Thursday, July 15, 2010

Harga Baru Minyak Petrol - Adusss




Semalam aku dapat info dari member ttg news nie..mula2 xpercaya..alik umah plak adik aku pon ckp mcm 2 gak..tak puas ati aku..try surf kat internet..lip-lap2..btol kot..secara pantas aku p trus p.pump..isi penuh kete n moto..

Petrol RON 95 dan RON 97 serta diesel naik 5 sen.
Manakala harga gula pula naik 25 sen, dengan gas LPG naik sebanyak 10 sen sekilogram
Kenaikan semua harga tersebut akan berkuatkuasa mulai tengah malam ini.

Berikut adalah harga baru:
- Petrol RON 95 - RM1.85 seliter.
- Petrol RON 97 - RM2.10 seliter.
- Diesel - RM1.75 seliter.
- Gula - RM1.70 sekilogram
- Gas LPG - RM1.85 sekilogram

Berikut adalah harga baru gas:
* Tong 14KG - dari RM24.50 kepada RM25.90 (naik RM1.40)
* Tong 12KG - dari RM21.00 kepada RM22.20 (naik RM1.20)
* Tong 10KG - dari RM17.50 kepada RM18.50 (naik RM1.00


Apa yang pasti enaikan Petrol dan diesel sudah pastinya akan mengakibatkan kenaikan seluruh harga barang-barang keperluan yang lain...so..bejimat2lah dari sekarang k...

What Caffeine Actually Does to Your Brain..HAha!!




For all of its wild popularity, caffeine is one seriously misunderstood substance. It's not a simple upper, and it works differently on different people with different tolerances—even in different menstrual cycles. But you can make it work better for you.

We've covered all kinds of caffeine "hacks" here at Lifehacker, from taking "caffeine naps" to getting "optimally wired." And, of course, we're obsessed with the perfect cup of coffee. But when it comes to why so many of us love our coffee, tea, soda, or energy drink fixes, and what they actually do to our busy brains, we've never really dug in.

While there's a whole lot one can read on caffeine, most of it falls in the realm of highly specific medical research, or often conflicting anecdotal evidence. Luckily, one intrepid reader and writer has actually done that reading, and weighed that evidence, and put together a highly readable treatise on the subject. Buzz: The Science and Lore of Alcohol and Caffeine, by Stephen R. Braun, is well worth the short 224-page read. It was released in 1997, but remains the most accessible treatise on what is and isn't understood about what caffeine and alcohol do to the brain. It's not a social history of coffee, or a lecture on the evils of mass-market soda—it's condensed but clean science.

What follows is a brief explainer on how caffeine affects productivity, drawn from Buzz and other sources noted at bottom. We also sent Braun a few of the questions that arose while reading, and he graciously agreed to answer them.


Caffeine Doesn't Actually Get You Wired




Right off the bat, it's worth stating again: the human brain, and caffeine, are nowhere near totally understood and easily explained by modern science. That said, there is a general consensus on how a compound found all over nature, caffeine, affects the mind.

Every moment that you're awake, the neurons in your brain are firing away. As those neurons fire, they produce adenosine as a byproduct, but adenosine is far from excrement. Your nervous system is actively monitoring adenosine levels through receptors. Normally, when adenosine levels reached a certain point in your brain and spinal cord, your body will start nudging you toward sleep, or at least taking it easy. There are actually a few different adenosine receptors throughout the body, but the one caffeine seems to interact with most directly is the A1 receptor. More on that later.




Enter caffeine. It occurs in all kinds of plants, and chemical relatives of caffeine are found in your own body. But taken in substantial amounts—the semi-standard 100mg that comes from a strong eight-ounce coffee, for instance—it functions as a supremely talented adenosine impersonator. It heads right for the adenosine receptors in your system and, because of its similarities to adenosine, it's accepted by your body as the real thing and gets into the receptors.

It Boosts Your Speed, But Not Your Skill—Depending on Your Skill Set




Johann Sebastian Bach loved him some coffee. So did Voltaire, Balzac, and many other great minds. But the type of work they did didn't necessarily get a boost from their prodigious coffee consumption—unless their work was so second-nature to them that it felt like data entry.

The general consensus on caffeine studies shows that it can enhance work output, but mainly in certain types of work. For tired people who are doing work that's relatively straightforward, that doesn't require lots of subtle or abstract thinking, coffee has been shown to help increase output and quality. Caffeine has also been seen to improve memory creation and retention when it comes to "declarative memory," the kind students use to remember lists or answers to exam questions.

(In a semi-crazy side note we couldn't resist, researchers have implied this memory boost may be tied to caffeine's effect on adrenaline production. You have, presumably, sharper memories of terrifying or exhilarating moments in life, due in part to your body's fight-or-flight juice. Everyone has their "Where I was when I heard that X died" story, plugging in John F. Kennedy, John Lennon, or Kurt Cobain, depending on generational relatability).

Then again, one study in which subjects proofread text showed that a measurable boost was mainly seen by those who could be considered "impulsive," or willing to sacrifice accuracy and quality for speed. And the effect was only seen in morning tests, indicating the subjects may have either become lightly dependent on caffeine, or were more disposed to such tasks at that time of day.

So when it comes to caffeine's effects on your work, think speed, not power. Or consider it an unresolved question. If we're only part of the way to understanding how caffeine affects the brain, we're a long way to knowing exactly what kind of chemicals or processes are affected when, say, one writes a post about caffeine science one highly caffeinated afternoon.

For a more direct look at what happens to your brain when there's caffeine in your system, we turn to the the crew at Current. They hooked up one of their reporters to a brain monitor while taking on some new caffeine habits, and share their brains on caffeine:

SKVE....Penat + Makan + Tdo = Gemokk!!




Hahaha..e2 la yg terjadi kat aku semalam..penat giler balik opis lewat smlm..angkara hujan..
Nak redah hujan confirm basah satu hal..jem lagi..urhhh..kurniaan allah..jngla mengeluh..xbaik..

Nak elak jem punye pasal..aku try highway baru SKVE= PUTRAJAYA-S.ALAM..tol free..Free sebab baru bukak la..
Mana ada tol yg free..lain la kalu lari..pasal baru bukak gak aku try tol 2..ingatkan bley la menyingkatkan perjalan..
Test 0 meter kat kete..jln punye jln dng confidentye aku lalu (walaupun ada dlm 3-4 kete je kot yang lalu kat c2) mayb
coz jln baru kot..nak bagi sedap ati la..

Puas aku tunggu exit higway 2 ..rupa2nya kluar kat KLIA..so..Putrajaya-KLIA-S.alam..tngok kat meter 32km=25 minit..
erm..kalu ikut LDP (jln biasa aku pakai) 15km=32minit...mcm lebih kurang jela..