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  • 2011 Ferrari 458 Italia priced for the UK

    Ready go on sale in the UK in May 2010, the 2011 Ferrari 458 Italia will carry a starting price tag of £169,545 ($277,124 USD). Ferrari is also offering racing seats at £4276 ($6,989 USD), a Ferrari shield on the wings for £945 ($1,544 USD), power seats at £2,120 ($3,465 USD) and a luggage set for the rear bench for £2987 ($4,882 USD).

    We’re still waiting for Ferrari to release pricing details for the United States. Stay tuned.

    Click here for more news on the Ferrari 458 Italia.

    Refresher: Power comes from a mid-rear mounted 4.5L V8 producing 570-hp at 9,000 rpm with a maximum torque of 398 lb-ft at 6,000 rpm. Mated to a dual-clutch 7-speed F1 gearbox, 0 to 62 mph comes in just 3.4 seconds with a top speed of over 202 mph.

    Ferrari 458 Italia:

    Ferrari 458 Italia Ferrari 458 Italia Ferrari 458 Italia Ferrari 458 Italia

    – By: Omar Rana

    Source: AutoCar


  • Mar de Ajó – Argentina

    Mar de Ajó – Argentina

    Photos:
    2005-2006-2007

  • Are all diets the same?

    Synchronicity strikes again.  The seeds of this post were sown when Gary Taubes emailed me about a study published in early 2009 in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) that I had seen at the time, briefly skimmed and tossed aside as worthless.  Gary agreed that the study was of little value, but notice that it contained a peculiar statement by the authors, an interesting admission about HDL, the lipophobe’s favorite lipoprotein.  And not only had the authors made this strange admission, but so had another prominent lipophobe who wrote the accompanying editorial.

    I pulled the study, read it more thoroughly and still found it mediocre at best.  But I did come across the strange HDL statements that Gary had mentioned. (More about which later.)

    As I was shaking my head over the amount of money spent on what was a truly abominable study, the synchronicity occurred.  I got a ding that I had a new email.  It was a notice from the American Heart Association telling me that this august body had deemed the very study I was holding in my hands as one of the ten most important papers published in 2009.  The sheer stupidity of it nearly took my breath away.

    Before we get into the study – which we won’t get into very deeply because, believe me, there’s not much depth – I want to use a parable to show just how silly this study is.

    Let’s set our story in the wonderful country of Stupidland where a debate has been raging about the feeding of dogs.  A vociferous old woman who kept dogs had been insisting that different breeds of dogs eat different amounts of food  The majority of the populace were of the opinion, however, that all breeds eat the same amount (it is Stupidland, after all) and looked down their noses at those who  believe a chihuahua may eat less than a collie.  To put an end to the bickering, scientists at Stupidland U ( who were believers in the all-dogs-eat-the-same doctrine) decided to do a definitive study.  They went to the Stupidland pound and procured a German Shepherd, a Labrador Retriever, an Irish Setter and an Alaskan Malamute.

    They provided the four dogs with pleasant accommodations and all the food they wanted to eat.  The scientists carefully measured every gram of food eaten by each dog and recorded it.  At the end of the two year study, they reviewed the data and confirmed what they already suspected to be the case: the different breeds of dogs ate just about the same amount.  They did notice one little disparity, however: the larger dogs ate a little more than the smaller dogs, but they were able to correct for that by controlling for size.  Their paper proving that different breeds of dogs ate the same amount of food was accepted for publication in one of Stupidland’s most prestigious scientific journals, The Stupidland Journal of Veterinary Medicine.  Buried deep within the paper was a sentence few noticed stating that size was a biomarker for food consumption by dogs.

    The Stupidland press picked up on the study and headlines proclaimed that all breeds of dogs eat the same amount.  The mainstream Stupidlanders nodded their heads sagely; they, after all, had been right all along.  But the old woman, who didn’t actually live within the borders of Stupidland, but who lived close enough to cause trouble, kept insisting that different breeds of dogs didn’t eat the same amounts.  She had a beagle and she had a Great Dane, and she had kept careful records of the food consumption of both. She insisted that the Great Dane not only ate more than the beagle, but that it ate a huge amount more. She would bend the ear of anyone who took the time to talk to her, and her data was so persuasive that she was beginning to make converts.  Just as the population of Stupidland was once again starting to wonder about the dog breed verses food enigma, the Stupidland Heart Association came out with its annual bulletin announcing that the paper by the brilliant scientists from Stupidland U showing that all breeds of dogs ate the same was the most important paper of the year.  The old woman’s first impulse was to attack the Stupidland Heart Association for its sheer stupidity, when suddenly a sense of calmness and clarity settled over her.  She experienced a spiritual awakening (just as did the Grinch in another tale) and finally realized the real meaning of Stupidland. She took her dogs and moved far away, leaving the denizens of Stupidland alone to marinate in their stupidity.

