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Showing content with the highest reputation on 09/08/21 in all areas

  1. Won't get dementia because 精尽人亡?
    3 points
  2. Ya Invent a cock stimulation then look at those brain wave firing
    3 points
  3. u all r really jin kumgong to the max. this is the best way to fight dementia.
    3 points
  4. Feel rike crying rike a dkgk nao... jin emose...
    3 points
  5. https://asia.nikkei.com/Business/Health-Care/Brain-stimulating-glasses-to-fight-dementia-Japanese-companies-say?utm_campaign=GL_JP_update&utm_medium=email&utm_source=NA_newsletter&utm_content=article_link&del_type=4&pub_date=20210908085958&seq_num=5&si=44594 Brain-stimulating glasses to fight dementia, Japanese companies say Drugmaker Sumitomo Dainippon Pharma aims to start clinical trials in two years A number of drugs have been developed to treat dementia, but devices are rare. (Photo by Akira Kodaka) SOSUKE KARINO, Nikkei staff writerSeptember 8, 2021 03:01 JST OSAKA -- A Japanese drugmaker has teamed with a startup to develop a wearable device like eyeglasses that the companies hope to use to treat dementia symptoms. Light-emitting diodes in the frame will shine violet light -- which lies at the high end of the visible spectrum -- into the wearer's eyes for several hours a day, stimulating parts of the brain including the frontal lobe and hippocampus. The light will be nearly invisible to the wearer, letting them go on with their everyday activities, according to developers Sumitomo Dainippon Pharma and Tsubota Laboratory, founded at Keio University. While a number of drugs have been developed to fight dementia -- including Aduhelm, an Alzheimer's treatment from Eisai and Biogen recently approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration -- devices are rare in this field of medicine. Clinical trials are expected to begin as early as the fiscal year ending March 2024 with the goal of bringing the product on the market two years after that, the companies said. Violet light makes up part of sunlight. With a wavelength of around 360 nanometers to 400 nanometers, it lies just before ultraviolet light in the spectrum.
    2 points
  6. never see pleon chit- nana area so quiet. but it also means time to look into buying noble pleon chit liao. wahahahahhaha i think this developer really desperate liao. drop price by almost 50% from 2018.
    2 points
  7. Tot the ah gong n ah ma when wonder off oso in sun...
    2 points
  8. Diam diam rah kgk mai suay cui rah Simpur melayu cai png, ani huan guess how much? @meng.huat
    2 points
  9. So walk in the sun will have same effect? Or Go disco better ?
    2 points
  10. Cooked for myself a simple yet satisfying dinner last night Spanish mackerel pan fried Kailan Dinner
    2 points
  11. why complain when you didn't check the price and after you ordered and paid liao?
    2 points
  12. Here's what the roads and highways of Bangkok looks like 2 hours into curfew. Just sharing. Hope you like the music too.
    2 points
  13. Looks like soon cannot dine in again. Haiz also feeling emose
    2 points
  14. After a night of drinking, Mohammed Faisal Seeni Syed, headbutted a police officer and used a racial slur against another after they responded to a call due to a commotion he was causing. In separate incidents, the 33-year-old Singaporean also intimidated his father with a knife while drunk, and stole a gold necklace and money from his then estranged wife. For his list of crimes, Mohammed Faisal, who appeared before a district court via video link, was sentenced to 17 months' jail on Monday (Sept 6). Deputy Public Prosecutor Bjorn Tan told the court that the officers had been called about the commotion at Orchard Towers at around 6am on Dec 31, 2018. When they arrived, a shirtless Mohammed Faisal was shouting and behaving aggressively towards his friends, who were trying to calm him down. The police officers also tried to calm him, but he called one of them a "Melayu babi (Malay pig)". He then ran across a four-lane road, with his friends and the officers in pursuit. The officers called for back-up and tried to place Mohammed Faisal under arrest at around 6.15am, but he headbutted one officer on his chin. Mohammed Faisal was eventually arrested and taken to Tanglin Division police station. He was later found to be intoxicated at the time of the offences. Both the incidents were captured on the officers' body-worn cameras. According to a medical report, the officer who was headbutted had mild tenderness on his face but had no external injury. He was given two days of medical leave. In a separate incident in the wee hours of Feb 27 this year, following another night of drinking, Mohammed Faisal held a knife with an 11cm-long blade as he approached his 61-year-old father who was asleep. He was angry after hearing rumours that his father was having an affair. He scolded his father using vulgarities in Tamil. In May, he stole a gold chain, valued at $2,900, and $300 in cash from his estranged wife who was using a separate room. In mitigation, Mohammed Faisal, who did not have a lawyer, said: "I am remorseful for what I have done. I'm asking for leniency." His sentence was backdated to July 6, when he was first placed in remand. https://stomp.straitstimes.com/singapore-seen/man-headbutted-police-officer-used-racial-slur-against-another-and-stole-from-wife
