Dashcam shows how cops in Russia end motorcycle chases in great ‘wait for it’ moment - TomoNews
VOTKINSK, RUSSIA — A biker in Russia ate the dust after trying to evade police because he didn’t have plates.
Dashcam video from an oncoming vehicle captures the moment on June 22 at 5:39 p.m. A police cruiser waits around the bend for the motorcyclist who was racing down a highway, trying to lose the cops. When the biker makes his move to pass the waiting patrol car, the cruiser suddenly turns and bumps the motorcycle, knocking both the driver and his passenger off onto the road.
Officers leave their vehicle and calmly approach the biker, who’s noticeably shaken up. The video ends as the car recording the scene drives away from the scene.
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Votkinsk Russia @vytkin kirill
Votkinsk Russia @vytkin kirill
Izhevsk, Udmurtia, Russia: Russia's fortress of defense manufacturing
Russia's fortress of defense manufacturing
Published: 03 February, 2011, 10:55 | Russia Today
Explore the motherland of the famous Kalashnikov assault rifle - the town of Izhevsk -- with RT's Close-Up team.
Izhevsk is the capital of the Republic of Udmurtia, located in the Western Urals area of Central Russia.
Formerly an engineering town and a closed city during Soviet times, all kinds of metalwork has been done in Izhevsk, especially the manufacture of machinery and weaponry.
It is also where Mikhail Kalashnikov designed his famed AK. The Kalashnikov assault rifle is sometimes called the ultimate firearm that changed the world.
It was developed soon after the end of World War II by Mikhail Kalashnikov, an engineer at the Izhmash weapons factory.
It was created with the experience of war in mind, with consideration for all the requirements for a firearm, which were in place during the war, Izhmash engineer Vladimir reported. Today, our customers demand new qualities from the assault rifle... they want a combination of a sniper and a stub-barreled weapon -- a rifle that will have high accuracy, yet be easy to carry and use.
The AK-47 has few moving parts -- so it does not jam.
Resistant to cold, heat, rain and snow, it can lie buried in sand for years, and still be ready to use -- if you just clean it up a bit.
In the central Russian republic of Udmurtia, as in the rest of the country, members of the special operations unit of the Ministry of Internal Affairs rely almost exclusively on Kalashnikovs. Many of them used the AK in anti-terror operations in Chechnya.
Sergey, officer of the special operations unit shared that, When you're in combat, it's very important that a rifle be easy to use and care for, especially in the Caucasus. I'd say it's the best weapon there is, and deserves very high praise.
But Izhevsk is not just the city that produces the world's most popular weapon. It is also a stronghold of defense manufacturing and innovative technologies.
Izhevsk-based Zala Aero is the leading producer of unmanned aerial vehicles in Russia.
Because they are hard to spot, easy to use, and can fly over places where a human cannot or should not set foot, Russia's Ministries of Defense and Emergencies, and Antiterrorist Center are some of Zala Aero's most prominent customers.
I think Izhevsk is unique. I mean when you live next door to Mr. Kalashnikov, like I do, then you have this drive in your life to make it big, confesses Nikita Zakharov, Managing Director of Zala Aero. Our company's trying to make it big. We started here, because the main engineers, the main thinking block is here.
Snow Plow Accident || ViralHog
Occurred November 28, 2015 - Votkinsk, Russia
A Russian dashcam records an accident as a snow plow pulls into the road and hits an approaching vehicle with nowhere to go.
For licensing or usage, contact licensing@viralhog.com
Russian Power Progress
Clip of three American senators (Frank E. Moss of Utah, Edmund M. Muskey of Maine, and Ernest Gruening of Alaska) and their aids traveling to the Soviet Union to visit new hydroelectric facilities. They were part of a special subcommittee tasked with an on-the-spot study of U.S.S.R. hydroelectric projects. Conducted in the Fall of 1959, this study was to compare the development of water and power resources between the U.S. and the U.S.S.R.
