Download File Firmware and Flashtool plus Video Tutorial compressed:
do not forget there are some additional tips from me:
How To Flashing lava iris 501
coming up on the local show,the next silicon valley buildingfast and furious in downtown kansas city.a special story about loveand the search for family. and art beyond words.principle funding for thelocal show provided by francis family foundation, frederick andlouise hartwig family fund,kauffman foundation, health care foundation of greater kansascity and johnson countycommunity college, john and effy â spees memorial trust, richardjay stern foundation for thearts, and kcpt members. thank you. hello.i'm randy mason.i'm nick haines.
welcome to the local show.there is a lot of attentionbeing paid right now both locally and nationally tobuilding our economy throughtechnology. start up america, forexample.of course, with the arrival of google fiber it's been aparticularly hot topic in kansascity lately. while tech companies havebeen popping up all across themetro, there is a noticeable cluster developing in thevicinity of downtown and thecrossroads. we take you inside three techstartups to show you more ofwhat the scene looks like these days.today the six-story structurejust south of the downtown loop is standing empty.but within the year, it willbecome home to a rising young
company with big ass --aspirations whose products isregularly evaluated just a few miles away.anytime 19,000 fans gather towatch kansas city's hottest sports franchise in action isalso a time they ant pate --anticipate great. it's about the energy,excitement, experience puttogether today. but it's more than just thegame on the field that they arewatching. as sporting kc's tech guru, he'sin charge of all the digitalstrays that make this one of the world's most innovative sportsvenues.when i walk around. at the core of it is thewireless network they'veinstalled out here hd wi-fi. 200 routers around the park thatinsure constant connectivity todeliver the kind of interactive
fan experience that ticketbuyers have come to expect.this has a name. fan 360, and sportinginnovations, the tech start-upwithin the sports club, is selling it to clients worldwide.fan 360 is an integrative spoftwear -- software platform covering ticket sales totargeted ads, specials to videoon demand. all of this internet activity istracked and monitored on site inwhat they call the command center, then analyzed andrefined before the next gamerolls around. high-tech innovators takingan idea and making somethingfrom it is nothing new for the metro.fortune 500 companies likesprint, garmin and cerner all started here and stayed.in fact, two of sporting'sowners came from the it realm.
obviously their background isin creating cerner and beingvery disruptive in the health care it space was something thatthey challenged us around thesport side and said we've got this really great living lab.we've got this great opportunitythat's different than any other sports team out there, so let'sgo after it.this is a map of the venue. you may not care about atm's,but you might care where thebathroom is, handicapped access, a restaurant.we have to know about you, learnabout you, and that data is key. like the average age ofsporting season ticket holders,29, the workforce here skews young.they know what their peers want,and they're tech savvy enough to spot cutting edge ways todeliver it best.if we have the final three,
we want that information.they're the people whounderstand how to do it, and they understand the generationbetter than anybody else does.i think it's the rate way to go satisfy it.do you look at other sportingfranchises and think, you guys are dinosaurs?yes, but i don't want tomention them. because there are some veryestablished industry players wholook at the industry a certain way, and change is not in theirmantra yet, but believe it ornot, they're changing too. baby-boomers are moving out.the generation being raised,they don't understand the world of paper and pencil.this industry is right forinnovation. in less than two years, fan360 is playing in 15 venues fromgermany to brazil, and sporting
is expanding here at home aswell, investing $20 million onthe edge of the crossroads to renovate the old hanna rubberbuilding where soccer balls wereonce manufactured. we wanted a place that wethought could be attractive tothe sort of democratic we're looking for in our company.it's been really energizing forour people. and to me it reminds me of thedays back in san francisco andchicago. i like it personally, but i alsoknow our associate population isfond of this environment, and we wanted to do everything we couldto foster that.growing up on the enter -- internet, you think about theworld differently.everyone is connected. adam, one of the team membersof kc start-up village, is partof that next generation ofent
entrepreneurs, nimble,collaborative, not afraid tofail. it's not coincidence that manyfind a fit within the city'screative core and coworking spaces that have begun to popup.with think big, just two blocks over, the heart heartbeatstarted.now, it's kind of spreading. kansas city is blessed with adowntown ringed by affordablespaces where a number of high-tech neighborhoods haveemerged, west bottoms, rivermarket, and across state line. not only innovating butinteracting through programslike the kauffman foundation's 1 million cups.where these weekly wednesdaymeet-us get -- ups get people with ideas percolating together.in just 8 months, attendance hasrisen from 12 to nearly 200.
