• Descubre todo lo que deberías saber sobre la cafetera superautomática Philips 5400 series, desde análisis, opiniones hasta mantenimiento #motivacion #vida #actitudpositiva #frasesparareflexionar

    https://tuscafeteras.es/philips-5400-lattego-todo-lo-que-necesitas-saber-sobre-esta-innovadora-serie-de-cafeteras/
    Descubre todo lo que deberías saber sobre la cafetera superautomática Philips 5400 series, desde análisis, opiniones hasta mantenimiento #motivacion #vida #actitudpositiva #frasesparareflexionar https://tuscafeteras.es/philips-5400-lattego-todo-lo-que-necesitas-saber-sobre-esta-innovadora-serie-de-cafeteras/
    TUSCAFETERAS.ES
    Philips 5400 LatteGo: Todo lo que Necesitas Saber sobre esta Innovadora Serie de Cafeteras
    Bienvenido a nuestro detallado análisis de la serie Philips 5400 con LatteGo, una joya de la innovación en cafeteras. En este post, te sumergirás en todo lo que necesitas saber sobre este impresionante modelo, desde sus características distintivas hasta cómo LatteGo eleva la experiencia del café a un nivel superior. Descubrirás el equilibrio perfecto entre
    1
    0 Comments 0 Shares 1802 Views
  • Aquí algunos testimonios sobre nuestro curso de barista. ¡Únete y conviértete en un barista excepcional hoy mismo!
    TOCA EL SIGUENTE ENLACE: https://go.hotmart.com/O81383433V


    #coffe #latte #barista #cafe #cafelover #barismo
    ❤️Aquí algunos testimonios sobre nuestro curso de barista. ¡Únete y conviértete en un barista excepcional hoy mismo!☕☕ 👉 TOCA EL SIGUENTE ENLACE: https://go.hotmart.com/O81383433V #coffe #latte #barista #cafe #cafelover #barismo
    1
    0 Comments 0 Shares 2090 Views
  • The Times Deeply Regrets These Errors
    By Alfie Kohn


    Due to an editing error, an obituary on Saturday incorrectly described Thomas R. McKeown as having lived in Longfield, NJ. He actually lived in East Longfield. Additionally, Mr. McKeown has not yet died.



    An account in Sunday’s Vows section of Elizabeth “Tipsy” Wagglesworth’s wedding to Maria Guttierez contained a typographical error. The bride’s mother was reported to have offered a toast in which she said, “At a time when our society is riven by acrimony and bigotry, it does one’s heart good to celebrate a pure love that crosses boundaries, ignores prejudices, and calls us all back to our better selves.” In fact, the bride’s mother was grimly silent throughout the ceremony.



    Editor’s note: As a result of an intern’s prank, all of the articles, columns, reviews, letters, photographs, maps, and advertisements in last Saturday’s paper consisted of the corresponding content in that day’s Wall Street Journal. The intern, A. G. Sulzberger VII, has been sternly requested to notify the editors if he intends to do this again.



    A review of an experimental theater production in last Sunday’s Arts section contained a claim that “no one can imagine the effect on an audience of staring at a blank screen on stage while listening to a recording of a raindrop for more than 40 minutes.” Subsequent reporting has revealed that just about everyone can imagine the effect of doing this.



    An article last Thursday about new restaurants opening in Tajikistan stated that “Qurghonteppe M. Kabirirakh, a long-time customer, has lived in Tajikistan, which is located in western Africa, ever since World War II began in 1958, and is now 46 years old.” Mr. Kabirirakh’s middle initial is actually N. The Times regrets the error.



    Due to an oversight, the slogan “All the news that’s fit to print” on the front page has not yet been updated to read “All the podcasts, newsletters, videos, AR demos, apps, puzzles, and recipes that are fit to post.”



    An article in Friday’s Science section contained a passage explaining that “To evaluate the domains targeted by the S protein-specific GC response after vaccination, recombinant monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) were generated from single-cell sorted S-binding GC B cells as defined by the surface marker phenotype CD19+ CD3– IgDlo CD20hi CD38int CD71+CXCR5+ lymphocytes.” That passage should have read as follows: “Loud coughing may disturb your spouse.”



