สร้างความสดใสให้ตัวเองในวันที่ต้อง Work From Home กับสไตล์การแต่งตัวแนวสตรีทแวร์
20 เมษายน 2564 – 10:29 น.
สร้างพลังบวก สร้างความสดใสให้ตัวเองในวันที่ต้อง Work From Home กับสไตล์การแต่งตัวแนวสตรีทแวร์
หลังจากเผชิญกับวิกฤต Covid-19 ระลอก 3 หลายคนต้องกลับมา Work From Home กันอีกครั้ง ดังนั้นเรามาสร้างพลังบวก สร้างความสดใสให้กับตัวเองผ่านแฟชั่นแนวสตรีทแวร์กัน เรียกว่าแม้จะ Work From Home แต่ก็เท่อย่างมีสไตล์ได้ วันนี้เลยพามาซูมแฟชั่นแนว Streetwear ของเหล่าดาราที่มีแฟชั่นไอเทมสุดคูลอย่าง ‘Matter club’ (แมตเทอร์ คลับ) จาก Matter Makers (แมตเทอร์ เมกเกอร์ส) เป็นคีย์หลักในการมิกซ์แอนด์แมทช์ เผื่อไว้เป็นไอเดียแต่งตัวทำงานที่บ้าน
Real-time payments surged 104 per cent to more than 5.24 billion in 2020 as cash use in Thailand plummeted during the Covid-19 crisis last year, new research shows.
The “Prime-Time for Real-Time” study placed Thailand fourth in the global rankings. It projects digital payments of 32.01 per cent in Kingdom from 2020 to 2025, far higher than the 23.6 per cent projected globally.
The phenomenal growth of real-time payments in Thailand is being driven by the Bank of Thailand’s national e-payment system, PromptPay, said the study’s authors, ACI Worldwide (NASDAQ: ACIW) and GlobalData.
Meanwhile mobile wallet adoption rose to an historic high in Thailand of 83.9 per cent in 2020, up from 72.6 per cent in 2019.
ACI Worldwide said Covid-19 had condensed a decade of development on digital payments into one year, creating a new normal that would not reverse after the crisis.
“Countries with a robust digital payments infrastructure already in place have coped better than those without when it comes to containing the economic impact of the pandemic,” said Jeremy Wilmot, chief product officer of ACI Worldwide.
It projects Thailand real-time payments to grow to 21 billion by 2025.
India topped the 2020 rankings for real-time payments with 25.5 billion, followed by China with 15.7 billion transactions, South Korea (6 billion), Thailand (5.2 billion and UK (2.8 billion).
People who have contracted Covid-19 once are less likely to be infected again, Chulalongkorn University virology specialist Dr Yong Poovorawan said on Sunday.
Citing foreign research, he said that people who had already been infected with Covid-19 were 84 per cent free from the virus compared to those who had never been infected.
“To put it simply, immunity built from the Covid-19 infection or vaccine made from the virus has 84 per cent efficacy in preventing infection,” he said.
“Immunity cannot be 100 per cent for Covid-19, unlike measles and chickenpox,” he said, adding that vaccines with 84 per cent efficacy are considered effective in the case of Covid-19.
“In the future, people may have to receive more jabs to stimulate immunity for long-term prevention,” he said.
He added that even people who have been infected with Covid-19 would need vaccination just as those who have never been infected.
“This would be a great opportunity for vaccine manufacturers,” he added.