Rabu, September 29, 2010

Hati-hati: Telur Palsu Buatan China

Manufacturing fake eggs

In China there are fake schools and classes that teach a variety of blatant fraud technology, even eggs can be modulated by chemical materials, but also be able to fry cook, is currently the most popular False course.

Step 1 modulation of raw materials

Using 7 kinds of chemical materials, see pic below

Beware of Fake Chinese Eggs

Fake egg was made from calcium carbonate, starch, resin, gelatin, alum and other chemical products.

Step 2 egg production

Raw egg into the mold to 2 / 3 full, put calcium chloride, colouring die, the egg appears on the film been announced.

Beware of Fake Chinese Eggs

The 'yolk' is shaped in the round mould. 'Magic water' containing calcium chloride is used.

Beware of Fake Chinese Eggs

By adding a yellow pigment and become raw egg yolk..

Step 3 fake egg shape

In the mold into 1 / 3 raw egg white, like the first package, like dumplings into the egg yolk, egg white into another, into the magic water, a shell eggs will come slowly. Naked egg shape to 1 hour to dry after washing with water, at shells ready.

Step 4

Sewing lines through the use of eggs, immersed in paraffin wax, calcium carbonate, such as modulation of the eggshell into a solution, repeated several times until the shell a little dry, immersion in cold water pumping line shape, this point, the egg has been put on a false cloak , You're done.

Beware of Fake Chinese Eggs

Hard shells are formed by soaking in paraffin wax onto the egg, which are then left to dry.

Beware of Fake Chinese Eggs

Beware of Fake Chinese Eggs

Oh yeah The Egg is ready. The artificial egg shell is very fragile and break easily but who cares!!

Look so real

Beware of Fake Chinese Eggs

Many small bubbles is formed during frying the egg but not many people can tell the difference.

The egg look exactly the same, and the eggs taste better than real but you are adding to the

statistic of food poisoning person.

Beware of Fake Chinese Eggs

Beware of Fake Chinese Eggs

Beware of Fake Chinese Eggs

Why make fake eggs ?

Because of money.

The cost of fake egg is only 0.55 Yuan/kg, while the true [WINDOWS-1252?]eggs’ market price is 5.6 Yuan/kg.

Cases of problem foods and food poisoning are widely reported in Mainland China over the last few years.. In 2001, there were 185 cases of food poisoning, affecting about 15,715 people and causing 146 deaths. The cases doubled in 2002. In 2003, the number of reported cases was ten times more than that in 2001, and the number of people suffered was as high as 29,660, including 262 deaths Now In Sept 2008 Nearly 53,000 Chinese children sick from contaminated milk; 4 have died

Rabu, September 22, 2010

New York Aerial Photos




Images taken by a British photographer show the dazzling lights of the planet's most famous skyline in spectacular detail - using state of the art technology



British photographer Jason Hawkes from Henley-on-Thames, Oxon., captured the series from a helicopter using a cutting edge gyroscopic mount




New York City boasts some of the planet's most famous landmarks - and this spectacular series shows them in all their glorious nocturnal neon-lit detail




This image shows in stunning detail a northward view of Madison Avenue - alive and jam-packed with the glare of headlights - flanked by the Empire State Building to the west and the Chrysler Building at night




Included in the collection is the world-famous Time Square shot from 1,300 ft and showing hundreds of tiny night time revellers far below




Also seen is the Statue of Liberty with the glow of Manhattan island forming a backdrop. Shots like these have only recently become a possibility through advances in technology




The device is essentially a tripod with six sets of spinning gyros, contained inside three egg-shaped cases, that rotate extremely quickly and stabilises the camera for perfect night-time photography




Before it was invented it meant that nocturnal aerial shots like these were impossible and all photographers could get was a blurry picture. "It's only really in the past couple of years that we have been able to get night-time shots from the air in this detail," said Jason




"Before, the cameras just couldn't cope with it. With little light you had to use camera settings with very high film speed which created 'noise'. It made the images grainy and pretty ugly"




Using the new gear Jason was able to heavily reduce the film speed - producing luscious neon-lit images of the most famous city in the world. Over two weeks in March he spent 15 hours circling Manhattan and other city locations




Jason, who in the past he has shot famous day-time pictures of London and other major cities, added: "I spend a lot of time in New York and I always thought night time aerials would look amazing.The great thing about the city is the high number of skyscrapers. In London you only have around five buildings that you can actually call a 'skyscraper', but in New York there are over 200"




The series has been brought together in new book 'New York At Night', with words by Christopher Gray, and goes on sale next month





















15 of the World's Largest Objects!



15 of the World's Largest Objects!


Here are 15 of the worlds largest objects, from swimming pools to motorcycles to football tables!