    The paper that inspired this parable was published in Feb 2009 in the New England Journal of Medicine and titled Comparisons of Weight-Loss Diets with Different Compositions of Fat, Protein, and Carbohydrates.  (This is another one of those studies the editors feel is so important that they provide the full text free of charge as a public service.)  The authors include Frank Sacks, George Bray, Steven Smith and an entire rogue’s gallery of lipophobes.  All the usual suspects, as they say.

    What the NEJM study sets out to demonstrate is that different breeds of dogs different weight-loss diets of varying macronutrient compositions all bring about the same loss of weight.  According to these authors, it doesn’t matter if you go on a low-carb, high-fat diet or a low-fat, high-carb diet, you’ll lose the same amount of weight.  Doesn’t matter how the protein, fat and carbohydrate stack up in your weight loss diet, you’re going to lose the same amount of weight.  So, you can go to the bookstore, stand by the diet-book shelf, close your eyes and pick.  Whatever diet book you end up with won’t matter because you’ll lose the same amount of weight regardless of which one you choose.  And, even more importantly – again, according to the authors of this study – whichever diet book you select will help reduce your heart disease risk factors.

    As Dave Barry says: “I AM NOT MAKING THIS UP.”  It’s right there in black and white in a study done at Harvard and published in the New England Journal of Medicine.

    What’s more, the American Heart Association (AHA) deemed this study to be one of the top ten most important studies published in 2009.  And they put it #1 on their list.  Now they said that they listed these ten studies in no particular order – and you can call my cynical –  but I’m just betting that they put this one right at the top for a reason.

    Said the president of the AHA, Dr. Clyde W. Yancy

    We all thought the statement made in that study was pretty profound. It really dismissed the notion that there’s something clever about weight loss, [showing] that it really is about calorie consumption or, to make it even more straightforward, portion control. You can spend a lot of time wringing your hands about which diet and the composition of which diet, but it really is a simple equation of calories in and calories out.

    Give me strength.

    My disgust aside, you may be thinking:  Why isn’t the study valid?  If they did analyze all those diets and found them to bring about the same results, what’s the problem?

    The problem is that the diets they used in the studies were similar.  They didn’t vary all that much in carbohydrate.  The diet with the highest carb intake contained 65 percent of calories as carbohydrate while the lowest carb diet was made up of 35 percent.  To put this into the gram figures we’re all used to, the highest-carb diet contained 325 gram of carb while the lowest-carb version contained 175 gram of carbohydrate.  Now, as those of us who have ever followed a low-carb diet know, 175 gram of carbohydrate does not a low-carb diet make.  Granted, it’s lower in carb than the diet with the 65 percent of calories as carb, but it doesn’t even approximate a low-carb diet.  As I’ve written before, you’ve got to get the carbs substantially below 100 g per day before good things start happening metabolically.

    What this study has done is to study roughly similar diets for two years and pronounce that all produce about the same results.  What the authors (and, apparently the AHA) want you to take away from this study is that real, honest-to-God low-carb diets don’t perform any better than low-fat, high-carb diets.  Which, as most of us know from bitter experience, is not the case.

    There are major problems in doing studies such as this one that make their outcomes suspect.  And these problems aren’t necessarily the fault of the researchers – they are simply a fact of life.

    When you try to do a dietary study by recruiting people who want to lose weight then randomizing them to a particular diet, you are asking for trouble.  If you run the study out over a long period of time – two years, for example, as this study did – you are asking for even more trouble.  People go into diets with a lot of enthusiasm and pretty rigorously stick to them at first.  But as time goes on, people tend to cheat a little, then cheat a little more and pretty soon find themselves pretty much trending back toward and finally squarely back on whatever their regular diet was before they started the study diet.  (Sadly, it’s not just subjects in studies who follow this pattern, but is the fate typical of most dieters.)  For this reason, after time, all the people in all the different arms of the study are eating about the same thing.  This is why you always see the charts showing weight loss and macronutrient composition start out wildly diverging then converge as the end of the study draws near.  In other words, they all end up consuming the same diet, so they all end up with about the same result.

    How can researchers overcome this dismal outcome.  Well, you can put out the call for people who really believe in low-carb diets to fill one arm of the study.  And recruit people who love the Ornish diet for another, and the Zone for another.  These subjects are more likely to stay enthused and stick with their respective regimens for the duration of the study.  But then you haven’t randomized your sample and you will be accused of generating worthless data because your sample groups self selected.

    The other way, of course, is to randomize subjects into various diet groups, then put them under lock and key for a year or two and feed them like you would lab animals.  Another impractical solution from a cost perspective if in no other reason.

    It’s extremely difficult – virtually impossible, I would say – to conduct accurate studies on diet over a long period of time with a large number of subjects.  Consequently, it is nonsensical to rely on the data from such studies to make the case for anything other than how difficult these studies are to carry out.  I certainly don’t think for all the reasons above that the study in question merits being listed as one of the top ten studies of 2009 by anyone, much less the AHA.