    The clue for 43-Across in last Saturday’s crossword puzzle, “A _______,” should have read “The ________.”



    A photograph intended to accompany a news article about climate change on Tuesday was entirely black because the photographer inadvertently neglected to remove the lens cap. Also, rather than appearing alongside the intended article, it was published in the Times Cooking Newsletter, next to a recipe for frozen kale dessert pops. The Times acknowledges being slightly amused by the error.



    A review of the book “Master of the Game: Henry Kissinger and the Art of Middle East Diplomacy” accidentally neglected to mention that Kissinger is a war criminal who, in a just world, would have spent the last 45 years in a dungeon.



    Editor’s note: A highly flattering profile of Senator Baxter Smithee, Jr., published on April 9, was written by reporter Baxter Smithee III. Editors had assumed the similarity between the two names was coincidental. It was not.



    The results of the quarterfinal match played at Wimbledon in 1983 were listed as 4-1, 3-0, 3-2, 2-1, 4-3, 2-1, and 3-0, respectively. In fact, these were the scores from the PGA golf tournament played several years earlier. The editor under whose auspices this error occurred has been posthumously reprimanded.



    Janine Delisle, professor of linguistics at Oral Roberts University, was misquoted in last Tuesday’s Science Times. She did not say, “‘Firefly’ and ‘lightning bug’ are synonymous and therefore completely interchangeable.” Dr. Delisle actually said, “‘Lightning bug’ and ‘firefly’ are synonymous and therefore completely interchangeable.” The Times deeply regrets the error.



    An item in Thursday’s corrections column stating that all of the items printed in Wednesday’s corrections column were inaccurate, and that the original articles in question were accurate, was inaccurate. Those items were indeed inaccurate, whereas this correction is not.

    On:

