Thứ Ba, 19 tháng 2, 2019

Auto news on Youtube Feb 19 2019

hey there beautiful people my name is Alison and welcome to the tech preneur

roundup sponsored by tech preneur magazine Rwanda invests in first

smartphone Factory Rwanda based technology company Mara Corporation

together with Rwandan government officials have announced the rollout of

a factory to produce smartphones in Rwanda in addition to enhancing access

to digital services in the country this comes after Mara Corporation

announced October last year that it was investing 100 million dollars in South

Africa to make affordable high-tech smartphones South Africa to introduce

new tech subject in schools on Thursday the 7th of February the president of

South Africa cyril ramaphosa delivered his second state of the nations address

during his speech the president announced the government will introduce

new technology subjects and schools who disclose the government's intentions to

introduce automation training in primary schools to address the digital skills

shortage in the country African startups have been invited to apply for the

Bulgaria based blockchain accelerator run by Eternity ventures which offers

funding of up to us $100,000 in AE tokens Nigeria is top funding hub for

tech startups 334 point five million dollars invested across Africa in 2018

African tech startups smashed funding records in 2018 as 210 startups secured

330 4.5 million dollars worth of investment with Nigeria emerging as the

premier investment destination on the continent so thanks for watching guys do

drop a like and subscribe for all things tech right here on Gordymax

For more infomation >> Africa is the new hub for billion dollar tech startups | 2019 - Duration: 1:42.

-------------------------------------------

Why is Free WiFi Dangerous? Simply Explained. - Duration: 8:22.

We've all been there before.

You arrive at a coffee shop and you notice a sign that says "Free WiFi".

Of course you know that you shouldn't really trust free wifi, but what's the worst that

could happen?

So you open up your laptop, connect to it and start working.

Simply connecting to an open network is already potentially dangerous.

The WiFi protocol cannot verify that you are actually connected to the WiFi access point

from the coffeeshop.

Someone else can create a WiFi network with the same name and then your devices will connect

to it instead.

That is because devices automatically connect to the strongest, known network available

and a known network is only identified by its name.

With a device like a WiFi Pineapple an attacker can do just that: set up a fake WiFi network

to capture and analyze your internet traffic.

But let's ignore that risk and connect to the WiFi anyway.

At this point your device becomes a part of the coffee shop's network.

This means your device can see and talk to all the other devices that are connected to

the same WiFi network, but they can also connect to you.

If you're running outdated software you could be hacked by someone sitting a few tables

away.

And it's not as difficult as it sounds.

There are penetration testing tools available like Metasploit that can scan any device on

the network and identify vulnerabilities.

Once complete, the tool returns a list of security holes that can be abused to get access

to the device in question.

Yikes!

So keeping your devices up to date and having the firewall enabled is a must!

Updates to fix newly discovered vulnerabilities and the firewall to block people from accessing

your device through the network unwantedly.

So with the latest updates installed, you continue working.

But right now all of your unencrypted traffic can be intercepted by anyone who's on the

same network.

That includes things like unencrypted email, ftp connections and every website without

HTTPS.

Yikes!

That sounds pretty bad!

So you decide to keep it safe and instead login to your bank account, your favorite

social media website or the intranet from work.

You know that these are safe because your browser shows a green lock next to the website's

address.

But as it turns out, that's a common misconception.

The lock means that the connection between the website's server and your computer is

encrypted with the TLS or SSL protocol.

So nobody on the network can see your username and password for instance.

You can see this because the URL starts with HTTPS instead of HTTP.

But the lock doesn't guarantee that you're connected to a legitimate website.

A fake or malicious website can also get a green lock next to its name without any trouble.

One way attackers can take advantage of this is by trying to redirect your bank traffic

for instance to another domain name that is very similar.

Like going from generalbank.com to generаlbank.com.

Did you spot the difference?

The "A" in general was replaced by a Cyrillic character.

