3 dropped to 1106
22:15LZ4 for 1108
22:17LZ5 for 1109
22:18If we had left it for a while
22:19We were landing the plane with pilots
22:20The Pro and Max versions have been released
22:21The man Aziz continued until he reached LZ126
22:241924
22:26That, my dear, was the Atlantic moment.
22:28LZ126 was ready
22:30Standing proudly, he declared that he was facing the mighty Uncle Atlas.
22:33The LZ126 was equipped with five engines
22:37Each engine has a power of four hundred horsepower.
22:39Four hundred horsepower, you blind man, every engine
22:40for him?
22:41Aziz stated that it could reach speeds of up to 80 miles per hour.
22:44He was taking stitches and the clouds
22:45He actually covered the distance in October 1924
22:47From Germany to New Jersey, five thousand miles
22:50All this, my dear
22:51Foo Only In Sery Deez
22:52In other words, just three days.
22:54And don't worry, my dear, about the achievement.
22:55At that time, if you were in Germany and wanted to adjust the Atlantic...
22:57You will travel first to the Atlantic Ocean
22:59We'll go a thousand miles
23:00After that you board a ship that will take four days
23:02Until the second part of it arrives
23:03After that, you'll see if you want to play football in America.
23:05Now, you're a professional at installing air.
23:07That's how it gets from Germany to America
23:09Uncle Atlas, my dear, the planet is now in a state of chaos.
23:11Any engine size
23:12Those who pass by him and those who pass by his mouth
23:14He sets records and holds competitions.
23:16Some of the middle of the oceans
23:18Oh, the German company Zeppen, you have completed ambitious projects
23:20Until she succeeded in organizing in the twentieth century
23:23Regular transatlantic bets
23:24The trip carries sixty passengers
23:26They are calm in a state of luxury and elegance
23:28They enjoy hotel accommodation
23:30Like steamships, and even better
23:31Inside, my dear, if you had lived for ninety years
23:33You didn't have the option of crossing the Atlantic in a flying hotel.
23:36At a height of two hundred meters in the middle of the sea
23:37And when I say "flying hotel"
23:38I'm not exaggerating
23:39I don't mean that it's Festacle and it lowers the meat wall too much
23:41He's not doing business and he's relaxed.
23:42This is a hotel in the truest sense of the word.
23:44Firstly, because they are sites for feasting and celebrations.
23:47And writing, writing, and drawing
23:49Five-bedroom hotel, Beitir Bek and Beidak Al-Atlanti
23:52Three nights' stay
23:53And the view is the ocean
23:54Imagine, my dear, the ocean surrounds you from all directions.
23:57Oh Abu Ahmed, I want to go back and live in that era.
23:59And my dear, this dream is a naive dream.
24:01You'll regret it. (Time break)
24:02Honestly, my dear, if you didn't love me, I wouldn't want time at all.
24:04For three reasons
24:05The world was racist at that time and slavery existed.
24:07Years have passed since the bacteria were that old.
24:19Like the railway and shipping companies, they all started with the same pattern.
24:22Hotel specifications in the first
24:23For example, if you saw old trains and old ships
24:25You will see a level of luxury that is difficult to find now.
24:27Because the first passengers of these means
24:29They were the richest of the bunch.
24:31Rich and strong
24:31Not because they have an extra spirit of experimentation and adventure
24:34God forbid!
24:35But because they are the countries of the time that can afford the cost
24:38Very high at this time
24:40Therefore, these transportations needed to be equipped
24:42With the finest amenities of its time
24:43The Zeppelin company wanted to compete with the huge steamships.
24:47Ships that regularly navigate the Atlantic Ocean
24:49He conducted an experiment that was neither well-received nor even achievable.
24:51There's nothing like that in our time at all.
24:53My dear, no matter what luxurious things you possess
24:55It is a compressed metallurgical science
24:57And it flies at very high altitudes
24:58There is neither oxygen nor blood pressure suitable for life.
25:01But the airship could reach a height of another thousand feet.
25:04You're barely floating above the surface of the earth.
25:06You don't have a problem with blood pressure.
25:07The ship was not just equipped
25:09With windows that can be opened normally
25:10Choose to open the airplane window and suck comfortably.
25:12And you're talking to people like that, as if you're running for president.
