 Let's check it out. Nice. I think we should be coming in live and there we are. Hi everyone, this is Chicho. Welcome to my channel and welcome to another live stream. Today today is October 31st, 2021. Happy Halloween! And we're doing a math touring session number 77, which is probably an underestimate of how many we've done so far. I hope you have a fantastic fall. Interesting times, interesting times, but we must never forget that name of the game is Mathematics. And this is sort of me making myself available as often as possible to just do drop-in math tutoring sessions, make myself available for a couple hours, try to do it once a week, but most likely it's turning out to be once every two weeks, so twice a month. To help people out with mathematics, mainly focus on high school mathematics, but we do expand to elementary school and post-secondary mathematics as well. And we've covered a lot. We've covered a lot. I have a few hundred videos, probably over 500 videos online regarding mathematics. Yoshi, how are you doing? Great to get you again while I'm repotting my bonsai. Nice, nice, nice. What kind of bonsai? Cannabis bonsai? Cannabis bonsai should be almost over, unless you got it on the lights, permanent lights. One of the amazing bonsai I liked, jade. Jade ones are beautiful, especially when the trunk starts getting thicker and thicker. It's got like three or four branches going off with minor leaves. It's beautiful, beautiful, beautiful. Fun. Aside from that gang, while we wait for people to roll in, it's a ficus bonsai, ficus bonsai. Chinese banyan. I gotta look that up. I'm gonna look that up right now, actually, while we wait for people to roll in and me do an intro. The bonsai trees are, they could be so beautiful, so beautiful. And some of them, so old, so old. Oh, one of these ones, nice, nice, nice. Beautiful, beautiful, beautiful. How many, how many years old? Super cool, super cool. I gotta get into bonsai, having bonsai plants all over the place. Fun. Gang, if you want to know what this work is about, I am on Patreon. Patreon.com. You can follow the work there, you can support the work there. Everything's layered on the mathematics. Almost everything's layered on mathematics. And I don't put anything behind paywall. Everything's creative commons. Share and share alike. So if you want to know what it is that we are doing, Patreon is a great way to do so. And we do have a subscribe star page as well. And the links will be in the description of this video once it's been loaded on to our video sharing platforms. And for those of you that are supporting this work on Patreon gang, thank you very much for the support. I hope you're enjoying the content that we are creating. It's all over the place, but there is a theme to it as you know. And I appreciate the support very much. We are live streaming on twitch, twitch.tv, four slash chico live, c-h-y-c-h-o-l-i-v-e. Yoshi, they surely are beautiful and can be very old. Luckily mine is rated beginner safe, nice. I really don't know how old it is. Maybe five to ten years old. Cool, cool, cool. Yeah, I've seen some that are like 30, 40 years old. It's like, whoa, so cool. Take serious care. It's like, wow. And pride and joy of some people's collection. Bonsai, I don't know anyone that's got a huge Bonsai collection, but I've been to some people's homes, friends that I've had or associates, where they have one or two, usually just one hanging around. And beautiful, beautiful. I hope you take care of it while Yoshi. And for those of you that are here on twitch, gang, thank you very much for the support. Thank you for being here. Thank you for the moths, for taking care of business. Thank you for the follows. Thank you for the subs. Thank you for the conversations and the questions when we are doing mathematics and other streams. It is in large part because of the support we're getting on these two platforms that we're able to do what it is that we are doing. I do analysis last stream 30 minutes before we go live on mines, vk, gap, parlor, and getter and bit cloud. You can follow the work there. Taco operator. How are you doing? Good morning. Good morning. And we do have a discord page exclamation mark discord. You can come to our twitch chat anytime you want. Type in exclamation mark discord and the invite will pop up. And there is an invite in the link in the description of these videos. Once they are uploaded to our video sharing platforms and we got almost a thousand people sharing information and whatnot. Long time no see chicho. I've missed you. I've slowed down on the streams a little bit because I've been crazy busy doing certain things, adjusting, maneuvering. But we're going to get back into a more regular session. So we have a lot more time, a lot more streams to pop in. Thanks for popping in, by the way. Holy tough. Hello. Hello. How are you doing? Have you been? I've been good. Adjusting. Adjusting our lives because of we're resisting fascism. So when you take on such a task, and I think personally everyone should take it on because the last thing you want to live on there is a fascist totalitarian oligarchy, technocratic oligarchy that controls every aspect of your life. That's a dystopian society. So I have no desire to live in such a state of being. So doing whatever we can to make sure we resist it and educate people. And mathematics is a huge part of that. Huge, huge, huge, huge, huge. And we will look at some of the data at some point in the future to really make sure it's appreciated the ludicrous state that the world has fallen under. And there's some amazing data to look at. Kyle M Parker. Hello, hello, hi, chat. Let's go, Brandon. The man, the legend, how are you doing? Yoshi, I'm doing my best to take care of it. Good luck for you to start your own. Thank you. I'm not into it yet. I'm not there yet. I'm not there yet. If I ever do one, a bonsai, and I will do one at some point, most likely it's going to be a jade. Most likely it's going to be a jade. Unfortunately, we had a jade that we had for like 40 years. Get hit by bugs and really get under stress. And we lost that huge, beautiful jade plant two years ago, two, three years ago or so. I tried to do everything to save it, but it didn't happen. But I like the jades. I like the jades. And maybe if I set up lights permanent with a mother plant, I'll do a cannabis one as well. Talk to our operator. I found a new job in that administration of Canadian products. Nice. I've been given an extension contract for filling a year into my work. Nice. Nice. What kind of data are you managing? Joe, how are you doing? Welcome to another live stream. Good afternoon from the UK. Only woke up three hours ago after a stream last night. I bet we did a current events live stream game last night. And it was 8 p.m. starting my time, which was, and UK went ahead an hour, I think. So it was like 5 a.m. UK time. People in the UK stuck around to participate in the discussion. That was super fun. We had an unboxing going on as well where someone sent us a care package. And wow, rock and roll. That was fantastic. That was fantastic. We went back an hour. You went back an hour. Okay, so back an hour. So not as bad, but the body doesn't realize all the clock's been set back an hour. So you saved an hour and good morning if you just woke up. Not many hours ago. Three hours ago. I hope you had good breakfast. I hope you had good breakfast. For live streams getting when we don't have any visuals, we will upload the audio to SoundCloud.com forward slash Chicho as a podcast. And those podcasts should be available in your favorite podcasting platform including Spotify and iTunes. And this is a mathematics drop-in tutoring session. And we will be uploading this to SensorTube, to BitShoot, to Rumble, and to Odyssey. And depending on the, you know, what we cover, if we cover anything, it's open discussion. Most likely we'll pull segments out and upload them individually. Mr. Brainfreeze, thank you very much. Is gifting one tier one sub to ChichoLive's community? Is their first gift sub in the channel? Awesome. Gifted it to Kyle and Parker. Thank you, Mr. Brainfreeze, for the tier one gift. Yay, Kyle! You got access to more emotes. I'm pretty sure. Awesome. I'm gonna take these things down, gang. And all the links will be in the description of these videos, gang. And again, if you want to follow all of our content, you want to be subbed on BitShoot, Rumble, and Odyssey. We are definitely, most definitely shadowbound on SensorTube. So not even the mathematics is being promoted, or recommended to most people. And Hedgy, how are you doing? Smoke him up, you got him. So BitShoot, Rumble, and Odyssey is where you want to be. Okay, I'm gonna take these things down. And all the links will be in the description of this video after it's been uploaded. And mods, thank you for taking care of business. Twitch mods, taco. I manage data, like for example, a bag of almonds from President's Choice, and I enter all the information like manufacturer, warranty, how many grams it is, what's the sub brand, allergy statements, and a bunch more. So my job is for businesses to have easy access to product information. Ah, cool. So you must be working for a large company or distributor, most likely. Is it a distributor? It must be a distributor, because if you've got a lot of products, administration of Canadian products. Or is it government? Data, man, datasets are amazing. I work for the DDC, DDC, what's the DDC stand for? DDC, DDC, take a guess what DDC is. Distribution, C must be Canada, no? Data distribution Canada? These acronyms, I have a hard time figuring out what acronyms mean. DDC, you're funny, you're funny. I've done data entry to and data management. Department of Dolan, Department of Dolan security, funny, funny. And again, data, huge data stuff is crazy. Like I've got my, I've mentioned this before, I have my SAP certificate, right? That's an SAP thing. I got my FI financial SAP certificate, but I got a job after I got my certificate working. I forget what the module was called, but basically pushing through cues, a skews of products. And we're just filling in numbers just to make sure the skew went from one pointer was able to go to one place, even if the dataset was inaccurate, right? That's what a gong show was. So it was interesting. No abs, only kebab, that's what you're doing. You're so good with math. I bet you have a master, no, no, not a master's degree. No. I got my geophysics degree with a minor in mathematics, honors co-op geophysics degree. So a little bit more amplified with a minor in mathematics. At the time, I was the only person from the earth science geophysics department that had ever graduated with math minor. I took some extra courses to make sure that happened. And I've done a lot of data processing and stuff, like analyzing, just working 10 