This is called the "IDN homograph attack" and browsers now have special protection on

board that will warn you when a domain name has a mix of regular and Cyrillic characters.

However, the technique can still be used with misspellings.

Like generaIbank.com where the L was replaced with a capital I.

To make matters even worse, the fake website can be made to look almost identical to the

real one AND it can have a green lock.

So in a way, the lock gives a false sense of security.

That's one of the reasons why Chrome and Safari are putting a smaller emphasis on the

lock.

They want HTTPS to be enabled by default and only draw attention when a website isn't

using it.

In fact, that move is also making another type of attack harder: SSL Stripping.

In a nutshell, an attacker can try to downgrade your secure HTTPS connections to an unsecure

HTTP one.

When successful, the data you send or receive over that connection won't be encrypted,

allowing the attacker to see what sites you visit along with your username and password.

However, modern browsers are now warning you when you're about to login to a website

with an unsecure connection.

That makes SSL stripping harder because people are very likely to spot the warning that most

browsers will put up.

Right now it's still a small warning, but eventually it will be a bold red one.

But SSL stripping can also be prevented if a website owners implement HSTS or HTTP Strict

Transport Security.

This allows them to say that their website should only be loaded through a secure connection.

If someone tricks you into loading an insecure version of a website, your browser will outright

refuse to load it.

The only downside is that website owners have to explicitly enable this feature.

If one fails to do so, you could be vulnerable.

A solution to this problem would be to use a browser extension like HTTPS Everywhere

that automatically switches to HTTPS if a given website supports it.

Wow, that all sounds pretty bad.

But then again, open WiFi is completely open.

What if the owner of the coffeeshop puts a password on his network and then writes the

password somewhere on a wall?

Would that make a difference?

Well, not really.

It's almost like locking your front door but leaving the key on the outside.

The password only prevents people from joining the network if they haven't been inside

to see it written on the wall.

If you know the password however, you can join the network, become a part of it and

perform all the attacks we just discussed.

Protect yourself Okay, enough with all the possible ways you

could be hacked on public WiFi.

How can you protect yourself?

The most obvious answer is to avoid public WiFi networks at all costs.

But that is pretty difficult with us all depending more and more on having an internet connection.

A better, but potentially expensive solution would be to invest in a good mobile data plan

and use a mobile hotspot whenever you don't have a trusted WiFi network.

The connection between your computer and the hotspot is encrypted and, in theory, can't

be intercepted.

And finally you could use the free WiFi anyway and use a VPN to secure your traffic.

VPN is short for Virtual Private Network and it creates a secure connection, also called

"tunnel" between you and the VPN server.

All your internet traffic is then sent through this tunnel and encrypted in the process.

That way nobody on the public WiFi can see your traffic or mess with it.

However there is a catch.

If you can't setup your own VPN server, you have to use a third party service, which

will cost a bit of money.

And secondly, the VPN provider can see all your unencrypted traffic, so it's best that

you pick a service from a vendor or brand that you trust or has a good reputation when

it comes to privacy.

Before ending this video, I want to mention that you don't have to feel bad if you use

free WiFi without thinking about the security risks.

According to a 2017 study from Symantec, 75% of the 15,000 participants don't use a VPN

when connecting to an open WiFi network.

It also revealed that 60% of participants felt safe using public WiFi, even though it's

anything but safe and 87% even admitted to accessing their personal emails or even bank

accounts using free WiFi.

So time for a conclusion then: free WiFi hotspot are potentially very dangerous and few people

really understand the risks.

As shown in this video, there are a bunch of security features on the web and on our

computers that protect us.

But unfortunately the bad guys are pretty clever in finding ways around those!

So, here is a Simply Explained top tip: keep your devices up-to-date and if you must, use

a VPN when connecting to an open WiFi network.

Whether you want to use an existing service for this or set one up yourself is up to you!

So that was it for this video.

If you learned something from it, hit that like button and consider getting subscribed.