    In their discussion of this mishmash of questionable data, however, the authors did make a most interesting statement.  Almost an admission, if you will, of the superiority of a lower carb diet.  This statement is what Gary emailed me about.

    (Before we go on with this, I have to make this aside.  HDL and LDL and IDL (intermediate density lipoprotein) and VLDL (very low density lipoprotein) aren’t really cholesterols.  Even though we often refer to them as LDL cholesterol and HDL cholesterol, they really aren’t.  These different groups of letters refer to transport proteins that carry cholesterol through the blood, not to cholesterol itself.  Cholesterol is cholesterol.  It is a specific molecule that doesn’t change.  Cholesterol is a waxy lipid (fat) that virtually every cell in the body synthesizes (because is it so important).  Cholesterol, like all fats, is not soluble in water and therefore can’t dissolve in blood (which is a watery substance), which means that the body has to package cholesterol in a form in which it can be transported from place to place in the blood.  The body attaches a specific protein (a lipoprotein) to cholesterol to make it dissolve in the blood.  The names LDL, HDL and the rest refer to the specific type of lipoprotein being discussed.)

    Here’s what the authors wrote:

    There was a larger increase from baseline in the HDL cholesterol level, a biomarker for dietary carbohydrate [my italics], in the lowest-carbohydrate group than in the highest-carbohydrate group (a difference in the change of 2 mg per deciliter at 2 years)…

    Even Martijn Katan, a lipophobe if there ever was one, and the author of a number of anti low-carb diatribes that I’ve taken to calling the Katanic Verses echoes the same fact – carbohydrates drive HDL down – in an editorial he wrote about the above paper.

    …compliance was assessed with objective biomarkers.

    The authors used the difference in the change in HDL cholesterol levels between the lowest- and highest-carbohydrate groups to calculate the difference in carbohydrate content between those diets.

    Now the differences weren’t all that spectacular, but the drop in HDL in those on the higher carb diet was there and noticed by the researchers.

    I find this extremely revelatory because if there is one lipid parameter a lipophobe loves, it’s HDL.  And here you have an entire cluster of lipophobes admitting that HDL varies as the inverse of carbohydrate intake.  Take any of these folks individually – or, heck, take ‘em together – and they’ll tell you that low-carb diets are bad because they give you too much fat.  Yet they admit that their beloved HDL goes up when carbs go down.  Doesn’t make a lot of sense, does it?

    When these folks compared these fairly similar diets they found that all of them reduced the risk for heart disease.  They used the fact that HDL went up on the lower-carb diets to deem them heart healthful; and they pronounced the higher-carb diets as heart healthful, too, because the LDL declined on those.

    As Yogi Berra said: “You can observe a lot by just watching.”  And they watched LDL go down on the higher-carb diets and HDL go up on lower-carb diets.  But the reverse of the Yogi-ism is also true: you can also fail to observe if you don’t watch.

    This refusal to watch is what really gets my dander up.

    The researchers whose names are listed at the top of this paper are all affiliated with prestigious institutions.  I am quite sure that there is not a single one of them who is unfamiliar with the work over the last 15 years or so of Ronald Krauss, the researcher who made the discovery of the differences between LDL particle sizes. (The same Krauss, by the way, who published the paper about the meta-analysis of saturated fat and heart disease much in the blogosphere currently.) Krauss and his team showed that large, fluffy LDL particles aren’t particularly harmful whereas the small, dense LDL particles are the ones that cause the problems.  He also discovered that increasing carbohydrate in the diet caused LDL to shift to a smaller, denser pattern while decreasing carb and adding fat made LDL change to the larger, fluffier non-problematic kind.  (You can read a nice review of LDL particle size in this article published in the popular press.)

    If you reduce carbs and add fat to the diet, not only does your HDL go up, but your LDL makes a particle size change for the better.  However, when you increase carbs and reduce fat, your HDL goes down and your LDL goes down too, but it changes for the worse. So even though the high-carb, low-fat diet decreases LDL, it doesn’t decrease risk – it increases it because even though LDL is lower, it is made up of a dangerous particle size,which negates any possible value of the fall in LDL.  All of these researchers know this.

    Why didn’t they check LDL particle size on these subjects?  Had they done that, they would have found that those subjects on the higher carb diets would have lowered their HDLs and althought they lower levels, would have shifted to more of the dangerous, smaller, denser LDL particles.  They couldn’t have then made the case that not only did all diets work the same where weight loss was concerned but they all decreased heart disease risk.  They would have had to say that although all diets brought about the same degree of weight loss, the lower-carb diets clearly reduced the risk factors for heart disease the most.  And that’s an admission I suspect they didn’t want to make. Therefore they refused to observe.