years as geophysicists. But yeah, so I'm not a mathematician. I just know how to use mathematics in my life to improve my life, to enhance my life, to keep me informed. And as far as I'm concerned, that's the mathematics that we all need to know. That's what I teach. If anyone wants to be a mathematician, more power to you. But for me, the first priority is to make sure people are literate in the language of mathematics. Talk co-operator, I have no idea. We have a ton of projects from around the globe. It's not just from Canada. My boss don't even know what it stands for. That's hilarious. Welcome to data management. Welcome to bureaucracy and big data. It's part of the bureaucracy. So that's what it's referred to. That's where it's categorized. That's where it goes. And good luck to anyone that tries to correct the bureaucratic system. As one person that used to come here, their username was bureaucracy kills, and they were 100% correct. Bureaucracy kills. No labs only came off. Your SAP certified? Wow. I want to do the WP warehousing module. Would you recommend it? Yeah, would I recommend it? I don't know what the job market is for SAP right now. When I got certified, it was back in 2000. Like 20 years ago, I got SAP certified. I took the course in Montreal. It was fun. It was amazing. I got a video out there. I think I pulled out a segment. I told a story about it. And I have a video out there. If you do, I think she chose SAP and should pop up. Give you a low down of what it is. It really depends on the job opportunities, if it's worth it or not. It costs a fair chunk of money to get certified unless you're being sent by a company to get certified. You want to be involved in rollouts, implementations, because that gives you the most experience and that kicks you up in the pay grade. If you've ever done a rollout, that's when your pay grade goes up. You don't want to just be the data entry person because that means you don't see the larger picture and you're not involved in the implementation, the hard work, and sometimes those projects take a long time. Is it worth it? It's really up to you. If you enjoy that type of work, if you think investing the money to get that certificate and the job opportunities are there, sure, why not? For me, was it worth it? I worked in the field a little bit, but pretty quickly, I found out I didn't want to be in it, so I moved on from it, right? So I spent a fair bit of money getting that certificate. I probably made the same amount of money back, if not more. And on the experience front, for sure it was worth it. I learned a lot. I taught myself accounting and I got the certificate at the same time. And I realized what ERP, enterprise resource, planning companies do, data management does, how they operate. So it gave me a really good perspective of what we're capable to do with big data, not just on a corporate level, but on a societal level. So it was worth it for me. Would I do it again? Yeah, I would do it again. But maybe I would try to find a job in the implementation aspect of it. At the time, the job market had collapsed a little bit. It was after the .com bubble. But if I hung around long enough, I would have got offers to do implementation and stuff like this. Salary would have gone through the roof and whatnot. But I moved on from there and started teaching mathematics, which I think is an amazing decision from my part. It just worked out really well. Kyle, to Mr. Brainfreeze, thank you so much for gifting me a subscription to this channel. Awesome. Indeed, Mr. Freeze, thank you very much. Again, don't forget Free Assange, Free Assange, Free Assange is a publisher and journalist that has been crucified for trying to make transparency and accountability of capitalist power to humanity. For more information, please see wikilease.org, defend.wikilease.org, or our Julian Assange and WikiLease playlist on sensor 2. No app says SAP professionals made like 200,000K a year. Yeah. And that was the salary back then as well. So I'm surprised that it's not more. So once you get the experience, your salary goes through the roof. It's a lot of smoke and mirrors as well. Okay. There's a lot of smoke and mirrors involved in it as well. In terms of how prestigious it's considered to be, because it's sort of a click. You could call it a cult to a certain degree. Right. It was interesting. It was interesting. It was interesting. Taco, the only bad part of my job is that they make me enter information in French. Oh no. And I don't even know it. More than four thirds of the staff don't know French, but you still type it in French. You could use that opportunity to learn French, Taco. So that could be an amazing opportunity to, while you're doing this, to learn French since you're entering it in. Right. But I'm pretty sure it's just certain key phrases and stuff that you're entering in. So you're not getting a full spectrum of the language, of communicating language. So it's just certain keywords that you must enter in. Right. But look, any jobs that you guys are in, even if you're not fond of it, try to use it to your advantage and learn something from it. Right. That. Mr. Brain freeze to call. No problem. Have a good day. Awesome. Awesome. Yeah. No app. Salesforce, Oracle, ABS, Microsoft Dynamics, now providing fierce competition to SAP. Yeah. And Oracle was around back then as well. Salesforce is more new when I got my SAP certificate. I don't believe Salesforce was around. I think Salesforce came around in the mid 2000s. So it was Oracle SAP. And I believe there was another company that was involved in that. SAP is a German company and the software. I love the software. So intricate, but very problematic, very problematic. I'm not sure what SAP stock is doing recently. I should look at it actually just to see what it's about. But Salesforce has gone through the roof. Right. But Salesforce has gone through the roof for other reasons than just their enterprise resource planning, tech. They're also involved with the Davos Group and the World Economic Forum and the certain agendas. So there's other factors in play. Yeah. Taco. I've learned French words like no iron. This is no iron. Sans fur, candy, bonbons. It's mostly food based knowledge that I've learned. Your vocabulary. Your walking candy machine. French candy words. Hilarious. Funny, funny, edgy to Taco. My ancestors were French citizens who moved to India in the 1650s. Wow. Gang, I got the snacks. I'm still eating my applesauce. Applesauce with feta cheese. Applesauce and feta cheese. So delicious, gang. So delicious. Sweet and salty and dairy. Sorry, edgy. I know you don't like the, like the dairy, but so yummy, so yummy. Like you do this and you do this and your papa feta cheese and some applesauce. That is really good. I hope you have amazing snacks. I should have brought more cheese. I'll partake our ration, my cheese. It's really super delicious. Jesus says applesauce is good. Keep the white, that white death. Yeah. I need to reduce my dairy intake. Tell the truth. But man, super delicious. Taco, edgy. Sorry if I offended your heritage, but French sounds good to the ear by my hands. When I type it in, they want to commit, to commit no, no work. French. We had to learn French in Canada for a number of years in high school. Didn't learn very much. We're here to do mathematics, gang. If you got math questions, if not, we just talk. We chill. For me, I've had a lot of people, a lot of requests privately to be teaching mathematics. I picked up a fair bit of students. I think in the last couple of years, people have realized their centralized education systems I mentioned before is complete garbage. So parents are desperate to make sure their children learn mathematics and a lot of kids are desperate to learn mathematics because they know how important it is. So if you're considering a business to get into, like a private business you get into, if you want to tip your toes in the industry, try tutoring mathematics or if you're good at it, you will have clientele. Word of mouth will get out. Not remotely. I don't speak French, but I speak four other languages. That's good. I think edgy speaks German. Cantonese? English, obviously. What's the fourth language? Edgy. Mandarin in Cantonese? Do you speak both? And tea in the morning is amazing. So good. Russian. Russian, German, Cantonese, and Urdu and English. Edgy, you speak five languages. You speak Urdu too? Urdu is the, is it the main language in India? I mean, India's got so many languages. The language of love. Zulu. Haha. Is it? I don't know if you're joking or not. It could be. Warriors are very passionate. So it could be the language of love and death. Why not? Love and death. That's the language of the powerful language of the Zulu. So you speak six, five languages, Edgy. I speak three. English, my best. And gang, if you ever get the opportunity to learn other languages, it gives you a different perspective on life, right? Different, different perspective on life. And by the way, gang, if we have no mathematics to talk about, we can talk about whatever we want and whatever comes up. If it's not deemed appropriate, the sensors will block us on SensorTube. We'll just make a little notice and just load up whatever segment we're loading up to SensorTube and the rest will go on the other video sharing platforms. Edgy, no, I learned it as it's the language of commerce between India and Pakistan. Oh, between India and Pakistan. Or do. Okay. So it's the language of commerce between India and Pakistan. So that's what most people speak for business transactions and stuff. Cool. Mr. Brain Freeze. A lot of my colleagues use SAP. I recently started working as a database administrator. Still got a lot to learn. Cool. Yeah, databases are, I mean, that's what in the last 20 years, really, the world has exploded. The world of data management has exploded, exploded, exploded. It's problematic, really, to our societies and also beneficial. We just have to, as Julian Assange and Edward Stone and many other people that know a lot about how data is managed by centralized power, as they have stated, we must have privacy, anonymity, infrastructure, software that provides that privacy, which is basically liberty by design. And the only way to do that is through mathematics. So there's a lot going on in the data management world. Some of it is going down a dark path. Some of it can be extremely enlightening and beneficial to society. Unfortunately, those that are well-funded are pushing the world towards the dark path of big data. We have to turn that around, if we can. Joe Ciccio. I'm not sure if this counts as a math question, but could you do a quick review of difference between torque and horsepower? Oh, man, I would have to look it up. Torque is horsepower. It's just different formulas, right? Different, what do you call