Thank you so much for watching and I'll see you in the next video!

For more infomation >> Why is Free WiFi Dangerous? Simply Explained. - Duration: 8:22.

-------------------------------------------

Why only 5% people are successful? 6 Daily Habits of All Successful People - Motivation - Duration: 13:08.

For more infomation >> Why only 5% people are successful? 6 Daily Habits of All Successful People - Motivation - Duration: 13:08.

-------------------------------------------

Why Do You Like Pop Music? - Duration: 10:39.

German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche once said, "Without music, life would be a mistake."

He was probably on to something.

How many of you can remember the first song you appreciated?

When as a small child you started tapping your feet and realized a bunch of notes, a

catchy melody, could make you feel happy or even ecstatic.

This happens to us at a very early age, perhaps before we are old enough to really understand

what music is; before we cling to a genre as an identity or can fully respect the depth

of the music itself or the lyrics that sometimes support it.

It's as if we like music a priori, meaning our love of music was kind of built-in.

And today we are going to try and understand why we love our tunes, in this episode of

the Infographics Show, Why Do We Like Pop Music?

There are lots of reasons why we like music and it's not all about neurochemistry and

dopamine hits.

For instance, music can be tribal, it can symbolize how we feel at certain times in

life, represent our ethos, our club, so to speak.

The punk music of the 70s defined a clique, while you could say that classical music has

often been the favored music of the upper classes.

But first let's talk about the science of why we like music.

We warn you, our relationship with music is complicated.

Later we will also discuss why so many people like popular, or pop music.

In 2001, a study at Montreal's McGill university set out to find what happens in our brains

when we listen to music.

Those neuroscientists told us that they used something called magnetic resonance imaging

to see what happened in our brains when we listened to what they called "pleasurable"

music.

They did not define pleasurable, so we can't say if the music was the Wu Tang Clan, Ed

Sheeran or Arcade Fire.

Perhaps different styles of music have different effects on the brain, but we'll get to that

later, too.

Ok, so the scientists told us that when we listen to pleasurable music parts of the brain

called the limbic and paralimbic areas are activated and these are connected with the

feeling of euphoria.

Yep, we get a dopamine rush from music, just as do when we make love, complete a jigsaw

puzzle or bite into a double-dipped chocolate lava cake.

But the problem is, we know we get that rush from making love so we make love more and

procreate and humanity goes on; we know we get pleasure from food so we eat and don't

become emaciated and finally dead.

But why does someone blowing into a saxophone give us this rush?

Well, the sad answer is that no one totally understands.

According to the BBC some scientists say it's all about expectation and pay off.

We hear sonic patterns and regular beats, and unconsciously we are predicating what

happens next.

We get emotionally involved, and when we hear what happens next and we expected it, we get

a thrill, possibly like that feeling when your hairs stand on end or you get that rush

up your back and neck.

That's the pay off, produced by dopamine.

This all goes back to how we evolved.

We listened to patterns as early humans, and those sonic patterns could signify danger

or joy, and music is a pattern that can induce fear or panic or joy.

Of course if you listen to very alternative tunes, or what you might call experimental

music, it's not predictable at all.

Maybe that's the stuff your parents call unlistenable.

But for the most part, most genres have melodies or predictable parts, they have crescendos

and blissful harmonies.

This gives us a buzz, while we might say extremely experimental stuff at least intrigues us.

Science goes further, saying in the past when we were hunter-gatherers we might hear sounds

of animals.

A lion's roar might produce adrenaline while bird-singing might induce calm.

"Nature's tendency to overreact provides a golden opportunity for musicians" said

one scientist.

What he means is that music manipulates us.

You have classical music that starts calm and then produces adrenaline when it climbs

to a crescendo.

You could say the same about post-metal bands such as Deafheaven, whose music often starts

peaceful and builds to something that sounds cataclysmic.

It manipulates our emotions, and this gives us a rush of adrenalin especially when the

crescendo comes.