    I don’t know what the deal is with these folks.  Why don’t they simply tell it as it is?  Do the long-term lipophobes who have ridiculed low-carb diets for years and built their careers on the rickety edifice of the low-fat diet not want to admit they were wrong? That’s understandable, I suppose, but what about the young ones?  Why are they stampeding over the low-fat cliff like Gadarene swine?  Do the younger lipophobes not want to offend the older ones?  Why do they fail to reconcile their theories with what amounts to basic biochemistry and physiology?  Whatever the reason, they are fighting a losing battle.  Ultimately the truth will out and when it does, all these people who have tenaciously clung to the low-fat, high-carb fantasy will be – like the phrenologists and other failed theorists of the past –  so much detritus in the history of medicine.  And their books and papers will be displayed as curiosities of the boneheaded thinking of an earlier day. A sad but fitting fate.

    Photo: Set of phrenological heads, England  circa 1831
    via The Pollo Web

  • Washington D.C. – o centro do poder mundial!

    Chegamos na capital do mundo hahah.

    Washington foi uma belíssima surpresa. Eu não dava muito crédito pra essa cidade, não tem muito destaque nas agências de turismo e nem entre as escolhas dos brasileiros que vão aos Estados Unidos.

    Chegamos na cidade dia 5 e fomos direto pro hotel dormir, já que chegamos logo depois da meia noite. No dia seguinte acordamos e fomos dar uma caminhada no Mall (Mall = a parte mais turística de Washington, com os museus e tal). O nosso hotel ficava a umas 3 quadras da casa branca, lugar que foi o primeiro ponto turístico que visitamos. Depois vimos o obelisco, o museu de ar e espaço, o capitólio e a biblioteca do congresso. Pode soar pouco, mas as distâncias pra se caminhar em Washington são bem grandes, então preencheu bem o dia.

    O museu de ar e espaço é interessantíssimo! Recomendo especialmente pela parte que (tenta) explica(r) o universo e como tudo foi descoberto, fiquei fascinado! Depois de lá fomos pro capitólio, que abriga o congresso e o senado americanos. A construção é muito bonita por fora E por dentro. O ponto alto foi a cúpula vista de dentro, a 20 metros de altura do chão, muitíssimo imponente! De lá pegamos o túnel e fomos direto pra biblioteca, a qual só vimos por ver e vazamos.

    No dia seguinte, visitamos o Lincoln Memorial, Arlington Cemetery e Georgetown – tudo a pé, claro. Essas três atrações também são muito interessantes e vale a pena visitar, gostei muito do Lincoln Memorial e de Georgetown.

    Sobre as minhas impressões da cidade – bom, Washington definitivamente é mais calma que Nova Iorque e Chicago, e a cidade estava quase tão vazia quanto Chicago! Isso foi muito bom pro turismo, é claro. O urbanismo é outro fator ímpar em Washington. A cidade tem os subúrbios típicos de uma cidade americana, claro, mas na região central, ao contrário das grandes cidades americanas, predominam edifícios médios, de uns 12 andares, todos com a mesma altura. Me senti em uma cidade europeia, lembrou em alguns aspectos Pariser Platz, em Berlim e alguns lugares de Lisboa (pela arquitetura dos edifícios modernos). Sobre a limpeza não preciso nem comentar. Outra coisa que eu achei interessante é que as estações de metrô são todas iguais! Eu só tinha visto isso em Copenhague, mas em Washington elas seguem um padrão de concreto que, apesar de não parecer tão moderno, não fica ruim. Acredito que o único ponto negativo que eu posso mencionar é que em alguns lugares eu vi muitos mendigos juntos, mas nenhum dormindo em calçadas ou praças, mais nas entradas do metrô mesmo.

    Vejam as fotos:

    1 – Perto do nosso hotel, na Rua 15 com a Avenida M

    2

    3

    4 – Eis a estação de metrô onde eu vi os mendigos acumulados!

    5

    6 – Perto da casa branca

    7 – Praça Lafayette

    8 – Algumas das construções que eu achei parecidas com Berlim

    9 – A Havan

    10 – O da direita se chama Banco PNC ( 😆 )

    11

    12 – Um pouco da influência francesa na arquitetura da cidade (achei isso interessante em D.C.)

    13 – Esse hotel dos 3 telhadinhos é famoso (tava no guia :D)

    14 – Obelisco

    15 – Capitólio (esse lugar em volta é o Mall)

    16

    17 – Museu de história natural

    18

    19

    20

    21 – Vejam o verde ao redor do capitólio

    22 – A cúpula que mencionei

    23 – Hall da biblioteca do congresso

    24 – A biblioteca, por fora

    25

    26 – A cidade é cheia de edifícios como esses

    27

    28

    29

    30 – Aqui novamente perto da casa branca

    31

    32

    33

    34 – No Mall, em direção ao Lincoln Memorial

    35 – Memorial da Guerra do Vietnã (à frente há livros onde pode-se consultar o nome das pessoas que morreram lá)

    36 – Lincoln Memorial

    37 – Lago congelado

    38

    39 – Oops, ficou torta, mas não tenho outra 😀

    40 – Arlington, Virginia (do outro lado do rio Potomac)

    41 – Arlington Cemetery

    42

    43 – Georgetown, em Washington de novo

    44

    45

    46

    47

    48

    49

    50 – Complexo Watergate

    51

    52

    53 – Embaixada russa, perto do nosso hotel

    54 – Um edificio um pouco mais moderno que o normal

    55

    56

    57

    58 – Aqui estamos na região do centro antigo da cidade

    59

    60

    61

    62 – E aqui acaba o nosso tour!