eventually you get to thepoint where you're walking thedown the street and you see other innovators and start-upguys.those meetings are what lead to great ideas, what lead topartnerships, what lead tocollaboration. the wide card here, ofcourse, is google fiber.in a city that's learning how to change its view of economicdevelopment from buildingbuildings to developing talent, google's potential is enormous,and it's kept mike burke workingovertime to make sure we take full advantage while we can.we have a window of timewhere we have a competitive advantage over the rest of theworld.kansas city is our first city.congratulations.just having high speed fiber
doesn't get you where you needto go.it's where we as a community can come together to make happen.something like launch kc, anew initiative from the city's edc and the downtown council,offering some real world toolsto equip young businesses in the tech sector with things likereduced rents, access to wi-fiand mentoring, even a proof of concept center.building the next silicon valleywon't happen overnight, but with each success comes moremomentum.we're very much a supportive community.everyone knows how hard it is tobreak through and have that big break.when somebody else does, it'skind of a win for the whole theme.it's been just over a yearsince the company throwing this
party whose software start-uprelocated from prairie villageto the crossroads to plunge into the business of building mobileapps.this is a hundred billion dollar market that hardlyexisted three, four, five yearsago. it's almost like the next bigtech boom that happened in the90s. it's happening again related tomobile, and we're knee deep inthe middle of it. it was a leap of faith.we thought that even thoughthere was some risk involved it was the right time to do it.the right time thanks to thearrival of the i-pad back in 2009.matt who had been teachinghimself ios, ended up with another computer language calledwire, and then he startedtargeting certain industries,
like publishing, they felt mightbenefit from it.it was going to be send us a pdf file and we'll turn it intoan app within 24 hours.within 20 minutes, they got a call back from atlantic saying,i don't believe you can do whatyou're saying you can do, but we'll take you up on it.it gave us a lot of instantcredibility, and we ended up winning a few awards for thatand it jump-started our company.rare wire is self-funded with help from family and friends.their goal is to add 40 jobsover the next five years, part of a program intended tostimulate the economy, but rightnow they're most excited about their newest program, the appcreation studio, a softwareplatform built around wire, an interface that let's a designermore quickly play programmer,too.
i am the poster child for it.the creative boom takingplace here has given new life to the old warehouses and factoriesthat grew up around unionstation, a portal where thousands pass through everyday.today these familiar faces are here to stay and to celebratethe first start-up to launchkc's start-up to affordable space.they say the future ofteleconferencing awaits us upstairs.when people start toexperience it, they're just like, wow, this is amazing.we've never seen such a thing.so forget power point and problems with stage fright,sight deck says their system canmake a polished performer out of just about any teacher, salesmanager or ceo.it's a special camera which
can observe an infrared image sopersons on the front of thescreen is not blind. the second element is a specialengine.it's a hardware solution, and of course, there's a screen.it's like a big i-pod 6-foot by11-foot and developed totally by the company.what you have to realize isthe man on the screen is not in the room.that's paul.his la based company i-mat has made green screen technology anintegral part of tv and film fordecades. there are some shots whichmust be created by imagecompositing in post production. what used to require a fullfull-fledged tv studio can nowbe done in a conference room. paul may be talking to thecoast.what am i pointing at?