    1 point
  15. SINGAPORE — After being caught lighting up outside a designated smoking area along Orchard Road, Chee Kam Fah and Koh Lee Yen lashed out at an enforcement officer, asking her to “talk to rich people nicely” and calling her a “crazy girl”. The Singaporean women, both aged 50, were each fined S$3,000 on Wednesday (Sept 8) after pleading guilty to harassing a public servant. The court heard that the two friends were smoking outside Lucky Plaza mall on the morning of Sept 21 last year. Ms Asyikah Suri Kamsari, an auxiliary police officer appointed by the National Environment Agency as an enforcement officer, was carrying out her duties with a colleague when she spotted Chee and Koh smoking outside the designated area. The officers approached them and asked for their particulars in order to issue a summons. When Ms Asyikah was keying Chee’s details into an electronic handheld terminal, Chee retorted: “Your salary how much? One thousand only one month, I think.” She also said: “Talk to rich people nicely, you’re a poor girl”, “I tell you, you careful walk, fall down… don’t bang to the car” and “So what, pay only what, I got money (expletive)”. Koh followed suit, saying: “You shut up and ask for IC” and “You poor forever, you know or not?” She also accused Ms Asyikah of being a” crazy girl” who did not earn enough to buy a pillow to cry into, and told her in Cantonese that she had no upbringing. Chee then took out a S$1,000 note and waved it in front of the officer’s face, while Koh said that the officer should just shut up and take the money. Their actions were captured on Ms Asyikah’s body-worn camera. State Prosecuting Officer Nasri Haron asked for a fine of between S$3,000 and S$4,000 for each woman. He told the court that the verbal abuse was “prolonged and calculated to insult and degrade the victim”, who was merely doing her job. Both women, who did not have a lawyer, said in mitigation that they were under stress at the time. Chee said through an interpreter that Ms Asyikah had “suddenly walked towards me, so at that point of time, my mind couldn’t get adjusted to the whole situation”. She added that she was a businesswoman and the Covid-19 pandemic had been a stressful period for her. When District Judge Jasbendar Kaur questioned Koh on why her friend had waved a S$1,000 note around, Koh said that they had thought they could pay the summons on the spot. She claimed that she had been caught discarding a cigarette before and paid a S$300 fine then. She further alleged that there were two other men smoking outside the designated area but Ms Asyikah “let them go like that”. “That’s why I used this type of language. I don’t like to use this type of language as well.” The judge told them that stress did not excuse their behaviour. They could have been fined up to S$5,000 or jailed for up to a year, or both. Read more at https://www.todayonline.com/singapore/talk-rich-people-nicely-two-women-fined-hurling-degrading-comments-nea-officer
    1 point
  16. most likely zheng hu lurkers saw my comments and leeport my easy solution to moh liao. thats why moh dont want to leeport unlinked cases anymore. wahahahahahahaha
    1 point
  17. If you’re a business owner, what will you do if there’s an army of ‘trolls’ giving fake negative reviews about your business? This is an interesting case of cyber bullying. Mentai-Ya Japanese Cuisine has been receiving threats and fake negative google reviews over the last 4 months since the opening of its Tampines branch. After months of harassment by Google reviewers (Deon Goh, Eunice, Wen Bin Chua) Mentai-Ya conducted an investigation and it led them to some shocking finds! 1. False allegations On 25 July 2021, Mentai-Ya owner received complaints via FB. After some internal investigations, Mentai-Ya found CCTV footages which does not match those complaints. It turns out to be some false allegations. 2. Customer is ‘always’ right policy Despite having video evidence refuting customer’s unreasonable claims, Mentai-Ya apologised and returned customers’ spending on that very day via PayLah. 