Then you have genre music that represents how you feel in life, or at a certain stage

of life, and when the lyrics combined with the music tell you should hate the oppressive

police, or distrust the establishment, or just party, party, party, this enforces the

manipulation and encourages dopamine to spill into your brain.

It goes further, though.

We are told that music is culturally specific, so one culture might find a kind of music

jarring as what they expect to happen doesn't happen.

Remember we get off on what we can predict.

The BBC writes, "All of us develop a strong, subconscious sense of which notes sound 'right',

whether in sequence in a melody, or sounding together in harmonies."

An article in Vox stated this is why we can get bored of music when we can't predict

the patterns.

That might not last, as we've all had some point in life where it took us some time to

get into an album or piece of music.

We might have also said that we liked something initially and then got bored of it, possibly

because it was just too predictable and bland.

We are also told by the French Institute of Science that music is like language, and all

humans hears tones in others' voices that sound angry, sad, etc.

If someone with a high-pitched tone talks fast and with energy it can sound happy, like

lots of electronic dance music.

A low-pitched slow warble might sound sad, as you might feel when trying to get through

a full Bill Callahan album.

And music has far wider range than voice, so it can manipulate us more.

Search on YouTube for 90's Rave clubs and you'll see what we're talking about, the

people looked possessed – of course there were sometimes added stimulants.

So, why do we like pop music?

In a book called "The Rest is Noise", the writer said, "Music may not be inviolable,

but it is infinitely variable, acquiring a new identity in the mind of every new listener.

It is always in the world, neither guilty nor innocent, subject to the ever-changing

human landscape in which it moves."

As we know, music sometimes defines who we are or at least we relate to it.

There are styles of music that help us to be part of a tribe, and we feel comfortable

with that music.

We can predict it, and it in turn gives our lives some meaning.

Whether you have ever defined yourself as a punk, a Hip-Hop devotee, a psychedelic psycho-naught,

a death metal fan or a lover of jazz, that music becomes part of what you are and you

receive pleasure in the form of dopamine when you listen to it.

For this reason, though, while you get intensely invigorated listening to Rage Against the

Machine your mother might not receive your kind of dopamine hit.

She might be more attuned to the Frozen tune, "Let It Go."

We are not all alike.

Another study asked 126 participants in Montreal to bring in all the songs they really liked.

They then tried to see how much pleasure a person derived from listening to songs of

different genres.

By looking at the brain they could predict how much time a person would spend, or was

willing to spend, on a certain song.

"Those areas included the amygdala, which is involved in processing emotion, the hippocampus,

which is important for learning and memory, and the ventromedial prefrontal cortex, which

is involved in decision-making," wrote the scientists.

They concluded that people just listen to music that they have experienced already and

can predict, it's what they feel at home with.

They said we have a musical template, and even when we listen to something new, we are

using those templates to see if the music fits with what we are accustomed to.

The problem is that this study doesn't solve why we have such different musical templates.

We might grow up in the same household as someone and at similar ages and have very

different tastes in music.

This might just be because we have been around a musical style that the other hasn't, it

might be about tribe, but it might also just be about something we were born with.

Perhaps we are made with a musical template, that indeed there is something innate when

it comes to musical preference.

Now, with pop music it is usually very easy to listen to and it is very predictable.

It's usually not full of nuance and we don't have to be refined musical aficionados to

like it.

It's made that way so it sells and is liked by the largest audience.

In one article, a researcher wrote, "Pop music is actually getting more and more homogeneous."

The study as the Medical University of Vienna in Austria looked at 15 genres of music and

374 sub-genres.

They studied each genre's musical complexity and they found that the more complex the music

was, the less it sold.

The best-selling music was simple, it was what they called generic.

They wrote that, "music is becoming increasingly formulaic in terms of instrumentation under

increasing sales numbers due to a tendency to popularize music styles with low variety

and musicians with similar skills."

Could we cynically call this the dumbing-down of music?