but we can still touch,points, play, even fis -- fistbump the same graphics in real time from up to 4 differentlocations.i come from different kind of business.most people like cisco or tamberg. our organization builds toolsused by the entertainmentindustry. we're looking at the exactsame files.but already paul's vision for it is beginning to broadenthanks to discussions withkansas city company's like hntb. who see an incredible tool forarchitects and engineers.that kind of freewheeling give and take, which can ultimatelymake a product more commerciallyviable, should soon become even more common here at the stationthanks to the new digital sundaybox proof of performance center
that umkc's block school isabout to open.the festivities drew what can only be called an a list crowd.i can tell by the energy onthe room, no one here needs to be sold on this project.a challenge grant got all ofthis started, part of the federal push to build an economythat will last.though at this point, it's largely symbolic, shifting thefocus here from transportationto innovation sends serious signals that for kansas city,tech is becoming more than justtalk. my nightmare is waking up inthree or four years and seeingus in chicago, denver are now google cities and that kansascity didn't take full advantageof what it had. what we've accomplishednationally in terms of takingadvantage of it can be the
template for the rest of thecountry.more than half a million children are currently trappedin the foster care system.being removed from a home and placed in foster care is adifficult and stressfulexperience for any child. many of these children havesuffered some form of seriousabuse or neglect. the midwest foster care andadoption association, which isbased in independence, is going to some extraordinary lengths,including hiring privateinvestigators to try and locate family members who might bewilling to adopt a hard to placechild who might otherwise languish for years in the fostercare system.they call their program extreme recruitment, and lastyear they found homes for 22foster children, and as about
you're about to see, including ahome for 10-year-old demahjay,whose mother abandoned him in kansas city.first saved voice message.yes. this is eugene baker on behalfof demahjay.that is my nephew. give me a call at this numberand leave me a message.demahjay, my nephew. i've been a privateinvestigator 22 years.i happen to specialize in background investigations onpeople, so i have a uniqueability to find people that are otherwise unfindable.this is a family that hadbeen in california for years until demahjay was about 5, andmom decided to come to missouri.at that point, she decided she couldn't care for him anylonger, so she drove him to anarea residential facility and
dropped him off.unfortunately, for demahjay, hestayed in residential for several years because of hisbehaviors.i was able to ascertain that the young boy had an uncle bythe name of eugene that lived incalifornia, a very common last name.it took me probably a goodcouple of months to search through several hundred peoplewith the same last name.well, we had periodic telephone calls from his mother,and she never actually told usdemahjay's location. it was john who contacted me,and he showed me a picture ofdemahjay, and i showed it to my daughter and the rest of myfamily, and we knew right thenand there demahjay needed to come home.we felt he was lost.it's a very sad occasion when
demahjay departed from ourlives, and we miss them.i know i do. the most important thing isthat he finally gets to bereconnected with his family. after spending years away fromhis family, away from everybodythat he knows and being in a residential care facility, eventhose are great facilities andthere are people that care very much about the kids who arethere, it's not home, and so thebest thing for demahjay is that he finally gets to bereconnected with somebody thathe lovingly calls uncle buzz. i'd rather just live with myreal family, because i have tomove from foster care to foster care to foster care over andover again, and it's starting toget old. it was really sad because ididn't want to come fromcalifornia away from my uncle,
but yeah.i mean, he has always been mylittle man, and just to see demahjay, i think just toanticipate seeing him isexciting. it's a situation where he waslost, and i found him, and ifound his family, and we're working to get him reunitedagain.pretty excited? i am.there's demahjay right there.let him go. he's coming.my little man.come here, demahjay. are you my uncle?yeah, i am.whoo-hoo. å›.look at demahjay.i knew he would be here. you knew i would?i wouldn't let you down.it was great.
i was very happy that i was ableto make this connection, and iprayed and hoped that we could get these people together, andit's happened.extreme recruit him -- recruitment and an intensivefocused effort to workdiligently, quickly, efficiently to try to find relatives orkinorkin -- or kin for children whoare in foster care who have no options for permanencyidentified.jackson county has over 1200 kids in foster care.some of those kids are alreadyplaced with relatives. this program, extremerecruitment, is needed for thosekids so we can dive into some of those families and try to figureout who they are and where theycame from and can we get them connected back to where theybelong?everybody has to have a
family.everybody needs to know whotheir family is. when somebody that has not hadtheir family for many years orhas never known them and then suddenly realizes they have afamily out there that cares forthem and loves them, the whole picture becomes something thatis just phenomenal.it's the greatest feeling in the world to do something like that.the midwest foster care andadoption association says they hope to find homes for 40children this year as part oftheir extreme recruitment program.you can learn more at the localshow dot org. that segment was produced bybryan shepard at linc, a kcptpartnership organization which works to improve the lives ofchildren and families in thekansas city region.
