scholarly journals Perancangan Alat Pencegah Kebakaran Rumah Akibat Kelalaian Manusia Mematikan Kompor Gas Berbasis Mikrokontroler Arduino yang Terintegrasi dengan Smartphone

2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 82
Author(s):  
Surawan Setiyadi ◽  
Dendra Alfi Nugroho

Many know that the activities of most people who are at home certainly cannot be kept away from the name of cooking with gas stoves. But it was a concern because of the many cases that occurred related to gas stoves. Often from most people when cooking they forget to turn off the stove because of other activities or even leave. This can lead to potential house fires. To overcome this problem, we need a tool that can detect the condition of the gas stove, in order to prevent undesirable things from happening earlier. To avoid undesirable events due to human negligence turning off the gas stove. So the design of making tools that can determine whether there is activity of moving objects in front of the gas stove. So that if the gas stove is still burning, the gas stove will automatically turn off or be turned off remotely by the homeowner by giving notification to the homeowner's handphone.

Author(s):  
Frederick C. Beiser

The Jewish writings of these final years develop themes of the earlier years. Cohen continues to explore one of his favorite topics: the affinity of German and Jewish character. Despite his cosmopolitan conception of Judaism, Cohen still thought that the Jews were most at home in Germany. Yet, despite his belief in the special affinity between Germans and Jews, Cohen still shows his cosmopolitanism by his sympathy for the Ostjuden; he maintains that they should be freed from the many immigration controls imposed on them. Cohen continues to worry about the growing weakening of Jewish communities in Germany, and argues, as Socrates did in the Crito, that people have a special obligation to stay within the communities which nurtured them. In a remarkable 1916 lecture on Plato and the prophets Cohen argues that they are the two major ethical voices in the Western world: Plato gave the West a rational form while the prophets gave it moral content. Cohen now reduces his earlier striving for a unity of religions down to the demand for a unity of conscience.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 84-89
Author(s):  
Tati Maryati

The Corona virus or Covid-19 which is unexpected will come to us, has an impact on health, economy and also humanity throughout the world and is able to fundamentally change the world. Supplements are disrupted because production is stopped, retail stores close, causing consumers to change their behavior, which had previously gone offline shopping. Not just shopping, when a pandemic, the way of thinking becomes different. Consumers around the world are looking for products and brands through new ways and new habits are formed. Online transactions focus more on basic products to make ends meet. The fact that Covid-19's anti-virus has not been found raises concerns about disrupted health and the Government's regulation to work and stay at home also raises concerns about disrupted businesses. Differences from habits and interests or preferences that are different for each person, provide different responses to the problems faced and solutions for the future. The habit of shopping offline has a tendency to continue for complementary products while food products are more directed towards offline. The rest eating habits at home can be continued because it provides more hygiene guarantees. The new habit of holding online meetings with distant relatives or colleagues will be increasingly considered given the many more positive things that can be obtained. Likewise with work problems, working from home is more interesting to consider because it is more efficient and effective and the results can be more productive. This new consumer behavior is adjusted to provide satisfaction for many parties, with the assistance of institutions or governments that oversee the security of supply and demand and maintain the stability of both. 


Author(s):  
Jane S. Gerber

Sephardi identity has meant different things at different times, but has always entailed a connection with Spain, from which the Jews were expelled in 1492. While Sephardi Jews have lived in numerous cities and towns throughout history, certain cities had a greater impact on the shaping of their culture. This book focuses on those that may be considered most important, from Cordoba in the tenth century to Toledo, Venice, Safed, Istanbul, Salonica, and Amsterdam at the dawn of the seventeenth century. Each served as a venue in which a particular dimension of Sephardi Jewry either took shape or was expressed in especially intense form. Significantly, these cities were mostly heterogeneous in their population and culture — half of them under Christian rule and half under Muslim rule — and this too shaped the Sephardi worldview and attitude. While Sephardim cultivated a distinctive identity, they felt at home in the cultures of their adopted lands. The book demonstrates that Sephardi history and culture have always been multifaceted. The book's interdisciplinary approach captures the many contexts in which the life of the Jews from Iberia unfolded, without either romanticizing the past or diluting its reality.


2017 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 152-159
Author(s):  
Jules B. Farber

Rather than write a classic biography of James Baldwin in the last cycle of his life—from his arrival in 1970 as a black stranger in the all-white medieval village of Saint-Paul, until his death there in 1987—I sought to discover the author through the eyes of people who knew him in this period. With this optic, I sought a wide variety of people who were in some way part of his life there: friends, lovers, barmen, writers, artists, taxi drivers, his doctors and others who retained memories of their encounters with Baldwin on all levels. Besides the many locals, contact was made with a number of Baldwin’s further afield cultural figures including Maya Angelou, Harry Belafonte, Sidney Poitier, Angela Davis, Bill Wyman, and others. There were more than seventy interviews in person in places as distant as Paris, New York or Istanbul and by telephone spread over four years during the preparatory research and writing of the manuscript. Many of the recollections centred on “at home with Jimmy” or dining at his “Welcome Table.”


