Inside the ‘Baby Factory’

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/lifestyle/30355119

An Afghan woman swaddles a newborn baby at the Doctors Without Borders (MSF) maternity hospital in Khost province./AFP Photo
An Afghan woman swaddles a newborn baby at the Doctors Without Borders (MSF) maternity hospital in Khost province./AFP Photo

Inside the ‘Baby Factory’

lifestyle September 25, 2018 01:00

By AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

More than 60 infants are born every day at this small doctors-without-borders clinic in Afghanistan

The mother was admitted at 9.30am, the birth recorded at 9.35. Women often arrive in extremis at the Doctors Without Borders maternity hospital in southeastern Afghanistan, one of the most active in the world, with more than 60 babies born daily.

The early hours of the morning are the most feverish for the hospital – affectionately known by the NGO as “the baby factory” – just a stone’s throw from Pakistan’s tribal areas, in Khost province.

The Taleban are active in the region and roads are often dangerous after dark, so when 25-year-old Asmad Fahri felt her contractions begin at night she knew she would have to wait until daybreak to begin the three-hour journey to the hospital.

Finally she is resting, her infant tightly swaddled and asleep between her knees.

On average new mothers are kept in the ward for six hours, but she has asked to leave after just three, to ensure she reaches home before darkness falls again.

Sometimes the mothers have to travel for days, in pain and bleeding, over unpaved, insecure roads in carts or by whatever mode of transportation they can find.

In an opposite wing, the delivery tables continuously welcome newcomers.

Most only have time to lift the long layers of clothing hiding their bodies and wedge their coloured veils between their teeth, too rushed even to change into MSF’s standard red pyjamas.

The Khost Maternity Hospital (KMH) opened at the end of 2012 in a medical desert in the conflict-riven country with one of the highest infant and maternal mortality rates in the world.

It was an overnight success, with nearly 12,000 deliveries in its first full year in 2013.

By 2017 that figure had nearly doubled, to 23,000.

This year the hospital is on track to deliver 24,000 babies, says Dr Rasha Khoury, a Palestinian gynaecologist who is medical officer at the site.

If so that puts it within crying distance of the busiest maternity wards in the United States, where the Northside Hospital in Atlanta delivered 27,000 babies in 2016, the highest number in the country that year.

“Here we are saving lives for free,” smiles Safia Khan, 24, the assistant manager of the midwifery team.

Behind her, a young mother of twins searches her skirts and hands her a folded banknote. It is a traditional gesture of gratitude after delivery, at times required in some hospitals but politely declined here. “It’s forbidden,” insists Khan.

The UN and the World Bank put maternal mortality at around 396 deaths per 100,000 live births in Afghanistan.

But the figure is disputed, with experts pointing out it is an improbable fall from the 1,600 per 100,000 recorded in 2002.

Such a decline would mean Afghanistan would have reached its Millennium Development Goal set by the UN some five years early, a study published in the medical journal the Lancet noted in 2017.

The authors of that study say more credible figures released by the Afghan government in partnership with USAid suggest maternal mortality could still be as high as 1,291 per 100,000 – meaning that giving birth is around five times more deadly for Afghan women than the conflict itself.

If so, it is a staggering figure 17 years after the fall of the Taleban regime, despite billions of dollars in international aid, in a country with one of the youngest, fastest-growing populations in the world.

Dr Khoury says that MSF facilitates around 40 per cent of the births in Khost, which has an estimated 1.5 million inhabitants.

But to make a real dent in the mortality rates in the face of these challenges they would need “three hospitals like MSF”, she says.

On top of war, poverty, and a galloping population, the medical staff face a further obstacle: the Pashtunwali, the patriarchal social code of honour that dictates life in the conservative Pashtun tribal region where Khost lies.

Under the Pashtunwali the genders must be segregated, and a woman must never show her face to a stranger.

As such, medical staff at the hospital are exclusively female, with the exception of some anaesthetists and the director of the neonatology department. Even so, a little persuasion has at times been necessary, says Salamat Khan Mandozai, a respected local figure who deals with security for the hospital and has also acted as a community liaison.

“In this rural environment, some women still prefer to give birth at home,” he notes.

Going to hospital embarrasses them, agrees Safia Khan – birth is a private matter.

Dr Khoury says the hospital is aware that many women are not coming to them, but adds that the families who do come do so “without hesitation”.

