Friday, September 2, 2011
Astro Battleground 2011: Katoon Network
Wednesday, July 6, 2011
8tv showdown 2011 final
8tv showdown 2011 final: result prediction
Monday, June 13, 2011
Elecoldxhot members
Disclaimer : I got this photo from Elecoldxhot facebook fanpage...
Sunday, June 12, 2011
Saturday, June 11, 2011
Elecoldxhot: Showdown Week 6 Life Show
Thursday, June 2, 2011
Elecoldxhot: Showdown 2011 Week 5
There you go. Yet another awesome performance by Elecoldxhot in Showdown 2011 week 5 live show. It's unquestionable that they were the best crew of the night, but I kinda feel it's overshadowed by last week performance... :/ maybe I just prefer trans over vampires.. nyehehe....
Saturday, May 28, 2011
8TV Showdown 2011--Analyzing Elecoldxhot: from an audience point of view
Tuesday, May 24, 2011
random post
Saturday, April 16, 2011
art passion
Wednesday, April 13, 2011
Fukushima Daiichi plant latest news
Thursday, April 7, 2011
Nero - Act Like You Know (Dubstep Mix)
Tuesday, March 29, 2011
Sucker Punch movie review
Sunday, March 27, 2011
Top 5 LGBT movies
As a child living in a seaside town in southern Taiwan, studious Jonathan was asked by his concerned teacher to look after rebellious classmate Shane. Ten years later, what was once a good-natured obligation has since blossomed into a warm friendship, with Jonathan still on the academic track and Shane now finding his calling on the basketball court.
Taiwan-born schoolgirl Carrie from Hong Kong befriends Jonathan and convinces him to join her on a secret day-trip to Taipei and in the evening she seduces him in a sleazy hotel but Jonathan backs down clearly distraught. Eventually, her observations of his and Shane's friendship leads her to believe that he is homosexual and in love with his best friend.Carrie then meets Shane through Jonathan after a school day where Shane develops an interest in Carrie. She accepts his offer to become his girlfriend on the condition that he manages to enter university.
Shane does his best to keep his feelings for Carrie secret in order to protect the feelings of his lifelong friend. Despite all their best efforts to keep their personal feelings secret, the truth eventually emerges, forcing all three to view their relationships in an entirely new light. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eternal_Summer)
Monday, March 21, 2011
Japanese spirit
Tuesday, March 15, 2011
Fukushima plant meltdown?
(CNN) -- Nuclear power has generally proved safe and nondetrimental to human health.
But when something goes wrong, it can result in widespread radioactive exposure and health hazards that turn an average power plant into a notorious name like Chernobyl.
The levels of radiation and potential health consequences were significantly worse at Chernobyl than at Tokyo Electric Power Company's Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Japan, which has has suffered numerous problems since Friday's earthquake and tsunami. .
The two accidents are not in the same realm, experts said.
On Monday, a hydrogen blast at at the Fukushima Daiichi plant injured 11 people and caused another reactor to malfunction, triggering new fears of a meltdown that could leak dangerous amounts of nuclear radiation.
As many as 160 people have tested positive for some level of radiation in the area. And 17 U.S. Navy helicopter crew members showed low levels of radioactivity after conducting disaster relief missions in Japan, the military said Monday. But after the crew members washed with soap and water, no further contamination was detected, the Navy said.
Radiation levels at the moment are low, but the next 24 to 48 hours will be critical, said David Brenner, director of the Center for Radiological Research at Columbia University.
As the public remains nervous about what will happen at the plant, it's important to keep in perspective the kinds of radiation that people are exposed to every day, and understand the real risks of too much radiation.
"I'm now concerned that we'll go into another nuclear winter, with public opinion turning against nuclear power," said Dr. James Thrall, president of the American College of Radiology and chief of radiology at Massachusetts General Hospital. "If you look at nuclear power objectively, it actually has fewer health consequences than any energy production with fossil fuels."
Contamination vs. exposure
Radiation is invisible; you cannot taste it, or smell it, or feel it on your fingers, Thrall said.
There are four primary kinds of ionizing radiation, which is light that has enough energy to ionize an atom, i.e. make it into a charged particle. Alpha particles are relatively heavy and, when emitted, cannot penetrate human skin or clothing, but are harmful if they get into the body otherwise. Beta radiation can cause skin injury and are also harmful to the body internally. Gamma and X-rays are high-energy invisible light that can damage tissue and are most hazardous to humans.
It's not possible to directly measure the amount of radiation exposure a person has had. Exposure refers to the energy the body has absorbed from radioactive material, the high-energy invisible light rays that unstable chemicals emit.
When you see people with Geiger counters checking around a site like Fukushima Daiichi, they're measuring contamination -- which generally refers to actual radioactive particles.
Radiation all around us
A study from the National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurement found that nearly half of the radiation to which the U.S. population is exposed comes from medical sources such as CT scans, X-rays, and nuclear medicine, which is the use of radioactive chemicals in the treatment and diagnosis of health conditions. But there's also radiation coming from the sun, stars and soil.
The average radiation exposure a person gets is about 3,000 microsieverts per year. To give you a sense of what that means, a CT scan is about 3,000 microsieverts, but lasts only a matter of minutes.
The farther away you are from the source of radiation, the less exposure you will have to damaging high-energy light beams such as gamma rays.
Radiation sickness
Generally, the greater exposure you've had, the faster and more intense the symptoms of radiation sickness will be.
