Jump to content
Facebook Twitter Youtube

Leaderboard

Popular Content

Showing content with the highest reputation on 10/13/2020 in all areas

  1. I'm going to give you below some information about an images you're gonna make: Avatar must be 150x250, Signature must be 400x180 use blur, brushes & light/dark adjustments Use text as you see fit, or don't use it at all. The watermark tho must be present under the form: CSBD, CsBlackDevil You can use After Effects to make it .gif Stocks: Avatar & Signature
    5 points
  2. Video title : Fortnite WTF Moments #266 Content creator ( Youtuber ) : Here Official YT video :
    4 points
  3. " Checking your browser before accessing to csblackdevil.com "
    4 points
  4. I'm going to give you below some information about an images you're gonna make: Avatar must be 150x250, Signature must be 400x180 use blur, brushes & light/dark adjustments Use text as you see fit, or don't use it at all. The watermark tho must be present under the form: CSBD, CsBlackDevil You can use After Effects to make it .gif Stocks: Avatar & Signature
    4 points
  5. Nickname : @-Apex Tag your opponent : @Meh Rez vM ! ♫ Music genre : Pop Number of votes : 8 Tag one leader to post your songs LIST : Me
    3 points
  6. My vote goes to DH2, i like the lyrics & music video
    3 points
  7. Nickname : @Ru-gAL.™ Tag your opponent : @-Dark Music genre : Dance/Electronic Number of votes : 7 Tag one leader to post your songs LIST : @HiTLeR.
    2 points
  8. My vote goes DH1, Better Video, Sounds.
    2 points
  9. Nickname : AL_MAOT Tag your opponent : @HiTLeR. Music genre : Remix Number of votes : 7 Tag one leader to post your songs LIST : @HiTLeR.
    1 point
  10. hey bro go this topic 1. Game: cs 1.6 2. Tag [@name]: @ITZ/MOHA 3. Time & Date: now 4. Detalies[rounds, duration, explains about game, etc., if necesary]: first win 10 rounds to awp 5. Do you need a referee?[click HERE to check the Overwatch team list]: -
    1 point
  11. Hello ! First you have to do activity, and your activity is not very good, need join to some projects, help projects that helps you..., also do activity in the FAQ section, and proposals.... So for my you have #CONTRA
    1 point
  12. agree to him, you will improve later, #PRO
    1 point
  13. These are the works: Only GFX Designers can vote.
    1 point
  14. Works: Only GFX Designers can vote.
    1 point
  15. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a password protected forum. Enter Password
  16. ""Whatever was the highest, sweetest, or most wonderful emotion in your life, make that the baseline. Why come down from what you are capable of"" Good Morning All