(B&W/Sound/16mm film)
This sequence is an excerpt of AAF-2045 from the Gruening Collection held by the Alaska Film Archives, a unit of the Alaska and Polar Regions Collections & Archives Department in the Elmer E. Rasmuson Library, University of Alaska Fairbanks. For more information please contact the Alaska Film Archives.
Iskander-M (SS-26 Stone) ⚔️ Russian Tactical Missile System [Review]
The 9K720 #Iskander (NATO reporting name SS-26 Stone) is a mobile short-range ballistic missile system produced and deployed by the Russian Federation.
Subscribe Now - ⚔️ ⚔️
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The #Missile systems are to replace the obsolete OTR-21 Tochka systems, still in use by the Russian armed forces, by 2020.
Type: Short-range ballistic missile
Place of origin: Russia
In service: 2006–present
Used by:
Russian Ground Forces
Armenian Armed Forces
Manufacturer:
Votkinsk Plant State Production Association (Votkinsk) - missiles
Production Association Barricades (Volgograd) - ground equipment
KBM (Kolomna) - developer of the system
SPECIFICATIONS
Weight: 3,800 kg (8,400 lb)
Length: 7.3 m (24 ft)
Diameter: 0.92 m (3 ft 0 in)
Warhead:
480–700 kg (1,060–1,540 lb) HE fragmentation, submunition, penetration, fuel-air explosive, EMP
Engine:
Single-stage solid propellant
Operational Range:
50 km (31 mi)-400–500 km (250–310 mi) for Iskander-M
Speed:
2,100 m/s (Mach 6.2) cruising (hypersonic)
Guidance System:
Inertial guidance, optical DSMAC (Iskander-M), TERCOM (Iskander-K), use of GPS / GLONASS in addition to the inertial guidance system
Inertial, use of GPS / GLONASS and optical DSMAC terminal homing
Accuracy: 5–7 m (Iskander-M)
Launch Platform: Mobile TEL
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We are sure, that all the fans of #MilitaryWeapons will find here something related to their interests.
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Remember that these are not toys :)
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Music Info:
Broken Reality by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (
Source:
Artist:
Libya - Putin said
English translation: PM of the government of Russia Vladimir Putin, being with a working trip to Udmurtiyas, during conversation with workers of Votkinsk factory has commented on a situation round Libya:
Even on one of parametres the Libyan regime does not approach under criterion of the democratic country - is an obvious fact. Here again there is nothing to add.
It is the complicated country. At the heart of it are relations between tribes. Certainly, it demands special regulation. The internal political situation has got character of the armed struggle. But it, of course, does not mean that it is allowed to someone to interfere with the internal political conflict even armed, from the outside, protecting one of the parties. It is the first part.
The second part concerns the Security Council resolution on which basis there is today an intervention, first of all armed intervention. This resolution of Security Council, certainly, is defective and depraved. Just look at that is written on there, at once it becomes clear that it allows everyone to undertake all, any actions concerning the sovereign state. In general, all it reminds me a medieval appeal to a crusade when someone urged someone else to go to a certain place to release something. It is the second part.
Now concerning an essence of events. Clearly that this armed intervention from the outside. But I am disturbed by even not fact of armed intervention itself (much of confrontations, they always occurred and, unfortunately, probably, will occur still for a long time), but that ease from which decisions on force application in the international affairs are made today. Cite as example, in the politics of United States it gets a steady tendency and a trend. At the time of Bill Clinton they bombed Yugoslavia and Belgrad, Bush has entered armies into Afghanistan, then under far-fetched, absolutely false pretext, he has entered armies into Iraq, liquidated all Iraq management - even children were dead from Saddam Hussein's family.
Now on turn Libya - under the pretext of protection of civilians. But at drawing of bombing attacks to territory these civilians were perished themselves. Where is the logic and conscience here? There's not either that or another. There are already victims among civilians for the sake of those these bombing attacks, ostensibly, are put. What is that I would like to tell? That we prepare and we want to live in peace with all the people. We don't want to quarrel with anyone, especially to be at war, thank God. But today's events including that in Libya, once again prove the propriety that we do on strengthening of defensibility of Russia.
