Tuesday, July 30, 2019

[限時優惠]momo 線上書展 線上優惠書城2019



MoMo線上書展



[限時優惠]KK Day&Klook 最新優惠 2019

KK Day&Klook 最新優惠


KKday - 匯豐信用卡優惠
指定行程可享低至85折,東南亞國家行程盡享9折
優惠碼: 站內獲得
結束: 12月31
地區: 香港, 澳門

Klook - 買韓國產品,送AREX機場快線
購買韓國產品滿$400,就送你免費AREX機場快線乙張
優惠碼: GOKOREA
結束: 8月5
地區: 香港, 澳門


Klook - 新會員優惠
去旅行未用過KLOOK? 新用戶即享88折
優惠碼: NEWTRAVEL
結束: 7月27
地區: 香港, 澳門
Klook - 所有用戶Wifi 1$/日
優惠碼: WIFI1GO
結束: 送完即止
地區: 香港, 澳門
Klook - 星馬泰越discount!
新加坡、馬東西亞、泰國、越南地區活動買滿$600減$66
優惠碼: SEATRIP
結束: 8月5
地區: 香港, 澳門
KLOOK - 全歐洲商品92折
優惠碼: EULETSPLAY
結束: 8月31
地區: 台灣
KLOOK -  台灣商品滿NT$2000減NT$200
優惠碼: TWSOGOOD

[限時優惠]Yahoo購物中心818登記領紅包

活動網址:  Yahoo購物中心818登記領紅包


▌活動時間:
2019年7月29日10點0分至2019年8月8日23點59分
▌活動辦法:
活動期間於活動登記連結登記成功,即有機會享有180、380、580、880現金券(獎項為隨機發放),每人每帳號限登記一次,現金券數量有限,領完為止。
▌活動內容:
活動登記共分3階段登記
第一階段:7/29-8/1登記者,現金券生效日為8/3,使用效期至8/18 
第二階段:8/2-8/4登記者,現金券生效日為8/6,使用效期至8/18 
第三階段:8/5-8/8登記者,現金券生效日為8/10,使用效期至8/18 
*現金券內容:
贈品金額獎項明細
180大禮包50元現金券*2張、80元現金券*1張
380大禮包50元現金券*4張、80元現金券*1張、100元現金券*1張
580大禮包50元現金券*4張、80元現金券*1張、100元現金券*3張
880大禮包50元現金券*4張、80元現金券*1張、100元現金券*6張
▌現金券使用範圍:
請參考折價券使用方式,使用範圍不包含虛擬點數、票券、清潔用品、美食、黃金、Apple系列商品(iPhone/iPad/Mac)實際可使用賣場請依照購物車顯示為主。

[限時優惠] foodpanda 免運折扣碼 (2019/08/31止)

舊客免運優惠碼【KSIFEQ3】
(訂餐滿$100,可享兩次免運優惠,使用期限至2019/08/31止)




Friday, July 26, 2019

[限時優惠] 金融理財/被動收入/財富自由


潛在收入
技術性
備註
填問卷賺錢
點廣告賺錢
電玩遊戲賺錢
~
中等
縮網址賺錢
開設網路商店
中等
需要資金,有風險
Dropshipping 直運
中等
中等
零庫存
POD T
中等
中等
零庫存
轉授權(PLR)
中等
中等
建置網站/部落格
中等
費時費工
聯盟行銷
中等
適合新手和老手
廣告投放(Media Buying)
要很專業
經營YouTube頻道
中等
費時費工
FB社團/粉絲頁經營
中等
費時費工
當網路直播主
中等
遊戲實況主潛力大
建立網路論壇
中等
買賣網站
要很專業
電子報行銷
中等
中等
外包平台上接案
中等
中等
賣自己的知識產品
中等
中等
網路開班授課
中等
中等
網店客服


[限時優惠] agoda 優惠碼/折扣碼 2019

agoda信用卡專屬優惠碼聯結

Monday, July 22, 2019

[Health]Is Your Child Experiencing Summer Learning Loss? What to Do



  • Summer learning loss is the loss of academic skills and knowledge children can experience over the summer break from school.
  • Though experts still debate why this happens and the degree to which children are affected, many teachers say it’s a real issue for many students at the beginning of each year.
  • Many states offer scholarships for a range of summer programs and activities that can provide learning opportunities and access to other school benefits that may be lost in the summer, including food programs.
  • Parents can also help lessen the impact of summer learning loss while kids are at home with regular activities, discussing appropriate current events, or reading for at least 30 minutes a day.
The concept of summer learning loss isn’t new. The original research, released in 1996, compiled data from the 1970s and ’80s and kicked off a decades-long search for answers regarding what really happens to children’s learning over the summer months when school is not in session.
It’s otherwise referred to as the Cooper Analysis, named for lead author Harris Cooper, who went on to write a great deal about his findings. That meta-analysis found that about a month of school-time learning was lost over the summer, with the negative impact increasing as children grow older.
Later research included a 20-year study, spanning 1982 to 2002.
In the years since, researchers have had debated the reasons some students experience learning loss during summer breaks, with some experts pointing to the gaps for children of lower socioeconomic status.
Others have theorized that the learning gap is actually established prior to the age of 5, with those gaps simply enduring and accounting for what researchers have observed when children begin 9th grade.
Others still, such as researcher Paul T. von Hippel, associate professor at the University of Texas at Austin, have examined the validity of our previously believed conclusions, questioning whether or not summer learning loss is, in fact, a real thing.
But while experts continue to debate why this may occur, many teachers say it does — and there are a number of things parents can do about it.