    C’est finite! 😎

  • RIM New Web Browsing to Bring New Surfing Speeds?

    Found under: RIM, Proxy, Patent, BlackBerry,

    Its not unusual to hear people complain every once in a while about their BlackBerry phone not being fast enough when it come to web browsing. And RIM apparently has heard everyones request and its finally taking some decisive action. The company wants to speed up the whole process of getting the data from the Internets and thats definitely something quite daring. RIM has a whole patent on this matter and we should assume to see these new faster web surfing speeds emerge in the nea

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    Read more in mobile format

  • “Chef” Pollan’s Daily Special: Lousy Advice

    Self-styled food guru Michael Pollan’s latest rant against modern farming, Food Rules: An Eater’s Manual, lists 64 rules for healthy eating. Pollan says they are meant to be taken as “Food Don’ts” — for the sake of our health and the environment. And as usual, America’s “foodies” are going ga-ga over someone whose claim to fame is repeatedly lecturing others to “Eat Food.” So let’s take a close look at what this journalism professor has to offer in his latest diatribe on what you eat.

    Pollan admits he ignores nutrition science, which he derides as inexact. But perhaps the real reason he avoids citing actual research is because he knows it doesn’t support his pseudo-scientific beliefs.

    Take Rule #22, “Eat mostly plants.” Pollan claims vegetarians are “notably healthier” and live longer than meat-eaters. Yet, a 2006 study by researchers at the University of Oxford found that vegetarians died of strokes and cancers of the colon, breast and prostate at the same rate as omnivores. The mortality rate, the Oxford team wrote, “appears to be similar in vegetarians and comparable non-vegetarians.” In other words, vegetarians don’t live longer than meat-eaters – though life may seem interminably long if you spend most of your time choking down Tofurky and soy-cheese lettuce wraps.

    Pollan blows it again with Rule #27, which holds that meat from “wild” free-range animals eating grass is more nutritious than from grain-fed animals raised in feedlots. Before you drop half your paycheck on “artisanal” porkchops, know this: Free-range meat carries health risks that slow-food advocates like Pollan won’t tell you about.

    A study published in the journal Foodborne Pathogens and Disease found significantly higher rates of salmonella in free-range pigs when compared with pigs raised on larger farms. Pigs raised in the roof-covered, environmentally-controlled surroundings of the much-maligned Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations (CAFOs) are actually less conducive to disease. And pigs that spend time outdoors are more likely to come into contact with disease-carrying animals.

    And if you don’t eat for your health, how about the health of Planet Earth? Pollan’s advice may actually lead to greater environmental damage. The CAFOs that he demonizes use less land to raise more animals than the free-range method. Grass-fed cows, for instance, can require up to 10 acres of pasture per head. If today’s cattlemen exclusively used 1950s technology, they would need an additional 165 million acres of land – roughly the size of Texas — to produce the same amount of beef. And since niche-market cows don’t grow as big as their more conventional counterparts, a wholesale backpedal to old-school farming would increase levels of animal-waste pollution by nearly 30 percent.

    Is this the environmental outcome Pollan seeks?

    Maybe it’s not fair to criticize Pollan for his scientific illiteracy. After all, he gives himself an out in his final Rule #64, “Break the Rules Once in a While.” If there’s a sequel, we think it should begin with Rule #65: Break most of Pollan’s rules most of the time.

  • Hydraulic brake ID 800 N

    We have developed a new spring-applied / oil-released brake named ID800-N. It’s the spring applied version of our traditional brake ID800 and it can supply a braking force up to 13 kN in a compact size. Its modular design is an innovative solution in this range of clamping force. Ideal for applications such as handling and lifting of small and medium capacity.

    ü Brake body made in steel and not cast iron: Improved mechanical strength and lower risk of oil leaking;
    ü Pads guided by pins so the tangential braking load is transferred to the brake body and not to the piston; longer life of piston and seals, lower risk of oil leaking;
    ü Pads fixed with a magnet for fast replacement and sure release;
    ü Cup springs and seals are accessible from the top of the thruster for easy maintenance;
    ü Polyuretahne seals for better performance at high pressure; suitable for vegetable oil too;
    ü Steel body and steel parts treated with manganese phosphation for protection against corrosion;
    ü Piston treated with Tenifer QPQ (Quench-Polish-Quench) for high resistance to corrosion, high surface hardness and surface lubrication;
    ü Pads supplied with wear indicator as a standard;
    ü On-off switch available as an option; explosion-proof version available upon request.