For many, she adds, obstacles are not about culture, but finances – namely, paying for transportation – or safety and security, especially at night.

Women must also wait until a man of the family is available to accompany them, she says.

But once inside the hospital power returns to the mothers-in-law who escort the patients until they reach the doors of the delivery room.

“We are really reaching people at the margin of the society in Afghanistan,” says Dr Khoury.

“It’s a success story.”

A diet that sharpens the mind

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/lifestyle/30355103

A diet that sharpens the mind

lifestyle September 24, 2018 12:07

By The Nation

A new health study shows the consumption of a Mediterranean diet, characterised by nutritious foods such as vegetables and olive oil, is associated with a higher score in core school subjects and verbal skills in adolescents.

Undertaken by Jaume I University in Spain, researchers found that adherence to Mediterranean diet improved teenagers’ school performance because of the eating plan’s ability to promote brain development, increased by healthy fats found in olive oil and fish, and overall better sleep quality.

“Academic performance during adolescence has a significant influence on future health and work conditions,” said the research authors at Jaume I University in Castellon, Spain.

In the study, published in Acta Paediatrica, 269 teenagers of an average age of 13.9 were recruited in Castellon, Spain. Analysis of the data showed closer adherence to the Mediterranean diet was linked to better scores in core subjects, language and verbal ability, as well as higher grade point averages.

According to the Centre for Educational Neuroscience in London, nutrition affects children’s performance in school for more mentally demanding tasks, short-term memory, and in the case of children who are poorly nourished in general.

Supporting the research is the fact that the Mediterranean diet is filled with wholesome foods such as fresh fruits, vegetables, whole grains, nuts, olive oil and fish – which provide a beneficial amount of vitamins, fats, and minerals to allow the body and brains of growing students to function at an optimum level.

Thai parents can also support their children’s learning abilities by monitoring diets, which plays a proven part of helping to increase the ability to learn. Incorporating nutrient-rich ingredients found in the Mediterranean diet in easy Thai home-made recipes cooked with olive oil, such as salmon fried rice, stir-fried vegetables, stir-fried noodle with shrimps can easily support brain capacity for Thai children.

“The health benefits of olive oil, such as high antioxidants and the ability to lower cholesterol and protect against heart disease are well-known around the world. The fact that research continues to reveal new ways that olive oil can help support good health, is a testament to its centuries of usage. If the Mediterranean diet and olive oil consumption can help teenagers and children reach their full scholastic abilities, then we are very proud to be able to offer the best quality olive oils to our Thai consumers,” says Alberto Perez Martin, head of Bertolli Thailand.

According to Board Certified Naturopathic Doctor Erica Steele of Holistic Family Practice in Virginia, USA, olive oil’s role in this study is closely linked to brain development.

“The Mediterranean diet has a positive outcome on brain health and brain development due to its high amount of omega-3 fatty acids, which are considered ‘smart fats.’ These fats supply building material for the brain and offer substantial memory-protective qualities.” In a study published in the Neurology Paper, scientists discovered that those with lower blood concentrations of omega-3 fatty acids performed worse on assessments and thinking tests that involved memory and problem-solving. The heart-healthy MedDiet also seems to be good for the brain.”

Making the most of life

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/lifestyle/30354989

  • Kanya Sesser uses skateboarding to get around and is delighted to demonstrate her skills in front of an audience at Indoor Stadium Hua Mark.
  • Kanya Sesser uses skateboarding to get around and is delighted to demonstrate her skills in front of an audience at Indoor Stadium Hua Mark.

Making the most of life

lifestyle September 24, 2018 01:00

By Jintana Panyaarvudh
The Nation

6,096 Viewed

Born with what many would consider a severe disability, Kanya Sesser is living proof that we can all be anything we wish

SHE WAS born without legs and abandoned by her parents but Thai-born Kanya Sesser neither curses her destiny nor lets her disability stop her from living life her own way.

The 26-year-old celebrity is determined to lead an ordinary life. Instead of a wheelchair, Sesser, whose motto is “No Legs, No Limits”, uses a skateboard to get around and also walks on her hands. Her talents include sports, acting, modelling and serving as a motivational speaker.

She is a professional skateboarder and surfer and has appeared in “Hawaii Five-0”, “Walking Dead” and “The Fear of The Walking Dead.” Oh, and she also models lingerie and sportswear.