it? Units. Torque is basically the, I don't even want to paraphrase it, but it's rotational force, I guess. There's rotation involved in torque. Horsepower is just pure power, the raw force used to do something, right? So torque engines have horsepower, but they're two different units, really, two different metrics. Torque could be used in the lever, you get more torque. If you go down the thing, I would have to look it up, Joe. Unfortunately, that's less math related, more physics related, and it comes to the definitions of them. And I haven't done any horsepower questions or torque questions for very long time, even though I got my geophysics degree, and I've done a lot of this in the past. But for some reason, I used to have a lot of physics, 11 and 12 students, I don't anymore. It's mainly become math students. Sorry, if you remind me, I will look it up before our next math stream, and I can do a little intro to it then, if I get the time to break it down and stuff. Our first math question, and I'm dancing around it, right? Sleepy waves, Chicho missed yesterday's stream. Happy to join you for a little today. Awesome. Welcome, welcome, sleepy waves. It was a good stream yesterday, sleepy waves. Fun. Taco. I only know Bosnian, Serbian Croatian, but they're very similar. But I do know English very well, and my German isn't bad, but needs work. Fresh just beginning. Man, you speak a lot of languages. That's pretty damn good. That's pretty good. Let's do some math in the real world. Oh, God, I know where you want to go, Hedgie. We will do that mathematics at some point, really. Especially the 95% efficacy thing, which is crazy. 95% if you know what I'm talking about. It's basically how I'll give you a little hint on people. What's the difference? I have to look it up. I have to look up their definitions between 0.04 and 0.88. Right? What can you do with these two numbers? Well, you could do this. You could say 0.88. Let's do this. 0.04 minus 0.88 divided by 0.88. This is equal to 0.84 divided by 0.88, which is equal to approximately 95.0.95, which is if you do it. Let's do a little eraser. 0.95, which is equal to 95, approximately 95%. If you're on our Discord page, if you're in a certain folder, which is the topic of discussion in the world for the last two years, these numbers will ring a bell if you watched about a two-minute video that I posted a link to. Right? At some point, we'll dig into this. At some point, we'll dig into this. And this data, and we'll see where it takes us. Let's see where it takes us. Taco to Edgy, hold your horses. Croatian is one of the hardest languages to learn. So be warned. Take it at your pace, really. Torque, Taco. Is Torque 0 to 60 in some sense? Is it? I don't know. I don't know what that means, 0 to 60. Are we talking about Torque engines? I'm not 100% sure. Hedgy, Torque simply is the ability of a vehicle to perform work. Specifically, the twisting force applied by the crankshaft. Horsepower is how rapidly the vehicle can perform that work. For instance, a lightweight sports car that operates at high RPM may have high horsepower but low torque. So they don't necessarily have to be both correlated the same way. Why Torque means high horsepower? There are engines that have minimal torque, the older engines really, that have huge horsepower. But in general, Torque engines, if I remember correctly from the time I was looking at the cars, you can get more horsepower with smaller engines and high torque. The RX-7 was one of the heavy engines, the Torque engines. RX-7, we used to, our family used to have an RX-7 at some point back in the 90s, late 80s, 90s. And those were fun cars, man. 86, RX-7, 87, RX-7s. Man, what a car. I would love to own one of those cars again. And nice and powerful for what it was. And a heavy front, very heavy front. And that heavy front and the car being low saved my life and my mom's life one day. We were driving down the highway. I was going around 130 clicks an hour or something like this, if you know British Columbia Hope. And it was during sunset and during sunset and sunrise, deer move, animals tend to move. And going about 130 on a straight highway, saw a deer over here, did a little look over there. When you see a deer, if you're driving, be careful. Deer do not travel alone, right? If you see one deer, there are other deers there. This is like a herd thing, right? So I looked over there and as soon as I looked in front of me, there was a full grown deer right in front of us. And 130 clicks an hour, boom, nailed it. The deer hit the front side of the car. Lucky for us, it was an RX-7 that we were driving. Not RX, yeah RX-7. At the time, we had a CRX as well. If we had hit that car, hit that deer at that speed with a Honda CRX, car would have been crushed. Cheecho would probably not be here, right? Nor Cheecho's mom, right? So that deer would have taken me and my mom out with an RX-7, with a CRX, Honda CRX. Because we were driving an RX-7, it's a heavy car, heavy front. The deer, we hit it. The deer flew up. The top of the deer hit the top of the car. Lucky for us, the RX-7 was low. Otherwise, it would have gone through the windshield. And the deer flew and we skidded. Somehow I was able to keep control. I was a young kid, so I guess my reflexes were pretty good. I was still able to keep control. We didn't flip, we didn't roll over, we didn't go down an embankment. There was an embankment right beside us, right? And I stopped the car and did a little double take, got out, and I saw the deer trying to get up. And he had flown. He had flown down the embankment. He was trying to get up. I was like, oh man, I had a deer. And we were on a road trip. We were going from Vancouver to Toronto. And this is the first day, first couple of hours, we had a deer. Damn. So we got in the car, we checked the car, and the car was dented in the front. You couldn't open up the hood. There's hair in the hood and stuff like this. Couldn't open it. We realized that we can't continue the road trip. We have to go get the car fixed. It didn't look that bad, but it was bad. So the car was still driving. Luckily, took the exit, came back. By the time we went back, that way the deer was already dead. Like he was done. It was a full blown deer. And found the cop station close by, reported the case, drove back, and the next day the car got towed to the mechanics to get fixed. And we hopped in the RX-7 and drove across the next day. So we didn't wait for the car to get fixed. That's my deer killing story. Taco. Is this how race is going? No, no. It's related to something else. I understand this. My veggie says indeed, indeed, Smith. Negative. It's negative. It's negative. Oh, negative. That's right. Negative. Negative, negative. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. And if I do anything wrong with the mathematics, correct me, gang. Sleepyways, chucho. During the pandemic, there was a lot of uncertainty in many industries and sectors, and hence that created a lot of opportunity to buy in and take advantage of some hidden opportunities. This half year of 2021, we are seeing the effects of inflation everywhere. And now even used items randomly around the house have shot up in higher value than before. What are your predictions for all the inflation that will probably continue to grow? It's going to continue to grow. Exactly what you said. Supply chain might be fixed at some point, but there's a lot of hands in the cookie jar that they do not want this information. Not information to get out. That's one thing. But the supply chain to be restored because they have gained a lot of power and they will be able to buy up a lot of industries on the chip, chip, chip, chip, chip. Right? So, and there's money supply that has kicked up a lot. We're going into a multi-polar world, so it might be difficult to have access to certain products in the future as easily as we had access to them in the past. There's regulations coming in. So, for example, in Vancouver, right? So, in Vancouver, the city of Vancouver was trying to pass a tax on the citizens and governments are coming for more taxes. That's why they want to digitize all currency. By the way, if you live in a country that they're eliminating cash from that country, and Canada might be one of them, at some time in the future, you may want to decide to leave that country because you have lost complete anonymity and privacy, which means you have lost your liberty because governments want to tax every single bit of transaction you have in your life, including paying a babysitter, including paying a neighbor's kid to mow the lawn or wash your car, or lemonade stand, little kids that set up a little lemonade stand in front of their house, they even want taxes from that, right? But in Vancouver, they were trying to pass a tax law, and I don't think it passed this year, but they'll try again next year, right? Where every citizen living in Vancouver would have to pay for parking, okay? And anybody that was buying a brand new SUV from 2022 and on, okay, would have to pay an extra $1,000 in taxes per year to get insurance on that car and an extra $500 for something else, right? So brand new SUVs were going to be like an extra $1,000 a year, right, in taxes. Well, if I wanted to buy an SUV, I wouldn't buy a new one. I would buy an older one. So older SUV prices might go up. Lucky for me, I have an older SUV that's been sitting there that I'm most likely going to get fixed up and sold in the next few months for. I wasn't really planning on it, but because of certain situation, family situation, where our household family is being cut in half because of certain mandates where my partner being a nurse will no longer be able to work as a nurse, because the government will allow her to work as a nurse, I'm most likely going to be selling the car to generate a little bit of funds to give us a little bit more buffer, right? So there's certain things going on. It's not just specifically supply chain related. It's mandate related. It's centralized power trying to grab more power related. It's corporations trying to screw over society and obtain more control related. It's politics, not necessarily economics. Hedgie, the bigger the vehicle, the more torque is important over horsepower. Is that what it is, Hedgie? Cool, cool. Now I need to find that bus steer video. I might have told that story before. I think I have told that story before. I don't know if I have a segment of it out. Taco, the RX-7 is the car with the Winkle engine. It's a rotary engine. Yeah, indeed. Rotary engine, high torque. Rotary engine that has an internal triangle making sealed rotations that makes high RPMs for performance, but top speed is around 190 kilometers per hour. Cool. It was a beautiful car at the time when it came out. Really. I really like driving both the CRX and the RX-7. Okay, they were fun cars