The Great Big Sell-Out?

Well, business is business, and if producers can create something formulaic that we can

all easily predict and enjoy, that doesn't offend, doesn't cause fear, doesn't upset

even the most sensitive parent, perhaps they are just doing their job.

Pop music is also marketed well and it's what we are exposed to a lot.

It doesn't carry serious messages; it doesn't attempt to have a profound social impact,

and the majority of people just want something easy to listen to that they are familiar with.

That's not to say bands with serious messages haven't broken the charts, just look at

Kendrick Lamar, Nirvana, The Red Hot Chili Peppers and even our dear old The Beatles.

They all did extremely well and were not what you'd call simple pop (the later Beatles

at least) or trying to be something they weren't.

Researchers, however, told us that sales of Alt-Rock, Hip-Hop, Experimental, Folk, Alt-Folk,

are all down, although there are pretenders who come across as a certain genre but aren't

really that genre, that do well in the charts.

An example would be pop-punk, which isn't exactly what The Dead Kennedys, NOFX, or the

Clash had in mind when they talked about punk.

It's really just pop in disguise.

This kind of dressed-up pop is doing well, but it's also formulaic we are told, a pop-façade

imitating a former sub-genre.

Will more sub-cultures develop with less generic music that will become popular?

Are we destined to have homogenous tunes in the charts from top-to-bottom forever more?

Tell us in the comments.

Also, be sure to check out our other show Why Do So Many Scams Come From Nigeria?.

Thanks for watching, and as always, don't forget to like, share and subscribe.

See you next time.

For more infomation >> Why Do You Like Pop Music? - Duration: 10:39.

-------------------------------------------

Why do people hiccup ? - Duration: 1:06.

Many people have suffered an embarrassing moment because of hiccups for they occur without

warning hiccups occur when the diaphrag,a muscles which is located between the lungs

and abdomen drawa air in to the lungs in sudden jerky movements.when Air rushes into the lungs

the vocal cords close restricting the airflow the sound of the hiccup is caused by

the air striking the vocal cords.

For more infomation >> Why do people hiccup ? - Duration: 1:06.

-------------------------------------------

Why do I have headaches and migraines? - Duration: 1:59.

Hey guys I'm Dr. Beth an osteopath here in Melbourne Headaches Solutions located within premier sports and spinal Medicine

so a really common question that I get asked is why do I get headaches why do I

get migraines and so that's what we're exploring today so usually from trauma

or from sustained questions such as forward hip poke or from looking down

all the time you get a reactive muscle spasm in through your neck which leads

to chronic neck dysfunctions through the upper three survival vertebrae in your

neck which can lead to sensitization of your lower brainstem also known as the

trigeminal cervical nucleus but the nerves from your face and from your head

also feed into the trigeminal viper nucleus so when this area is sensitized

that's why you're going to get your face and your head pain also known as

headache and migraine but why do you get those associated features of a migraine

well your lower brainstem is responsible for your vomit center you have a

stimulus center which is responsible for your balance and also if the originator

of all of your cranial nerves and some of those are responsible for your

eyesight your sense of smell and also your hearing so if you've sensitized

then it can lead to things like nausea and vomiting not very nice also a sense

of dizziness and lack of coordination and also it can lead to things like it's

an increase since of sensitivity of light sound and smell so what do we do

as practitioners will we come in and we decrease those restrictions in through

your neck which decreases the sensitivity of that lower brainstem so

you're not getting those associated features of your migraine and it

decreases that campaign you're getting so if you want to start

on your headache free journey today book an appointment with me dr. Beth

thanks guys catch you next time

For more infomation >> Why do I have headaches and migraines? - Duration: 1:59.

-------------------------------------------

Why Do You Receive a Reduced Amount When Selling Your Annuity? - Duration: 0:45.

The reason that you'd be getting a reduced amount on your lump sum when you sold a portion

of your annuity to a factoring company is because they are looking to make a profit.