 Kanya Sesser uses skateboarding to get around and is delighted to demonstrate her skills in front of an audience at Indoor Stadium Hua Mark.

Sesser was born in Pak Chong District, Nakhon Ratchsima province and left on steps of a Buddhist temple when she was only one week old. The monks at the temple took care of her before she was transferred to a hospital then the child adoption centre, Holt Sahathai Foundation.

She lived with foster parents – she refers to them as her grandparents – for a few years and at the age of five was adopted by American couple and taken to Portland, Oregon.

Today Sesser lives in Los Angeles and is currently spending her vacation in Thailand. This is her second visit to her hometown – the first was last year. Apart from visiting the nurses who took care of her when she was a baby and her foster parents, she also donned her motivational speaker hat and shared her inspiration and love of life with Thai disabled athletes at a recent event organised by US embassy.

A visually impaired participant asked her whether she has ever blamed God for being born disabled. “I’ve been asked this question many times and the answer is no. Everything grows differently. Flowers grow differently. And this is life.”

Sesser also took time out from her busy schedule to share her story with The Nation and explain how she manages her disability to live life to the fullest.

HOW HARD WAS IT BEING FIVE YEARS OLD AND ARRIVING IN THE US FOR THE FIRST TIME?

It was hard at first because I didn’t know English or any people. It’s like I had to adapt to whole new environment and new people who I had never seen before.

WHAT HELPED YOU GET THROUGH IT?

My amazing family, the love and support around me, and the amazing friends I have met since living in America. It’s been wonderful. I’m so glad that I’m American and also Thai. These connect together to make the person I am today.

HOW DO YOU MANAGE TO LIVE WITHOUT LEGS?

I keep saying that everybody is different. I don’t have legs but I still have my arms and I still use my bottom or skateboard to get around. My arms are pretty strong. I still use my chair, for instance to go shopping. My lifestyle has created who I am today. And all the nurses, my adopted family, the friends around me, and people who I’ve met or who are just like me and understand me as well as the foundation have encouraged and helped me too.

WHAT WAS YOUR BEST MOMENT IN YOUR LIFE?

My best moment would have to be winning so many first place medals in Track and Field events at the junior Olympics and Paralympics. That started when I was 15 and continued until I turned 20. So together those would be my best golden year.

I feel like when I was younger everything that happened was exciting. I got to meet everybody and everyone.

Sesser poses with a group of disabled athletes.

WHAT ABOUT THE WORST MOMENT?

Probably in my mid twenties. I kind of lost myself in a way and I did not know what to do with my life. I guess reality hit and I wanted to give up.

But then maybe God played his hand. I never expected I would become a motivational speaker. I certainly never expected to become an actress. I think in life we have to go through the bad to get to the good. That’s just the way it is.

AND THAT WAS WHY YOU WERE ABLE TO GET BACK TO YOUR LIFE?

Yes. I’m the kind of person who can just go on. Because I have so much stability in life, I can do whatever. That’s why I never stop. Sometimes I doubt myself and have negative feelings but I try to dismiss them. And I learn from that.

HOW DID YOU DISCOVER YOURSELF OR REALISE WHAT YOU WANTED TO DO OR BECOME?

Ever since I was young, my parents have said that I know what I want, what I expect to have and that I never listen to people. And it’s true. I’m my own boss. So, it’s my stubbornness. As a child, I felt free and very adventurous.

As a kid, you try to find yourself but when you reach your mid-twenties you learn from what you do or you struggle. Now I’m 26, I’ve learned how to be calmer, more chilled out.

 Sesser chats with disabled athletes.

WHAT ADVICE DO YOU GIVE TO MOTIVATE DISABLED PEOPLE?

I like to say I’m just like them. We are all together and you are not alone. When people stare at you, just know that another 500,000 people like you are being stared at too every day.

But don’t let any negatives influence you in a way that makes you want to give up on yourself and don’t let anybody talk you down. There are so many opportunities in life. There are people around who know people who can help you too.

And when we are together in wheelchairs or whatever, that’s a family. It’s nice to be comfortable with people who are around us because they understand us.

Our body is just the house but our soul connects us together. Even though we are different physically or mentally we all can connect and we are actually not alone.

