Welcome to Heavenly2, a blog that serves a variety of delicious recipes, cooking tips, and healthy lifestyle inspiration. Discover dishes ranging from traditional to modern, useful tips to enhance your cooking skills, and informative articles on beneficial lifestyle choices. Join us in exploring the exciting world of cooking and learn how to make every meal special!
Sunday, 27 August 2017
4 Good Fruits for Pregnant Mom
Feed intake into your body will be absorbed also by the Small in the womb. So you need balanced nutritious food for the fulfillment of fetal nutritional needs. In the third trimester, the fetus will grow larger.
A good fruit for pregnant women would be one of the important points that must be considered. Mother would think twice about eating any food. Because it will greatly affect the growth and development of the fetus.
All intake of food that goes into your body will be absorbed also by the Small in the womb. So you need balanced nutritious food for the fulfillment of fetal nutritional needs. In the third trimester, the fetus will grow larger. So the need for nutritional intake is increasing. Mothers should also consume a lot of balanced nutrition. Whether it's carbohydrates, fats, and minerals like iron. One of the foods that have the content of vitamins and minerals can certainly be obtained from fruits and vegetables. There are many types of fruit that is good for pregnant women who can be consumed you know. Well, what are you doing? Check out the following reviews.
Avocado
This fruit became one of the recommendations for the mother because it has a good content such as folic acid that is needed by pregnant women. In addition, avocado is also the only fruit that contains monounsaturated fatty acids. Of course, for pregnant women who need fat, it would be better if you eat foods that contain unsaturated fats. Mango
This seasonal fruit does have a sweet and fresh taste. However, not only delicious loh, this fruit also can help digestion process. In addition the content of vitamins A, C, E, potassium, and fiber contained in it and good for pregnant women.
Kiwi
Kiwis are ripe and tasty. They come with important nutrients like Vitamin C, E, A, Potassium, Phosporus, Magnesium, Folic Acid and dietary fiber. Kiwis are known to have healing effects on human respiratory system. You are less likely to be affected by cough, cold and wheezing if you eat kiwis every day. The fruit helps in lesser blood clotting because of its richness in phosphorus content. Kiwi also felicitates easy absorption of iron.
Orange
This fresh fruit is also beneficial to the health of pregnant women. The content of vitamin C and folic acid can help Mother maintain body health as well as optimize the growth of the baby in the womb.
Banana
Good fruit for pregnant women This one is very easy to find in Indonesia. Consumption of bananas is also appropriate for mothers who often experience constipation problems. The fruit of this one will greatly help overcome the problem. In addition, quoted from the book 378 Juices & Herbal Remedy: Tumpas Illness of Light to Weight , the content of folic acid in bananas will be easily absorbed by the fetus.
Saturday, 26 August 2017
Google creates virtual reality voyage to Italy
Really awesome, Google started in January 1996 as a research project by Larry Page and Sergey Brin, now Google has recreated a mythical journey from 300 years ago, that takes armchair travellers through the jewels of Italia in a virtual reality version of “The Grand Tour of Italy.”
Art lovers and Italophiles can explore Italy without leaving home using Google’s VR Cardboard, a platform that creates immersive experiences through a simple, foldable and affordable, cardboard viewer.
The Grand Tour of Italy was a voyage undertaken by wealthy young, adventure-seeking men and women who were dispatched by their upper class families to explore the country’s art and culture and become sophisticated and learned citizens of the world.
Three hundred years later, the voyage is being democratised for the less affluent, through a VR experience that explores four cities — Venice, Palermo, Siena and Rome – in 25 videos, 21 Street View tours, 38 digital exhibitions and 1,300 ultra-high resolution images.
Partners include museums, art galleries, and theatres across the country.
Highlights include a street art tour in Rome, and the Redentore fireworks display in Venice.
Parts of the tour are also available on Google Arts and Culture.
GoogleGrandTour The Grand Tour of Italy
Sunday, 13 August 2017
7 Technologies Where China Has the U.S. Beat
Earlier this week, the latest surprise came from energy secretary Steven Chu, who's been talking up China's green progress in an effort to boost Washington's resolve on clean tech policy.
In a talk at the National Press Club, with characteristic forceful clarity (PDF of slides), Chu illuminated the growing list of sectors where China's emerging leadership threatens U.S. players, and added leadership in supercomputing as the most recent Sino-superlative. China's success in these technologies represents a "Sputnik Moment" for the United States, Chu said.