3. Mentai-Ya’s investigation begins Mentai-Ya felt something amiss. They did a search on the PayLah account. One thing led to another. The following was what they have found during their investigation, Mobile number belongs to someone named WenBin from an F&B establishment – Ishiro Further investigation, they found Eunice’s name appearing on a positive Ishiro’s Google review (Own self check own self?) Mentai-Ya went to Ishiro and found out their cashier is also named Eunice with physical appearance matching ‘Eunice’ who complained on 25 July 2021 Found more negative reviews from ‘Wenbin Chua’ for other Mentai-Ya outlets Mentai-Ya found out that they were not the only ones getting harassed. There were other fake accounts going by the moniker, C BEE LIF, C Wen Bin, Eunice Neo leaving 1 star negative reviews for other small businesses More negative reviews with links to C BEE LIF More related troll accounts found on Facebook, C Bee Lif, C Wen Bin, Eunice Neo C Bee Leaf tagging Eunice Neo More similar and related accounts appearing after a quick search on Ishiro’s FB page (C Bee Lif, C New Nib, Eunice Neo) Mentai-Ya engaged a 3rd party agency to help their investigations. They have compiled a list of F&B businesses getting ‘attack’ by the same group of internet trolls So, who are these people? Why are they doing this to other small businesses? Many sources lead to Ishiro / A $300k Paid-up capital business. Ishiro’s Responses to legit negative reviews It makes us wonder if this is how big F&B players sustain their business, by manipulating the market using troll accounts and harassing their competitors. https://foodieking.sg/trending/internet-bullies-led-business-owner-to-some-disturbing-findings/
    1 point
  18. Since being discovered in Colombia in January, the Mu variant of Covid-19 has spread to nearly four dozen countries and has made its presence known in Hawaii and Alaska. It has so far been found in 49 states with Nebraska being the only state to not have a Mu variant case detected. Health officials believe Mu is even more transmissible than the Delta variant and has the potential to resist vaccines. In the US, the mu variant has been detected in 49 states and the District of Columbia, according to Newsweek. California has reported the highest number of the latest variant with 384. A total of 167 of those cases were found in Los Angeles County. “The identification of variants like Mu, and the spreading of variants across the globe, highlights the need for LA County residents to continue to take measures to protect themselves and others,” said Dr Barbara Ferrer, director of LA County Public Health, in a statement. “This is what makes getting vaccinated and layering protections so important. These are actions that break the chain of transmission and limits Covid-19 proliferation that allows for the virus to mutate into something that could be more dangerous.” On August 30, the World Health Organization called the Mu variant a variant of interest due to its ability to be more transmissible than any of the other strains of Covid-19. The Centres for Disease Control and Prevention has not yet made similar classifications about mu in the US. Dr Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said that health officials were maintaining a “close eye” on the Mu variant despite it being “not at all even close” to becoming the dominant Covid-19 strain in the US. “Even though it has not in essence taken hold to any extent here we always pay attention to at all times variants,” Fauci said. The US saw its peak of Mu variant cases in mid-July but case numbers involving that variant have been declining since, signalling either a weakening of the strain or indicating a worrisome future.
    1 point
  19. https://tenor.com/67jg.gif Vaccine no power liao
    1 point
  20. Police officers in the southern Japanese city of Beppu have accused a man of stealing 730 pieces of women's underwear from coin laundries. Authorities were first alerted by an unnamed 21-year-old female college student, who accused Tetsuo Urata, 56, of pilfering six pairs of underwear from her at a laundromat on August 24, per local news broadcaster Abema TV. The city police showed up on Urata's doorstep that week, where they found 730 pieces of underwear stashed in his apartment. Urata has been arrested and has admitted to the authorities that he stole the underwear found in his possession, according to Yahoo Japan News. "We haven't confiscated such a large number of panties in years," a Beppu city police department spokesman told Abema TV. The Beppu city police are currently carrying out further investigations into the incident, per MSN Japan. Several other high-profile cases of men stealing women's underwear have come out of Japan in recent years. This March, Takahiro Kubo, a 30-year-old electrician, was accused by the authorities in southwestern Saga Prefecture of stealing 424 pieces of underwear and swimsuits from teenage girls. He was caught when a resident in Saga filmed him attempting to steal a swimsuit drying on a clothesline. In 2019, police arrested Toru Adachi, then 40, in Oita Prefecture on suspicion of stealing 10 pieces of women's underwear from a coin laundromat, local news site Japan Today reported. The police netted a haul of more than 1,100 items of female underwear kept in futon cases at Adachi's home when they searched his place. Serial underwear theft happens in the US, too. In July, the Associated Press reported that Alabama police found more than 400 panties in the home of John Thomas Uda, 27. Uda was also accused of stealing underwear from laundromats in 2019, per the Daily Beast.
    1 point
  21. emo kia jiu shi emo kia. sakti kia is baoed the whole place for a few mths one. wahahahahhahaha
    1 point
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