I walk through obstacles and challenges in my own way. And I’m pretty sure all of you guys, whether able-bodied, physically disabled or mentally disabled, have your own ways of living your lives.

YOU HAVE SEVERAL ROLES – ATHLETE, ACTRESS, AND MODEL. WHICH IS YOUR FAVOURITE?

I don’t have a favourite. I couldn’t choose one of them. Everything I have done is for a purpose. I love them all because they all give me such amazing experiences.

I love being an athlete because I can stay fit and healthy. I love being an actress because I can be in front of the screen and get to see how everything is done. And I love being a model or skater. Everything is real for me. I am just so fortunate that I get these opportunities. But even I didn’t have those opportunities, I believe that if there is the will, then there is a way.

HOW DO YOU MANAGE YOUR TIME SO YOU CAN DO ALL THESE ACTIVITIES?

I’m a busy woman. I feel like I keep doing everything that I can. So I just do a lot of stuff and I always find the time.

WHAT DO YOU WANT TO DO OR BECOME NEXT?

I really want to travel more to different countries and be an advocate for the disabled and give them a chance to get equipment or accessibility. I also would like to be in a big movie, maybe a Thai movie. Who knows?

WHAT WILL BE YOUR NEXT ROLE IN THAILAND IF YOU VISIT THE KINGDOM AGAIN?

Maybe I can advocate for something in Thailand or work with agencies or industry here. That will be amazing. I hope to come back next summer.

Facebook dating service rolling out in Colombia

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/lifestyle/30355005

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Facebook dating service rolling out in Colombia

Breaking News September 22, 2018 10:55

By Agence France-Presse
Bogota

Facebook said Friday a dating service it teased early this year is being rolled out in Colombia.

The social media giant chose the Latin American country as its test lab because Colombians are particularly avid fans of using social networks and websites to find partners.

The new feature, rolled out in Colombia this week, allows users to create a separate “dating” profile not visible to their network of friends, with potential matches recommended based on preferences and common interests.

The service is programmed not to link up people who are already connected as family or friends, and users of Facebook Dating will also be able to block people if they wish.

A basic chat service will be available, and the site will bar strangers from sending photos, videos or links.

Some 21 million people log in to Facebook every day in Colombia, a country of 50 million people, according to the company.

“We view this as an incredible opportunity to continue helping people build relationships in meaningful ways on Facebook,” said Facebook Dating product manager Nathan Sharp.

Facebook’s chief Mark Zuckerberg in May announced plans for the new dating feature at the world’s leading online social network — while vowing to make privacy protection its top priority in the wake of the Cambridge Analytica scandal.

Zuckerberg was emphatic that the focus would be on helping people find partners, not flings.

“This is going to be for building real, long-term relationships, not just hookups,” Zuckerberg said in presenting the new feature.

He said the dating offer was built with privacy and safety in mind.

Facebook faced intense global scrutiny over the mass harvesting of personal data by Cambridge Analytica, a British political consultancy that worked for Donald Trump’s 2016 election campaign.

The company has admitted up to 87 million users may have had their data hijacked in the scandal.

Getting creative with YOGA

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/lifestyle/30354987

Getting creative with YOGA

lifestyle September 22, 2018 01:00

By Paisal Chuenprasaeng
The Nation Weekend

The new and very affordable convertible from Lenovo is the ideal tool for students

A STYLISH and powerful convertible 14-inch laptop computer, the Lenovo Yoga 530 AMD is also affordable, making it the perfect choice for students to be creative both in and outside the classroom.

Weighing a mere 1.6kg and just 17.6mm thick, it is easy to heft around between school and home as well as on assignments.

The Yoga 530 AMD is powered by AMD Ryzen 5 2500U quad-core processor running at 2 GHz, quipped with 8 gigabytes of DDR4 RAM or working memory and comes with a fast 256 GB SSD (solid state drive) storage.

The AMD cpu is integrated with AMD Radeon Vega 8 Graphics processor that shares the RAM for graphics memory. The Radeon Vega 8 is fast and able to handle smooth gameplay in titles that do not require very complex graphic rendering. AMD Radeon Vega 8 has eight cores and it also supports the DirectX 12 graphics platform.

The Yoga 530 AMD runs on Windows 10 Home 64-bit operating system and comes with the Microsoft Cortana Intelligent Personal Digital Assistant allowing you to give voice commands conveniently.