    https://www.alfiekohn.org/blogs/corrections/
    The Times Deeply Regrets These Errors By Alfie Kohn Due to an editing error, an obituary on Saturday incorrectly described Thomas R. McKeown as having lived in Longfield, NJ. He actually lived in East Longfield. Additionally, Mr. McKeown has not yet died. An account in Sunday’s Vows section of Elizabeth “Tipsy” Wagglesworth’s wedding to Maria Guttierez contained a typographical error. The bride’s mother was reported to have offered a toast in which she said, “At a time when our society is riven by acrimony and bigotry, it does one’s heart good to celebrate a pure love that crosses boundaries, ignores prejudices, and calls us all back to our better selves.” In fact, the bride’s mother was grimly silent throughout the ceremony. Editor’s note: As a result of an intern’s prank, all of the articles, columns, reviews, letters, photographs, maps, and advertisements in last Saturday’s paper consisted of the corresponding content in that day’s Wall Street Journal. The intern, A. G. Sulzberger VII, has been sternly requested to notify the editors if he intends to do this again. A review of an experimental theater production in last Sunday’s Arts section contained a claim that “no one can imagine the effect on an audience of staring at a blank screen on stage while listening to a recording of a raindrop for more than 40 minutes.” Subsequent reporting has revealed that just about everyone can imagine the effect of doing this. An article last Thursday about new restaurants opening in Tajikistan stated that “Qurghonteppe M. Kabirirakh, a long-time customer, has lived in Tajikistan, which is located in western Africa, ever since World War II began in 1958, and is now 46 years old.” Mr. Kabirirakh’s middle initial is actually N. The Times regrets the error. Due to an oversight, the slogan “All the news that’s fit to print” on the front page has not yet been updated to read “All the podcasts, newsletters, videos, AR demos, apps, puzzles, and recipes that are fit to post.” An article in Friday’s Science section contained a passage explaining that “To evaluate the domains targeted by the S protein-specific GC response after vaccination, recombinant monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) were generated from single-cell sorted S-binding GC B cells as defined by the surface marker phenotype CD19+ CD3– IgDlo CD20hi CD38int CD71+CXCR5+ lymphocytes.” That passage should have read as follows: “Loud coughing may disturb your spouse.” The clue for 43-Across in last Saturday’s crossword puzzle, “A _______,” should have read “The ________.” A photograph intended to accompany a news article about climate change on Tuesday was entirely black because the photographer inadvertently neglected to remove the lens cap. Also, rather than appearing alongside the intended article, it was published in the Times Cooking Newsletter, next to a recipe for frozen kale dessert pops. The Times acknowledges being slightly amused by the error. A review of the book “Master of the Game: Henry Kissinger and the Art of Middle East Diplomacy” accidentally neglected to mention that Kissinger is a war criminal who, in a just world, would have spent the last 45 years in a dungeon. Editor’s note: A highly flattering profile of Senator Baxter Smithee, Jr., published on April 9, was written by reporter Baxter Smithee III. Editors had assumed the similarity between the two names was coincidental. It was not. The results of the quarterfinal match played at Wimbledon in 1983 were listed as 4-1, 3-0, 3-2, 2-1, 4-3, 2-1, and 3-0, respectively. In fact, these were the scores from the PGA golf tournament played several years earlier. The editor under whose auspices this error occurred has been posthumously reprimanded. Janine Delisle, professor of linguistics at Oral Roberts University, was misquoted in last Tuesday’s Science Times. She did not say, “‘Firefly’ and ‘lightning bug’ are synonymous and therefore completely interchangeable.” Dr. Delisle actually said, “‘Lightning bug’ and ‘firefly’ are synonymous and therefore completely interchangeable.” The Times deeply regrets the error. An item in Thursday’s corrections column stating that all of the items printed in Wednesday’s corrections column were inaccurate, and that the original articles in question were accurate, was inaccurate. Those items were indeed inaccurate, whereas this correction is not. On: https://www.alfiekohn.org/blogs/corrections/
    WWW.ALFIEKOHN.ORG
    The Times Deeply Regrets These Errors - Alfie Kohn
    Due to an editing error, an obituary on Saturday incorrectly described Thomas R. McKeown as having lived in Longfield, NJ. He actually lived in East Longfield. Additionally, Mr. McKeown has not yet died.   An…
    8
    0 Comments 0 Shares 11218 Views
  • This Week in Crypto
    Dear Houdini,

    Markets entered another week of resistance, with Bitcoin closing at $20.6K on Monday, close to where it started a week before. Despite a brief jump over the $21K and $1.6K marks that lasted for three days, Bitcoin and Ethereum barely moved over the past week, increasing by 0.5% and decreasing by 0.2% respectively. The biggest winner of last week’s rally was Polygon, which increased in returns by 43% after getting monumental institutional recognition as JPMorgan traded tokenized cash deposits on the Polygon blockchain last week, which we’ll delve deeper into in the DeFi section. Other winners, as seen in the figure below were Binance Coin and Lido which increased in returns by nearly 4% and 13% respectively.


    Figure 1: TVL and price development of major crypto sectors

    Artboard 1
    Source: 21Shares, Coingecko, DeFi Llama

    Key takeaways:

    Binance Acquires FTX
    The Fed seized more than $3B in Bitcoin stolen from the Silk Road in 2012.
    Hetzner kicks one-fifth of Solana validators off the cloud hosting platform
    JPMorgan and Singapore’s Central Bank testing DeFi’s Infrastructure
    Spot and Derivatives Markets

    Figure 2:

    glassnode-studio_bitcoin-futures-perpetual-funding-rate (1)
    Source: Glassnode



    The chart above plots the average funding rate (in %) set by exchanges for perpetual futures contracts. A negative funding rate means that short positions have to pay long positions periodically and usually indicates a bearish sentiment since more short traders are dominant, and vice versa. As seen in Figure 2, the funding rates of most exchanges have risen above the zero mark over the past week, except for those of Kraken and FTX, who are currently at a down downtrend, with the latter getting acquired by Binance.


