วันจันทร์ที่ 5 มีนาคม พ.ศ. 2555

Brandy on her new album, outlook and reunion with Monica


(Rolling Stone) -- It's been four years since Brandy released her last album "Human" and many things have changed, including her.

"I'm reinventing myself and I feel fearless," Brandy told Rolling Stone. "I haven't done R&B in a very long time. This album is rooted in R&B. The sound is different, it's about love. It's mature, it's gritty, it's edgy."

The former teen star and mother of one is hard at work on her sixth album and recently wrapped the video for her first single, a duet with Monica called "It All Belongs To Me." This is first time the two have recorded together since their 1998 Grammy Award winning hit, "The Boy Is Mine."

"Monica and I have a bond as women and as mothers, working with her doesn't feel like work," Brandy says. "Chris Robinson directed the video and we're both in dysfunctional relationships. We're helping each other through both situations, it's sort of like a 'Thelma & Louise,' girl empowerment video."

Recruiting producers like Rico Love, who wrote and produced "It All Belongs To Me," Jim Jonsin, Danja, Timbaland, Chris Brown and longtime collaborator Rodney Jerkins, Brandy's also seeing what two Canadians have to offer.

"I heard the song that Drake did and I loved it," Brandy says of working with the Cash Money MC and his primary producer Noah "40" Shebib. "I haven't recorded it yet but I'm looking forward to it because it's such a great melody and the beat is nice. It's a vibe that I haven't dipped into and I think the fans would get a kick out of hearing my voice over a record like that. I'm not sure if Drake's going to be on it but I'm a huge fan of his. His melodies are beautiful, I like the way I sound in the shower singing his songs."

Singer-songwriter Frank Ocean is also contributing to her new project, and according to Brandy, their relationship is more than just professional.

"He's like a little brother to me," Brandy says. "He wrote a song called 'Scared of Beautiful' about women who are afraid to be beautiful in their full potential as women. I've been there before so I know a lot of women can relate."

Despite moving from her initial record label home Atlantic to Epic and now RCA, Brandy says she finally feels supported.

"RCA reminds me of how Atlantic used to be, they really believed in my vision as an artist when they signed me at 14," she shares. "RCA welcomed me and Breyon Prescott and Peter Edge showed such passion for what I wanted to do."

See the full article at Rolling Stone.


Race to save the leatherback turtle


London (CNN) -- The leatherback turtle is one of the ocean's titans. The largest member of the turtle family, it is also one of the world's biggest reptiles, outsized only by some species of crocodile. Adults can weigh more than 900 kilograms and reach more than 2 meters in length, with the largest ever discovered measuring about 3 meters from bill to tail.

The species gets its name from its ridged, dotted carapace which, unlike other sea turtles, has the texture of hard rubber. Spending virtually its entire life at sea, the leatherback -- the only warm-blooded sea turtle -- is able to withstand colder waters than other species.

This has allowed it to become the most geographically dispersed reptile, spotted off the coasts of Newfoundland and Norway in the north, to New Zealand and the southern tip of Africa.

But despite its wide spread across the world's oceans, leatherback populations have plummeted in recent decades. The impact of commercial fishing, the poaching of their eggs and other hazards saw their numbers drop by an estimated 80% during the 1980s and 1990s, and today the species is classified as critically endangered.

On the beaches of Gabon on Africa's west coast, however, there are encouraging signs. Here, an important conservation project run by local NGO Aventures Sans Frontieres (ASF, or Adventures Without Borders) is attempting to save this ancient giant from extinction.

Watch: New research to save Africa's leopards

Gabon is home to the world's largest nesting population of leatherbacks, with an estimated population of between 15,000 and 41,000 females using its warm, tropical beaches as a place to incubate their eggs. As ASF's Celine Gagne explains, if you know where to look, the man-sized leatherback can be glimpsed on a nightly basis for months at a time.

"There is, from October to March or April, perhaps every day some turtles coming to the beach to lay their eggs and go back to sea," she said.

The most important are human threats, because activities, sounds, lights are ... a real problem for turtles Celine Gagne, Aventures Sans Frontieres

After mating with a male just off shore, the female leatherback will wait for nightfall to head for the beach, dig a shallow pit in the sand, and deposit her eggs -- as many as 150 at a time.

See also: Meet Senegal's octogenarian master drummer

She buries the eggs about 80cm deep with her hind flippers, compacting the moist sand with the weight of her body to protect the eggs. Her work on land done, she returns to the sea.