to drive. Fun cars to drive. Cheryl, this time of year is freaky with deer here. They pop up anywhere and everywhere. Yeah. Yesterday, a couple of days ago, we were driving. We almost, again, almost hit a deer on the highway. And man, gang, I'm an animal lover. Really. But deers are the dumbest, dumbest, dumbest animals out there. They see a car coming. They freeze, right? Supposedly, if you see a deer on the highway when you're driving and they stop in front of you, blink your headlights and the blinking lights is supposed to kick him out of their hypnosis on the run, right? But when the deer comes and a lot of animals actually do this, even squirrels do this, when you see them, they'll freeze, right? Because they think when they freeze, you won't see them because a lot of predators function, their visuals function on motion, right? So if you freeze, the predator won't be able to recognize you because you're not moving, right? So they consider, I guess, cars to be predators and they freeze. Now, freezing in front of a car moving at 120, 130, 140 kilometers per hour or 100 clicks per hour is not a good idea, especially if the drivers are not in that experience. So, supposed to be blinking your headlights works, but super dangerous. Cheryl, super dangerous. Deers take out a lot of people on highways. So when you see deer crossing signs on the highway, pay attention. Those deer crossing or moose crossing or any animal crossing signs, they're there because most likely someone has died on that highway and there's been a lot of accidents on that highway, right? In that zone where there's a deer crossing or whatever animal crossing. So they only put up those signs there is because that is a pathway for the animals to go, right? So pay attention. Road signs mean something, okay? Be aware, be aware. Smith, I thought that did pass. No, did it pass in Vancouver? The tax? Someone told me a few days ago that it didn't pass. I'm guessing it might have passed. That was my assumption but they said it didn't and my reply was well they didn't pass it this year, they'll pass it next year, right? But if you find the link where it did pass Smith, link it up for us on Discord. That'd be great. I'd like to know because that's insane to me. Hedgie, they ain't taking my money. All my shippers are so excited about a no-cast society, are they? No man. They're excited about it. Some form of underground economy will pop up, barter system, preferably, but it's if they eliminate cash in Canada, I will begin to set my life and my family's life in motion to go to a country where cash is the name of the game. The name of the game. Joe Chicho. What do you mean by torque engine? What would be an example of a non-torque engine? Like I think every engine has torque but the RX-7, I've looked at the inside of the RX-7, it's a different type but it's not pistons going up and down. Like a V8, pistons go up and down. There's still torque there but the main power, again I'm not, I'm not, I don't know my car engines well at all, right? It was just, I'm going by memory from like 34 years ago, right? But regular engines were pistons going up and down. V6, V8, V10, whatever, right? But the RX-7 was a torque engine. I don't know how it really functioned but it was a rotation. When you turn it on, you felt the car go whoo, right? It was pretty cool. Actually some of the V8s did that too but you really felt the car go whoo, so there was a rotation involved in it. That's where it got most of its power through the rotation. I don't think that's the way it works for the V, for the straight V6s or V8s and stuff like this. I would have to look it up. I don't know. All I know is the torque engines got their power, their horsepower through rotation while the other engines got their horsepower through. I don't know, just brute force I guess. I don't know how it worked though, the truth. Ronnie, how are you doing? Welcome to another live stream. Isn't China already a cashless society? They use and buy stuff. Yeah, complete dystopian. And China went from cash to digital in a matter of like two, three years. I had friends that traveled to China a lot in the past anyway and they said, they said, this was a few years ago we talked. They said last year we were there, you know, you could buy everything, just went to little vendors. You just bought stuff with cash. They said that year that they went, the following year they went, barely anybody would take cash. They laughed at you when they said cash. There's a cash. What do we do with this? They don't know what to do with it. It was all app-based, right? And one of the richest people in China was the one that, the company that rolled out this digital currency and he was actually threatening or he was deemed to be a threat to the Chinese, to the CCP and they took control back a little bit from his company. So it's dangerous. Taco. Yesterday I went as Jason Horvies. It was a day before Halloween and I wanted to surprise people and one guy came to me and asked, dude, are you okay? Is this, wait a second, is that Jason Horvies? I don't know who Jason Horvies is. Who's Jason Horvies? I gotta look this up. I'm gonna look this up. I need a visual. I need a visual of this. Jason Horvies. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's Halloween. Cool, cool, cool. Dude, are you okay? Or Friday the 13th. Friday the 13th, dude. Fun, fun. Peggy, the system named FacePay allows users to look into a camera at special entrance turnstiles fitted in the Metro's 241 stations instead of tapping in with a bank or metro card. Oh my god. Friday the 13th, chap, yeah. Yeah, like this digital surveillance that's being rolled out in the Western world. Extremely dangerous gang. Extremely dangerous. It's related to big data. It's math. A lot of mathematics in it and dystopian, very much so. Apple sauce and feta cheese. Is it Moscow? Yeah. They're gonna roll that on and they're gonna try to roll that on UK and whatnot. I hope people resist. So good. I hope you got good snacks this morning. We're on Sunday morning doing mathematics. I don't think we're getting too many, too many takers to do math on a Sunday morning. So there it is. Sleepways, chicho. How much are houses around where you live versus renting them? Has it increased insignificantly over the last few years or signifying laughter? Houses, prices in houses where I live is insane. Insane. Rent is problematic as well. So we've had friends that want to go to school okay and they come here. This is sort of a university town, so there's universities and colleges around and stuff like this. And they can't find an affordable place to live, so they either choose to do it online or decide not to come, not to pursue their education. So rent is very expensive here, but housing is extremely expensive here as well, but it's about to collapse. The housing market is about to collapse, I believe, as long as Wall Street is not allowed to buy all the all the homes, the banks and stuff, because interest rates are about to kick up in 2022. And once interest rates kick up, a lot of people are over leveraged. Once interest rates kick up, then there's going to be a lot of people that won't be able to afford that price hike in their mortgage, monthly payment in their mortgage. And anybody that's got a floating interest raise is going to be in deep trouble. And anyone that's locked it in for five years, once it starts kicking in 2022, let's say they just buy it then, lock it in before it goes up, by 2027, they'll have to renegotiate their mortgage. If anybody's smart that's already locked into a mortgage and they only have a year or two left in it, they would go in and renegotiate their mortgage again, lock it in again for an extended period of time. Because once interest rates go up, a lot of people will not be able to afford the payments, especially since governments are coming in and increasing taxes as well. We know people who own homes and in the last two years, the taxes on the home have gone up like 15-20%, some even more. So just imagine if your cost of living in your home in regards to taxes goes up 20% in two years or a year. That's a lot. Renewals has gone up, water has gone up, electricity has gone up, gas has gone up, just everything's gone up, right? 1724 here in UK and Sun has vanished. Oh, 1724. Yeah, yeah, yeah, what time? So you're eight hours, so eight, nine hours ahead, nine hours ahead, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. No, what? Wait a second, what's going on? I'm losing my count again. You're eight hours ahead but then you guys went back an hour, so you're seven hours ahead now. Heiji, is that correct? You're seven hours ahead? Math on planning a move to a new place. Yeah, we should do, we should do, depending on the place, it varies so much now. Like people in certain parts of the world, house prices have dropped, have already started dropping, so have rent prices because people are leaving those areas either because they've become draconian or their taxes have gone up, there's no jobs, whatever it might be. Cheryl, I even asked my son if he had any questions. Algebra 1 is so far so good this year, but we'll ramp up in the next marking period. Okay, yeah, for sure Cheryl. We're going to keep on doing, I'm going to make sure I keep on doing this. I was getting a little bit burnt out, I just had to adjust to this new schedule with all these students coming in, so I've been doing a lot of math with students and I've done this level before, but I had to stabilize, going from coming in from the summer to a level where you're doing a lot of math. It takes a little bit of getting into that rhythm. Now that I'm in that rhythm, we're going to do a lot more math, so keep the questions that your son may have, Cheryl, and anybody else, gang, if you know anyone that has math questions or you have math questions that are going to come up if you're taking a math course, write them down. Next time when we do drop in math tutoring session, just come with your question and say, hey, how do we do this? How do we do this? How do we do this? If we can, we'll help you out. Joe Ciccio, rent prices here in the UK are absolutely insane. A lot of places are around 1000 pounds a month for a tiny apartment. What can the government do to control rent prices? Rent control? That's about the same price here as well, Joe. If not more expensive here. What the government can do is get out of our lives. That's what the government can do. One of the reasons there is a housing issue right now is because government has cut the supply chain with mandates and locking everyone down. Another reason is regulation and taxes. And I know this because our family was involved in housing construction, residential construction since the late 1970s and I worked in construction for three decades with the family. I did geophysics and stuff and I still did