Thursday, November 20, 2014
Tips for a Healthy Pregnancy
Pregnancy is something that can make a mother feel happy. Keeping the baby in the womb to grow healthy and born alive is to be performed by a pregnant woman. The gestation period will determine the child's growth. Here we provide some tips on healthy during pregnancy.
Visit a Physician Regularly
During pregnancy, mothers can visit a physician/doctor regularly. Regularly check the baby in the womb is useful to know the condition and growth of the fetus. Likewise, if there is anything wrong in pregnancy should be immediately checked by a physician. Do this until the last month of pregnancy.
Important Eat Nutritious Foods
Begin to eat nutritious foods; it is important for pregnant women and fetal growth. Maternal diet usually eats small meals but often, about 5-6 times per day. It's better than eating large servings in 3 per day, a diet with smaller portions and more often to reduce nausea and vomiting in the morning, and stomach pain.
Folic Acid and Zinc
Healthy foods for pregnant mothers are foods that contain folic acid and zinc. Folic acid is useful for preventing neural tube defects in infants and spine. Foods that contain folic acid present in cereals, brown rice, oranges, green vegetables, beans, broccoli, and more. Zinc is useful to prevent anemia during pregnancy. Anemia is very dangerous for pregnant women, can cause bleeding during childbirth.
Avoid Cigarette Smoke
Cigarette and tobacco smoke are very harmful to the health of mother and fetus. Avoid cigarette smoke; try not to become passive smokers. If your husband is a smoker, warn not to smoke near you. And if you're also a smoker, stop smoking better. Cigarette smoke will make your baby born weighing less, easily hurt, slow growth; it can even cause miscarriage and death in the womb.
Drinking Adequate Water
Drinking adequate water is another important thing to note for pregnant women. Drinking lots of water is very useful for pregnant women, because the incoming fluid will help to increase the blood volume that occurs during pregnancy. Drink at least 6-8 glasses a day, can be fruit juice, milk, or water.
Taking Medications Safely
Be careful when taking some drugs. If you are attacked by a disease or pain, be careful taking drugs. You should immediately consult your physician before taking it. If you are pregnant and taking medication without rules would be harmful to the fetus in the womb.
Remain Active During Pregnancy
Pregnant women should remain active. Pregnant women can also do exercise such as walking. Taking a pregnancy exercise classes are also good, in addition to the benefits to the mother and fetus, the pregnant women in the class are able to share experiences and gain knowledge. In between activities, do not forget to rest
Vaccination During Pregnancy
Another important thing is vaccinated during pregnancy. Pregnant women should talk to their physicians to figure out which vaccines they might need and whether they should get them during pregnancy or wait until after their child is born. Hepatitis B, Influenza and Tetanus/Diphtheria are considered safe to give to women who might be at risk of infection.
Nurse-Physician Collaboration
To achieve effective service the nurses, physician and healthcare team should collaborate with each other. No one group can claim more power over others. Each profession has different character so that when combined can be a force for achieving the desired goals.
Nurse Physician Workplace Collaboration
With good communication and respect for other professions in shared decision-making (in collaboration) in the group it will create a good work team so committed to providing a comprehensive service can be created. Opinion between physician and nurses need to be a standard domain with (physician-nurse) standard.
There are significant differences in the collaboration between groups of patients with severe, moderate, and independent. Practice negotiating collaboration on many stages in patients partially dependent (being) because of the patient's full dependence (severe) physicians only give direction and decisions without consulting nurse.
Of the need for education and socialization practices of collaboration among work teams managed care health or health professions ranging from education situation. For hospitals need to improve the quality of nursing care health. An increase in nurse education and good communication between team and patient to work, and to improve the practice of collaboration needs to be a shared commitment between leaders (structural) and functional (health professions), where the principal can adopt managed care and socializing and can be applied to services.
How to Teach 1st Grade
Teaching 1st grade will be different by teaching high school students. Required certain techniques so that the child can absorb lessons more fun considering the psychological child is still in the early learning stages.
The voice sounded clear enough by children, intonation, etc. are things that are very important to be possessed by the teacher. For early elementary grades, they are still considered early childhood, before providing early childhood learning, as teachers need to recognize the characteristics of elementary school age children first. Do not forget to always give something new and varied for them. No need expensive, objects in the environment can be the object of exploration for children.
The period is also very short of their concentration. Thus, teachers must have a second plan, and even third, fourth plan needs to be prepared for them so they do not saturate. Keep in mind that early childhood is a period play. Thus, the instruction given to them should be based on the principles of play (fun, children can explore, gain a lot of experience).
Children are not miniature adults but they have the characteristics and uniqueness of each. So, do not equate them with the high school kids that are easier on the set and was able to concentrate for a long time.