It has eight hours battery life, more than enough for students to work on the go. And its power adapter is compact and light enough to be carted along. Moreover, the Yoga 530 AMD supports Rapid Charge technology that comes in handy when you need extra juice. The Rapid Charge technology gives you two additional hours of use from just 15 minutes charging.

The laptop looks sleek in black with polished aluminium surfaces. It comes with a 360-degree hinge that effortlessly transforms the laptop mode into a tablet mode and back.

Just fold the display onto the back of the keyboard and Windows 10 will ask you if you want to switch the mode into the tablet mode. When it is in tablet mode, you don’t have to worry about pressing keys on the keyboard when you are holding it.

And its 14-inch touch-screen IPS display with 1920×1080-pixel resolution is responsive as a tablet function.

Best of all, the tablet mode can be used with Lenovo Active Pen 2, a stylus with battery. The active stylus lets students to take complete control of graphic designing and digital sketching.

During the test, I found that the stylus worked effectively for drawing and painting on support apps, such as Microsoft Paint 3D, Concepts, and Bamboo Paper.

I was pleased to find that the AMD Ryzen processor handled business applications like Microsoft Word, Excel and PowerPoint fast and was also pretty good when I wanted to edit photos.

AMD says its Ryzen 5 2500 Mobile processor consumes less battery while the processor uses high-performance x86 Core “Zen” architecture to deliver considerably more in the instructions-per-clock cycle than the previous generation AMD core.

Moreover, the Ryzen 5 2500 uses AMD’s SenseMI technology, which is a set of learning and adapting features that help the processor customise its performance to your applications with true machine intelligence or MI.

Thanks to the fast processor and speedy integrated GPU, Yoga 530 AMD played Full HD video very fast. So, you can use Yoga 530 AM D as a portable home theatre. The movies I watched were crisp thanks to the 1920×1080-pixel wide-angle IPS display with narrow bezels and the high 250-nit brightness.

Movies also sounded great on the laptop with the virtual surround sound experience of the Harmon Speakers optimised with Dolby Audio Premium. Since the Yoga 530 AMD can also be used in Tent Mode, the movies sound louder when the speakers at the back and bottom point upwards.

The Yoga 530 AMD comes with large backlit keyboard that is convenient for typing. Its touchpad is also good on cursor control.

I tested the laptop with my Linksys EA8500 router and it had no problems sharing files and streaming videos with my network-storage DiskStation DS418j.

For security, the Yoga 530 AMD comes with fingerprint reader under the bottom right corner of the keyboard. With the fingerprint reader, you don’t have to remember the password as you can unlock the laptop with one touch of your finger by using Windows 10’s Windows Hello function.

The Yoga 530 AMD comes with all necessary ports. There is an HDMI port on the left side for connecting to a TV. A full-size USB 3.0 port, a Type-C USB and audio jack are also provided on the left side. You can also find a 4-in-1 card reader and a full-size USB 3.0 port on the right side.

Lenovo Yoga 530 AMD has a suggested retail price of Bt25,990.

>> Processor: AMD Ryzen 5 2500U 2 GHz

>> Operating System: Windows 10 Home (64 bit)

>> Display Type: 14.0-inch Full HD (1920 x 1080) IPS Touchscreen

>> Memory: 8GB (2x4GB DDR4)

>> Storage: 256GB SSD

>> Warranty: One year Carry-in

>> Graphics: Integrated AMD Radeon Vega 8 Graphics

>> Camera: HD 720p Camera

>> Security Feature: Fingerprint Reader

>> Keyboard: Backlit Keyboard

>> Wireless: 802.11 AC Wireless Bluetooth Version 4.1

>> AC Adapter: Rapid charge 65W Adapter – charge 15 minutes for up to 2 hours use

>> Battery: Up to 8 hours

>> Dimensions:(W x D x H): 328 mm x 229 mm x 17.6 mm

>> Weight: 1.6 kg

Back to the future

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/lifestyle/30354986

Back to the future

lifestyle September 22, 2018 01:00

By Agence France-Presse
Paris

Sony announces the release of a “classic” PlayStation

SONY ANNOUNCED Wednesday it plans to launch a miniature games console designed like the original PlayStation pre-loaded with 20 vintage games as it joins the retro gaming craze just in time for Christmas.