  • Eco range – Cleaning

    The parts to be cleaned are placed into a revolving basket Rapid cleaning is achieved by spraying hot detergent solution from three spray pipes located around the backet.

    Applications:
    – Cleaning of parts
    – Cleaning of tools
    – Surface treatment
    – Cleaning of parts for reconditioning and renovation.
    – Degreasing of heavily contaminated parts within a few minutes..

  • Eriez Europe Launches Competitively Priced ProGrade Products

    Eriez Magnetics Europe Ltd announces the launch of the new and high quality ProGradeTM range. The line includes Grate Magnets available in XtremeTM Rare Earth magnetic strength, ideal for application in all processing industries. All ProGrade products are available for immediate despatch to meet the ever increasing demands of customers.

    The ProGrade Square, Rectangular and Round Permanent Magnetic Grates are designed to remove ferrous contamination in hoppers, chutes, floor openings and other areas where free flowing materials are present. They are of a sanitary construction which makes them ideal for the food industry and other processing applications.

    The ProGrade Easy to Clean Grate in Housing is also available. Consisting of two rows of staggered magnets, it is designed to enable operators to quickly remove accumulated fine iron contamination and clean the magnets. All of the Grates in the ProGrade range are manufactured to the highest quality with a glass bead surface finish and stainless steel construction.

    Another new ProGrade product is the Eriez Ceramic Permanent Magnetic Hoppagrid. The Hoppagrid Magnet is a simple yet effective low strength device for removing tramp iron from free-flowing granular or powdered materials. It is predominantly used in the plastics industry to stop damage to equipment resulting from ferrous metal contamination like nails, nuts, bolts and screws.

    Paul Fears, Managing Director at Eriez Europe commented, “We [Eriez] always try to respond to the needs of our customers. The ProGrade range is our latest initiative to achieve this goal by supplying standard size products at very competitive prices and offering immediate despatch. We have also not only maintained, but improved the quality and finish. The benefits for our customers are clear for all to see.”

    For more details on the ProGrade range please visit en-gb.eriez.com or alternatively email [email protected]

  • Process data transmission via GSM/GPRS with PLICSMOBILE

    VEGA Grieshaber KG has introduced a new component for wireless communication: PLICSMOBILE.

    The transmitting and receiving unit PLICSMOBILE is equipped with a standard SIM card and sends the measured values via GSM-GPRS service. With this module, remote diagnosis and teleservice can also be carried out worldwide over the public telephone network. PLICSMOBILE can be integrated into the double chamber housings of the plics®plus series or separately connected to any plics®plus or plics® sensor.

    PLICSMOBILE has an integrated energy management system at its disposal and the module operates in an autonomous standby mode. Data transmission is time or event driven, depending on the settings.

    The power supply for the connected sensor is provided via the PLICSMOBILE. The low operating voltage enables supply for both module and sensor via an integrated accumulator or a separate battery. In detached operation, the module can be independently powered by an external power supply.

    The adjustment of PLICSMOBILE is carried out via the PC with PACTware and DTM. This allows comprehensive, remote access to sensors with HART, Profibus PA or Foundation Fieldbus interface.

    Areas of use for PLICSMOBILE are applications in which one single measurement takes place at a remote location. Examples of this are mobile silos, deep wells, high containers, waste oil gathering points as well as river and sea levels.
    The data can be passed on to the Internet portal WEB-VV or made available per e-mail or SMS.

    PLICSMOBILE from VEGA stands for simplified installation and great flexibility in operation, parameter adjustment and diagnosis from a distance.

  • Z/A – Zirconia alumina coated, stainless steel and heat-treated steel.

    Used for blending and finishing in one operation, CGW flap discs replace the traditional T-27 depressed centre discs and fibre discs.

    Suitable for:

    Grinding and finishing of welds Deburring, rust removal and snagging Excellent for surface finishing

    Flap discs and wheels are suitable for:
    Grinding and finishing of welds
    Deburring, rust removal and snagging
    Suitable for most ferrous & non-ferrous materials
    Excellent for surface finishing

  • Cost Efficiency and Increased Performance with Electric Cylinders

    The concept of the CA series which comes with diameters of 8, 12, 16, 24, 35, 36, 50, 75 and 150mm has been proved to be successful: robust linear actuators with a round design that use moving coil technology. Available strokes – depending on the model – range from 10 to 50mm with encoder resolutions of 20, 5, 1, 0.5, 0.1 or 0.05 microns.

    SMAC electric cylinders have a low moving mass and are equipped with a self-lubricating splined shaft linear guide which significantly decreases friction. This enables the unit to generate a low controlled contact force while using the SMAC patented Soft-Land function. This eliminates any damage to components during handling. Position, force and speed are individually, programmed through a standard PC interface. Thus, re-calibration for applications with different sized components can be carried out in a very short period of time.