HP unveils budget Windows Stream notebooks with 1TB OneDrive storage
HP has unveiled low-cost Windows 8.1-based Stream notebooks and two Windows 8.1 Stream tablets.
If bright blue and purple notebooks make you happy at work, then HP's two new Windows 8 Stream notebooks could be your next device, thanks to a price tag that undercuts HP's new Chromebook lineup and a rather sizeable chunk of cloud storage.
Priced to compete head on with Chromebooks and aimed at consumers who want to "work and play", the 11.6-inch HD display Stream will be available for purchase in the US from November from $200, while the 13.3-inch Stream will be available from $230.
Like Chromebooks, Stream devices are meant to operate mostly through a browser with enough additional chops, thanks to Windows, to run apps locally.
They also come with a bevy of Microsoft extras, including 1TB of OneDrive storage for a year, though that's a special introductory offer, which may dial back to the original 200GB slated for the devices.
The HP Stream notebooks also include a one year subscription to Office 365 Personal, and a $25 gift card to spend on apps, videos or Xbox games from the Microsoft Store.
The larger HP Stream will also include an optional 200MB of free 4G data each month from T-Mobile, although that's a limited time offer. It's also the only model available with a touchscreen option.
The two new devices join the recently announced 14-inch HP Stream notebook, which starts at $299, but instead of an AMD processor, the smaller notebooks are powered by an Intel Celeron processor and have 32GB of eMMC flash memory.
According to HP, the 11.6-inch Stream has an eight hours and 15 minutes battery life while playing HD video, while it's up to seven hours and 45 minutes for the 13.3 inch device under the same conditions.
Also launching from HP are two new tablets, the Intel-based HP Stream 7 and HP Stream 8, which again are Windows 8.1 based devices and similarly come with extras from Microsoft.
As their names suggest, the new tablets have seven-inch and eight-inch displays, and come with a one year Office 365 subscription, and 1TB of OneDrive storage for one year. The Stream 8 includes the same 4G data deal as the 13.3 inch Stream notebook.
The HP Stream 7 starts at $100, while the HP Stream 8 starts at $150.
31 ways to improve your iPhone's battery life
Making the most out of your iPhone's battery (updated for iOS 8)
Although iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus land with better or the same battery life as their predecessors, they can’t compare to some of the other devices on the market, which can last in some cases for days at a time.
iOS 8 comes with a number of improvements but also new features that can drain your battery life even further.
These tweaks aim to extend your battery life — at times forsaking some of the new functionality — allowing you to get the best out of your new or existing iPhone.
Sunday, November 2, 2014
Modifikasi Lamborghini Aventador LP988 Edizione GT by DMC

CAR PICTURES AND WALLPAPER
German-headquartered car tuning enterprise DMC has come up with another Lamborghini Aventador LP988 Edizione GT. The tuner has also sold one example. The customer who bought the first example opted for an intimidating all-black appearance.
Following the Spezial Version and the Molto Veloce, this is the third modification kit for the Aventador by DMC. The package costs $288,888 (�176,138.33) and features:
� An all-encompassing use of carbon fibre
� Huge rear diffuser
� Large wing
� An enormous front splitter
Under the bonnet, the 6.5-litre V12 engine received a variety of improvements. The most significant improvement is a twin-turbo conversion that boosts the engine�s power from 700 hp (515 kW) to 988 hp (727 kW). The engine bears:
� Fresh fuel lines
� Modulators
� Fuel pumps
� Injection nozzles
� Individual throttle plates for each cylinder
� A modified ECU
You also have the possibility of buying the body kit without the performance boost. If you do opt for that, you will have to shell out $89,990 (�54,867.94). However, if you go for the entire package, you will get:
� Fresh forged alloy wheels
� A two-tone paint
� Bespoke suspension
� A modified interior cabin with a different steering wheel
Car Spec & Details:
Model: Aventador
new game The Crew preview
Ubisoft's cross-USA driving RPG is an ambitious use of modern gaming's connectivity, John Robertson talks to The Crew's crew about their plans.
Formats PlayStation 4, Xbox One, PC, Xbox 360
Developer Ivory Tower/Ubisoft Reflections
Publisher Ubisoft
Released 14 November 2014
The video game landscape is changing. Largely gone are the days when wholly completed projects would be printed on discs and inserted in our consoles, played until completion and then stored away likely never to be seen again. We live in an age of downloadable content additions, "shared-world experiences" and expansion packs that tread a the line between commercial cynicism and cultural value.
It is into this environment that new games must venture in order to justify the kinds of nine figure budgets that are increasingly being reported on. Indeed, without such an approach a game is unlikely to generate the kind of investment that would classify it as a member of the nebulously-titled 'triple-A' crowd.