So they're looking to purchase those future payments at a discount rate, it's called a

"discount rate".

And that's because in the future there's going to be a certain inflation rate that does not

exist today.

So they are actually purchasing it at that rate which is why you have to sell it at a

discount.

For more infomation >> Why Do You Receive a Reduced Amount When Selling Your Annuity? - Duration: 0:45.

-------------------------------------------

Why do so many people demonstrate against MSC? | RobBubble | #yourMSC - Duration: 6:30.

As young people, what would you wish for

from the politicians and the people

that are currently meeting at the MSC?

Why are you here today?

Because globally, governments are shifting to the right.

We can see that imperalism is getting more aggressive,

both internally and externally.

Well, because of the Security Conference

that's taking place at Bayerischer Hof.

A lot of important people for this world are meeting there.

At the end of the day, they plan wars.

Or rather on behalf of NATO, while talking about security,

they claim to do something for world peace or our security at the end of the day.

But actually, all they do is negotiate deals.

It's important for people to talk to each other.

Are you categorically against conversations between heads of state?

Or would a different setting be better?

No, I'm absolutely fine with heads of state talking to each other.

It's important. That's how politics work.

Through communication, no matter at which level.

At the end of the day, it doesn't matter if it takes place here or somewhere else.

Communication is important.

My wish is that my grandchildren and the whole generation of grandchildren

can have a peaceful future and live in a peaceful society.

I feel that the so-called Security Conference doesn't reflect our security

because, for us, military operations abroad can't be defined as security.

There is ever more war.

They talk about disarmament, when in reality they increase armament.

We have to get involved to oppose this.

We can't trust them and we can't take a back seat.

Why are you against the Munich Security Conference?

I think that things can't continue the way they are.

War preparations are increasing. Internationally, arms expenditures are growing.

Somehow, there's no money for other things.

Especially at these conferences

they talk about a joint approach.

Demands like "2% of the GDP need to be invested in the defence industry"

from Trump are discussed at this kind of event.

And basically, this is a call for the old imperialist powers

to guard against emerging new powers.

From what I've seen, the environment is also a topic they discuss.

So, do you fear that they primarily negotiate wars for the profit of a few people?

I think the main topic is money. And we're talking about a lot of money.

And especially in a field like this, that should not be the case.

I think it's all taking place on the pretext of security, but in reality it's not for our security.

As young people, what would you wish for from the politicians and the people

that are currently meeting at the MSC?

I think the main problem is

that it's about a justification of what's happening

and that Germany supports wars

and that weapons coming from Germany are used there.

So you're not criticizing the conference itself, that people are talking to each other,

but it's rather that you're afraid that there will be some decisions

to increase military spending, for example.

When it comes down to it, I'm not against people talking to each other, obviously.

But the topics they're discussing, that's what we're protesting against.

We're not protesting against

people sitting around a table and talking to each other.

I view this as a kind of culmination.

Because we're hearing arms build-up,

we're hearing about these intended 2 % for Germany's military spending.

They're currently negotiating that.

And as our Minister of Defence declared,

all options should be discussed, including the nuclear one.

I think that's very alarming.

Would you have a more positive view of the Munich Security Conference

if it were a meeting of just the heads of state, experts, foreign ministers and so on?

And if the armament lobby were excluded?

Well, it would still be necessary to ensure

that they can't have any influence from the outside.

So, in my opinion, the whole system of lobbying would need to be changed.

Yes, I would also say that the problem would remain

because businesses would still try to exert their influence on politicians.

It would be a big step forward, though.

For more infomation >> Why do so many people demonstrate against MSC? | RobBubble | #yourMSC - Duration: 6:30.

-------------------------------------------

Why do we say Swaha at the end of mantras? | Tamil| Channel Om #Mythology #Hindugods - Duration: 8:21.

Namaste people

Welcome to Channel Om

I am Uma Maheswarri

In this channel we

Discuss about our culture

And the meaning behind it.