[Health]Heart Failure for People Under 65 Is Rising: How to Reduce Your Risk



  • Heart failure, also called congestive heart failure, is when the heart doesn’t pump blood as well as it needs to.
  • Over the past decade, death rates from heart failure for adults between 35 and 64 years old have been increasing.
  • According to experts, this is partially due to a “clustering of risk factors” in young adults, such as hypertension, high blood pressure, rising rates of obesity, and coronary artery disease.
  • A healthy diet, regular exercise, and knowing your family history can help prevent and manage heart failure for those who are at risk.
It was just before the Fourth of July three years ago when John Sousa, 44, knew something was seriously wrong with his health.
For about a month, he had trouble breathing, which he initially passed off as part of his asthma symptoms from seasonal allergies. But this was different. His inhaler wasn’t working like it normally did.
Concerned, Sousa visited his doctor who treated him for an upper respiratory infection.
While some antibiotics and steroids improved his condition slightly, within 10 days, he was back at the doctor’s office. He was given another round of steroids and just days later was back. His breathing was worse.
“This time, the nurse asked me ‘weird questions’ like, ‘Did I have chest pains?’ Those kind of things. She was like, ‘I’m going to do an EKG’ (electrocardiogram), and the next thing I knew, I had an appointment to see a cardiologist the day before the Fourth of July,” Sousa told Healthline.
The results shocked him. Sousa was diagnosed with a chronic type of heart failure. He had no family history of heart disease.
“I couldn’t even wrap my brain around it,” he said of his diagnosis. “It was overwhelming. ‘I was going to die’ was the only thing I could think. I started Googling the survival rates and saw these terrible statistics. It took me probably about six months before I was able to wrap my brain around what heart failure was and that it was something that could be managed.”

[Health] How social media can affect mental health



The findings are in line with other recent studies about the association between social media and depression.
Research published in the Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology in December 2018 found a causal link between the two and suggested that limiting social media made people less lonely and less depressed.
Melissa G. Hunt, PhD, the lead author of that paper and the Associate Director of Clinical Training Department of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania, said of the research published this week:
“I’m not surprised they found an association between increasing social media use and increasing depression, and their data do suggest that upward social comparison is a factor in this.”
However, Hunt was critical of the use of self-reported data, which she described as “notoriously faulty,” and suggested that studies on screen time and social media use need better objective measures of time spent on these activities.
Hunt’s own research from last year required participants to have iPhones in order to utilize usage data to track the exact time spent by the user on different apps per day.
The association between social media and depression is prevalent in other studies as well, but the reason why isn’t entirely clear, although psychologists have a pretty good idea.
Boers and his team looked at three different hypotheses to explain their findings.
The first, “displacement,” suggests that any screen time displaces users from other healthier activities such as physical exercise.
“Upward social comparison” happens when people compare themselves to others who appear to be doing better than them; that could mean physically in terms of looks, or wealth.
“Reinforcing spirals” refers to when people seek out information or content consistent with their cognitions. Practically, what it means is that if you’re politically liberal, you’ll probably seek out information online that aligns with your political viewpoint.
And if you’re depressed, well, you could start looking for content that matches how you feel.
Boers work suggests that “upward social comparison” and “reinforcing spirals” are likely drivers of depression related to screen time, but not “displacement.” In fact, it pushes back against the idea of video games as a driver of depression at all.
“The vast majority of kids play the games socially, either physically side by side with friends or joining friends via headset. Skills (both technical and social) are rewarded, just like on a playing field or a Science Olympiad team. It only becomes problematic if that’s the only thing a kid is doing,” said Hunt.

For parents interested in understanding the effects of screen time on their children, there are some general takeaways, but no hard-and-fast rules when it comes to how much time kids should or shouldn’t be spending on their devices.
“Parents should moderate and/or monitor their child’s social media and television use. Especially when a child is vulnerable to mental health issues and/or has already experienced mental health issues in the past,” said Boers.
“Prevent your child from exposing him/herself to idealised content of fellow peers, content that lowers their self-esteem and, in turn, increases the severity of depressive symptoms.”