Nausea and vomiting are usually the initial symptoms of radiation sickness. A very severe exposure can lead to them within 10 minutes; dizziness, weakness, and low blood pressure may begin immediately. If the radiation exposure is mild, a person might not start experiencing these symptoms for up to six hours. Check out this Mayo Clinic chart, under "symptoms" for more information about how various levels of radiation might affect a person.
The simple removal of clothes and shoes eliminates about 90% of external radiation contamination, according to the Mayo Clinic, and washing with soap and water takes radiation off the skin. This lowers your risk of breathing or ingesting radiation particles, or having them get into open wounds.
There may be damage to bone marrow, which can be treated with a protein called granulocyte colony-stimulating factor. Transfusions of red blood cells or blood platelets may also be necessary.
When there's a possibility of internal organs being damaged from radiation exposure, there are some treatments for specific types of radiation.
Radioactive iodine, which is hazardous to humans, is one of the biproducts of the chemical reaction involving uranium that takes place at the Fukushima Daiichi plant.
Since the thyroid is prone to taking up radioactive iodine, people at risk of this problem can benefit from potassium iodide, which contains the stable component of iodine. Potassium iodide can protect the thyroid from damage. The Japanese government is currently working to distribute potassium iodide to residents near the reactors.
There is also a type of dye called Prussian blue that binds to the radioactive particles of cesium and thalium, reducing the amount of radiation that cells may absorb, according to the Mayo Clinic. A chemical called diethylenetriamine pentaacetic acid binds to radioactive particles of plutonium, americium and curium.
The shadows of Chernobyl and Three Mile Island
In Chernobyl, the world's biggest nuclear accident, which occurred in 1986, 28 workers and firefighters died from radiation sickness months after they helped put out the fire.
Radioactive iodine also allegedly got into the general population through milk, Thrall said. This likely happened when milk-producing cows ate iodine-contaminated grass, he said.
Cancer can take decades to appear as a result of radiation exposure, and epidemiological studies have found an increased risk of cancer in people who were near Chernobyl at the time of the disaster.
The Japan situation probably won't get to the scale of Chernobyl, but it could be bigger than Three Mile Island, said. Three Mile Island is a nuclear power plant in Pennsylvania that, 32 years ago, had the worst nuclear power accident in the United States. But in the U.S. crisis, there was only a partial meltdown, and nuclear fuel never escaped the reactor vessels. There has been no evidence found of resulting long-term cancer risk in that area.
"At the levels that we're seeing in Japan I do not believe we'll see any cancer risk in the population," Thrall said.
How it differs from an atomic bomb
There is a big difference between the effects of the atomic bombs dropped in Hiroshima and Nagasaki at the end of World War II and possible spread of nuclear radiation from malfunctioning nuclear power plants, said Dr. John D. Boice, a radiation epidemiologist and scientific director of the International Epidemiology Institute.
In 1945, Americans dropped bombs in parachutes, and these detonated above the city -- not on the ground.
"The atomic bomb -- it was whole body exposure that lasted less than a second," he said. The radiation traveled through the body, similarly to how X-rays behave.
"The effects may be different, because it was such an immediate response," Boice said. "For the reactors, it's different. It's a gradual exposure over time. It might include radioactive elements such as iodine and cesium, which may be ingested."
Radioactive iodine can cause thyroid problems and cancers, and cesium can also increase cancer risk. If leaking occurs, the population could breathe or ingest contaminated foods with radioactive elements.
"These are different types of exposure -- they would involve the possibility of ingestion and staying in the body."
The effects of survivors of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings have been followed through the Radiation Effects Research Foundation, a joint U.S.-Japan effort to study the impact. Studies found survivors had higher rates of leukemia and cancers in the breast, thyroid, lung, colon and stomach over time.
And today in Japan
Boice said he was concerned about workers who are having to deal with the emergency and work in a highly volatile situation at Fukushima Daiichi.
"They're dealing with the deaths of friends and families -- then to add on top of that, there is the possibility of a serious nuclear meltdown," Boice said. "How much can one country, one civilization bear?"
http://edition.cnn.com/2011/HEALTH/03/14/japan.radiation.sickness/index.html
Monday, March 14, 2011
Japan earthquake and tsunami
but I think the end is really coming.
Yes. The end of the world is near.
During period of grief like this, political unrests are still happening around the world. Following the democratic success in Egypt, political turmoil continues to spread all over Middle East. http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2011/03/14/MNJD1IA930.DTL Dozens were killed and hundreds wounded. Gunshots can be heard all over the place.
Bless Japan, bless the world.
Wednesday, March 2, 2011
I hate...
They eat you without you knowing...
chew chew chew
until you're dead
Then they begin to decompose you
until you're left with nothing
Then they devour your soul
until you completely disappear
eh... tat's bacteria..
Bio not good...... =.=
But the point is I hate them...
hate them to the MAX!!!
Parasites increase their fitness by exploiting hosts for resources necessary for the parasite's survival (Source: wikipedia)
Sunday, February 6, 2011
yaoi yaoi
I bet some of you were directed here due to the blog's name, 'yaoi'-ish. My first intention of creating this blog was to provide information about yaoi stuff since I thought I knew everything in the world of yaoi. I am a super fujoshi you see :)
But as time goes by, this blog has been abused more and more often as a place for me to express my feelings and angers when I feel emo. I feel very sorry for those who came here in expectations of some yaoi tit bits, but end up reading my emo posts...
So, for the very first time in the history of this pathetic blog, I present to you my Top 5 favorite yaoi manga of all time!!! (with linkies ;D)