    1 point
  17. Theme: Vectors: - Effects: - Registration time: Until 16/10 (Friday) Organizer: @Nexy
    1 point
  18. 1 point
  19. Hello CSBD Familly , I Hope You Are All Fine I Am Here To Tell You Good Bye See You Later Love You All ❤️❤️
    1 point
  20. Try to discover the object, and you may WIN SPECIAL BADGES / D.C , ITS YOUR CHANCE NOW!, DONT YOU MISS IT!
    1 point
  21. https://csblackdevil.com/forums/topic/360421-proposal-betting-arena-battles/ A short proposal |:|
    1 point
  22. > Opponent's nickname: @Agent 47' > Theme (must be an image): > Work Type: Avatar > Size & Texts: 150x250 // Battle > How many total votes?: 9 > Work time: 2 hours
    1 point
  23. 1 point
  24. In key battleground states, Gen Z is ready to make its voice heard. And for many among America’s most progressive generation, that means setting aside their misgivings about establishment politics to vote for the Democratic candidate, Joe Biden. On a crisp Thursday in Ann Arbor, the University of Michigan’s flagship campus is unusually quiet. The university is one of many across the United States that has welcomed students back to campus amid the Covid-19 pandemic; but with many activities and some courses shifting online, the fall semester is off to a somewhat muted start. One corner of campus, though, is bustling. Tucked in the lobby of the university’s Museum of Art (UMMA) is a voter registration office operated by the Ann Arbor City Clerk. The temporary office has been open since September 24, when early voting began in the state, and staff said interest among students has been overwhelming. “‘Surge’ is an understatement,” said Candice Price, 34, a poll worker and Ann Arbor native. “After the debate, it was crazy,” Price told FRANCE 24, referring to the first presidential debate between President Donald Trump and Biden on September 29, in which Trump repeatedly interrupted his opponent, to the dismay of both Biden and the moderator. “It was like zombies on the windows, trying to get in here. It was insane. There were kids waiting in line for like 45 minutes to vote.” Price said many students who came to the office that day were quick to say why: They wanted to vote Trump out. “They were very clear why they came in,” Price said. “[Their] words were, ‘I’m tired of this foolishness, this can’t happen anymore ... you need my vote, this is a swing state.’” Michigan, along with Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, is one of the three states that delivered Trump’s electoral college victory with a razor-thin margin in 2016. he temporary election office, which will close on Election Day, is one of hundreds of sites where Michigan residents can cast their votes early under sweeping election reforms approved by voters in a 2018 ballot initiative. Michiganders can now register and vote on the same day – up to and including Election Day – as well as obtain an absentee ballot without providing a reason. Price has seen the results first hand. “Typically, Ann Arbor City has about 15,000 people that request absentee ballots. We’ve had over 40,000,” she told FRANCE 24. “At the headquarters, people are stuffing envelopes over and over and over … I’ve probably done about 1,000 myself.” UMMA has given similar numbers, reporting in a tweet that the office “registered more than 1,000 new voters” in its first week and that “more than 800 absentee ballots (were) returned”. Logan Woods, a Ph.D. candidate in Political Science at the University of Michigan and secretary of the campus voter registration drive Turn Up Turnout, told FRANCE 24 by email that he has “heard no indication that number is dropping” as voting continues. Across Michigan, youth voter registration is up since 2016, according to researchers at the Center for Information and Research on Civic Learning & Engagement (CIRCLE) at Tufts University in Massachusetts. As of September, the number of 18- to 24-year-olds registered to vote in the state was 12 percent higher than in November 2016, with some six weeks to go before Election Day. That was before National Voter Registration Day (September 24), the debate and the rush of voters seen by the Ann Arbor campus office. Still, CIRCLE’s findings suggest that the “surge” Price describes may not be reflected nationwide. In six of the 27 states the researchers surveyed, youth registration at last count was actually down from November 2016. Reports have pointed to several possible factors. In Ohio, where youth registration has dropped the most, voting rights advocates have blamed voter ID laws and other technicalities for making it harder for students to vote. Then, of course, there’s Covid-19, which has collided with a maze of state laws to turn voting into a logistical, legal and political battle not seen in decades. Many states have made it easier to vote by mail, but that is not an intuitive solution for a generation raised with smartphones. Even in states like Michigan, which have made it relatively easy to vote, the pandemic has exacerbated longstanding logistical hurdles to getting to the polls. Price said social media has played a role in counterbalancing that. “First-time voters come in and say, I saw it on Instagram… I saw it on Twitter... that’s a big deal,” she said. If you don’t connect with them online, she added, young people are not going to show up. Diverse, progressive – and elusive The biggest obstacle of all, though, may be convincing young voters that the candidates can actually make a difference in their lives. It’s not that they’re apathetic. On the contrary, members of Generation Z – generally defined as those born after 1996 – have been at the forefront of the defining social movements of the last several years, from the climate strikes to March for Our Lives to Black Lives Matter. That’s no great surprise: polling from Pew Research has found Gen Z to be the most diverse and progressive generation of Americans yet. Just a slim majority (52 percent) are white. Of the 13- to 23-year-olds surveyed by Pew, 35 percent said they knew someone who used gender-neutral pronouns, compared to just 16 percent of Gen Xers and 12 percent of baby boomers. On the economic front, about half of those polled this year reported that their household had faced a loss