    As costs drop and capabilities increase SMAC moving coil electric cylinders are rapidly replacing older technologies such as pneumatics, moving magnet linear motors, ball screw and belt drive actuators. SMAC electric cylinders provide better force control for glass applications, and better force control and quality feedback for medical product manufacturing and assembly. SMAC electric cylinders are high speed, low cost and have the ability to measure what cameras and lasers cannot during part inspection. They also enable quick adjustment and provide longer life. SMAC electric cylinders are therefore rapidly replacing older linear actuator technology and camera and laser measuring systems.

  • Schmitt Europe Launches New Lasercheck® Surface Roughness Measurement Gauges

    Schmitt Europe Ltd are proud to announce the launch of its new Lasercheck® Surface Roughness Measurement Gauges. These products are designed to perform high speed, accurate, non-contact measurements of surface roughness on a large variety of manufactured, machined and engineered parts. Lasercheck® works on any material including metals, ceramics, glass and rubber and is suited to ground, sanded, polished, honed, super-finished, fine-turned or even shot blasted surface finishes.

    These gauges are specifically designed for portable or on-line use in production and manufacturing environments. Patented light scatter detection technology provides superior durability, measurement speed (less than 1 second) and repeatability without high maintenance and re-calibration costs. Operators on the production floor can use Lasercheck® to easily and quickly monitor surface finish quality without concern for damaging other fragile measurement equipment or surfaces.

    Measurements can be performed by manual pushbutton operation, or continuous high speed measurements controlled by Windows software, or fully automated high speed on-line measurements triggered by external signals and Windows software, displaying real time Ra values in graphical and numeric format with statistical parameters.

    Lasercheck® has been designed for a nominal height standoff of ~ 2.5 mm from the measurement surface in which, any motion or vibration is continuously monitored and corrected for during every measurement cycle to ensure accurate results. The Lasercheck® “Micro 8826” Head measures ~2.5 x 1.9 x 5.1 cm with a surface roughness measurement range of 0.025 to 2.0 mm and the Lasercheck® “Mini 6212” Head measures ~7.5 x 3.5 x 4.4 cm with a surface roughness measurement range of 0.0125 to 2.0 mm. Three controllers are available. The Automated “A” Controller is a stand alone unit capable of 10 measurements per second, the Portable “B” Controller a hand held unit capable of storing up to 10,000 Ra values and an OEM Card “C” Controller for mounting in the customer’s own electronics panel. For more information please contact Schmitt Europe Ltd.

  • Best in class with minimum footprint – Epson PROSIX C3

    The Epson six-axis ProSix C3 robot combines the best qualities of Epson’s longstanding tradition of robot expertise.

    The compact model embodies optimal functionality for assembly of electronic parts, as well as for the food, pharmaceutical, medical and the automotive industry.

    As the robot can be controlled by the reliable
    Epson RC180 robot controller or the PC-based RC620 controller, it eliminates the need for comprehensive courses and training when integrated into existing systems.

    In addition to this, the Epson ProSix C3 provides outstanding value for money.

    QUICK AND RELIABLE
    Thanks to the innovative Epson Smart Motion Technology, the Epson ProSix C3 combines high-speed and high-precision. Average cycle time in the 0.37 seconds range (1 kg load) with repeatability of ± 0.02 mm can be achieved. This makes the ProSix C3 the best six-axis robot in its class.

  • NEED HELP CALLING A NUMBER IN VIETNAM

    I want to call this number in VN:

    84 0972051111

    So when I dial, should I dial (09) or just (9) ?

  • Cat who boarded same bus every day for four years killed in ‘hit and run’

    :ohno: killed by plymothian chavs no doubt.

    Quote:

    A cat which became famous for catching the same bus every day for four years has been run over and killed – while crossing the road to catch its daily lift.
    Crafty Casper died in a hit and run accident as he tried to board the No3 service.
    He hopped on the bus around 10am every morning and sat on the back seat throughout its entire 11 mile route.
    The freeloading Feline would travel around his home city of Plymouth, Devon, for up to an hour before arriving back at the same stop.
    But after an estimated 20,000 miles on the bus Casper was killed crossing the road to catch his daily ride.

    Devastated owner Susan Finden, 65, said whoever ran over her cat failed to stop and help him.
    She said: ‘Many people knew Casper, who loved everyone.
    ‘He enjoyed the bus journeys. Sadly a motorist hit him and did not stop.

    ‘Casper died from his injuries. He will be greatly missed – he was a much loved pet who had so much character.
    ‘Thank you to all those who befriended him.’
    During his regular trips the 12-year-old cat passed an historic dockyard and naval base, a city centre, several suburbs and a red light district.
    He took his daily rides for so long that all First Bus drivers were told to look out for him to ensure he got off at the right stop.
    Grandmother-of-three Susan added: ‘I called him Casper because he had a habit of vanishing like a ghost.
    ‘But then some of the drivers told me he had been catching the bus.
    ‘I couldn’t believe it at first, but it explained a lot. He loved people and we have a bus stop right outside our house so that must be how he got started.’

