Wednesday, April 22, 2009
年轻人少奋斗8年的10个方法
Posted by chiatak at 7:11 PM 3 comments
肝硬化,居然有救
馬鈴薯、紅蘿蔔、蘋果三合一鮮汁的功效:
一、防治癌症,抑制癌細胞生長
二、防治肝臟病、腎臟病、胰臟病、胃潰瘍。
三、防治非典型肺炎、心臟病、高血壓。
四、恢復體力,增強體質,提高免疫和自癒能力。
五、恢復眼睛疲勝,消除眼睛乾燥,令雙眼亮麗。
六、治癒腰痛、肩膀痛、膝痛。
七、排除體內毒素,美容顏潤皮膚、治肥胖。
八、根治便秘,痔瘡,根治口臭、胃酸、減低月經痛。
特點:
沒有任何副作用,高營養健康食品,迅速吸收和排毒,令食慾增加,
補氣恢復體力。
材料:
新鮮馬鈴薯(即薯仔)、紅蘿蔔、蘋果各一個。
每個各重約 一百五十克 至
二百克。
榨汁,即榨即飲,切勿存放。
注意:
馬鈴薯發芽處要切除,以免中毒。
新鮮果汁宜清晨空腹飲用。
重症患者,每天下午五時空腹時再飲一次。
飲用後約一小時才可以進食早、晚餐,以免胃液被稀釋,影響消化力。
必須天天飲用不間斷,輕症三週見效。重症三個月見效。
有效病來:
一、二十年口臭頑疾根治
彭先生四十五歲,二十年來口異臭,給社交帶來極大煩惱,中西醫治療無效,去年經親友熱心推介服用新鮮果汁,當時半信半疑試一試,每天清早空腹飲五百C.C.,二個月後口臭完全清除,人變得自信了,新鮮果汁的神奇功效令他佩服,喜不自禁地再三感謝向他推介的親友,解除了他二十年來的苦惱。
二、肺癌得以控制
丁先生耳下生一個腫瘤,被診斷是末期癌細胞,用放射療法之後,癌細胞轉移到肺部,成為肺癌,被宣告已經是到了無法治療的階段。
丁先生以積極的態度,回到家裡實行鮮汁療法。
目前已經控制住癌細胞的蔓延,體力漸漸恢復,而且幾乎可以回到工作崗位。
三、肝炎、花粉症、濕疹
須女士六十八歲,患慢性肝炎、花粉症、濕疹。醫生分析,肝炎惡化,會使食道、胃腸易患癌症。
須女士的父親、叔父、叔母和姐姐都因癌症而去世,她很擔心自己也會得癌症。
承以當她看到馬鈴薯鮮汁對治療癌症有效的文章之後,
就毫不猶豫隨即把馬鈴薯配合蘋果一起
榨成鮮果汁,如此更可口易喝,她把鮮汁視為「生命之水」,一回氣就全部喝完了。
不久,奇蹟出現,二個月後檢查:病情穩定」。四個用後檢查:「接近正常」。
除了肝
炎顯著改善之外,還有二件值得慶幸的意外收穫:
第一:她長年受花粉症的困擾,今年春天沒有出現這種症狀。
第二:以往手腳一吹到冷風,就會出現紅疹,非常痕癢,又稱濕疹。
今年卻一次也沒有。
這都是飲馬鈴薯鮮汁的功效,體質獲得改善,身體的自癒能力增強承致,
須女士現在心情非常愉快。
四、四十年白眼球赤熱,三個月根治
林先生五十八歲,從十七歲開始雙目常赤熱,中醫診斷是「肝經積鬱」,服藥多年無效。西醫診斷說是城市空氣污染承致,最好移居鄉村,但是居住鄉村十幾年,眼未見好轉。由於白眼球長期充血呈紅色,朋友戲稱他外號叫荔枝眼。
去年幸獲讀了三合一新鮮果汁文章之後,每天清早空腹飲五百CC鮮汁,一個月後雙眼明顯好轉,赤熱減退。
三個月後,雙目黑白分明,從此再也沒有赤熱的現象。
五、肝硬化,居然有救
高女士五十九歲,患肝硬化,食道靜脈瘤破裂,大量吐血,皮膚黃
疸,臉和手腳浮腫,終日昏昏睡夢中,多次入院施手術,亦曾經嘗試各種療法和健康食品,但因肝臟太差,承以總是無效。突然在一個契機經朋友介紹,聽到馬鈴薯鮮汁對治癌症有很好效果,於是立刻動手做馬鈴薯鮮汁。
材料是馬鈴薯、紅蘿蔔、蘋果、再加三份一的檸檬汁調味,三種一起榨汁即時飲用,一個小時後才吃早餐。
Posted by chiatak at 6:28 PM 0 comments
Monday, April 20, 2009
Friday, April 17, 2009
Walking Tour
去年,我参加了一个少年领袖集训营。有个晚上,俊海播了这个短篇,很多同学都感触良多,你呢?希望你能把你的感想留言给我。谢谢。。
Posted by chiatak at 12:54 PM 0 comments
Thursday, April 16, 2009
Researchers build tiny batteries with viruses
By manipulating a few genes inside these viruses, the team was able to coax the organisms to grow and self-assemble into a functional electronic device.
The goal of the work, led by MIT Professors Angela Belcher, Paula Hammond and Yet-Ming Chiang, is to create batteries that cram as much electrical energy into as small or lightweight a package as possible. The batteries they hope to build could range from the size of a grain of rice up to the size of existing hearing aid batteries.