on the local show, we liketo take you to places you'venever been before or haven't been to in a while.next up we invite you to join usin the changing gallery at the american jazz museum in kansascity's historic 18th and vineneighborhood. producer sandy woodsonintroduces us to local artistryan haralson, whose work is featured in "beyond words", afusion of poetry, visual art andjazz. well, the name of the pieceis called the briar patch, andit's based on old southern folk tale, parable about a cleverrabbit who has always succeededin getting out of tight situations with this fox andbear that is always trying toget him to eat him. the reason that i know thisstory is because one of myfavorite hip-hop artists has a
song called the briar patch.so i was listening to this song,and he's pretty clever. he's a pretty clever artist.like, he's got this song, andit's like please don't throw me in the briar patch.å› the briar patch.no, don't throw me in the briar patch.you can cut off all my toes butnot the briar patch ". you listen to the words,andies like briar patch, allright. i came across these cartoons,because i mean, in goodcontemporary art there are references and little things youcan look and find words and justa beat to lead you to something else.the person that ryan haralsonat america now and here, and this was a national art projectthat was looking at the identityof america in a post-911
context, and i met ryan.he had some artwork as part ofthe exhibit that they had at the gallery, and i just thought hiswork was really exciting, and iwas looking forward to an opportunity to work with him,and i knew that we had thisspace here. and my hope was that one day wewould have his work in ourchanging gallery here at the american jazz museum."beyond words", a fusion ofpoetry, visual art and jazz. the idea for this exhibit reallycame from a visual poetry.and visual poems are poems that, the way that they're laid out,offer some additional meaning orit's done in some way that it's really compelling.so i thought it would be cool ifwe had some exhibit that had visual poems.so i ran the idea by ourvisiting curator who thought it
was really cool but also thoughtit would be cool to incorporatethe work of visual artists who somehow employ texts in theirwork.the piece was inside the outside.i make things based on kind ofwhere i'm at, and at the time i felt like, i guess, i was insideof a box that was outside of thenorm, you know, like not really escaping from being independentof anything but just in adifferent box. i like the fact that thereare messages that he'scommunicating with his words. there's always something that'she's exploring that i think isreally worth talking about. when i was working on thispiece along with the runawayslave figure here, those were patterns i was looking at at thetime.so there's all different types
of patterns that would tellpeople that he needed to hop atrain or needed to go on a path that wasn't direct.what caused that to be necessaryin the first place? people lacking the ability toread and write, you know, peopleneeding to covertly get a message across.so i thought that that was acool way of using patterns. the incredible level ofdetail and layers that are inhis work, and no matter how many times i look at his paintings, ialways discover something new.a lot of different symbols in here, and i guess that's kind ofwhat it is, in a way my quilt.the exhibit beyond words runs through april 26th at thechanging gallery at the americanjazz museum at 18th and vine. and finally this week, youdidn't get to see them pick uptheir grammy's during the big
rhyme time telecast over theweekend, but congratulations arein order for the kansas city chorale who snagged two grammy'sin sunday's preshow awards.the chorale's 2012 album "life and breath, choral worksby rene clausen" received grammyawards for best choral performance and best engineeredclassical record.we leave you this week with the chorale in words and music.å›.principal funding for the local show provided by francisfamily foundation, frederick andlouise hartwig family fund, kauffman foundation, health carefoundation of greater kansascity, johnson county community college, john and effy speesmemorial trust, bank of americatrustee; richard jay tern foundation for the arts,commerce back -- bank trustee;and kcpt
0 comments:
Post a Comment