"When it comes to innovation, Americans don't take a back seat to anyone -- and we certainly won't start now," said Secretary Chu at the event. "From wind power to nuclear reactors to high-speed rail, China and other countries are moving aggressively to capture the lead. Given that challenge, and given the enormous economic opportunities in clean energy, it's time for America to do what we do best: innovate."
China's ascent to the top of the list for supercomputing speed reveals a new front in this race. Last month China's Tianhe-1A, developed by Chinese defense researchers, became the world's fastest supercomputer, with a performance level of 2.57 petaflop/s (quadrillions of calculations per second, for all the geeks in our audience, based on a standard test), substantially eclipsing the U.S. DOE's Cray XT5 "Jaguar" system at Oak Ridge national labs in Tennessee, which runs at 1.75 petaflop/s. Third place is also held by a Chinese computer.
Supercomputers may seem long way from grid-competitive solar panels, long-range electric car batteries, or other cleantech gizmos, but advanced computational simulation is the keystone of most leading-edge scientific research, including nuclear energy, nanotech and materials science, proteomics and other advanced biotech applications. Basically, any very advanced science these days needs big computing horsepower. Leadership on the fastest-computer league tables has been traded off many times, between U.S., Japanese and European computing centers. China is a relative newcomer to the race, but is clearly the new elite.
Chu highlighted several crucial technologies -- mostly in the areas of power generation and transportation -- where China is already outpacing U.S. efforts, adding the U.S. must innovate or risk falling far behind. The following is from the DOE:
• High Voltage Transmission.
China has deployed the world's first Ultra High Voltage AC and DC lines -- including one capable of delivering 6.4 gigawatts to Shanghai from a hydroelectric plant nearly 1300 miles away in southwestern China. These lines are more efficient and carry much more power over longer distances than those in the United States.
• High-Speed Rail.
In the span of six years, China has gone from importing this technology to exporting it, with the world's fastest train and the world's largest high-speed rail network, which will become larger than the rest of the world combined by the end of the decade. Some short distance plane routes have already been cancelled, and train travel from Beijing to Shanghai (roughly equivalent to New York to Chicago) has been cut from 11 hours to 4 hours.
• Advanced Coal Technologies.
China is rapidly deploying supercritical and ultra-supercritical coal combustion plants, which have fewer emissions and are more efficient than conventional coal plants because they burn coal at much higher temperatures and pressures. Last month, Secretary Chu toured an ultra-supercritical plant in Shanghai which claims to be 45 to 48 percent efficient. The most efficient U.S. plants are about 40 percent efficient. China is also moving quickly to design and deploy technologies for Integrated Gasification Combined Cycle (IGCC) plants as well as Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS).
• Nuclear Power.
China has more than 30 nuclear power plants under construction, more than any other country in the world, and is actively researching fourth generation nuclear power technologies.
• Alternative Energy Vehicles.
China has developed a draft plan to invest $17 billion in central government funds in fuel economy, hybrids, plug-in hybrids, electric and fuel cell vehicles, with the goal of producing 5 million new energy vehicles and 15 million fuel-efficient conventional vehicles by 2020.
• Renewable Energy.
China is installing wind power at a faster rate than any nation in the world, and manufactures 40 percent of the world's solar photovoltaic (PV) systems. It is home to three of the world's top ten wind turbine manufacturers and five of the top ten silicon-based PV manufacturers in the world.
• Supercomputing.
Last month, the Tianhe-1A, developed by China's National University of Defense Technology, became the world's fastest supercomputer. While the United States -- and the Department of Energy in particular -- still has unrivalled expertise in the useful application of high performance computers to advance scientific research and develop technology, America must continue to improve the speed and capacity of our advanced supercomputers.
On a note of consolation, Chu identified two research areas in U.S. labs that have the potential to vault U.S. industries to the front of these fields. Both are both vehicle related:
• Revolutionary Electric Vehicle Batteries -- 500 Miles on a Single Charge.
With the help of Recovery Act funding, Arizona-based Fluidic Energy is working with Arizona State University to develop a new generation of "metal-air" batteries that can store many times more energy than standard lithium-ion batteries. Metal-air batteries contain high energy metals and literally breathe oxygen from the air, giving them the ability to store extreme amounts of energy.
To date, the development of these batteries has been blocked by the limitations of using unstable water based solutions that break down and evaporate out of the battery as it breathes. Fluidic Energy's innovative approach involves ionic liquids -- extremely stable salts in liquid form -- using no water at all.
