‫عقدت Geekvape ندوة فنية عبر الإنترنت لاستكشاف التقنيات المستخدمة في السجائر الإلكترونية

شنتشن، الصين، 13 نوفمبر 2022 / PRNewswire / — في 10 نوفمبر 2022، استضافت Geekvape ، وهي واحدة من أفضل العلامات التجارية للبخار في العالم، ووسائل الإعلام ذات اللقطة الواحدة، وهي منفذ إعلامي فرنسي معروف، حلقة دراسية عبر الإنترنت حول تكنولوجيا السجائر الإلكترونية تحت شعار “قفزة أخرى” لاستكشاف الاتجاهات الجديدة في تقدم تكنولوجيا السجائر الإلكترونية.

Geekvape held an online technical seminar to explore technology using in the e-cigarette

ودعت الحلقة الدراسية خبراء الصناعة إلى مناقشة “التقدم التكنولوجي والابتكار في الصناعة” بالاستناد إلى أربعة مواضيع: شواغل المستعملين، والتصميم الهيكلي للرذاذات، وخلايا البطاريات والرقائق، والتطوير المستقبلي. ها هو الرابط:  https://fb.me/e/2UXBV9XpX

وفقًا لبوتي، مدير التسويق في Geekvape ، فإن غالبية المستخدمين يعانون من تسرب الزيت لأسباب مختلفة. يمكن أن يكون لتصميم الهيكل تأثير كبير على أداء أجهزة التبخير. ولتقديم إجابات أفضل، تم ربط الحلقة الدراسية بمختبر Geekvape شنتشن الموجود في الموقع. لقد ثبت من خلال تجارب اختبار المحاكاة أن تصميم تدفق الهواء للهياكل العلوية والسفلية سلس وأن مقاومتها للهواء متطابقة. ومع ذلك، فإن هيكل تدفق الهواء العلوي يتمتع بكفاءة حرارية أكبر، مما يسمح له بتبخير السائل بشكل أكثر دقة وفعالية، مما يؤدي إلى المزيد من السحابة وطعم أفضل. بالإضافة إلى ذلك، يساهم تصميمه الهيكلي بشكل كبير في منع التسرب.

مع وصول مناقشة الندوة إلى ذروتها، اتفق خبراء الصناعة على أن جهاز VAPE كان كليًا، حيث يلعب المرذاذ دورًا مهمًا لأنه يحدد أداء الذوق. تؤثر الرقائق وخلايا البطارية على ما إذا كان لديك نفس الذوق بمرور الوقت.Geekvape held an online technical seminar “Leap Further” to explore technology used in the e-cigarette

أعاد الموقع الاتصال بمختبر اختبار منتجات Geekvape من أجل فحص كيفية تأثير خلايا البطارية المحسنة والرقائق على تجربة المستخدم. أوضح المختبر أن جهد خرج المنتج كان له تأثير مباشر على ترذيذ زيت النيكوتين، وكذلك النكهة. وبالتالي، فإن مستوى واتساق جهد الخرج أمر بالغ الأهمية. من خلال مقارنة جهد خرج العديد من المنتجات بنفس قيمة مقاومة قلب التذرية، ثبت أن استقرار خرج جهاز Geekvape أعلى بشكل واضح من المنافسين، وأن الجهاز بأكمله أكثر موثوقية. أجهزة Geekvape هي أيضًا تنافسية بشكل استثنائي من حيث التحكم في إخراج الرقائق عند استخدام نفس خلية البطارية.Geekvape held an online technical seminar to explore the technology used in the e-cigarette

تحت تأثير العديد من العناصر مثل نموذج المنتج وطلب المستخدم والقواعد واللوائح، يجب على الصناعة الابتكار باستمرار وإدخال تقنيات جديدة، وفقًا لجون دان، المدير العام لجمعية صناعة الأبخرة في المملكة المتحدة. كشركة في طليعة السلسلة الصناعية، جمعت Geekvape التكنولوجيا على مدى فترة طويلة من الزمن، مما يمنحها القدرة على تحمل التنمية في جميع أنحاء العالم والاستجابة لتحولات السوق.

الصورة –  https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1943817/1.jpg
الصورة –  https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1943818/2.jpg
الصورة –  https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1943819/3.jpg

 

State of Emergency Declared in Sudan’s Central Darfur After Gunmen Fire on Mediators

Sudan’s Central Darfur state has declared a state of emergency after gunmen opened fire on mediators tasked with settling an inter-communal dispute, killing 24 people.