Ural (region) | Wikipedia audio article
This is an audio version of the Wikipedia Article:
Ural (region)
Listening is a more natural way of learning, when compared to reading. Written
language only began at around 3200 BC, but spoken language has existed long ago.
Learning by listening is a great way to:
- increases imagination and understanding
- improves your listening skills
- improves your own spoken accent
- learn while on the move
- reduce eye strain
Now learn the vast amount of general knowledge available on Wikipedia through
audio (audio article). You could even learn subconsciously by playing the audio
while you are sleeping! If you are planning to listen a lot, you could try using
a bone conduction headphone, or a standard speaker instead of an earphone.
You can find other Wikipedia audio articles too at:
In case you don't find one that you were looking for, put a comment.
This video uses Google TTS en-US-Standard-D voice.
SUMMARY
=======
The Ural (Russian: Ура́л) is a geographical region located around the Ural Mountains, between the East European and West Siberian plains. It is considered a part of Eurasian Steppe, extending approximately from the North to the South; from the Arctic Ocean to the end of Ural River near Orsk city. The boundary between Europe and Asia runs along the eastern side of the Ural Mountains. Ural mostly lies within Russia but also includes a part of northwestern Kazakhstan. This is a historical, not an official entity, with the boundaries overlapping its western Volga and eastern Siberia neighbor regions. At some point in the past, parts of the currently existing Ural region were considered a gateway to Siberia, if not Siberia itself, or were combined with the Volga administrative divisions. Today, there are two official namesake entities, the Ural Federal District and the Ural economic region. While the latter follows the historical boundaries, the former is a political product; the District omits Western Urals and includes Western Siberia instead.
The historical center of the Ural is Cherdyn, nowadays it is the small town in Perm Krai.
Perm was an administrative center of the gubernia with the same name by 1797. The most territory of historical and modern Ural was included in Perm gubernia. The administrative center of Urals was moved to Sverdlovsk (nowadays Yekaterinburg) after Revolution and Civil war. Nowadays Ural economic region does not have an administrative and informal capital, whereas Yekaterinburg is the administrative center of the Ural Federal District.
Piano Tutorial Sheet - TCHAIKOVSKY Swan Lake - HD
Piano Sheet:
Practice to particular Measure (M), click the below Time-stamp:
M1 = 2:52, M4 = 3:16, M8 = 3:44, M12 = 4:12, M16 = 4:40, M19 = 5:02, M26 = 5:50, M30 = 6:18, M33 = 6:39, M36 = 7:00, M40 = 7:28, M45 = 8:03, M50 = 8:38, M56 = 9:20
FACEBOOK:
SUBSCRIBE:
Tutorial Playlist:
The Nutcracker Playlist:
BIOGRAPHY:
Tchaikovsky, Piotr IlyichPiotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky is perhaps the
most famous Russian composer ever. He was born in Votkinsk, on May 7, 1840. Having been born to a reasonably well-off family, he was given a good musical education from a French teacher. At the age of 10, Tchaikovsky moved with his family to St. Petersburg, where he studied to become a government clerk. His musical talent, however, did not manifest itself until he attended the new school in the city founded by Anton Rubinstein. That school came to be called the St. Petersburg Conservatory. Here, Tchaikovsky learned harmony and counterpoint, as well as composition.
Tchaikovsky was hired by the Moscow Conservatory in 1866 as a
professor of harmony. At this point he began to compose in earnest, but his first works were somewhat uninspired. It was his symphonic poem Fatum (1869) which finally demonstrated Tchaikovsky's promise as an individualistic composer, with its minor modes and rhythmic life. His subsequent works, though often criticized, went on to become enormously famous. Tchaikovsky's Piano Concerto No. 1 (1875) was initially called unplayable by his good friend Nicolai Rubinstein. Similar attacks were made on his Violin Concerto (1881) by Leopold Auer, to whom the score
was dedicated. However, the incredible popular response to these pieces spoke for Tchaikovsky's mastery.