    On-chain Indicators

    Figure 3:

    glassnode-studio_ethereum-percent-of-supply-in-smart-contracts
    Source: Glassnode



    The amount of Ethereum powering smart contracts are on the rise, as shown in Figure 3. Nearly 30% of the total supply of Ethereum is held in smart contracts. This indicates that the utility behind Ethereum’s value is intensifying, which means that the cryptoasset’s dollar figure will in turn follow suit.

    Next Week’s Calendar

    CAL_Nov8
    Read full report here
    The information provided does not constitute a prospectus or other offering material and does not contain or constitute an offer to sell or a solicitation of any offer to buy securities in any jurisdiction. Some of the information published herein may contain forward-looking statements. Readers are cautioned that any such forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance and involve risks and uncertainties and that actual results may differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements as a result of various factors. The information contained herein may not be considered as economic, legal, tax or other advice and users are cautioned to base investment decisions or other decisions solely on the content hereof.
    21Shares, Pelikanstrasse 37, Zürich, Switzerland 8001, Switzerland

    Manage preferences
    This Week in Crypto Dear Houdini, Markets entered another week of resistance, with Bitcoin closing at $20.6K on Monday, close to where it started a week before. Despite a brief jump over the $21K and $1.6K marks that lasted for three days, Bitcoin and Ethereum barely moved over the past week, increasing by 0.5% and decreasing by 0.2% respectively. The biggest winner of last week’s rally was Polygon, which increased in returns by 43% after getting monumental institutional recognition as JPMorgan traded tokenized cash deposits on the Polygon blockchain last week, which we’ll delve deeper into in the DeFi section. Other winners, as seen in the figure below were Binance Coin and Lido which increased in returns by nearly 4% and 13% respectively. Figure 1: TVL and price development of major crypto sectors Artboard 1 Source: 21Shares, Coingecko, DeFi Llama Key takeaways: Binance Acquires FTX The Fed seized more than $3B in Bitcoin stolen from the Silk Road in 2012. Hetzner kicks one-fifth of Solana validators off the cloud hosting platform JPMorgan and Singapore’s Central Bank testing DeFi’s Infrastructure Spot and Derivatives Markets Figure 2: glassnode-studio_bitcoin-futures-perpetual-funding-rate (1) Source: Glassnode The chart above plots the average funding rate (in %) set by exchanges for perpetual futures contracts. A negative funding rate means that short positions have to pay long positions periodically and usually indicates a bearish sentiment since more short traders are dominant, and vice versa. As seen in Figure 2, the funding rates of most exchanges have risen above the zero mark over the past week, except for those of Kraken and FTX, who are currently at a down downtrend, with the latter getting acquired by Binance. On-chain Indicators Figure 3: glassnode-studio_ethereum-percent-of-supply-in-smart-contracts Source: Glassnode The amount of Ethereum powering smart contracts are on the rise, as shown in Figure 3. Nearly 30% of the total supply of Ethereum is held in smart contracts. This indicates that the utility behind Ethereum’s value is intensifying, which means that the cryptoasset’s dollar figure will in turn follow suit. Next Week’s Calendar CAL_Nov8 Read full report here The information provided does not constitute a prospectus or other offering material and does not contain or constitute an offer to sell or a solicitation of any offer to buy securities in any jurisdiction. Some of the information published herein may contain forward-looking statements. Readers are cautioned that any such forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance and involve risks and uncertainties and that actual results may differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements as a result of various factors. The information contained herein may not be considered as economic, legal, tax or other advice and users are cautioned to base investment decisions or other decisions solely on the content hereof. 21Shares, Pelikanstrasse 37, Zürich, Switzerland 8001, Switzerland Manage preferences
    16
    1 Comments 0 Shares 6884 Views
  • https://minepi.com/houdinicripto
    RUMOR !
    Too many people mine Pi on their phones!
    So what is the essence of pi mining on phones? it is the process of distributing, paying off free Pi coins to the pioneers who have contributed to building the Pi network community on a daily basis.
    Using a mobile App to identify users and pay rewards is a very clever way of doing things. Cost ~ zero, no energy consumption, no environmental pollution and fair distribution... This paid Pi will be transferred to your personal digital wallet. Your digital wallet is your smartphone. After you complete the KYC process, your wallet works on the official Blockchain network and can connect to various ecosystems and payment platforms.