If successful, the effort could yield batteries that weigh less, cost less, and are capable of carrying a four passenger electric car 500 miles without recharging, at a cost competitive with internal combustion engines. A fact sheet on the project, which is part of DOE's Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E).
Converting Sunlight Into Usable Fuel.
Through a newly established Energy Innovation Hub led by the California Institute of Technology (Caltech), an interdisciplinary team of scientists and engineers are working to create an integrated system modeled after photosynthesis that can convert sunlight, carbon dioxide and water into usable fuels such as gasoline.
The goal is to create a system of artificial photosynthesis that is 10 times more efficient than traditional photosynthesis in converting sunlight into fuel -- paving the way for a major expansion of America's biofuel industry and reducing our dependence on oil.
In a talk at the National Press Club, with characteristic forceful clarity (PDF of slides), Chu illuminated the growing list of sectors where China's emerging leadership threatens U.S. players, and added leadership in supercomputing as the most recent Sino-superlative. China's success in these technologies represents a "Sputnik Moment" for the United States, Chu said.
"When it comes to innovation, Americans don't take a back seat to anyone -- and we certainly won't start now," said Secretary Chu at the event. "From wind power to nuclear reactors to high-speed rail, China and other countries are moving aggressively to capture the lead. Given that challenge, and given the enormous economic opportunities in clean energy, it's time for America to do what we do best: innovate."
China's ascent to the top of the list for supercomputing speed reveals a new front in this race. Last month China's Tianhe-1A, developed by Chinese defense researchers, became the world's fastest supercomputer, with a performance level of 2.57 petaflop/s (quadrillions of calculations per second, for all the geeks in our audience, based on a standard test), substantially eclipsing the U.S. DOE's Cray XT5 "Jaguar" system at Oak Ridge national labs in Tennessee, which runs at 1.75 petaflop/s. Third place is also held by a Chinese computer.
Supercomputers may seem long way from grid-competitive solar panels, long-range electric car batteries, or other cleantech gizmos, but advanced computational simulation is the keystone of most leading-edge scientific research, including nuclear energy, nanotech and materials science, proteomics and other advanced biotech applications. Basically, any very advanced science these days needs big computing horsepower. Leadership on the fastest-computer league tables has been traded off many times, between U.S., Japanese and European computing centers. China is a relative newcomer to the race, but is clearly the new elite.
Chu highlighted several crucial technologies -- mostly in the areas of power generation and transportation -- where China is already outpacing U.S. efforts, adding the U.S. must innovate or risk falling far behind. The following is from the DOE:
• High Voltage Transmission.
China has deployed the world's first Ultra High Voltage AC and DC lines -- including one capable of delivering 6.4 gigawatts to Shanghai from a hydroelectric plant nearly 1300 miles away in southwestern China. These lines are more efficient and carry much more power over longer distances than those in the United States.
• High-Speed Rail.
In the span of six years, China has gone from importing this technology to exporting it, with the world's fastest train and the world's largest high-speed rail network, which will become larger than the rest of the world combined by the end of the decade. Some short distance plane routes have already been cancelled, and train travel from Beijing to Shanghai (roughly equivalent to New York to Chicago) has been cut from 11 hours to 4 hours.
• Advanced Coal Technologies.
China is rapidly deploying supercritical and ultra-supercritical coal combustion plants, which have fewer emissions and are more efficient than conventional coal plants because they burn coal at much higher temperatures and pressures. Last month, Secretary Chu toured an ultra-supercritical plant in Shanghai which claims to be 45 to 48 percent efficient. The most efficient U.S. plants are about 40 percent efficient. China is also moving quickly to design and deploy technologies for Integrated Gasification Combined Cycle (IGCC) plants as well as Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS).
• Nuclear Power.
China has more than 30 nuclear power plants under construction, more than any other country in the world, and is actively researching fourth generation nuclear power technologies.
• Alternative Energy Vehicles.
China has developed a draft plan to invest $17 billion in central government funds in fuel economy, hybrids, plug-in hybrids, electric and fuel cell vehicles, with the goal of producing 5 million new energy vehicles and 15 million fuel-efficient conventional vehicles by 2020.
• Renewable Energy.
China is installing wind power at a faster rate than any nation in the world, and manufactures 40 percent of the world's solar photovoltaic (PV) systems. It is home to three of the world's top ten wind turbine manufacturers and five of the top ten silicon-based PV manufacturers in the world.
• Supercomputing.