Much of Tchaikovsky's music reflects a life fraught with tragedy. His Mother died of cholera when he was 14. A woman with whom he
considered marriage married another man in 1868; when he was finally married in 1877, he found that his homosexual nature was incompatible with his new wife, and in a fit of dispair, he attempted, unsuccessfully, to commit suicide; a woman, Nadezhda von Meck, who had been supporting Tchaikovsky with an annuity of 6000 rubles per year terminated this income and all correspondence at the peak of his career. Tchaikovsky found this particularly sad because, having corresponded with her for over 13 years, he had considered von Meck among his best friends.
It seems ironic that Tchaikovsky should die of the same disease that claimed his mother. While visiting St Petersburg in 1893 during the height of a cholera epidemic, Tchaikovsky ignored the warnings about drinking unboiled water. On November 6, 1893, Piotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky died.
Piano Tutorial Sheet - TCHAIKOVSKY Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy The Nutcracker - HD
Piano Sheet:
Practice to particular Measure (M), click the below Time-Stamp:
M1 = 01:54, M9 = 2:27, M16 = 2:55, M22 = 3:19, M26 = 3:35, M31 = 3:55, M36 = 4:15, M41 = 4:35, M48 = 5:03
FACEBOOK:
SUBSCRIBE:
Tutorial Playlist:
The Nutcracker Playlist:
Tchaikovsky's Nutcracker (composed 1891-2) is one of the Composer’s most successful and enduring ballets. In 1892, Tchaikovsky constructed an orchestral suite or collection of dance movements from the Nutcracker, Op. 71a,
Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy is a magical selection and very famous which is heard here in the piano solo version with faster tempo than in the orchestral version. You can watch this ballet by clicking this link:
BIOGRAPHY:
Tchaikovsky, Piotr IlyichPiotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky is perhaps the
most famous Russian composer ever. He was born in Votkinsk, on May 7, 1840. Having been born to a reasonably well-off family, he was given a good musical education from a French teacher. At the age of 10, Tchaikovsky moved with his family to St. Petersburg, where he studied to become a government clerk. His musical talent, however, did not manifest itself until he attended the new school in the city founded by Anton Rubinstein. That school came to be called the St. Petersburg Conservatory. Here, Tchaikovsky learned harmony and counterpoint, as well as composition.
Tchaikovsky was hired by the Moscow Conservatory in 1866 as a
professor of harmony. At this point he began to compose in earnest, but his first works were somewhat uninspired. It was his symphonic poem Fatum (1869) which finally demonstrated Tchaikovsky's promise as an individualistic composer, with its minor modes and rhythmic life. His subsequent works, though often criticized, went on to become enormously famous. Tchaikovsky's Piano Concerto No. 1 (1875) was initially called unplayable by his good friend Nicolai Rubinstein. Similar attacks were made on his Violin Concerto (1881) by Leopold Auer, to whom the score
was dedicated. However, the incredible popular response to these pieces spoke for Tchaikovsky's mastery.
Much of Tchaikovsky's music reflects a life fraught with tragedy. His Mother died of cholera when he was 14. A woman with whom he
considered marriage married another man in 1868; when he was finally married in 1877, he found that his homosexual nature was incompatible with his new wife, and in a fit of dispair, he attempted, unsuccessfully, to commit suicide; a woman, Nadezhda von Meck, who had been supporting Tchaikovsky with an annuity of 6000 rubles per year terminated this income and all correspondence at the peak of his career. Tchaikovsky found this particularly sad because, having corresponded with her for over 13 years, he had considered von Meck among his best friends.
It seems ironic that Tchaikovsky should die of the same disease that claimed his mother. While visiting St Petersburg in 1893 during the height of a cholera epidemic, Tchaikovsky ignored the warnings about drinking unboiled water. On November 6, 1893, Piotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky died.