Worlds Largest Objects


World's Largest Book



The award for largest published book goes to an author and scientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Michael Hawley. The 133-pound book is five by seven feet, 112 pages, needs a gallon of ink for printing, and costs $2,000 to produce. Its title? “Bhutan: A Visual Odyssey Across the Kingdom.”


World’s Largest Motorcycle



Officially recognized by the Guinness Book of World Records, Gregory Dunham, from California's Stockton, built the world's largest motorcycle. Greg spent three years in his workshop crafting this 11 feet tall, 20 feet long monster bike which is powered by a 8.2 litre (V8 engine and has tyres that are 1.88 m tall. The 6,500-pound motorcycle with a pricetag of $300,000 is totally rideable.



World's Largest Bottle of Wine



It’s a 490 liter Grande Cuvee TBA NV No.7 2005 of Austrian wine maker Kracher, presented in Rehetobel Switzerland. The bottle itself has been certified by Guinness World Records as the world’s largest bottle of wine, holding the equivalent to 640 regular bottles of wine.


World’s Largest Revolver



You’re looking at what probably is the largest revolver in the world: a replica of Remington model 1859, by Mr. Ryszard Tobys. It’s 1.26 meter (4.13 ft.) long.


World's Largest Pencil



This mother-of-all writing utensils weighs in at 21,500 lbs and stretches to 76 feet long and it’s a version of the classic No. 2. The huge pencil was built in New York by Ashrita Furman and many talented craftsmen.


World’s Largest Pinata



Breaking the Guinness Record for the world's largest pinata, according to an onsite Guinness adjudicator, this giant mock donkey measured 28.5 meters long; 7.2 meters wide and 18 meters tall and was filled with 8,000 pounds (3,628 kilograms) of candy. A wrecking ball was used to help smash the pinata during a public event, where Carnival Cruise Lines was producing a television commercial.


World's Largest Crossword



The Ukrainian city of Lvov has recently installed what might just be the world's largest crossword (in physical size). The puzzle covers the entire side of a residential tower block that's approximately 30 meters tall. During the day the crossword appears empty - with the answers lighting up at night. The questions for the puzzle are located in different point of interests of the city: monuments, theatres, fountains etc. so people walking around the city can try to solve the puzzle and write down their answers. When night comes they can meet at this house and check how they did.


World's Largest Easter Egg



In 2005, a Belgian city entered the Guinness Book of Records creating the Largest Easter Egg ever. The Belgian chocolate producer Guylian made the chocolate egg with at least 50,000 bars. The egg measured 8.32 metres high, beating the previous record made in Kwazulu-Natal, South-Africa in 1996. Twenty-six craftsman worked altogether 525 hours to build the egg. They used 1950 kg (4300 lb) of chocolates.


World's Largest Burger



Weighing in at 123 pounds, this giant burger features an 80-pound beef patty, a 30-pound bun, 12 tomatoes and 160 slices of cheese. Made at Denny's Beer Barrel Pub, Pennsylvania restaurant, they also throw on a pound each of lettuce, ketchup, mustard and mayo -- and up to five onions. The menu price for the Beer Barrel Main Event Charity Burger comes at $379.


World's Largest Swimming Pool



This swimming pool is more than 1,000 yards long, covers 20 acres, had a 115ft deep end and holds 66 million gallons of water. Acknowledged by the Guinness Book of World Records as the world's largest swimming pool, it took five years to build, cost nearly £1billion and the annual maintenance bill will be £2million.

The man-made saltwater lagoon has been attracting huge crowds to the San Alfonso del Mar resort at Algarrobo, on Chile's southern coast. The saltwater pool contains 250,000 cubic metres of water and is even navigable in small boats.


World's Largest Chair



This is not Photoshopped —it's an actual photograph of the world's largest chair, in the piazza of Manzano, Italy, a city of chair makers where it was created.


World's Largest Birthday Cake



Made in 1962 for the Seattle World's Fair, the world's largest birthday cake weighted 25,000 pounds and stood 23 feet tall. The ingredients list includes the 10,500 pounds of flour needed for the cake.


World's Largest Cheese




Dutch gourmet cheese maker Beemster made a record-breaking cheese wheel. The giant cheese measures 6 feet wide and weighs 1,323 pounds.


World’s Largest Beer Can



Not much information on what could very well be the World’s Largest Beer Can.


World's Largest Football Table



Here’s the largest table football game in the world. In fact, Table Football XXL is so huge, two entire soccer teams — 22 players — could face off with it, settling their challenges without ever setting foos on a real field. This monster was built by Amsterdam brewer Amstel, a stunt that coincided with the European Champions League Finals. If this wanted to buy this one, you’d need six flight cases just to ship it to you.