Gagne says that for every thousand eggs laid, perhaps only one turtle will survive to maturity. Some of the 10cm long hatchlings will be unable to dig their way to the surface to make it to the surf, and suffocate in the nests. Others are easily picked off by crabs, dogs, seabirds and other predators.

ASF's program involves collecting data on the nesting patterns of the leatherback populations, and operating hatcheries. In these projects, eggs from the wild are allowed to hatch in a fenced-off location, before the hatchlings are introduced to the ocean, in order to improve their chances of survival.

The organization also works to educate the public about turtle conservation. "There is a lot of threat for young turtles," said Gagne. "The most important are human threats, because activities, sounds, lights are ... a real problem for turtles."

Watch: Combating South Africa's rhino hunters

She said it was important to minimize human activity around beach areas used by nesting leatherbacks. The nests could be easily crushed by vehicles or beachgoers, and the noise they produced could scare off nesting females. Furthermore, because both female turtles and their hatchlings navigate their way to the ocean using the bright moonlight reflecting off the breaking surf, artificial lights could disorientate them and send them towards danger.

Although leatherbacks have not traditionally been prized for their meat, their eggs have been highly sought in various parts of the world as a protein source, an aphrodisiac or for use in traditional medicines. Gabon was no exception, said Gagne.

"People used to eat turtle eggs, but only in [their] family," said Gagne. "They take just a few eggs for children and wife."

See also: Kenya orphanage takes in elephant babies

ASF has encouraged locals not to eat or sell the eggs, stressing the greater economic value to the community in assisting conservation efforts. "Turtles can be an important tourist product and if they disappear ... tourists may disappear with it. It's a source of money."

Even if the leatherback survives the hatching process, it faces many more dangers on its journey. Large numbers are killed each year on the long-lines or drift nets of commercial fishermen, in which the animals can become snared and drown within 40 minutes. Pollution also poses a threat: floating plastic bags look a lot like the jellyfish they rely on as their main food source, and have been found in the digestive systems of about half of the leatherbacks studied in recent times.

If they can avoid these hazards, however, these solitary giants can live to be over 50 years old. The males of the species may never return to land after surviving the arduous hatching process. Remarkably, though, when it comes time to lay their own eggs, the female of the species will typically cross the ocean to return to precisely the same beach where she may have hatched 15 years earlier.

วันพุธที่ 22 กุมภาพันธ์ พ.ศ. 2555

Green Coffee Bean Extract สารสกัดจากเมล็ดกาแฟ

Green Coffee Extract The history of coffee dates back more than a thousand years, originally , Coffee beans were used as food . East African tribes would grind the coffee berries together , mixing the results into a paste with animal fat. Later , around 1000 AD , Ethiopians made a type of wine from coffee berries , fermenting the dried in water .

The history of coffee dates back more than a thousand years, originally , Coffee beans were used as food . East African tribes would grind the coffee berries together , mixing the results into a paste with animal fat. Later , around 1000 AD , Ethiopians made a type of wine from coffee berries , fermenting the dried in water . Coffee also grew naturally on the Arabian Peninsula where it was first developed into a hot drink . Despite decades of research on coffee and caffeine , there are many misconceptions about the potential health risks associated with coffee , while many of the beneficial aspects have gone unnoticed .

The high antioxidant activity observed in research on coffee is believed to be mostly due to the phenolic acids . GREEN COFFEE EXTRACT contains a number of polyphenols called hydroxycinnamic acids , with the two most prominent being chlorogenic and caffeic acids . Caffeic acid is the most abundant phenolic compound in coffee .
PRODUCT NAMEGREEN COFFEE EXTRACT
COLOURLIGHT TO DARK YELLOWISH BROWN. HYGROSCOPIC POWDER
ODOUR & TASTECHARACTERISTIC ODOUR WITH SLIGHT BITTER TASTE
BOTANICAL NAMECOFFEA ARABICA
PLANT PART USEDSEEDS
PARTICLE SIZE100 % THROUGH 40 MESH
LOSS ON DRYINGNMT 5%
BULK DENSITYNLT 0.4 g/ml
IDENTIFICATIONPOSITIVE FOR CHLOROGENIC ACID BY HPLC
ASSAY
TOTAL CHLOROGENIC ACID BY HPLC
CAFFEINE BY HPLC

: NLT 45%
: 3 - 5%
MICROBIOLOGICAL
A) TOTAL PLATE COUNT
B) YEAST & MOULD
C) SALMONELLA & E.COLI

: NMT 1,000 CFU/g
: NMT 100/g
: ABSENT
HEAVY METALSNMT 10ppm