Dubbed the PlayStation Classic, the new console shares the design of the original Playstation that launched in 1994, but is considerably smaller.

It will also come with a considerably smaller price tag than the full-feature PlayStation with a recommended retail price of just under $100 (Bt3,200).

The console comes pre-loaded with 20 classic PlayStation games such as the 1997 role-playing game “Final Fantasy VII” and the 1998-1999 racing game “R4: Ridge Racer Type 4”.

“PlayStation Classic is a perfect fit for nostalgic PlayStation fans that enjoyed playing the original PlayStation as well as gamers new to PlayStation who want to experience classic PlayStation games from the 1990s,” Sony said in a statement.

The console, onto which other games cannot be added, is set to arrive in stores in early December. Sony did not disclose how many of the limited-edition Classic consoles would be produced.

The move by Sony comes two years after Nintendo launched the NES, a palm-sized version of its eighties era games console, tapping into nostalgia for titles from the early era of home video games.

The console which retails for around $60 comes with 30 games including Nintendo’s famed Super Mario and Donkey Kong characters.

It subsequently released its 1990 Super Nintendo console.

Sony’s original PlayStation quickly dominated the home video game market after its release in 1994, with the compact disc technology allowing for games with richer graphics.

Sony is now on its fourth iteration of the PlayStation, and the PlayStation 5 is due out next year.

Stretching out the storage

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/lifestyle/30354985

Stretching out the storage

lifestyle September 22, 2018 01:00

By Paisal Chuenprasaeng
The Nation Weekend

You can now add 250GB to your Mac Notebook with an external drive from transcend

A CONVENIENT way to increase storage on your Mac desktop computer or notebook with fast and reliable Solid State Drive technology, Transcend JetDrive 855 uses Thunderbolt interface to transfer data at a speed of up to 10 gigabits per second.

While the MacBook, MacBook Air and MacBook Pro are much admired for their sleek and slim design, they only have 256GB SSD storage, which fills up fast. JetDrive 855 helps users get over that problem by adding 240 GB more storage.

The portable drive looks good too, coming in a sleek, aluminium alloy enclosure that matches the Mac’s simple, clean design.

MacBook Air is the only series of Mac notebook computes that has retained Thunderbolt 2 ports, which are compatible with Thunderbolt 1. The MacBook and MacBook Pro series have switched to Thunderbolt 3 (USB-C) ports. So, if you want to use JetDrive 855 with your MacBookPro, you will need to buy an Apple Thunderbolt 3 (USB-C) to use as the Thunderbolt 2 adapter.

I tested JetDrive 855 on MacBook Pro using the Thunderbolt 3 (USB-C) to Thunderbolt 2 adapter. The external drive worked instantly when plugged in and I didn’t need to insert any settings.

Copying files and folders to the JetDrive 855 was fast. I dragged and dropped an 851-MB music folder from Macbook Pro to JetDrive 855 and the copying was completed in a matter of seconds.

JetDrive 855’s fast speed comes from the PCIe Gen3 x4 interface paired with the latest 3D NAND flash. Transcend says when its SSD drive is installed inside a Mac it can achieve a compelling performance of up to 1,600MB/s read and 1,400MB/s write when measured with AJA V1.0 or Black Magic V 3.1.

Transcend also provides two screw drivers in the package and instructions on how to open and remove the SSD drive from the enclosure to replace your Mac’s internal SSD drive. I personally think it’s safer and more convenient to use the JetDrive 855 as an external drive.

When I used the AJA System Test Lite to measure the drive speed of the JetDrive 855, it got 650MB/s for writing and 776MB/s for reading, which is very fast for an external drive.

As an external drive, JetDrive 855 is very mobile with a footprint of 120 mm x 31.5 mm x 18.2 mm and weighing a mere 88 grams. You can conveniently carry it along with your MacBook Air.

To allow you to use JetDrive 855 with peace of mind, Transcend has developed JetDrive Toolbox software for you to download. The software helps maintain a healthy and efficient SSD by keeping it up-to-date, preventing functional degradation, and predicting problems before they happen. It displays drive information, SMART status for possible drive failure, health indicators for estimated lifespan, and facilitates firmware upgrades.

Transcend JetDrive 855 with 240GB capacity retails for Bt10,990 and it is available at |Power Buy.