construction. The first time I worked on a construction site in the house that we were building was in grade eight. I was 13 years old, right? That's what you do. I just went to work. It was good for me. Really, if you can get into working when you're young, especially construction, you build muscle. You get stronger, right? So back then, if you wanted to build a house, you could build a house with inspection coming in and you did your inspections and you paid them their fees and they buggered off the government and you build a house solid house. Now the licensing and inspection and all this stuff cost so much money that is basically cheaper to buy an older house than it is to build a new house, right? That's what government has done. That's one of the reasons there's a housing shortage, right? Because government is trying to control every aspect of our lives and its bureaucracy and bureaucracy kills, right? Rent control, sure, but that's not the solution. That's a band-aid, right? They need to get rid of regulations up the yin-yang, f off government. That's my take, okay? Seven hours ahead, seven hours. Cool, cool, cool. Sleepy waves. By the way, did the rest of Europe kick their clock back in hours as well? Or is it just the UK that did it? Interesting framework to consider when looking at the tactics from eastern totalitarian countries like China and Singapore, whereas they're pretty blunt about where they draw the line with their citizens versus the neoliberal oiled cog machine of the US where it grabs power every year and painting a pretty picture to its citizens so they don't realize what's actually happening. Yeah, pretty much, right? You're free to do what we tell you to do, right? That's the kicker. They don't finish the sentence in the western world. You're free. Everyone thinks that's it. They don't, they don't re-pass the first two words. You're free to do what we tell you to do. They don't realize that part of it, right? Taco, if Thanos snapped his fingers, could he make two plus two equal fish? Indeed, of course. I smet the fine two plus equals and fish. Peanut butter pumpkin party, how you doing? Nice underwear. Fish equals two plus two, hilarious, hilarious. And gang, don't forget, free as such, free as such, free as such. Julian Assange is a publisher and journalist that has been crucified for trying to bring transparency and accountability of capitalist power to humanity. He's in trial right now. Pay attention to what's going on. For more information, see wikileast.org, defend.wikileast.org, or Julian Assange and Wikileast playlist on censor two. Smith, then yes, two plus two equals fish, but what if you reverse the two and the two? Does two plus two equal two plus two equal fish? Funny. Taco to Smith, that's also a probability. That is, that is, that is. My rant is, uh, Hedgie says my rant is 730 pounds a week. That's considered to be cheap here. Even for like a studio. It's considered to be here, studio where you basically, it's just one room, you got the kitchen, you got whatever is Canadian. It's like 12 to $1,400 Canadian. It's expensive. It's expensive. Smith, two plus two equals four equals fish. Cancel out the f? Assume f. This is zero. Then our is fish. They're both four letters. Sure, why not? Taco, I don't pay rent. I own my apartment from Inheritas. Nice. But you pay taxes. You must pay maintenance fees, monthly maintenance fees. Taco, right? So like here, people live in apartments. They pay their, their, if they own the apartment, they don't pay rent, right? But they have to pay anywhere between 300 to $600 monthly fees, maintenance fees, right? Expensive. Some even more. Hedgie, in 2019, the European Parliament voted to scrap the twice a year custom of changing the clock. Cool. The last change was supposed to be spring of this year, but the reform has since been delayed ahead of the time change. And Gardana, Sochana, and and guard Garda, Sochana said there was international evidence to show there was an increase in burglaries in the order of 20% in the winter month. When daylight hours are at the lowest level. Oh, makes sense. Darkness. Sliwaishicho. Thoughts on Tik Tok. Is it disruptive technology? Maybe throwing off Instagram since people prefer Tik Tok since it's less regulated. Maybe. I don't, I don't use Tik Tok. I looked into it. And sure, it'd be a good place to promote some of our stuff to get a more, more audience, but cost benefit. I rather focus on some of the other stuff. Instagram is, you know, it has its uses, I guess, but it's garbage. It's under Facebook control. And as far as less regulated Tik Tok, maybe that's just now. Tik Tok is a mainstream platform controlled. It's completely monitored. There is no privacy on Tik Tok. So you know, it's going to go in a certain direction as well. Personally, I don't, I don't surf Tik Tok or Instagram. I don't use them. So I don't really have too much of an opinion on them other than I'm not into them. Joe, everyone that I knew that finished university a couple of years ago has ended up living in a house share because they can't afford their own place. Yeah. Taco, maintenance is $20 a month. That's it? No, dude. Taco, where are you living by the way? You're, you're in the, you're in Romania area, aren't you? Eastern Europe? Like in Canada, I know people that live in apartment or own their apartments and complexes, they're paying $300 to $500 a month in maintenance. $20 a month. I can teach you some of the Tik Tok dances, Joe. And I've seen some stuff on Tik Tok, which is good. Really. I've seen some stuff on Tik Tok, which is good, but it's usually linked to me from another platform, right? I don't, because it can be addicted. I have gone on there and this clip, this clip, this clip, this clip, this clip. By time you blink, you've been on there for a while, looking all this random info and and you've wasted a lot of time just looking at random stuff. So ideally you want to find, for me anyway, I would want to find content which is worth consuming. I'm not into, there has been times in my life where I like the randomness just to kick the brain into neutral. And do I do that still? I maybe do it in certain forums where I'm accessing news, but I don't do it anymore because it can become an addiction. It can become an issue. So might as well stay away from it. Remember, gang, the algorithms are smarter than you if they're trying to program you, right? They've been designed to manipulate you, because we know a lot about human psychology, right? And how to manipulate society and individuals and those companies, those algorithms, they use that information to get people addicted to the click, to the click, to the click and the swap and spending more time there. Hedgie, $1,237 Canadian dollars a week I pay. For one bedroom, Hedgie? Now that is good content. TikTok, Cheryl. Hi, Cheryl, how are you doing? Is your son still sleeping? Don't have to wake up. Let's go do some math. They probably don't, they don't have, it's only October, end of October, November, November. And man, they've got it, the math curriculum so harshly right now. It's dumbed down to a level which is ridiculous. Hedgie, algorithm need a Butlerian? The sleeper must awaken. The sleeper must awaken. That for the whole pub, that for the whole pub? Hedgie, that's what you pay? For the whole pub? No way, dude. Serious? I worked in a cigar store, Cuban cigar store, as some of you might know, in 2000. It was our main drag, Vancouver's main street, the most expensive street for retailers. At the time, this small store that had a walk-in human door and a little lounge in the back that you, you know, you had eight chairs, lounges chairs and leather chairs and stuff like this. This small area, they were paying $30,000 Canadian rent a month. Okay. And within four years, I think that had kicked up to $50,000 in rent a month. I don't even know what it is now. That was 20 years ago, right? Insanity. Insanity, not on the island. Insanity. $1,200 for a pub rental? Man, I need to find a cheaper place to live. Crazy. But I like this area. And I do have a clientele here. But it's become, it's become crazy. It's become crazy. The cost of living here is insane. Insane, really. One thing that has happened though is in the past, Canadians used to drive to the United States to buy gas because it was a lot cheaper. Now, I saw the gas prices in California. I don't know what it is in Washington because I never did that drive over the border to get gas and come back to save money. It just didn't register with me. Maybe if I had a huge, huge truck that you would save a lot of money. But in California, the gas prices there used to be one of the cheapest in North America, Canada, United States anyway. Now they're paying more in gas than in Canada, a lot more where I am. So that's the situation there. Smith, there's a cigar store downtown, Victoria. I bought a comb there, figured out, yeah, yeah, yeah. There is one, and it's a husband and wife, their older couple, right? Is that the one you went to, Smith? That's where I got the boulevard as we smoked. I should do another smoking session. Did you see Dune on? No, I haven't seen it yet. I do have access to it. It popped up online somehow, but I haven't had a chance to watch it yet. I haven't had a chance to watch it yet. I'm looking forward to it. Lonely Piggy, how are you doing? Dune Part 2 got greenlight. Nice, nice. Yeah, yeah, Smith, that's the cigar store. That's the cigar store. Lonely Piggy, let me show you my snack. Check this out. Delicious snack, homemade applesauce. Homemade applesauce and feta cheese. Homemade applesauce and feta cheese go amazing together. So delicious. And these are apples that I picked. You got the feta, so good. Joe Chicho. People in the US who live near Canadian or Mexican often hop the border to buy insulin because it can be 10 times cheaper. Hmm. Yeah, medicine wise. Yeah, Americans come up here to buy medicine because it's cheaper in general, I believe anyway. I don't know if that's still the case, but borders have been closed, now they're opening up and stuff like that. So we'll see. Hedgie, basically a 100 pound a day for me. I earned that in an hour of trade. Cool. Yeah, depending where you are here, rent is insane. But by the way, here's just a heads up, just economics and stuff like this. Last week I went downtown and in one block where there used to be stores, like the whole place was full, in that block every retail space was taken. And now in that one block, I think there were nine storefronts there, five of them were boarded up closed. So retail has been gutted. Restaurants, at least two restaurants were gone and a couple of other things. I don't know what they were, two or three other things were gone, right? So retail in my part of the world has been gutted. That one block had seen, one place said they had moved, I guess they found a