Into this space enters The Crew, a massively multiplayer online driving game set across the entirety of the United States. That's 'entirety' in the pragmatic, rather than the idealist, sense. The map is not to scale, rather landmarks and cities are correctly positioned in relation to one another and driving between them means racing across routes lined with roughly the right kind of scenery. It's a shared experience, with other players occupying the world with you, and what's on the disc is far from what's eventually going to be available.
"Two years ago I would have said that on day launch day the content that's on the disc would be everything," explains The Crew's creative director Julian Gerighty. "Today, though, and this is both a blessing and curse, we can continue working on the game and adding things to it after it has been released and submitted.
"Yes, you could do that two years ago, but what I'm finding with this console generation is that there's a much bigger opportunity to continue building content far beyond launch day. That's my vision for The Crew, to continue supporting it way down the line. We've negotiated with Ubisoft to keep the team working on the game for a year after release to deliver content packs, new missions and skills and even major features."
Gerighty's desire is to provide this kind of post-launch support without charging players extra to engage with it. The plan is to instead underpin the business model with a micro-transaction system that sees players part with cash to add extra cars to the game, presumably in a way similar to that seen in Forza Motorsport.
The grand scheme is to give players what Gerighty describes as a "platform for driving games", in which multiple styles, tastes and disciplines are covered. It's here that the open-world comes into play, the broad range of environments giving you the option of street racing, off-road hill climbs and takedown challenges in which you must destroy another car within a set time limit. There's even a full recreation of California's Laguna Seca racetrack for you to drive to and compete on.
It's undoubtedly an idea of significant scope, one that will likely require many hours of investment to appreciate it in the way intended. What it's not, however, is an idea that has come about without existing foundations.
"Our core team has been working together for about 15 years," Gerighty tells me, "I joined the team about three years ago as creative director. Our studio director has always had the vision of creating large, shared-world driving games - that goes back to Test Drive Unlimited on Xbox 360, the idea of which is essentially Destiny with cars. That game was the precursor to The Crew, really, although it's very bare bones by comparison.
"I'm seeing a lot of games launching with this similar concept, but without the social layer at the base in the way that we've got it. For me, this generation is all about creating connected experiences. The reason for that is that playing in a world populated by other real people is going to be more surprising and engaging than an AI world. No matter how good the AI is, having other people in the world is going to create a more powerful experience."
A consistent theme comes to the fore when you begin to reel off console games attempting to provide 'connected experiences'. Destiny, Grand Theft Auto Online, War Thunder et al revolve around conflict, either by design or player persuasion. Gerighty is intent on making sure The Crew's communal elements don't exclusively revolve around competition in this way by not encouraging players towards specific routines of play that define a universal base of interaction.
You can decide to concentrate solely on racing your peers, but equally you can ignore that side altogether and instead embark on road trips across the country or work together as a team against an AI entity. The idea goes back to the initial concept of creating a driving game platform, in which 'driving' is the key word... a 'racing game platform' would be a different proposition.
Creating this kind of pick-n-choose environment is a far cry from how games used to be made, requiring a completely different skill set based around facilitating player actions rather than guiding them at every opportunity. It's something Gerighty seems to savour.
"Fundamentally our jobs have changed because of the move towards designing logic and systems over very defined paths for players to follow," discusses Gerighty. "Going back to something very linear and something that's very 'level designed' kind of feels like a chore for me now, I don't enjoy those kinds of experiences very much at all anymore.
"Some people do that kind of thing very well. Naughty Dog still creates some fantastic linear experiences, but in general I'm not so interested in them. I think that's been a huge change in this industry and a change in what our jobs mean. It's been a pleasurable change, though, because designing something that's going to be the same every time you play takes the magic out of video games. It does for me, at least."
And that's where The Crew is either going to succeed or fail, in its provision of allowing us to do something different every time we play. It's no easy task, not least given that driving games must adhere to the rigid fundamentals of vehicular interaction: accelerate, brake, reverse and turn.
Reimagining the framework within which those commands operate, to the extent that The Crew feels like a wide open platform for you to experience 'driving', is where Gerighty and his team will be judged
Saturday, November 1, 2014
11 iPad mini 3 cases you'll love
Apple has launched a new iPad mini (iPad mini 3) and still offers the previous two generations of the smaller tablet (iPad mini 2 and original iPad mini) at lower price points. If you're thinking about buying a new iPad mini, or if you've already got your hands on one, you'll probably want to protect it with a case or cover. Here's our round up cases for the iPad mini 1, iPad mini 2 and iPad mini 3.
The iPad mini's dimensions have only fractionally changed through the generations, so all of the cases listed here should fit all three iPad mini models.