After an emergency meeting of the state security committee on Sunday night, Central Darfur Governor Saad Adam Babiker issued an order declaring a state of emergency in all parts of Central Darfur for a period of one month.

The decision came after gunmen attacked a reconciliation committee sent to mediate a dispute between the rival Wadi Saleh and Bendasi communities.

According to locals, the mediators were accused of favoring one side, sparking anger from the other side. The governor said the attack in Wed al-Mahi locality killed at least 24 people and left 41 others wounded.

In the order, Babiker stressed the need to preserve the security of the state and the safety of citizens. It banned all forms of gatherings in the two localities.

Last week, the governor of Blue Nile state, Ahmed Al Omda Badi, issued an emergency order also banning all public gatherings, events and unlicensed activities.

Badi acted after communal clashes that killed more than 200 people. The order prohibits blocking public roads, encroaching on public and private property, and circulating content that calls for discrimination among citizens on an ethnic basis, among other activities.

Inter-communal conflicts have been on the rise in Sudan since the military coup in October 2021.

Pro-democracy protesters have kept up demands for the military to step aside and establish a civilian-led transitional government in the country.

Mediation efforts by the U.N. and African Union have yet to bear fruit.

Source: Voice of America

Clashes in Eastern DR Congo as Envoy Pursues ‘Dialogue’ Initiative

Troops and rebels traded heavy fire in eastern DR Congo on Monday, a military source and local inhabitants said, as an envoy from the East African bloc pursued efforts to hold a “peace dialogue” on the region’s troubles.

Government forces and the M23 militia were fighting in Kibumba, about 20 kilometers (12 miles) north of the strategic city of Goma in the North Kivu province, the sources said, speaking by phone.

M23 fighters were also seen about 40 kilometers to the northwest of the city in the Virunga National Park, a wildlife haven famed for its mountain gorillas, but which is also a bolt hole for armed groups, the sources said.

A mostly Congolese Tutsi group, the M23 — the March 23 Movement — leapt to prominence in 2012 when it briefly captured Goma before being driven out.

After lying dormant for years, the rebels took up arms again in late 2021, claiming the DRC had failed to honor a pledge to integrate them into the army, among other grievances.

They have since won a string of victories against the military and captured swathes of territory, prompting thousands of people to flee their homes.

The resurgence has ratcheted up diplomatic tensions, with the Democratic Republic of Congo accusing its smaller neighbor Rwanda of backing the group.

Kinshasa expelled Rwanda’s ambassador at the end of last month as the M23 advanced, and later recalled its envoy from Kigali.

Rwanda denies providing any support for the M23 and accuses the Congolese army of colluding with the Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR) — a notorious Hutu rebel movement involved in the 1994 genocide of Tutsis in Rwanda.

“The Rwandan army and its allies from the M23 don’t stop, every passing day, launching assaults on our different positions in Kibumba,” army spokesman for North Kivu, Lieutenant Colonel Guillaume Ndjike told reporters.

School canteens pillaged

As happened late last week too, witnesses spoke of World Food Program-backed school canteens being pillaged in the rebel-held town of Kiwanja on Sunday and Monday.

“There was corn flour and oil. They took these provisions as food rations,” a resident said.

Another said oil cans, flour sacks and beans had been taken away by truck the previous day.

Eastern DR Congo was the location of two bloody regional wars in the 1990s.

That conflict, along with the Rwandan genocide, bequeathed a legacy of scores of armed groups which remain active across the region but especially in North Kivu.

The heads of the seven-nation East African Community (EAC) on Sunday announced they would hold a “peace dialogue” on the region’s problems.

EAC’s mediator, former Kenyan president Uhuru Kenyatta arrived in Kinshasa Sunday for talks aimed at paving the way for the meeting, set to take place November 21.

The bloc has not spelt out who will take part in the talks or how long they are scheduled to run.

Another diplomatic path is being explored by Angolan President Joao Lourenco.

He met Friday with Rwandan President Paul Kagame and on Saturday with Congolese President Felix Tshisekedi.

Source: Voice of America

Invasive Mosquito Threatens Malaria Control in Africa

Malaria exploded this year in the Ethiopian city of Dire Dawa, which saw more than 10 times as many cases between January and May as it did in all of 2019.

