Almost time for halloween, don't come to my house or else i'll but it's good ending

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he'll suck your blood :)

#kinemaster

Song is owned by Konami, tooken from fisherman bait 2
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I think YouTube start to delete comment randomly, so if anyone wondering why is my comment deleted? It's because yt has delete it, i never delete comments

curutron
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The only thing worse than a bad ending is no ending 😔

oscarma
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Imagine the confusion of those people who don't know the original ending.

gamingdino
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This isn’t a good ending, but it is the clean ending

psychicmouse
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I don't want a good ending.
I want a happy ending.

javierfigeroa
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Morally I think this is the bad ending

ballinbalgruuf
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Well technically, the bad ending one is the most safest one so I'll stick to the bad one for my safety. 🗿

steveniumprime
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What’s the point of going to his house than

smallspace
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This is not just good ending, this is also good editing, It doesn't look like a cut, It looks like a slight camera lag

riccardocoppolino
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Why is this unironically funnier then the original

BrodyDoesSomething
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How is this the good ending

Edit:Ok, so how is most of the replies I’m getting telling me what the joke is? As if I’m unaware? I made a joke, explaining the original joke to me is stupid

goalhorncrazy
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There’s a difference between a “good ending” and a “happy ending”

sleepybim
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This is the Opposite of the good ending

ITS
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time traveller: *kicks rock*

the timeline:

vladimirdrippin
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As a straight male, this is not the good ending

heyitsdaniel
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this is the bad ending
the regular one was the good ending….




*pls daddy dracula go harder*

edit: no thanks for 30 likes stop liking

hypnov
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So happy to hear Fisherman's Bait 2 ost in the wild

kanadaiya
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This may have have been a good ending to some, but I'll always miss the happy ending...

jacobstallings
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Ending: Normal: You get ur blood taken away from cursed filter Dracula

TheoneGuyYT
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Thank you, Daniel, for this question. As you have guessed there is a very interesting back story to “squawk codes”. These codes have been used in radio signalling systems for more than 75 years to identify and determine the location of aircraft in flight.

Code name: Parrot
Early radar systems used in the second world war were critical to allied success in the Battle of Britain in 1940, when Britain’s Royal Air Force (RAF) defended the United Kingdom against a huge air attack campaign by Nazi Germany’s air force, the Luftwaffe.

But these early radar systems had a major limitation. They could detect aircraft by radio signals being reflected by moving objects, but the reflected signal could not tell you whether an aircraft was friendly or hostile.

This led to the rapid development of secondary surveillance radars, which required an active and cooperative response from aircraft. In other words, the aircraft had to answer back. This would help to identify the “friendlies” in the skies.

The secondary radar system would send a transmission of radio frequency pulses directed at the aircraft. Friendly aircraft were fitted with equipment that would respond with an identification code. If no response was received, radar operators would presume the aircraft was an enemy plane.

This innovation meant that radar operators could now use the main radars (known as “primary radars”) in combination with the secondary radars to detect the presence of aircraft and to distinguish between friends and foes.

This system was known as Identification Friend or Foe (IFF) and the concept remains important to military forces even today.

The aircraft transponder, which received and transmitted signals, was initially code-named Parrot. Soon, airmen started using the nickname “squawk codes”.

While the name Parrot didn’t last, the term “squawk” continues to be used today to describe the activity of the transponder.

How it works
After the war, the concept was adapted for civil aircraft – the kinds of plane we fly on when we go on holiday.

The system identifies an aircraft through a four-digit octal number (each digit from 0 to 7), which provides for up to 4, 096 possible codes. These codes can also be used to alert controllers of an aircraft emergency. Subsequently, another mode was added to inform radar controllers of an aircraft’s height, using data from the plane’s altimeter (the instrument that tells you how high a plane is flying).

For those of you who are technically minded, the frequencies used in secondary surveillance radar are 1030 Megahertz for the interrogation (the “hello, who are you?” signal) and 1090 Megahertz for the response (the answer you get back). The response is a sequence of pulses spaced 1.45 microseconds apart – that’s very fast!

Air traffic control towers
Imagine a pilot is flying a plane full of passengers on holiday to Sydney. As she or he flies towards the destination, the air traffic control tower at Sydney airport sends an interrogation signal. The aircraft automatically responds with a series of short pulses that let air traffic control know the identity of the plane and its altitude. Then air traffic control can compare the identity code to flight plans to identify the aircraft.