Apple sells the official Smart Cover for the iPad mini, which is a miniature version of the full-size iPad's Smart Cover that protects the front of the iPad and acts as a handy stand. It's available in the same colours: black, white, pink, yellow, blue, green and red. The price is also the same at �29, and it attaches with powerful magnets, and can wake and sleep the iPad mini automatically.
Apple Smart Case - �55
Belkin's Slim Style Cover comes in Azalea/Fiesta, Blacktop/Gravel and Stone/Cyan colour options.
Griffin TurnFolio for iPad mini - �35
The iPad mini's dimensions have only fractionally changed through the generations, so all of the cases listed here should fit all three iPad mini models.
Apple sells the official Smart Cover for the iPad mini, which is a miniature version of the full-size iPad's Smart Cover that protects the front of the iPad and acts as a handy stand. It's available in the same colours: black, white, pink, yellow, blue, green and red. The price is also the same at �29, and it attaches with powerful magnets, and can wake and sleep the iPad mini automatically.
Apple Smart Case - �55
The iPad mini Smart Case has the same front as the Smart Cover but also protects the back of the iPad. It costs �55 because it's made with leather rather than the polyurethane Smart Cover, and is available in black, red, blue, brown or beige.
Read next: iPad mini 3 vs iPad mini 2 comparison
We'll add to the selection below as we come across more iPad mini covers, cases and sleeves
Belkin Slim Style cover for iPad mini - �35
As the name suggests, this iPad mini case from Belkin has protective corners to keep the tablet in place, magnets to secure the case shut when not in use, and a soft inner lining to protect the screen from scratches. The cover can be used as an adjustable stand, positioned in various angles thanks to rubberised feet on the frame and a grippy inner lining.Belkin's Slim Style Cover comes in Azalea/Fiesta, Blacktop/Gravel and Stone/Cyan colour options.
Griffin TurnFolio for iPad mini - �35
This particularly practical TurnFolio iPad mini case has a folio design, so it opens like a notebook and the iPad slots into a protective frame that holds it in place. Flip the cover over and it is capable of holding your iPad mini into landscape or portrait mode for a four-position workstand. The entire frame surrounding the iPad mini is removable too. There are cutouts for all ports, buttons and cameras, and it's available in a range of colours and designs.
Griffin IntelliCase for iPad mini - �35
A combination of a polycarbonate rear shell and a TPU cover, the IntelliCase provides protection in a slim package for your iPad mini. Magnets in the cover wake and sleep the tablet when it's opened and closed, and also provides two stand positions: for typing and FaceTime calls, or watching videos. It's available in red ordigital camo (blue/grey) .
Griffin Survivor for iPad mini - �50
If you need to keep your iPad safe from harm mini in harsh conditions, the Survivor All-Terrain should be a good option. As with other cases in the Survivor range, the iPad mini version has a Shatter-resistant polycarbonate frame over the which is a shock-absorbing silicone bumper. There's Also a built-in screen protector and ports are covered, keeping out dirt and rain. A huge variety of colors will be available to suit your taste, and Griffin has made ??many of the models compatible with the Touch ID so the make sure you check that when you're choosing the which color option to go for if you own an iPad mini 3.
Proporta iPad Mini Back Shell - � 15
We're not too surprised to see a smartphone-style shell cases available for the iPad mini, and Proporta's are some of Reviews those. Reviews These plastic slim cases cover the rear and sides, protection without adding too much bulk or weight.
Currently, there's a choice of pink, blue, purple or white.
Barbour Quilted Mini iPad case - � 55
Proporta has teamed up with Barbour to bring the famous brand to the iPad mini with its Barbour Quilted case . It protects the front and back of the tablet with a folio design, and it offers two stand angles. Barbour-lovers will be pleased to see the quilted exterior of this iPad mini case, the which comes in a terracotta color.
Cygnett Armour case for iPad mini - � 30
Cygnett's Armour case for the iPad mini grips the tablet with six 'hooks' but has a foldable rear panel of the which allows the edge to rest on the inside of the front cover in an upright position for watching videos or making video calls as well as other angles . It's also available in purple
Cygnett Slim Folding Enigma case - � 24.95
Cygnett's Enigma Slim case has a clever folding origami-style front cover that allows you to stand the iPad mini in various different positions. It has a soft, rubberised exterior and microfiber interior, and there's access to all ports and functions. This case comes in blue or pink color options, too.
Case-mate Tuxedo for iPad mini - � 25
We've seen the full-size iPad version of the Tuxedo , and it's much like Apple's own Smart Cover. However, it extends around the rear of the iPad mini, and is attached with a super-strong adhesive tape (the which leaves no residue when removed).
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