cheaper place or a bigger place or a small place they moved to. But more than 50% of the stores on that block were closed, done. That's how horrendous the government is in Canada. They've gutted the Canadian economy. So bad, so bad, so bad. Ronnie, how consistent are your... I gotta cut back on the cheese though, really. But I do like cheese. I do like cheese. Sleepy ways, haji. Makes sense that you pay that much for your place if you're a day trader. Again, don't forget Frisage, Frisage, Frisage. Julian Saundes is a publisher and journalist that has been crucified for trying to bring transparency and accountability of capitalist power to humanity. For more information, see wikileaks.org, defend.wikileaks.org, or are Julian Saundes and wikileaks playing us on censor too. C-O, we enjoy being a non-self-sufficient country out here, boys. Non-sufficient... let's read that. Non-self-sufficient country. Which one? If you're talking Canada, Canada should be one of the the most self-sufficient countries in the world because we have resources, we've got water, we've got land, we've got semi-intelligent population, I guess, considering where they're going. But it's insane that we're not anti-fragile. Heiji, I run a 700 capacity pub restaurant. It's doing really well now and I live in a very rough area so we don't see the bacon at all. Nice. Brother Heiji, if UK goes in the right direction maybe I'll have to skip town and I'll come live in the UK and give me a job at your restaurant. Seal America, the United States. Ronnie, nice, nice. Good luck, Heiji. That too, Heiji goes, yeah. Crazy, crazy. And gang, thank you. Absolute, absolutely Aussie. Thank you very much for the follow. Absolutely Aussie. Hey man, what's up? Hello, hello, how are you doing? Absolutely Aussie. Are you from Australia? Man, I hope, I hope, I hope you guys are able to resist. Have you ever been to the UK? I've been to, no, I went to Europe when I was traveling in Europe and I bought a Euro rail pass for a couple of months but the UK didn't accept it and I was just traveling on the chip chip, right? So I didn't go to the UK, I didn't go to London, I flew over and went to Ireland because they accepted it. So I went to Ireland but I never made it to the UK, I never made it to Wales or Scotland or England. Are you teaching math? I am, I am indeed, absolutely Aussie. What do you got? What do you got? I'm not from Australia but do you know how to do long division? I forgot. Yeah, for sure, we can do long division. Let's do long division brother or sister of course. Long division. Let's do long division. Let's do simple long division for now. Ronnie Chichot, I think I failed this exam that I spent four months preparing for. I spent countless hours after work and weekends during the summer and fall. Sadly the exam was so crushing. Oh, I'm sorry to hear that Ronnie. I've had that experience. Sometimes it's just, it's just not your day. And there is a thing called overstating as well, right? When you do too much. Yeah, and what exam? The UK will welcome you with open arm chichot. Thank you, Hedgie. Thank you, Hedgie. Thank you for the follow, gang. Aussie, long division. Check this out. We'll do simple one. This is the example I use usually. 27 divided by 2, right? If you want to do this, first time chat. God bless you, man. Thank you very much. Mohammed Daye. Hey, you seem like a really nice person. I appreciate the good. My pleasure, Aussie. My pleasure. Check this out. 27 divided by 2. Aussie, do you know what that is just off the top of your head? What's 27 divided by 2? If you have 27 apples and you're going to split it between two people, how many apples does each person get? That's what a fraction means, right? Part of a whole or dividing something up between a certain number of people. Not Mohammed. It's Mahmood. Oh, Mahmood, but all good. Mahmood, how are you doing? 13.5. Exactly, Aussie. Mahmood, how are you doing? I've had friends in my life called Mahmood. I wonder where they are now. So, this is 13.5, right? Remember, you can also write 13.5 as this, 13.5. You can also write it as this, 13 plus 1.5. Because if this guy, you're going to add 13 plus 1.5. You're going to go 13 plus 1 over 2, and that's 13 over 1. Common denominator is 2, right? What did you multiply 1 by to give you 2? You multiply by 2, so you multiply 13 by 2. So, you multiply this by 2, you get 26 plus 1, and you get back 27 over 2, okay? I just want to clear that up so you see the link, right? Nice to meet you as well, Mahmood. Nice to meet you as well. Fret not wrong. I'll be passing the next round. Now, check this out. This is how you do long division. 2, 27. So, whatever you're dividing into, you put inside the division symbol, and whatever you're dividing it by, you put out here, and then you ask yourself, oh, you multiply it across the denominator so that it can be a common denominator. Okay, that makes sense. Yeah, and you can convert this as well going this way. You could go 2 times 13 is 26 plus 1 is 27, right? 27 over 2. That's the other way to convert it as well, right? But this is sort of more visual of it, okay? Now, check this out. When you're doing long division, this is what you need to do. You ask yourself, you take this number, and you look at the first number here. You ask yourself, does 2 go into 2? And if so, how many times? And you say, okay, 2 goes into 2 once. So, you put your 1 there, and whatever you put up here multiplies this, okay? And it's placed down here, and you subtract it from this. You follow that pattern? So, whatever you put up here multiplies this, and then whatever the result is, you put it here, and you subtract it from the top, okay? So, 2 minus 2 is 0. Once you hit this number, whatever this is, you're into, you move to the next number, right? And you can bring this number down. So, every number you go, every step, you can bring down one number, okay? See what you show. Where do you think is a good place to live in the world? Let's do this one. Sleepy Ways. Ask the question again after we finish the long division. So, you bring the 7 down, and then ask yourself, what do you multiply 2 by to give you 7? Or how many times does 2 go into 7? That's the better question. You don't go how what do you multiply 2 by to give you 7. You ask yourself, how many times does 2 go into 7 evenly? And that's three times. So, you put the 3 on top of the 7, and then 3 multiplies the 2, and you put it here, and you subtract it from here, right? So, 3 times 2 is 6. You subtract these, you get 1. Okay? Now, let me tell you how this plays out to this, right? So, if you go 27 divided by 2, what that equals, you go is 13, and 1 over 2. 1 over 2. So, 13 and a half. This is called the quotient. This is called the divisor dividend. I forget what they're called. And this is called the remainder, right? So, this is how the division works. Let's do another one. Okay? Let's keep this up. Let's do another one here. Let's go 3 divided into 134, right? Here, let's do another one. 134, 1347. Now, you ask yourself, what do you multiply 3 by to give you 1? Well, 3 doesn't go into 1 evenly, right? And then you ask yourself, if it doesn't go evenly, if this number is too small to contain this, you go to the next one, and you ask yourself, what do you multiply 3 by, or how many times does 3 go into 13 evenly? Well, 3 goes into 13 4 times. So, you don't put your 4 on top of the 1. You put it on top of the 3, whatever number it is that you're starting off with, the complete, right? So, 4 times 3 is 12. You bring the number here, that's 12, and then you subtract, you get 1. And then you can bring the next number down, right? You ask yourself again, how many times does 3 go into 14? Again, 4 times. And 4 times 13 is 12. You subtract, you get 2, and then you can bring the 7 down, right? You ask yourself again, how many times does 13 go into 27 evenly? 9 times. So, you get a 9 here. 9 times 3 is 27. You subtract it, you get 0. When you get a remainder of 0, it means this number goes into this number evenly. And how many times is that? 449. So, 1, 3, 4, 7, divided by 3 is 449. Zero remainder, so it just goes into it evenly, okay? Is that, does that help you out? Oh, all the memories of the long division process are coming back to me. I think I understand enough. I appreciate it a lot. My pleasure. I'm glad it's working out. I see, I see how he says, wow, wait, that's so simple. The way that my teacher explained it to me was a lot more, yeah, I'm not a defender of our centralized education system. That is, it is what it is, right? I don't know why they make it so complicated. It's not. You could have more complicated stuff you're doing division with. Here, let's do a polynomial division. Watch this. You got this? You can take a screen cap if you want this as notes. Now, watch this. We'll move on from integers, right? Let's do polynomial long division, right? Which is something that you need to learn how to do in grade 12 mathematics because it's important. So, for example, let's assume you had this, x squared plus 5x minus 7 divided by x plus 1, right? It's the same concept, right? That's a polynomial. That's a polynomial. You're asking yourself how many times this divided into the top, right? So, you lay it out the same way. x plus 1 and x squared plus 5x minus 7. So, again, you ask yourself, hello, crafter. How are you doing? You ask yourself, and you're only looking at the first letter or variable or number here. How many times does x go into x squared, right? Well, it goes in x times. Or what do you multiply x by to give you x squared? You're trying to get rid of this guy, right? You multiply it by x. So, x multiplies this and this because there's two terms here, right? So, whatever you put up here multiplies everything here. x times x is x squared. x times 1 is x. So, you take this, multiply by these guys, and you put the result here, and you subtract this from this, right? So, the way you can write it is you go, oh, this whole thing is subtracted from that. But I don't like it. That makes it too complicated. So, what I do is, what I do is, I call it the same thing. You subtract this from this, but all I say is multiply this by negative 1 and add it to that. So, when you multiply by negative 1, everything just changes sign. So, if this is plus x squared, positive x squared becomes negative and this becomes negative. So, x squared minus plus a negative x squared or x squared minus x squared is 0. They kill each other, and then 5x minus x is 4x. And then you can bring this one down, minus 7. And you ask yourself, how many times does x go into 4x? Well, it goes four times. So, you go plus 4. This multiplies this and this again. x times 4 is 4x. x times 1 is, oh, sorry, 4 times 1 is 4. Change the signs and add them. This kills this. This becomes negative 11. Does x go into negative 11? No. It doesn't go anymore, right? It