The time taken between the interrogation transmission and the received code lets us know the distance between the radar and the aircraft. Air traffic control computer systems use this information, the direction of the interrogation signal, and the altitude to determine exactly where the aircraft is.

Other navigation and airspace management systems have been developed over the years. The most recent is the Automatic Dependent Surveillance Broadcast (ADS-B) system, which incorporates Global Positioning System (GPS) data into the responses from aircraft.

Secondary surveillance radar was an important development in the safety of aviation and remains a key element of airspace management today.

Hello, curious kids! Have you got a question you’d like an expert to answer? Ask an adult to send your question to us. They can:

* Tell us on Twitter

Please tell us your name, age and which city you live in. You can send an audio recording of your question too, if you want. Send as many questions as you like! We won’t be able to answer every Thank you, Daniel, for this question. As you have guessed there is a very interesting back story to “squawk codes”. These codes have been used in radio signalling systems for more than 75 years to identify and determine the location of aircraft in flight.

Code name: Parrot
Early radar systems used in the second world war were critical to allied success in the Battle of Britain in 1940, when Britain’s Royal Air Force (RAF) defended the United Kingdom against a huge air attack campaign by Nazi Germany’s air force, the Luftwaffe.

But these early radar systems had a major limitation. They could detect aircraft by radio signals being reflected by moving objects, but the reflected signal could not tell you whether an aircraft was friendly or hostile.

This led to the rapid development of secondary surveillance radars, which required an active and cooperative response from aircraft. In other words, the aircraft had to answer back. This would help to identify the “friendlies” in the skies.

The secondary radar system would send a transmission of radio frequency pulses directed at the aircraft. Friendly aircraft were fitted with equipment that would respond with an identification code. If no response was received, radar operators would presume the aircraft was an enemy plane.

This innovation meant that radar operators could now use the main radars (known as “primary radars”) in combination with the secondary radars to detect the presence of aircraft and to distinguish between friends and foes.

This system was known as Identification Friend or Foe (IFF) and the concept remains important to military forces even today.

The aircraft transponder, which received and transmitted signals, was initially code-named Parrot. Soon, airmen started using the nickname “squawk codes”.

While the name Parrot didn’t last, the term “squawk” continues to be used today to describe the activity of the transponder.

How it works
After the war, the concept was adapted for civil aircraft – the kinds of plane we fly on when we go on holiday.

The system identifies an aircraft through a four-digit octal number (each digit from 0 to 7), which provides for up to 4, 096 possible codes. These codes can also be used to alert controllers of an aircraft emergency. Subsequently, another mode was added to inform radar controllers of an aircraft’s height, using data from the plane’s altimeter (the instrument that tells you how high a plane is flying).

For those of you who are technically minded, the frequencies used in secondary surveillance radar are 1030 Megahertz for the interrogation (the “hello, who are you?” signal) and 1090 Megahertz for the response (the answer you get back). The response is a sequence of pulses spaced 1.45 microseconds apart – that’s very fast!

Air traffic control towers
Imagine a pilot is flying a plane full of passengers on holiday to Sydney. As she or he flies towards the destination, the air traffic control tower at Sydney airport sends an interrogation signal. The aircraft automatically responds with a series of short pulses that let air traffic control know the identity of the plane and its altitude. Then air traffic control can compare the identity code to flight plans to identify the aircraft.

The time taken between the interrogation transmission and the received code lets us know the distance between the radar and the aircraft. Air traffic control computer systems use this information, the direction of the interrogation signal, and the altitude to determine exactly where the aircraft is.

Other navigation and airspace management systems have been developed over the years. The most recent is the Automatic Dependent Surveillance Broadcast (ADS-B) system, which incorporates Global Positioning System (GPS) data into the responses from aircraft.

Secondary surveillance radar was an important development in the safety of aviation and remains a key element of airspace management today.

Hello, curious kids! Have you got a question you’d like an expert to answer? Ask an adult to send your question to us. They can:

* Tell us on Twitter

Please tell us your name, age and which city you live in. You can send an audio recording of your question too, if you want. Send as many questions as you like! We won’t be able to answer every

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