>> Connection Interface: Thunderbolt 10 Gb/s

>> Storage Media: NVMe PCIe Gen3 x4 SSD

>> Capacity: 240 GB

>> Operating Temperature: 0 degree C – 60 degree C

>> Storage Temperature: -40 degree C – 85 degree C

>> Operating Voltage: 15V

>> Certificate: CE, FCC, BSMI

>> Warranty: Five-year Limited Warranty

>> In the box: JetDrive 855 Thunderbolt PCIe portable SSD, Screwdrivers (T5 & P5), Rubber feet

>> Dimensions: 120 mm x 31.5 mm x 18.2 mm

>> Weight: 88 g

Most nations to miss UN target on chronic diseases: study

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http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/lifestyle/30354942

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Most nations to miss UN target on chronic diseases: study

lifestyle September 21, 2018 09:01

By Agence France-Presse
Paris

More than half of all countries will likely fail to hit the UN target of reducing premature deaths from a quartet of chronic diseases by a third before 2030, researchers said Friday.

Cancers, heart and blood-vessel disease, diabetes, and chronic respiratory disease combined to kill 12.5 million people aged 30 to 70 worldwide in 2016, they reported in a major study.

“The bottom line is this: a set of commitments were made, and most countries are not going to meet them,” lead author Majid Ezzati, a professor at Imperial School London’s School of Public Health, told AFP.

Only 35 nations are on track to meet UN Sustainable Development Goal 3.4 — launched in 2015 — for women, and even less for men, the study revealed.

“International donors and national governments are doing too little to reduce deaths from non-communicable diseases,” Ezzati said.

The good news, he added, is that most countries are at least moving in the right direction.

But around 20 states — 15 for women, 24 for men — are either stagnating or backsliding.

That select group of failure includes only one wealthy nation: the United States.

A much-noted study last year in the American Journal of Public Health showed that the rise in premature deaths was especially sharp among white, rural Americans, described by the authors as gripped by an “epidemic of despair”.

“It comes down to weak public health, weak health care system, high levels of inequality,” Ezzati said.

– Weak public health –

Across all age groups, non-communicable diseases kill more than 40 million people a year worldwide, accounting for seven in ten deaths.

Of these, 17 million are classified as “premature,” or before the age of 70.

“We are sleepwalking into a sick future because of severely inadequate progress on non-communicable diseases,” said Katie Dain from the NCD Alliance.

The “NCD Countdown 2030” report, published in The Lancet ahead of next week’s UN High-Level Meeting on NCDs in New York, “will assist in holding governments and donors accountable”, she added.

Ezzati rejected the notion that the UN goal may have been set too high.

“The fact that 30-odd countries are very much on track, and another 40 or 50 — depending on the gender — are close, means that it is very doable,” he said by phone.

Declining tobacco and alcohol use, low blood pressure, a good public health care system, low levels of inequality — countries not doing so well in meeting the UN target are likely to fail in a couple of these things, Ezzati said.

Only four countries — South Korea, Japan, Switzerland and Australia — ranked among the top ten for lowest NCD mortality rates for both men and women.

China not on track

Spain, Singapore, Portugal, Italy, Finland and France rounded out the good health podium for women.

For men, the other countries were Iceland, Sweden, Norway, Bahrain, Canada and New Zealand.

The United States ranked 53rd for men, and 44th for women, with Chinese men and women placed 80th and 76th, respectively.

China is not on track to meet the goal but its NCD rates are declining, even as levels of obesity and high blood pressure are on the rise, the study revealed.

Smoking rates have stabilised but remain high, especially for men. Tobacco use claims one million lives in China every year.

“China has the ability to do a lot when it comes to managing tobacco and alcohol, with both largely state-owned industries,” Ezzati noted.

“They are also wealthy enough so that hypertension treatment should be trivial.”

In sub-Saharan Africa, non-communicable diseases account for a smaller share of deaths than infectious diseases such as AIDS and tuberculosis.

But their NCD mortality rates are still much higher than in most middle-income and rich countries, and should not be neglected, the authors said.

“By any standard, it would be inappropriate and non-strategic to not incorporate NCDs in the strengthening of the overall health care system,” Ezzati said.

“We should say to the donor and aid agencies: ‘Focus on the overall health system rather than disease by disease’.”