doesn't go anymore, right? So, the way you write this is, this divided by this is equal to x plus 4 plus negative 11 over x, negative 11 over x plus 1. That's what it is, right? This is called the division statement. The way you can write this is, and check this out, you can do it this way as well. Yeah, here, let me show you this. This is d of x. Let's refer to it as d of x. It's a polynomial d of x. Let's call this small d of x, the divisor, dividend, dividend, divisor, the other way around. This is called the q of x, the quotient. This is called r of x. Now, if you're going to write this in these terms, you can write it like this. This guy is big d of x divided by little d of x is equal to q of x plus r of x over little d of x. So, this is called the division statement in grade 12 polynomial long division stuff like this, right? Evil told, I'm glad you're inventing new math. I wish I was inventing this. I'm not. I'm regurgitating, right? So, this is called the division statement, one version of it. Here's another way you can express this, simpler. Multiply everything by the common denominator, which is d of x right now. When you have fractions in an equation, you can get rid of the denominators by multiplying about a common denominator. So, multiply everything by d of x. So, big d of x divided by little d of x, well, d of x kills d of x. So, this side becomes big d of x. q of x times d of x becomes q of x times d of x plus r of x over d of x is just r of x. If we express, use this to express this, then this becomes x squared plus 5x minus 1 is equal to quotient, which is x plus 4 times the divisor, which is x plus 1, is equal to negative 11, not equal to, sorry, minus 11, right? So, if you foil this baby out and subtract at 11, you get this. Oops, this is a 7, my bad. Okay, we can test it. Okay, foil it out. You get x squared plus x plus 4 plus 4 minus 11. Combine your like terms. You get x squared plus, this is 4x, 5x minus 7. That is the same as that. And this is one way of writing it. Okay. So, this division comes into play higher level mathematics. It is quite important. Ozzy, hey, Chicho, I have to go to sleep, but I really appreciate the help. My time to leave has arrived, but I really got a lot of value from the teaching, this quick lesson that you've given. Awesome. I genuinely appreciate it a lot. The internet needs more people. Thank you very much, Ozzy. Appreciate the love, and I'm glad we could help out. We've got to do at least a little bit of math through the math stream. Go reading points. Edgy says, yeah, someone reading the taco. Remember, we're going to do an auction November where we're going to auction off some goodies, and I'm going to send them out to people as a thank you for being here and building up points, right? It'll be comic books, it'll be applesauce, and we'll see what else we can do. Oh, it'll be these guys. It'll be these guys, drug war trading cards that we did the readings for, right? So if you have points, don't redeem them. And taco, if you want your points back, let me know. I'll reimburse the points to you. Joe Chico, what is the difference between algebraic, long division, and synthetic long division? Synthetic long division is just a quicker way of doing this. Here, I'll show you the synthetic long division, right? Check this out. Yo, first time chat. Litch, druggan, how are you doing? I'll tune in more often. Goodbye, goodbye. Sweet dreams, Ozzy. Take a look at synthetic long division. We'll do the same guy. I'm going to erase these guys. This is what we got with the long division, right? Here's what we can get with synthetic long division. Want to become famous by more followers and viewers? Not really. First time chat. Jala, I have no idea what you're doing right now, but I know some math thing that might be very, very useful. I will type it in the next message, okay? Hello, I'm a snake. How are you doing? Hey, Chico, good to see you again. Which math subject should I learn to teach high school math, aside from algebra and trigonometry? Which math subjects should I learn to teach high school math? To teach high school math, you need to learn everything. So, yeah, you would have to learn everything, but I would say start off with the basics first. Learn how to deal with fractions right away, ratios right away, factor, polynomials, how to move around an equal sign right away, powers and all that stuff really well. That's where a lot of people have problems with initially, right? And then you got to get into a function as graphing and stuff like that. But let's assume we wanted to do this. We wanted to do synthetic division on this, right? x squared plus 5x minus 7 divided by x plus 1. So, what do you do? You do this. Take the coefficients in front of these guys and lay them out. 1, 5, negative 7. And you're going to do it this way. And you're going to take x plus 1 and you're going to set it equal to 0 because you're assuming that might be a factor of that. And you're going to write this as x is equal to negative 1. So, what you're going to do is, you're going to go x is negative 1. You're going to divide it into that. So, what you're really doing is you're subbing in x is equal to negative 1 for x. And you're trying to find out what the remainder is. The remainder is 0. That's the remainder theorem, just telling you that you're on the x-intercept. In this case, if it happens to be negative 11, that means if you subbing x is equal to 1 into this polynomial, your y is negative 11. It's a point that you just got. I'll show you how that works. So, the way you do synthetic division, your first order is to bring this guy down and you multiply this by this. One times negative 1 is negative 1. Add these guys up, you get 4. Bring this guy here, multiply by negative 1, becomes negative 4. Add these guys up, you get negative 11. What you have now is, this is this. 1x plus 4. So, you took an x squared and divided by an x. Your result is going to be 1 less x. So, this part becomes x plus 4. Which is that guy there. This guy is your remainder, negative 11. So, what this really means is, if you have this polynomial function f of x is equal to x squared plus 5x minus 7, if you find f of negative 1, basically subbing negative 1 for x, you're going to get negative 1 squared plus 5 times negative 1 minus 7. This is going to be 1 minus 5 minus 7. Which is going to be 1 minus 5 is negative 4 plus negative 7 is negative 11. So, you just went f of negative 1 is equal to negative 11. So, on a grid, negative 1 and negative 11 is a point on this graph. And this is a parabola that opens up. So, it's going to be looking, it's going to be like this or like that. What's the y in this? y in this is negative 7. Here's negative 7. 0 and negative 7. So, the graph looks like this. I don't know where the vertex is. I would have to complete the square to find the vertex on it. Do you teach anything related to aviation, math wise? I haven't done no. We do do some stuff with physics when I do get physics students coming in, but I wouldn't call it aviation. I haven't done no. It would be cool though. It would be super fun. So, here's the thing. I realized this a month ago. If one car, one car starting from point A going 50 kilometers per hour and second car from point B going 90 kilometers per hour, both have to travel 280 kilometers to end. But the question is, when do they meet each other in two hours? Because 50 kilometers plus 90 kilometers equals 140, and whole distance 280 divided by 140 is 2. So, they meet in two hours. It's very simple and much easier than some counting. Well, you wouldn't be counting it. You would just do the algebra for it, physics for it. I haven't done this in 10 plus years and never understood it. Now, I'm watching this and I'm starting to understand it nice. And that's what happens, dragon. After the fact, as you get older, some of the mathematics you might have done in the past makes more sense, because you have a logical sort of life experience and things may make more logical sense. That's the way it worked for me anyway. And la, if you want to do your question, let's do this physics question. Let's erase this. Watch this. I remember how to do it. I sure remember how to do it. Tutscho, very cool, very cool sleepy way. Here's two cars. Here's two cars. Oh, hold on. They're going to be, they would have to start at different times. We don't have a full problem here. Or are they traveling towards each other? We need one specification. I'm assuming they travel towards each other. Going second car from point B. Hold on. I realized this a month ago. If a car starting from point A, going a second car starting from point B, both travel have to travel to end. The question is, when did they meet? I'm assuming they would have to be like this. Here's car A. Car A is going 50 kilometers per hour. 50, oops, 50 kilometers per hour. 50 kilometers per hour. Here's car B. Car B is going 90 kilometers per hour. Car B is going this way. Car A is going this way. And the distance between them is 280 kilometers. 280 kilometers. Where did they meet? One car is on place A and a second car going against them from the other side. Yeah. So this would be it. Right? So basically, we want to find out where they meet. And where they meet, if they leave at the same time, it would be the same time that they started. Right? So your question is, we need formulas for this and we need formulas for this. We need our kinematics formulas. The distance, how should we do this? Let me think about this first. The distance, we do a distance time. So distance equals velocity times time. Let's do this. Start off with basic equation. Distance is equal to velocity times time. Over here too, distance is equal to velocity times time. Now, the total distance, this is D1, this is D2, this is D1. A V1, this is D2. And the time is going to be the same. Right? When do they meet? Not where. Yeah, when do they meet? Well, once you figure out the where, you can figure out the when as well. But you do this. Now, the total distance D total is equal to D1 plus D2. Does that make sense? This distance plus this distance is equal to the total distance. Right? So the total distance D1 is V1T plus D2 is V2T. And the total distance is just D total. Right? Now, keep in mind, if they left at the same time, right? Then their times is the same because their time of traveling, they left at the same time, when they meet, they would have been traveling the same amount of time. So T is the same for both. Right? So D total is equal to what you can do here is factor out the T, because this T is the same for both. So you factor out the T, it's common. Right? And you've got V1 plus V2. Well, we know what the distance is total. We know what V1 is, is 50. We know what V2 is, is 90. So we can figure out the time. So this becomes 208, oops, 280 is equal to T50 plus 90. So it's going to be 