    Care worker Susan got Casper from a rescue centre in 2002 and drivers say he started riding the bus in 2005.
    She has now put up a sign at the bus stop breaking the bad news to other commuters who regularly shared a ride with her pet.
    Mrs Finden said that despite his regular bus rides Casper had ‘no road sense whatsoever’.
    She said: ‘Casper was quite quick for his age but I was trying to stop him from riding the bus so much.
    ‘He had no road sense whatsoever but he loved people.
    ‘He’d queue up in line good as gold – it’d be ‘person, person, person, cat, person, person’.’
    A spokesman for First Bus added: ‘He’d just curl up at the back of the bus. He never caused any trouble.’
    Susan believes Casper may have begun life at a haulage yard as he was so fond of large vehicles.


    Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti…#ixzz0d0ljYY6i

  • New to Forum and Diabetes

    Was diagnosed with type 2 in July of 2009. My A1c at time of diagnosis was 6.7 and after 3 months it was 6.1! We had already stopped using white sugar and white flour the previous year as part of treatment of DH’s cancer treatment but it wasn’t enough to head off diabetes. I am using a Freestyle lite meter and am taking 500 mg of Metformin twice a day. Still having a hard time giving up carbs but am really trying to use more complex carbs and trying to make time to walk daily. Still trying to figure out what works and why. I am halfway through my first goal of losing 50 pounds and will set a new goal when I get there.
  • Review: A Case Report of Catatonia

    The article reviewed here is ‘Catatonia. Treatment and Recognition’ by  Cottencin and colleagues. This is a paper consisting of a case report with discussion. The authors describe the case of a 54-year old lady with a history of hypomania (later revised to Bipolar Disorder) who was initially admitted to hospital for an alcohol detoxification. After being noted to have depression with anxiety she was then discharged on an antidepressant as well as an antipsychotic with sedative properties – Cyamemazine which acts at D2 and serotonin 2c receptors.  She was readmitted 2 days later with a number of symptoms including mutism, disorientation, flight of ideas, wandering, rigidity and oppositionalism. The authors included Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome as a differential but there is no mention that I could find of the CK’s or autonomic features. The authors focus on their main differential that of catatonia. They found that she scored highly on the Catatonia Rating Scale (although commenting on the reliability and sensitivity of catatonia scales) and then proceeded to initiate a Zolpidem challenge. She responded well to this and there was a marked improvement on the Rating scale scores which peaked at 45 minutes before returning to (roughly) baseline levels after 3 hours. The authors conclude that a Zolpidem challenge is a useful confirmation test for catatonia before speculating that the withdrawal from a number of GABAergic medications prior to the episode may be related to the onset of the catatonia. The difficulty in interpreting a case-report is that it is difficult to control for a number of potentially important factors – medications, mood, alcohol withdrawal, abrupt withdrawal of multiple medications to name but a few. The opportunistic case-report also differs from the more ‘controlled’ settings of the clinical trial where subjects with certain characteristics are selected for inclusion. Nevertheless they offer initial evidence and the speculation here has led to a useful hypothesis which can be further assessed.  

     

    References

    Cottencin O, Danel T, Goudemand M, Thomas P and Consoli S. Catatonia recognition and treatment. Med Sci Monit. 15(8). CS 129-131.  2009. 

     

     

     

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  • Chicken and Dumplings

    Chicken and Dumplings

    Chicken and dumplings is classic American comfort food. It’s one of those dishes that you just want to curl up with on a cold winter night since it’s hearty, flavorful and can be very easy to make. If you’ve never had it, chicken and dumplings is a lot like chicken soup (very heavy on the chicken) with steamed biscuits floating in it. The chicken and broth portion of the dish already has a comforting, homey flavor to it and adding steamed biscuit dough makes the dish filling and lends a nice buttery flavor to everything.

    This version of chicken and dumplings – and you should know that there are as many ways to make this dish as there are ways to make a chocolate chip cookie – is a quick one-dish meal that you can make in less than an hour from start to finish. I start with a whole rotisserie chicken and shred the meat. I make a chicken soup base using onions, carrots, celery, garlic and chicken stock (storebought, but homemade is good if you have it) and add the shredded chicken into it. I make homemade biscuit dough, drop it in small chunks into the boiling soup, then put the lid on the pot and cook everything until the biscuits are soft and tender.

    I think that the homemade biscuit dough is the key to this dish. The finished dumplings are so buttery and flavorful, and they even have a bit of a flaky texture to them that you’re not going to get from a can of biscuit dough dropped into the soup. It’s worth noting that you’re not going to get the same kind of rich, buttery flavor from canned dough, either, since most are made with shortening. The dumplings will be done when they are cooked through and fluffy, no raw dough in the center; you will probably have to cut one open to double check and can cook the whole dish a few minutes longer if you need to. It reheats well, but is best fresh!
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