Big life insurer shifts to activity tracking in health push

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http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/lifestyle/30354940

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Big life insurer shifts to activity tracking in health push

lifestyle September 21, 2018 08:43

By Agence France-Presse
Washington

Financial giant John Hancock is converting all its life insurance policies to an incentive-based system using activity tracking, a move aimed at promoting healthier lifestyles but which also raises privacy questions.

The Boston-based insurer announced Thursday that it would immediately begin moving life insurance policies to a “behavior change platform that rewards customers for the everyday steps they take to live longer, healthier lives.”

Policyholders will be asked to sign up online for fitness and nutritional advice, or may get premium discounts for using devices such as Fitbit or Apple Watch to monitor daily activities.

“For centuries, the insurance model has primarily provided financial protection for families after death, without enhancing the very quality it hinges on: life,” said Marianne Harrison, John Hancock president and chief executive.

“We fundamentally believe life insurers should care about how long and well their customers live. With this decision, we are proud to become the only US life insurance company to fully embrace behavioral-based wellness and leave the old way of doing business behind.”

One of the largest US life insurers, John Hancock said the new offering is aimed at countering unhealthy lifestyles including physical inactivity, poor diet, excessive alcohol use and smoking blamed for most premature deaths, and expressed hope that other companies would follow suit.

The company, a division of Manulife of Canada, said it believes people who use these kinds of wellness and activity tracking programs will live longer with lower medical bills compared with those who do not use these systems.

The latest effort stems from a partnership agreed in 2015 between Hancock and Vitality, part of the South Africa-based financial group Discovery Limited which offers incentive-based wellness programs.

Too much data?

Wellness programs using health tracking have been in use for years, but privacy activists worry about the risks or invasive monitoring of consumer habits.

“I realize this is to encourage healthier habits but I worry about excessive data collection,” said Nuala O’Connor, president of the Washington-based Center for Democracy & Technology, a digital rights group.

“These devices can collect a lot of data such as your location or whom you associate with, much more than what they need to know if the person is insurable. There can be unintended sharing of that data.”

Others expressed concern over the idea of using incentives linked to data collection, sometimes called “gamification,” for insurance products.

Marc Rotenberg, president of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, said the move raises questions about “algorithmic transparency” or whether insurance decisions are fair, accountable, and transparent.

“There are also larger policy questions, including whether it is possible to maintain insurance markets if companies are able to assign risk directly to individuals policy holders,” Rotenberg told AFP.

The announcement comes amid a push by some large employers to introduce wellness programs which may require employees to wear fitness trackers in order to obtain health coverage, or to get discounts.

O’Connor noted that the private life insurance offering is not as invasive as a mandatory employer-based program but contended that the benefits of such wellness programs may be overblown.

A 2015 study cast doubt on the accuracy of data from wearable devices and questioned whether this data should be used for important decisions.

Wearables and health apps “are buggy, produce errors, they can be gamed, and the data are open to misinterpretation,” said Kate Crawford, a New York University research professor who was co-author of the 2015 study and is a co-founder of the AI Now Institute which studies social implications of artificial intelligence.

Crawford said there are additional concerns about trading personal data for economic benefits.

“What concerns me is that people are being told that wearing these devices will get them discounts and gift cards, but they are giving up enormously detailed portraits of their lives,” she said. “What if policies change such that ‘negative’ behaviors are punished?”

Seoul to host World Knowledge Forum next month

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http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/lifestyle/30354850

Seoul to host World Knowledge Forum next month

lifestyle September 21, 2018 01:00

By THE NATION

The 19th World Knowledge Forum (WKF) is taking place at Jangchung Arena Shilla in Seoul from October 10 to 12 and is expected to welcome around 3,500 delegates.

Launched in October 2000, WKF serves as a platform to educate people about pressing global issues and seek ways to promote balanced world economic growth. Heads of state and government, business leaders and other public figures participate, building the event’s reputation as the World Economic Forum’s Asian counterpart.

The central theme this year is “Global Challenges: Geopolitical Conflicts and Trade War”. Delegates will gain insight into interesting developments in diplomatic relations on the Korean Peninsula and how blockchain technology is disrupting the monetary system.

There will be 200 speakers, including former UN secretary general Ban Ki-Moon, Crypto Exchange founder Miko Matsumura, Nobel Peace laureate Kawasaki Akira and Estonia’s President Kersti Kaljulaid.