Author(s):  
Florry O’Driscoll

This chapter explores the case-study of Dublin-born Albert Delahoyde as an instance of transnational language learning. Delahoyde was not yet eighteen years of age when he volunteered to fight with the Papal Battalion of St Patrick in 1860, in an ultimately futile attempt to maintain Pope Pius IX’s control over the Papal States. Through his letters, one can assess the individual, but also the communal significance of both the Papal Battalion and the Papal Zouaves, and the many contacts between Ireland and Italy in the mid-nineteenth century. Delahoyde provides a perfect example of practical literacy in action, as the correspondence of the Irish soldier reveals much about the links between writing, identity, and nation at the midpoint of the nineteenth century.


1938 ◽  
Vol 2 (6) ◽  
pp. 385-386

The trend towards natural sciences, manifest in various members of the house of Rothschild of this and the previous generation, may truly be said to have dominated the life of Lionel Walter Lord Rothschild, who died at Tring on 27 August, 1937, at the age of 68. One might have expected that his early love for butterflies and beetles would be eclipsed by the usual pursuits of a rich man in the environment into which he was born as eldest child of the first Baron Rothschild, the head of the famous banking house. But the education at home which deprived him of the leavening influence of other boys tended to bind him firmly to his collections, where he found solace from the supervision by governess and tutor so irksome for the shy and delicate boy. Having ample means and opportunities to indulge in his pastime, the collections had already assumed a considerable size when he went to Bonn and then to Magdalene College, Cambridge. The contacts he made at these Universities gave him a wider outlook in Zoology, but as he had no intention of going in for examinations—his father had taken a first in Botany at Cambridge—his biological education was general rather than intimate in any branch. The details of morphology did not interest him so much as the animal as a whole, and as he had a keen eye for differences in appearance and a very retentive memory he acquired an astonishingly wide knowledge of species in the many groups of animals (and even plants) in which he was interested. At Cambridge he came under the influence of Professor A. Newton, the great ornithologist, and from that time the study of birds became one of his main pursuits.


Daedalus ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 146 (2) ◽  
pp. 19-29 ◽  
Author(s):  
Valerie Bunce

From 1998 to 2005, six elections took place in postcommunist Europe and Eurasia that led to the defeat of authoritarian incumbents or their anointed successors, the empowerment of opposition forces, and, thereafter, the introduction of democratic reforms. Because Putin's regime closely resembles those regimes that were successfully challenged by these dramatic changes in politics, Russia is a logical candidate for such a “color revolution,” as these electoral turnovers have been termed. Moreover, the color revolutions have demonstrated an ability to spread among countries, including several that border Russia. However, the case for a color revolution in Russia is mixed. On the one hand, the many costs of personalized rule make Putin's Russia vulnerable. On the other hand, Putin has been extraordinarily effective at home and abroad in preempting the possibility of an opposition victory in Russian presidential and parliamentary elections.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexandra Medline ◽  
Lamar Hayes ◽  
Katia Valdez ◽  
Ami Hayashi ◽  
Farnoosh Vahedi ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTBACKGROUNDThe many economic, psychological, and social consequences of pandemics and social distancing measures create an urgent need to determine the efficacy of non-pharmaceutical interventions (NPIs), and especially those considered most stringent, such as stay-at-home and self-isolation mandates. This study focuses specifically on the efficacy of stay-at-home orders, both nationally and internationally, in the control of COVID-19.METHODSWe conducted an observational analysis from April to May 2020 and included countries and US states with known stay-at-home orders. Our primary exposure was the time between the date of the first reported case of COVID-19 to an implemented stay-at-home mandate for each region. Our primary outcomes were the time from the first reported case to the highest number of daily cases and daily deaths. We conducted simple linear regression analyses, controlling for the case rate of the outbreak.RESULTSFor US states and countries, a larger number of days between the first reported case and stay-at-home mandates was associated with a longer time to reach the peak daily case and death counts. The largest effect was among regions classified as the latest 10% to implement a mandate, which in the US, predicted an extra 35.3 days to the peak number of cases (95 % CI: 18.2, 52.5), and 38.3 days to the peak number of deaths (95 % CI: 23.6, 53.0).CONCLUSIONSOur study supports the potential beneficial effect of earlier stay-at-home mandates, by shortening the time to peak case and death counts for US states and countries. Regions in which mandates were implemented late experienced a prolonged duration to reaching both peak daily case and death counts.


2019 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 32
Author(s):  
I Wayan Miarta

<p><em>Ubud is one of the destinations of a worldwide tourist destination, Ubud which originally was an agrarian traditional village turned into a tourism village, even the village of Ubud has been transformed into a world tourism destination is evidenced by the many awards obtained in the field of tourism. Ubud tourism practitioners have been able to meet the standard of facilities that become the standard needs of tourists themselves, both nationally and internationally, such as the availability of accommodation, restaurant, telecommunications, transportation, entertainment, museums, art gallery and other supporting objects close to Ubud such as Bedahulu, Pejeng, Tampaksiring etc. Ubud tourism is not the same as other tourist destinations in Bali such as Nusa Dua, Sanur, Kuta and others, because Ubud people have different characteristics and lifestyles, the management of Ubud tourism through the concept of Tri Hita Karana combined with Hindu Theology so that existence Ubud tourism can be maintained. In Veda (Manava Dharma Sastra) states that how to serve Tourists such as serving the God (Atithi Deva Bhavo) so that guests will feel at home to visit and settle in Ubud.</em></p>


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