25:15Also, my dear, there were dances and numbers on the balcony
25:17So, in our plane, he moved like this and he
25:19And the bathroom is afraid of a matchbox
25:20And the whole trip was like a stuffed pigeon in Farhat
25:23The journey was long, and he was working because of the rice, which he couldn't live on.
25:24Those were the days, my dear, when people used to go out onto their balconies to have a cup of tea and a cigarette.
25:28All of this on the plane
25:29And then they go back and sit comfortably, enjoying their time in the building.
25:32If you see a nice-looking hair removal cream, you can ask her if you'd allow me to use that head.
25:34And they danced Salwa on the plane
25:36All of this, my dear, is in the air.
25:37And late at night on the plane, she fears falling asleep on a bed.
25:41If you're feeling inspired, here's an idea for you.
25:44You enter the writing stage and write your inspiration.
25:47All this, my dear, on a plane
25:48I know, my dear, that crossing the Atlantic Ocean is no longer a big deal.
25:52The matter became easy
25:53Crossing it is no longer as historically difficult as I'm telling you about.
25:56Many things happened after that beautiful moment of Zé Blen Dee
25:58Crossing the Atlantic on a beautiful air cushion
26:01However, as usual, life doesn't always give you happy endings.
26:05The era of Zee Blain ended in tragedy.
26:07When the regular airplane came along, it replaced the balloon.
26:09What a powerful human being of this era!
26:10He doesn't want to let the slui spread across the Atlantic Ocean.
26:12He wants to get there faster; crossing the Atlantic is now measured in hours, not days.
26:15Currently recorded
26:16For use on regular passenger planes
26:18Which is not faster than the sound except for the Concorde
26:20It arrived in five hours, my dear.
26:21Five hours to cross the Atlantic
26:23Which was the fastest thing they could do, in three days.
26:24Those were the days, my dear, when Columbus was still standing on the edge of the ship.
26:27He's now doing bye for his family.
26:28But we arrived and found all of this already there.
26:29Even if the legends say that beyond the ocean lies Atlas
26:32So today we see that beyond this ocean
26:34Not Atlas, beyond the ocean is America.
26:35America is similar to an atlas in many ways.
26:37Because, just as Atlas was banished to the world of the new gods under the leadership of Zeus
26:41Because he no longer has what he used to have.
26:42Many European immigrants left their countries and went to America after the Industrial Revolution.
26:46Because they couldn't find a place for themselves in the new world that created them.
26:48And America, once gone, remained America.
26:50On the Atlas road, America also gained the ancient gods
26:53British and French attire
26:54Her war against the new gods
26:55Germany and Japan uniforms
26:57But America had better luck than Atlas.
26:59Leaving aside the legend of Atlas and all this Greek nonsense
27:02His historical reflections
27:03I prefer the name that the Arabs of old gave to this ocean.
27:06Neither Atlantic nor Atlantic
27:08They called him the dear sea of darkness
27:09Simply because they don't know or see what's behind it.
27:12Like the rest of the ancient world at that time
27:13And at the same time, they see the sun and it sets there always.
27:15It's as if he really is a world-class person.
27:17or the last boundary of the earth
27:18My dear, the Arabs felt that this sea
27:21Nothing good will ever come of it.
27:22Honestly, I mean, the whole Hamburger, tomato, and cycle thing is ridiculous.
27:25Netflix, Hulu, WhichPho
27:28iPhone, Microsoft, and Nvidia
27:30And how many companies are there like SP510?
27:32But the whole world there is dark.
27:34Amon, my dear, is the easiest person to throw a toy at.
27:36He is the white man
27:37God's judgment is for the blindness of the white man
27:39And the second person I throw the most insults at is President Biden.
27:41And the third person I throw the most at is the finance minister.
27:44And the fourth limit is throwing play at him, the colonial one.
27:46Hasbullah is the best of them all.
27:48Oh God, if this is in our best interest, let them all drown in the Atlantic and not find a zipla to rescue them.
27:52That's it, my dear, finally, or rather, not finally.
27:54The hospital of the one who passed through the old neighborhood
27:55Look at its sources
27:56We need to subscribe to the channel.
27:57Do you know, my dear?
27:58The Atlantic Ocean?
27:58Sa'li, my dear
27:59I'll show you a longer set