    The knowledge of many people about cryptocurrencies in general and Blockchain technology in particular is limited, and information cannot be updated...So they think it is meaningless to earn Pi by participating in daily registration. They do not believe that just spending a few tens of seconds a day to activate the lightning, they can make money. They think that they have to invest in machinery with terrible configuration, be on duty day and night, take care, maintain, repair ... tweaking to earn money.
    It was the age of the old Web 2.0, friends. Web 3.0 - Internet of things - is connected, consolidated and secure. All devices accessing the internet can connect to each other ... So it is very normal for you to use Smart Phone to mine Pi. Web 3.0 leverages and enhances the connectivity and access of everything to create a common decentralized storage, mining, and processing network for all its data and algorithms. Combined with the management and operation in the form of blockchain - Blockchain. Data stored on the Blockchain cannot be tampered with by an individual or organization. Once saved to the blockchain, they are permanent. In addition, with Web 3.0, the Web deployment service is always up and running. The system is operated by many network nodes distributed around the world instead of centralizing one server.
    The overall picture of our Pi Network project has gradually revealed positive perspectives. On GitHub has provided a lot of code with which Pi Network has connected and cooperated. Among them, the famous exchange Binance… Leaked sources from PCT, Developers also said that when Pi entered Mainet open, its value is not small, it can break all our imaginations and expectations. .
    The Pi community on all social networking sites and the pi ecosystem built by the ink-splatter method is becoming more and more complete and growing.
    So based on the knowledge base, we fully believe and pursue this humanistic project. .
    The year 2022 will have the most beautiful and memorable milestones in each of our lives.
    Go this way to get Pi: https://minepi.com/houdinicripto
    https://minepi.com/houdinicripto RUMOR ! Too many people mine Pi on their phones! So what is the essence of pi mining on phones? it is the process of distributing, paying off free Pi coins to the pioneers who have contributed to building the Pi network community on a daily basis. Using a mobile App to identify users and pay rewards is a very clever way of doing things. Cost ~ zero, no energy consumption, no environmental pollution and fair distribution... This paid Pi will be transferred to your personal digital wallet. Your digital wallet is your smartphone. After you complete the KYC process, your wallet works on the official Blockchain network and can connect to various ecosystems and payment platforms. The knowledge of many people about cryptocurrencies in general and Blockchain technology in particular is limited, and information cannot be updated...So they think it is meaningless to earn Pi by participating in daily registration. They do not believe that just spending a few tens of seconds a day to activate the lightning, they can make money. They think that they have to invest in machinery with terrible configuration, be on duty day and night, take care, maintain, repair ... tweaking to earn money. It was the age of the old Web 2.0, friends. Web 3.0 - Internet of things - is connected, consolidated and secure. All devices accessing the internet can connect to each other ... So it is very normal for you to use Smart Phone to mine Pi. Web 3.0 leverages and enhances the connectivity and access of everything to create a common decentralized storage, mining, and processing network for all its data and algorithms. Combined with the management and operation in the form of blockchain - Blockchain. Data stored on the Blockchain cannot be tampered with by an individual or organization. Once saved to the blockchain, they are permanent. In addition, with Web 3.0, the Web deployment service is always up and running. The system is operated by many network nodes distributed around the world instead of centralizing one server. The overall picture of our Pi Network project has gradually revealed positive perspectives. On GitHub has provided a lot of code with which Pi Network has connected and cooperated. Among them, the famous exchange Binance… Leaked sources from PCT, Developers also said that when Pi entered Mainet open, its value is not small, it can break all our imaginations and expectations. . The Pi community on all social networking sites and the pi ecosystem built by the ink-splatter method is becoming more and more complete and growing. So based on the knowledge base, we fully believe and pursue this humanistic project. . The year 2022 will have the most beautiful and memorable milestones in each of our lives. Go this way to get Pi: https://minepi.com/houdinicripto
    27
    0 Comments 0 Shares 2533 Views
Sponsored