What made this spike in cases unusual is that it happened outside the rainy season, when malaria typically surges across Africa, and in an urban area — malaria is more of a rural problem on the continent. Cities are not immune, but they typically don’t see these kinds of outbreaks.

Something new and insidious has arrived in the Horn of Africa. An invasive species of mosquito called Anopheles stephensi threatens to unravel two decades of gains in malaria control. And it may bring the deadly disease to more of the continent’s rapidly growing cities.

“There is real fear that it could start more transmission in these areas that traditionally don’t have as much malaria,” said Arran Hamlet, a disease modeling expert with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “And they don’t have infection control strategies implemented to the same levels.”

The new mosquito arrives at a bad time in the fight against malaria.

Africa’s native mosquitoes have become increasingly resistant to insecticides. (Anopheles stephensi is already resistant.) In addition, the malaria parasite is getting not only tougher to kill, but tougher to spot. Malaria strains that don’t show up on rapid diagnostic tests are becoming more common.

“We don’t want the three to meet — the drug resistance, the diagnostic resistance and the highly efficient vector [Anopheles stephensi],” said Fitsum Girma Tadesse, a molecular biologist at Ethiopia’s Armauer Hansen Research Institute.

“What happens if they coexist? We don’t know,” he said. “It’s really dangerous. You can’t detect the parasite. You can’t kill it with a drug. And the mosquito is wise enough to evade your [control] mechanisms.”

Fitsum and his colleagues linked Anopheles stephensi to the Dire Dawa outbreak in a study presented at the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene in Seattle this month. It is the strongest evidence yet that the mosquito is increasing malaria rates in Ethiopia.

A different mosquito

Malaria fighters started the millennium strong.

With insecticide-treated bed nets, indoor insecticide spraying campaigns and new artemisinin-based drugs, deaths from malaria plunged from nearly 900,000 in 2000 to around 560,000 in 2015. But since then, progress has stalled.

And the tools that have worked up until recently won’t help much against Anopheles stephensi.

“This [mosquito] is different and more insidious than some of the other mosquitoes that transmit malaria that we’re used to seeing in sub-Saharan Africa,” said Johns Hopkins Center for Communication Programs epidemiologist April Monroe.

Africa’s native malaria mosquitoes prefer to bite people inside their homes late at night. That’s why bed nets and indoor spraying have been so effective.

But Anopheles stephensi bites earlier in the evening. When it goes searching for a meal, “people aren’t actually in bed yet, and so they don’t get the same protection” from bed nets, Hamlet said.

It also prefers to take its blood meal outdoors. Or if it does bite indoors, it doesn’t rest there, thereby avoiding indoor insecticides.

The new mosquito’s habitat is different, too. Most malaria mosquitoes live in rural Africa. But Anopheles stephensi is “really highly adapted to urban areas, which isn’t what we typically see,” Monroe said.

It likes to lay its eggs in water storage containers, which are especially common in Africa’s fast-growing unplanned urban areas that lack piped water, Fitsum noted.

Newcomer

Originally from South Asia, Anopheles stephensi was first spotted on the African continent in Djibouti in 2012.

The small nation was on the verge of eliminating malaria at the time. It recorded just 27 cases that year. In 2020, there were more than 73,000.

Besides Djibouti and Ethiopia, the mosquito has turned up in Sudan, Somalia and Nigeria.

One study estimates the mosquito may put an additional 126 million people at risk of malaria in cities across Africa.

In Ethiopia alone, Hamlet and colleagues estimate that Anopheles stephensi could increase malaria cases by 50% and cost hundreds of millions of dollars to control.

“This is very much possibly a cheap option compared to letting Anopheles stephensi spread around the country,” Hamlet said. “There is a lot of economic burden on both individuals and the wider economy in this level of malaria increase.”

The last thing African countries need, however, is new disease vector that is expensive to control.

“Most of the countries affected by malaria have limited resources to deal with already existing prevalent diseases,” Fitsum said.

One bit of relatively good news is that since Anopheles stephensi breeds in the same places as the mosquitoes that carry yellow fever, chikungunya and dengue, efforts that target one would also control the others.

Fitsum says covering water containers with polystyrene beads can help prevent the mosquitoes from laying eggs. He advises people to cover water containers tightly and get rid of any they don’t need.

And keep using bed nets and indoor sprays, he added. Native mosquitoes are still out there.

Source: Voice of America