280 is equal to T times 140 and then divide by 140. So T is going to be equal to 280 over 140. The zeros kill each other and 14 goes into 28 twice. So in two hours they meet. Does that make sense? There's a nice question. I like these physics questions. Fun. Physics. We did math and we did physics. Good session. Yes, you did it exactly how I learned it. Awesome. And it's fun to do. Good problem. Right? Good job. Thank you very much. Joe, one basic rule of mathematics is that multiplications is commutative. Yeah. So three times four is the same as four times three. It seems obvious, but I can't seem to get a rigid understanding of why it works. Just break it down. Just break it down here. I'm going to erase this. So commutative because three of four is the same as four of three, basically, right? Bring math, math. Wow. Cool. Cool math. So watch this. Four times three is the same thing as three times four, right? Four times three, you can interpret it as saying four things added together three times, right? That's what multiplication is. Multiplication is an extension of addition, right? So when you write this, you're saying four plus four plus four. It's just a faster way of writing four plus four plus four. That's what four times three is. Three times four is really three plus three plus three plus three. Now, what's the proof of this? I don't know what the official proof of this is, but if you add these up, if you do the addition of it, this is equal to 12. And if you add these up, this is equal to 12. So 12 is equal to 12. And this is an official proof. This is just a visualization of how it works. As for the official proof, this is one of the axioms of mathematics. And I forget what the proof is. I've looked into it before. Four basic properties, cumulative, distributive, transmittive, and identity. Or I think they're called axioms. Yeah, the axioms of math. There's actually five axioms of mathematics. One of them is distributive, cumulative, transmittive. Is that what this is? I don't know what the fifth one is. I think mathematics is based on five axioms. I can't remember what the fifth one is. And I don't know the names. I actually don't know which one all of them are. I can't remember distributive. Don't I forget. I looked into this stuff a while ago. I have two crazy facts about dividing. Just want to share with you. For sure, share away. I can only recall four. Yeah, you do better than me, Ronnie. I can only recall like two cumulative distributive, transmittive for sure too. So you do better than me. You do better than me. What are your crazy facts about dividing? You can't divide by zero. The universe explodes. Chicho, I try to understand the proof. If I remember correctly, it's to do with the number one being the seed of all other numbers. Is it, Joe? I don't know that. I didn't know that. One being the seed of all other numbers. One and zero. You would need zero in there too, somehow. But that sort of kicks you into a binary, I guess. Zeroes and ones. So I was never good at proofs for some reason. I just, I like real, I like hands-on stuff that's tangible to me, not theoretical. Apple sauce and feta cheese. Very yummy. Very yummy. Gang, we're almost at the end of the stream. Discrete math was super tough. Yeah, there's a lot of trying to visualize a theory involved with it. Abstract to a certain degree, which is really weird. It was very challenging and fun, but it took 80% of my work time, not bad. Just missed it. What do you, what did you say you were eating, Chicho? I'm eating homemade apple sauce and feta cheese. And these are apples that I picked. Um, so local apples that I picked and feta cheese. And they go amazing together. A salty feta cheese and sweet apple sauce. It's like a treat. Laugh. First thing is that dividing symbol is basically a snippet where upper and lower numbers are refund, refunded by dots. Oh, okay, okay. It's this. Golden apples and white down gold. I just says golden apples and white down. So division symbol is this. Why is this? Division symbol is this. And a fraction is, let's say, 27 over two. So the dots are the numbers. Is that what you mean, Joe? Joe? Chicho, something that I have always been confused about is why multiplication produces a linear line on a graph by div, but division produces a curve. If division is the inverse of multiplication, why does one graph align and the other curve? Oh, because there is, uh, this is a reason I'm just trying to visualize it because zero, we can't divide by zero. Linear involving constant. Yeah, because we can't divide by zero. So for example, what did Ronnie say? Linear involving constant. Yeah, it's like for example, f of x is equal to x, right? If you have this, this is a line really, which is y is equal to x, which means when x is one, y is one. When x is two, y is two. When x is zero, y is zero. When x is negative one, y is, so it's just a line like this. But if you have this, f of x is equal to one over x. This is problematic. One of the reasons it's problematic is because we can't divide by zero. It's undefined at zero. It's undefined at zero. It becomes an asset to it like Ronnie says, right? So if you do this, you get this. My graph sucks. And this, you can't be at zero because you can't divide by zero. It's the one restriction we have in mathematics. Dividing by zero is undefined. That's the problem. If you go one divided by zero, undefined. You can't be here, so that becomes an asymptote. And by definition of this thing, this becomes an asymptote too. That's why you get this going on. Sorry, my English is coming from translator. So few words might be wrong. No, that's okay. I hope that makes sense. Same for the function natural log. Same for function natural log. Hello, Snake. I've been hearing that peat mass is not the best method for solving equations. Is that true? Peat mass is for simplifying expressions. Solving equations, you should go the other way. Sam sad myth, I guess. It's the other way around. For us, is bed mass. They always push it on you. Bed mass, bed mass, bed mass, bed mass, bed mass. This is for simplifying. This is for solving. You go the other way. You do your subtraction additions first in the multiplication division and exponents, and then the brackets. So for me, I just say learn your order of operations and learn how to move around an equal sign. So you just don't have to know how to move around an equal sign or how to manage your teeter totter. La. And second thing, dividing basically means how many times you have to deduct second number from first to get on zero. Example 72 divided by 8 is 9 because you have deducted 9 times number 8 from 72. But you don't necessarily have to get to zero, La. You could get to another number. You could say how many times is 7? What's 71 divided by 8? Well, that would be 7 and 7 eighths, right? Oh, sorry, 8 and 7 eighths, right? So it's not necessarily get to zero. I guess you could think about it that way too. Sure, maybe. Have you heard of the library of Babel? Joe was asking. That would make an interesting math topic. Library of Babel, no. I know library of Alexandria. But Babel, that's ringing a bell, but I haven't really, I might have. I can't remember. And if I did, it was a long time ago. Library of Babel sort of rings a bell, but I can't remember exactly. La, yeah. That's another thing when you can't get to zero. Yeah, it's basically, division is, you're just basically asking yourself how many times does this go into the other guy, right? Whatever you're dividing into. Tower of Babel. That's what it is. Tower of Babel. That's why he's ringing a bell. Tower of Babel, not library of Babel. I'm running. That's the same as me. That's why the Babel is ringing a bell. Library of Alexandria and the Tower of Babel. I can't really, Tower of Babel is supposed to be like debauchery and stuff like this, wasn't it? Something along those lines. Gang, we've got to call the stream. We've got two of us left and I usually try to make these two hours so we can, no longer so we can load them on. Bit shoot easily. Cheryl, what are you doing? You're still here. Nice. You're quiet. Gang, thank you for being here. Thank you for the questions. Thank you for the discussions. We did a little bit of mathematics and it was a lot of fun and we're going to do a lot more of these things. If you want to know what this is about, I am a Patreon. Patreon.com, forward slash chico, C-H-Y-C-H-O. If you want to support this work, if you want to follow this work, if you want to know what this is about, Patreon is a great way to do so. We do have a subscribe star page as well where we post everything on there. We are live streaming on twitch, twitch.tv, forward slash chico live, C-H-Y-C-H-O-L-I-V-E. If you want to participate in these live streams in the chat, twitch is where you want to be at. And gang, thank you very much for being here on the support. It is because of the collective support that we're getting on Twitch and Patreon that we're able to do this. And some of the support that we're getting on some of the other platforms, right? We do announce these live streams on Mines, VK Gap, Parler, BitCloud, and Getter. And we do have a Discord page, almost a thousand people sharing information, participating in discussions, and you're welcome to join us there. The links will be in the description of this video. For live streams where we don't have any visuals, we do upload the audio to soundcloud.com forward slash chico as a podcast. And those podcasts should be available on your favorite podcasting platform, including Spotify and iTunes. And we will be uploading this live stream to SensorTube, to Bichu, to Rumble, and to Odyssey. If you want to catch all our live streams, Bichu, Rumble, and Odyssey is where you want to be. And whatever the sensors permit us to upload to SensorTube, we will upload there. If you haven't seen this yet, please watch Coherence. Low budget film that's about multi-dimensions. Okay, okay, Library of Love is a thing. It is a thing, Joe. Chico is based on a novel about a librarian who works in a library containing books of everything that could ever be said. Oh, cool. Joe again. It's a website that uses an algorithm that converts any 30,000 texts into a unique number so you can generate any 30,000 texts using the website. Vsauce talked about it. Oh, wow, cool stuff, cool stuff. And again, closing. Don't forget, Free Assange, Free Assange, Free Assange. Julian Assange is a publisher and journalist that has been crucified for trying to bring transparency and accountability of capitalist power to humanity. For more information, see WikiLeaks.org, Defend.Wikileaks.org, or Julian Assange and WikiLeaks playlist on CensorTube. I'll see you online on our Discord, on our video sharing platforms, and we'll probably do another round of live streams next weekend. Bye, everyone. Hope you have a fantastic week.