Batteries consist of two opposite electrodes -- an anode and cathode -- separated by an electrolyte. In the current work, the MIT team used an intricate assembly process to create the anode.
Specifically, they manipulated the genes in a laboratory strain of a common virus, making the microbes collect exotic materials -- cobalt oxide and gold. And because these viruses are negatively charged, they can be layered between oppositely charged polymers to form thin, flexible sheets.
The result? A dense, virus-loaded film that serves as an anode.
A report on the work will appear in the April 7 issue of Science.
Belcher, the Germeshausen Professor of Materials Science and Engineering and Biological Engineering; Chiang, the Kyocera Professor of Materials Science and Engineering (MSE); and Hammond, the Mark A. Hyman Professor of Chemical Engineering (ChE), led a team of five additional researchers.
They are MSE graduate students Ki Tae Nam (the lead author), Dong-Wan Kim, Chung-Yi Chiang and Nonglak Meethong, and ChE postdoctoral associate Pil. J. Yoo.
In their research, the MIT team altered the virus's genes so they make protein coats that collect molecules of cobalt oxide, plus gold. The viruses then align themselves on the polymer surface to form ultrathin wires. Each virus, and thus the wire, is only 6 nanometers (6 billionths of a meter) in diameter, and 880 nanometers in length.
"We can make them in larger diameters," Belcher said, "but they are all 880 nanometers in length," which matches the length of the individual virus particles. And, "once we've altered the genes of the virus to grow the electrode material, we can easily clone millions of identical copies of the virus to use in assembling our batteries.
"For the metal oxide we chose cobalt oxide because it has very good specific capacity, which will produce batteries with high energy density," meaning it can store two or three times more energy for its size and weight compared to previously used battery electrode materials. And adding the gold further increased the wires' energy density, she added.
Equally important, the reactions needed to create nanowires occur at normal room temperatures and pressures, so there is no need for expensive pressure-cooking technology to get the job done.
The work is important, too, because energy density is a vital quality in batteries. A lack of energy density -- meaning the amount of charge a battery of a given size can usefully carry -- is what has hampered development of electric cars, since existing batteries are generally too heavy and too weak to compete with gasoline as an energy source. Still, battery technology is gradually being improved and may someday even become competitive as the price of oil escalates.
"The nanoscale materials we've made supply two to three times the electrical energy for their mass or volume, compared to previous materials," the team reported.
The researchers' work was spurred by "growing evidence that 'nanostructured' materials can improve the electrochemical properties of lithium-ion batteries," compared to more conventional batteries based on older technologies, the team wrote in Science.
But to create new battery materials, Belcher noted, special control is needed so just the right amounts of the exotic materials end up exactly where they belong. Cobalt oxide "has shown excellent electrochemical cycling properties, and is thus under consideration as an electrode for advanced lithium-ion batteries."
In earlier research, Belcher and colleagues learned they could exploit the abilities of microbes to recognize the correct molecules and assemble them where they belong.
A new means of inducing this order comes from self-assembly, a tool that is commonly used now in Hammond's lab. "By harnessing the electrostatic nature of the assembly process with the functional properties of the virus, we can create highly ordered composite thin films combining the function of the virus and polymer systems," Hammond said.
This work was funded by the Army Research Office Institute of Collaborative Biotechnologies, the Institute of Soldier Nanotechnologies and the David and Lucille Packard Foundation.
Link: http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/2006/virus-battery.html
Posted by chiatak at 11:42 AM 0 comments
Sunday, April 12, 2009
My Dream Phone Nokia E71
我不曾对手机有这么大的兴趣,直到我遇见“它”,我真得很想得到“它”。现在我每天看着‘它”,试用我的视觉化想象力来吸引“它”,我知道我一定会成功。有谁曾买过或用过,请给给意见。。。没用过得也可以给给你们的想法。。。谢谢。。。如果Nokia E71和DiGi的3G一起使用的话,简直是perfect。。。没有话讲。。。
Posted by chiatak at 10:09 AM 3 comments
Saturday, April 11, 2009
DiGi脫離龜速‧殺入3G無線寬頻大戰
千辛萬苦等了3年多,也拼了近10個月,最近才推出3G通訊服務的DiGi,推介時只字不提“3G” 或“3.5G”,反而以“更快更便宜的寬頻服務”口號,來強調其穩定的平均速率,和最便宜的每Byte數據平均價,殺入本地競爭激烈的無線寬頻網絡市場。
雖然DiGi三四年前就已推出EDGE網絡服務,但作為無線寬頻市場後起之秀,DiGi首席執行員Johan Dennelind還是滿懷信心地表示:“DiGi的目標是在三五年內,瓜分我國三分之一的無線寬頻市場。”
為此,DiGi率先推出的就是目前廣受本地用戶歡迎的無線寬頻上網服務,而延後才考慮推出使用率不高的3G語音和3G視像通話。
推介初期,DiGi的無線寬頻服務範圍,僅在巴生谷主要地區,如:Damansara(白沙羅)、Petaling Jaya(八打靈再也)、雙威(Sunway)和孟沙(Bangsar)。
我們請DiGi的商業策略與新業務總監盧家捷為讀者解惑:
問:惡劣天氣會影響DiGi無線寬頻服務的連線素質嗎?
Posted by chiatak at 7:39 PM 4 comments