Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Love LV, Check out link to learn to spot fakes...

had never been interested in branded stuff but thot to share this link with u all....  if u r into lv stuff, maybe by reading the guides in this site, u would really learn more in spotting the fakes...  

http://www.fashionphile.com/

Posted via web from 冷冰心 の 心情點滴

Thursday, August 30, 2007

【Clips】Clever uses for Aspirin

Not sure how good these tips are but these are the kind of things that it's better to know than not... 'coz you'll never know when you need them...

Share with us your tips, no matter how common it is 'coz you'll never know who can actually benefit from them..
clipped from www.gomestic.com

  • To remove perspiration stains from white T-shirts, dissolve two aspirins in half a cup of warm water and apply to the area of the fabric where the stain is. This should be left for a couple of hours before washing.




  • First aid for pimples: Crush an aspirin tablet and add a little water to make a paste. Cover the pimple with this paste and after a few minutes rinse it off. The pimple will be less red and reduced in size. Aspirin is an astringent.




  • Drop a soluble aspirin tablet into the water before arranging cut flowers in a vase. It helps to keep them fresh for longer.




  • Mosquito bites can be eased by wetting the skin and rubbing an aspirin over the spot.




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    【Clips】Cows - The Energy Source of the Future?

    If this's really true, maybe we don't have to be so worried about the future... But of 'coz we should still try every means and ways to save energy just in case...

    Cows might be alternative energy sources

    COLUMBUS, Ohio, Aug. 23 (UPI) -- U.S. scientists say cows might one day help meet the rise in demand for alternative energy sources.

    Ohio State University researchers used microbe-rich fluid from cows to generate electricity in a new, small cellulose-based microbial fuel cell.

    Doctoral student Hamid Rismani-Yazdi, lead author of the study, said experiments showed it took two of the new cells to produce enough electricity to recharge an AA-sized battery. That power was produced from the breakdown of cellulose by a variety of bacteria in rumen fluid -- the microbe-rich fluid found in a cow's rumen, the largest chamber of a cow's stomach.

    To create power, researchers fill a microbial fuel cell with cellulose and rumen fluid.

    "Energy is produced as the bacteria break down cellulose, which is one of the most abundant resources on our planet," said Rismani-Yazdi.


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