Last month, the Tianhe-1A, developed by China's National University of Defense Technology, became the world's fastest supercomputer. While the United States -- and the Department of Energy in particular -- still has unrivalled expertise in the useful application of high performance computers to advance scientific research and develop technology, America must continue to improve the speed and capacity of our advanced supercomputers.
On a note of consolation, Chu identified two research areas in U.S. labs that have the potential to vault U.S. industries to the front of these fields. Both are both vehicle related:
• Revolutionary Electric Vehicle Batteries -- 500 Miles on a Single Charge.
With the help of Recovery Act funding, Arizona-based Fluidic Energy is working with Arizona State University to develop a new generation of "metal-air" batteries that can store many times more energy than standard lithium-ion batteries. Metal-air batteries contain high energy metals and literally breathe oxygen from the air, giving them the ability to store extreme amounts of energy.
To date, the development of these batteries has been blocked by the limitations of using unstable water based solutions that break down and evaporate out of the battery as it breathes. Fluidic Energy's innovative approach involves ionic liquids -- extremely stable salts in liquid form -- using no water at all.
If successful, the effort could yield batteries that weigh less, cost less, and are capable of carrying a four passenger electric car 500 miles without recharging, at a cost competitive with internal combustion engines. A fact sheet on the project, which is part of DOE's Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E).
Converting Sunlight Into Usable Fuel.
Through a newly established Energy Innovation Hub led by the California Institute of Technology (Caltech), an interdisciplinary team of scientists and engineers are working to create an integrated system modeled after photosynthesis that can convert sunlight, carbon dioxide and water into usable fuels such as gasoline.
The goal is to create a system of artificial photosynthesis that is 10 times more efficient than traditional photosynthesis in converting sunlight into fuel -- paving the way for a major expansion of America's biofuel industry and reducing our dependence on oil.
Guide How To Use Effective Serum According To Experts
Serum is featured in many magazines and blogs or beauty forums for women. But did you really understand how to properly use serum effectively?
1. BASIC KNOWLEDGE ABOUT THE SERVER
COMPARED TO THE HISTORY OF THE BEAUTY INDUSTRY, THE CONCEPT OF SERUM (OR SERUM, ESSENCE) IS STILL FRESH, WAS BORN IN 1982 AND IS UNDERSTOOD AS A FORM OF CONCENTRATED ESSENCE WITH THE USE OF EXCESS. EXCELS IN CARING AND IMPROVING THE SKIN.
The texture of the serum is generally milder than a moisturizer , and is capable of being used as a stand-alone skin cream, suitable for dry, oily, or neutral skin types.
According to experts, serum is the essence of skin care to crystallize should be able to contain up to 70% of the essence, have the ability to penetrate the skin very well. Unlike other skin care products , just one drop of serum is enough for the entire face.
2. HOW TO USE SERUM PROPERLY
Dermatologist and well-known expert in the beauty industry in the world, Adam Geyer has directed the following: "Serum should be used to nourish the skin twice a day. This is the first step to the skin after cleansing and toning. Even day creams and lotions before bed are also used after this serum. How to use serum is quite simple: you just give a sufficient amount (peanut) to your heart clean hands, rub your hands and press firmly to create heat. Then apply your face and massage gently. The heat of the hands will make the serum more effective.
3. HOW TO CHOOSE SERUM?
A question is not simple because the serum in the market is extremely rich, diverse. Usually, women choose serum quite emotional, may be according to price, design or advertising. " But it's time to get to know the ingredients of the serum as a real expert. Just like other cosmetics, serums are divided into different categories with different uses. There are some types of moisturizing serum that are naturally white, with collagen-boosting and antioxidant types, and there are also deep skin types with unique extracts, "says expert Adam. Geyer said.
Here are tips on choosing the serum that corresponds to your target
A) MOISTURIZE SKIN AND REDUCE BROWN SPOTS
"Choose serum with antioxidant ingredients, especially Vitamin C, which deepens the skin, prevents damage from the outside, improves color uniformity and reduces wrinkles on the face."
B) SKIN FIRMING
According to Adam Geyer, you should choose " Serum contains peptides that promote collagen production and elastin to restore elasticity and firmness of the skin."
C) Lightening and regenerating skin
" L OAI serum is formulated ingredients chevoi retinol will help promote cell renewal process and lighten the skin while maintaining the skin smooth. But with this ingredient you should use it at a reasonable level, because overuse will irritate or injure the skin, "
D) REJUVENATE THE SKIN AT NIGHT
This is also a very common purpose when using serum. You should choose products rich in essential oils and fatty acids, Omega-3 to help deepen and regenerate the skin.