Tag: teach
Street Fighter 6 wants to teach “the fun of fighting games”
Street Fighter 6 is almost here, and the fighting game revamp is aiming to appeal to both new fans and single-player gamers in a big way. So if you’re anticipating the Street Fighter 6 release date, Capcom president Haruhiro Tsujimoto has been talking about how the studio wants to cater to new fans, but still find that balance between them and the hardcore players, too.
MORE FROM PCGAMESN: Street Fighter 6 release date, Street Fighter 6 roster , Street Fighter 6 preview
This great new city building mobile game could teach PC city builders a few tricks
I’m a hot teacher – people beg me to teach them something when they see me in my tight dress
PARENTS often expect those looking after their kids to dress conservatively, but many want to let loose after hours just like everyone else.
One 21-year-old kindergarten teacher has shared the highlights of her experience as a young, attractive educator on TikTok.
“The hottest teacher outfit you’ve ever saw,” TikTok user @diazsweetlola wrote over one of her recent clips.
In the video, she shows off her chest in a slim-fit, low-cut, long-sleeve top that left her midriff exposed.
“Would you agree?” she asked in the description.
Many of her commenters were on the same page.
“Stunning,” one said.
“Teach me something,” said another, with a little heart face emoji.
In another clip, the TikToker shows off a slim-fitting blue dress that would be perfect for a night out at the club.
“Kindergarten teacher who loves her job,” she wrote over the video.
But she also noted that many single dads love picking up their kids so they can come see her.
In the comments, several men took the opportunity to express their love for early childhood education.
“I’m going back to school!” one commenter said.
“What school you teach at?” another asked
“Trying to enroll my son so you can be his teacher.”
But not every dad who makes a pass at this teacher is actually single.
“When the kindergarten dad says he is also single but his wife calls every five minutes,” the TikToker wrote over one particularly raunchy clip.
“I was blind and deaf when his wife called,” she wrote in the description.
Not everyone, however, was enamored.
“Oh cut the cr*p girl,” one commenter said.
Hidden Systems is the book I’ll use to teach my kids how the internet works
Growing up, I learned The Way Things Work from author David Macaulay’s incredible illustrated books. This week, I was surprised to see Macaulay’s endorsement in my inbox for a new illustrated explainer by a different author — but the surprise didn’t last long.
Fifteen minutes after I began skimming through an advance copy of Hidden Systems, which just came out this week, I immediately ordered the book for my kids. It looks like a fantastic way to help them conceptualize the internet, the world’s water supply, and our power grid — and get them thinking about the infrastructure of the world they’ll someday inherit.
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Master Chief is here to teach you how to file your taxes
And change your oil, and ask out your crush, and …
I’m a cowgirl – men ask me to ‘teach them how to dance’ after seeing my killer moves
THIS country girl has stunned her viewers after showing off her dance moves with cowboys requesting that she teach them how to dance.
The TikToker is known to show off her western fashion looks, but in a new post, she flaunted her dance moves.
This country girl has stunned her viewers after showing off her dance moves[/caption]
Jaid Kenzie wore spandex shorts and a zip-up hoodie while dancing[/caption]
Jaid Kenzie is a cowgirl from Virginia who enjoys sharing her country life with her TikTok followers.
In a new video, she traded in her cowgirl hat for some dancing shoes.
Wearing a pair of black spandex shorts and a tan zip-up hoodie, Jaid danced to some techno music.
She showed herself spinning around and rolling her arms around each other.
“Bet y’all didn’t know I was such a dancer,” she wrote in the caption of the video.
Her viewers were blown away by the dancing queen.
One commenter said she was a “pretty girl,” while others called her “beautiful.”
A stunned cowboy wrote to Jaid: “Wow girl, teach me to dance like that.”
“Sucks seeing you have to do this trend alone,” another viewer said.
While Jaid’s viewers are usually supportive, she does get trolls who call her “fake country” and a “buckle bunny” because of what she wears.
A buckle bunny is commonly used as a derogatory term for women who dress up as cowgirls to attract cowboys.
“[It’s] gettin a little old,” the influencer said in the caption of one of her videos.
“Find some new material folks.”
In the clip, she responds to a commenter who told her that “real cowgirls don’t dress up or wear makeup,” by lip-syncing to Eminem’s 2004 track Big Weenie.
“I don’t understand. Why are you being so mean?” the lyrics go.
“You’re just jealous of me.”
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ChatGPT can teach humans a thing or two about politeness
What an ‘oddball’ star in the Cygnus cluster can teach us about how masers are made
Like going to the store to buy dog food and coming back with a duck, researchers with the National Radio Astronomy Observatory may have uncovered a significant insight into how masers (nature’s lasers) are formed while conducting a routine study of the “oddball” star MWC 349A using the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA). It came in the form of a previously unseen jet of ejected material being launched away from the star at “impossibly high speeds,” according to the NRAO.
MWC 349A, which resides 3,900 light years away from us in the Cygnus constellation, earned its oddball moniker by being 30 times larger than our own star as well as one of the brightest radio sources in the sky. It’s also one of the only observed celestial objects that’s known to have a hydrogen maser. Those are as cool as they sound, being radio wavelength analogs to lasers that emit powerful, narrow beams of radiation instead of coherent light. Naturally occurring masers are valuable research tools as they amplify radio wave emissions which enables researchers to study processes that are too far or obscured to observe visually — think star-sized bullhorns in space.
“A maser is like a naturally occurring laser,” Sirina Prasad, primary author of the study and an undergraduate research assistant at the Center for Astrophysics, said in a release Monday. “It’s an area in outer space that emits a really bright kind of light. We can see this light and trace it back to where it came from, bringing us one step closer to figuring out what’s really going on.”
The scientific community has been aware of MWC 349’s existence since 1989 when they observed that it had, “some of the characteristics of a molecular maser source: It was extremely bright, and it varied in time, the result of sensitivity to changes in the detailed excitation processes,” Ignacio Diaz Bobillo at the Center for Astrophysics wrote in 2013.
He notes that the maser source offered three valuable features:
The first is that the excited atoms produced a series of masers at a series of wavelengths from the corresponding set of hydrogen lines – some even at wavelengths short enough to be trumpeted as being natural lasers. The second is that the numerous lines allowed scientists to model the emitting region in detail. It is an edge-on disk rotating in so-called Keplerian fashion, that is, like the planets orbit in the solar system with those near the Sun orbiting faster than those far from the Sun (very different from the rotation of a solid disk). The final, mysterious point was that this first hydrogen maser source seemed to be unique.
No one understands why, but despite decades of searching for other hydrogen maser sources, only two other possible examples have been proposed, though they remain uncertain at best.
“Our previous understanding of MWC 349A was that the star was surrounded by a rotating disk and photo-evaporating wind,” Prasad continued. “Strong evidence for an additional collimated jet had not yet been seen in this system.” But that is what they stumbled upon this time around.
The collimated jet is streaking away from the star and its gas disk at a blistering 500km/s — at those speeds you can get from San Diego, California to Phoenix, Arizona faster than you can say “please, no, anywhere but Phoenix.” Literally. Prasad’s team believes that the material is accelerating to such high speeds with the help of the star’s immensely powerful magnetic field which is generating powerful magnetohydrodynamic winds.
“Although we don’t yet know for certain where it comes from or how it is made, it could be that a magnetohydrodynamic wind is producing the jet, in which case the magnetic field is responsible for launching rotating material from the system,” Prasad noted. “This could help us to better understand the disk-wind dynamics of MWC 349A, and the interplay between circumstellar disks, winds, and jets in other star systems.”