So you must have

Observed that whenever

A yagya is performed

At the end of

The mantra the word

Swaha is used

Example

Om Namah Seaha!

But why do we

Use this word?

What's it's importance?

Let's find out!

So today I'll be

Telling you 5 things

About the word

Swaha

Firstly let's take

A look at

It's meaning.

The word can

Be split as

Su + Aha

So Su means

Something good.

And about this

We have already

Discussed in the

Swastika video. If you

Haven't watched it

Yet I'll leave a

Link in the description

You can go

Check it out.

Next is aha

'Aha'basically stands

For paying respect

In Sanskrit two dots

Are added after

A few words

That is to

Give it more respect.

It has no

Particular meaning.

Example thvameva maata

Pitaha tum hi ho

In this mantra 'Pita'

Is the word but

'Aha'is added

At the end

To pay our respects.

So Swaha basically

Means something good.

Now let's move

On to number

Two

But before that

Let me also

Tell you that

When this word

Is used after

A mantra it

Signifies us praying

To God that

He do only

Good to us.

Now the second point

So Seaha is

Basically a woman.

You might wonder

If so how

Is her name

Used in a yagya.

So Swaha is

Actually the wife

Of Agni,

The fire Gof

So what she

Does is she

Delivers all the

Offerings to God

In an order.

Like we eat

Starters, main course

And then dessert,

Similarly all the

Fruits and ghee

Offered needs to

Be delivered to

The Gods in an order.

And this is

Carried out by

Seaha.

Let's move on

Number three

3,4, and 5

Are stories.

So the first

Story is that

During the time

Of Mahabharata, the

"Saptarishis" prrformed a yagya

And in any

Yagya it is obviousFor the fire god

To be present.

So Agni saw

The wives of

Saptarishis and thought

How good it

Would be if he

Too had a wife.

Swaha a princess

Was watching all of this.

She already loved Agni

But he wouldn't

Look at her

As he was busy

Admiring the saptarishis's

Wives. Soon he

Felt guilty of his

Thoughts of another woman

And went into

The forest. Swaha

Followed him.

She disguised herself into

The saptarishis's wives

And met him.

But she was

Unable to disguise

As Arundathy, the

Wife of Sage Vasisht.

The reason is unknown.

In this process

Both of them

Fall in love

And get married.

Now the second story

It is said

That Lord Krishna

Told to Swaha

That no God

Would be able

To consume anything

Unless it is

Turned into ashes

By Swaha.

Everything that's offered

To the Gods

Will go through

Swaha alone and

Hence the word

Swaha is used.

She is considers

As the goddesses

Of nature.

She was born

Ftom nature.

Hence we say

Swaha at the

Rnd of every

Mantra during a

A yagya.

Now the fifth

Point as well

As the third

Story.

According to

This story

Once upon

A time the

Gods had

Nothing to eat.

They decided

To consume the

Offerings made by

The humans in

Yagya.

But unfortunately it

Had to be

First burnt in

To ashes for

Them to

Eat it.

That is when

Lord Brahma called

Upon Swaha

She was created

By.nature and

Appeared as soon as

Brahma called her.

She asked

Lord Brahma

The reason

He had

Called her.

Brahma explained

The situation

And asks

Her to

Marry Agni

Devta, the

Fire God.

Very soon

They get

Married and

That is

Another story

As well

As reason

As to

Why we

Use the

Word Swaha

At the

End

Of

Any mantea

Especially whike

Performing a

Yagya.

So those

Were the

5 facts

Or reaskns

As to

Why we

Use the

Word Swaha.

I hope

You liked

The video.

If yes

Then don't

Forget to

Like,

Share

Comment

And subscribe.

Also hit

The 🔔

Icon.

Social media

Links are

In the description.

You can follow me

Next time keep chanting Om.

Until we meet

If you want.

Không có nhận xét nào:

Đăng nhận xét