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GAMIT NA GAMIT NG TATAY SEKYU AT TATAY BOUNCER ANG DALAWANG BUTAS NG BATANG ESTUDYANTE (BIBIG AT PWET ) 👮🏾♀️💪🏽
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STANFORD ACABA DE FILTRAR GRATIS LA CLASE QUE EXPLICA COMO FUNCIONA CLAUDE Y CHATGPT POR DENTRO
La mayoria desperdicia el 90% de su potencial
Stanford te lo enseña en 1h44 minutos
Guardalo en favoritos para no perderlo 🔖
La mayoría de los hombres ignoran las formas más simples de mejorar su apariencia.
Todo lo que necesitas es un solo producto: (Vaselina)
Aquí tienes 8 trucos con Vaselina que cambiarán tu apariencia (y tu vida) por completo:
El cortisol alto añade 5 años a tu rostro.
Destruye la insulina, te da papada y barriga, e incluso encoge tu cerebro.
Aquí tienes los 7 mejores consejos de médicos para arreglarlo:
1. Deja de hacer ejercicio por la noche.
POR QUÉ EL VIH AÚN NO TIENE CURA
¿Alguna vez te has preguntado por qué el VIH es tan difícil de vencer?
Este hilo explica - en términos simples - cómo el VIH infecta el cuerpo y por qué sigue siendo tan difícil de curar.
Un hilo
If you’re Filipino, chances are you’ve been told at least once that malunggay can solve almost anything.
Need more nutrients? Eat malunggay. Recovering from illness? Drink malunggay soup. Breastfeeding? Someone will inevitably recommend malunggay capsules.
Now, scientists are asking a new question: can malunggay generate electricity too?
Surprisingly, the answer is yes.
Researchers have successfully used the humble malunggay plant—known scientifically as Moringa oleifera—as a component in experimental bio-batteries capable of producing electricity. In laboratory tests, malunggay extracts mixed with salt and paired with metal electrodes generated enough power to light a small LED bulb for several hours.
Before anyone rushes out to replace their AA batteries with backyard leaves, however, scientists stress that the technology remains firmly in the research stage.
FROM SOUP INGREDIENT TO BATTERY
The secret lies in chemistry.
Malunggay leaf extracts are naturally acidic. When copper and zinc or iron strips are placed inside a malunggay paste, chemical reactions occur that release electrons. Those moving electrons create an electrical current.
Adding ordinary table salt improves the process even further. Salt breaks down into charged particles that help electricity move more efficiently through the mixture.
In several studies, a single malunggay bio-battery cell produced between 1.06 and 1.64 volts—roughly comparable to the voltage of a standard household battery. When multiple cells were connected together, researchers were able to continuously power a small LED light for up to seven hours.
For a plant best known as a backyard vegetable, that’s an impressive feat.
THE CATCH
Unfortunately, voltage is only half the story.
While malunggay batteries can generate electricity, the amount of current they produce remains extremely small. That’s enough for tiny devices like LEDs but nowhere near enough to run a smartphone, electric fan, laptop, or refrigerator.
There are other challenges too.
Because the battery relies on organic plant material, the paste eventually dries out, ferments, or grows mold. The acidic mixture also corrodes metal electrodes over time, reducing performance and lifespan.
In short, your neighborhood talipapa won’t be replacing lithium-ion factories anytime soon.
A GLIMPSE OF A GREENER FUTURE
Still, scientists see promise in the research.
Around the world, researchers are exploring ways to turn plant materials into sustainable energy technologies. Some have converted malunggay leaves into carbon-based materials for supercapacitors, while others are studying malunggay-derived membranes as components for next-generation batteries.
The goal isn’t necessarily to power entire cities with malunggay. Instead, the research could contribute to safer, cheaper, and more environmentally friendly energy storage systems.
And perhaps that’s what makes the story fascinating.
For generations, Filipinos have looked at malunggay and seen food. Scientists looked at the same leaves and saw something else entirely: a tiny spark of electricity.
The humble plant growing beside countless Filipino homes may never replace the batteries in your remote control. But it reminds us that some of the most surprising innovations can begin with something we’ve been overlooking all along.
#radarPH
MILLIONS OF CAVITE COMMUTERS WHO HAVE WAITED SO LONG DESERVE ANSWERS
Senators Mark and Camille Villar are reportedly blocking the continuation of the Light Rail Transit Line 1 (LRT-1) extension project in Cavite, according to Ombudsman Jesus Crispin Remulla.
“We are investigating (the claims). The project should’ve extended to Cavite by now, but we’re still verifying rumors that the Villar senators were going against the alignment. They want the rail system to traverse their lands,” Remulla told radio dzRH on Saturday.
Read: https://t.co/PV9RI6D4et
Salamat sa serbisyo, SG Conan 😿🌈
Beloved security-guard cat Conan has passed away on Tuesday, June 2.
Conan became internet famous after photos and videos of him surfaced in which he is seen "pawtrolling" inside an establishment.
READ: https://t.co/DoxhhwXm0q
'IS ACCOMPANYING SEN. ESTRADA MORE IMPORTANT THAN PRESIDING OVER A SENATE SESSION?'
WATCH: Former Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Winnie Monsod questions why SP Alan Peter Cayetano and members of the Senate majority failed to show up for Monday's scheduled session. @bncdotph