of income due to Covid-19 and a whopping 70 percent said the government should do more to address social problems – nearly double the rate among the oldest Americans. The open question is how much of Gen Z’s political energy will translate to the ballot box in what, for millions, will be their first-ever presidential election. The generation’s older members make up some 24 million eligible voters this year, but only 4 percent of likely voters. That’s because, historically, most young Americans do not vote. And while they bucked that trend in 2018, helping Democrats reclaim the House of Representatives in the midterm elections, there is no guarantee the pattern will hold. “Zoomers” may lean heavily Democratic, but polling shows them to be increasingly distrustful of established institutions. As many as half of those who identify as Democrats are also wary of “party elites”, according to CIRCLE polling from 2018. “I don’t think [Biden is] a long-term plan,” said Madison Horton, a 20-year-old student in nursing and anthropology at Ann Arbor. She backed Bernie Sanders in the Democratic primary, and like many of Sanders's young supporters, lost enthusiasm after he conceded defeat. Still, since Biden clinched the nomination, she “never really doubted” she would vote for him. Some of Trump’s more extremist positions might also help galvanize young voters. Horton said that when Trump couldn’t do “something as simple as condemning white supremacy” on the debate stage, that sealed her decision. Horton, who works in the art museum café adjacent to the city clerk’s office, is confident that many of her peers will vote the same way – even those who still support Sanders. “I think to continue the support for Bernie, people are deciding to vote for Biden,” she said. Despite their reservations, nearly two-thirds of likely Gen Z voters polled by Morning Consult in September plan to vote for Biden, compared to just 27 percent for Trump. ‘Someone has to step up’ Horton joins a wide swath of young voters who feel disillusioned with the political options available at the national level but who plan to cast what they see as a necessary vote for Biden. In FRANCE 24’s reporting across the Rust Belt in late September and early October, we encountered versions of this sentiment among a range of young social movement activists in key swing states spanning from Pennsylvania to Wisconsin. In Cleveland, Ohio, on the night of Trump and Biden’s rancorous debate, several hundred demonstrators gathered a few blocks from the venue for the Cleveland presidential debate protest for Black lives and climate justice. The protest was organized by about a dozen racial justice, environmental and left-wing groups, including the Sunrise Movement, Black Spring CLE and the Democratic Socialists of America. Jonathan Roy heard about the protest online from Black Lives Matter Cleveland. The 24-year-old, who plays drums for a church full time and moonlights at local breweries, said that growing up biracial in East Cleveland, he had himself experienced police abuse. “I got pulled over in a suburban area,” he said. Police cursed at him, and “made me do a sobriety test for no reason, in the cold, while it was snowing.” “I almost got six months in jail and a $1000 fine for nothing,” he said. The charges against him were eventually dropped. “Personally, I’m not into government. But someone has to step up and do something,” said 24-year-old Jonathan Roy of Cleveland. “Personally, I’m not into government. But someone has to step up and do something,” said 24-year-old Jonathan Roy of Cleveland. © Colin Kinniburgh Roy said he was also jolted by the 2014 killing of Tamir Rice, a Black 12-year-old who was shot by Cleveland police while playing with a toy gun. Rice’s killing was among those that spurred the first wave of the Black Lives Matter movement that year, and it continues to be a driving force for organizers in the city to this day. When it comes to the election, Roy said he plans to vote for Biden. “Personally, I’m not into government. But someone has to step up and do something,” he told FRANCE 24. ‘Issues-first voters’ Among those Gen Z voters who support Trump, many are just as mobilized as their left-wing counterparts and have garnered a dedicated following online. On the social media platform TikTok, Trump fans rally around hashtags like #SocialismSucks, bashing progressive icons like Sanders and New York Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. YouTube, the most widely used social media app among teens, has served as a recruiting ground for the far right. And across various channels, well-funded youth groups like Talking Points USA use aggressive new tactics to champion longstanding conservative causes. In Cleveland, Lexie Hall, the 19-year-old spokesperson for the anti-abortion group Created Equal, carried a placard displaying a graphic image of an aborted foetus. Gathered with about a dozen other activists, she said their group “seeks to make abortion unthinkable in our culture”.
    1 point
  25. Desktop icons are a preference, and a personal one at that. Unfortunately, they happen to get moved around quite a bit. Whether that’s caused by a new user, a desktop resolution change, or a software update, we’ve got you covered in getting everything back to exactly the way you like it. DesktopIconManager, a freely available app does a good job of memorizing the location and restoring it whenever you want to go back to your own system. It can also save multiple configurations of the Desktop. This will come in handy if a machine is a public or shared PC and you would like to make desktop tweaks that don’t disappear once someone else uses the machine. The app has a small footprint and it opens in a small, unobtrusive window. In addition to the basic memorize and restore buttons, there are a handful of other options available. Automatically restoring icon positions everyday to previously memorized default, for example, or memorizing newer positions at different times during the day. Or, you can just use it as a way to save multiple icon locations, or the preferences of multiple users. 1) In a browser open http://www.parker9.com/desktopIconManager4.html#d. <safari.png> 2) Click Download on the Desktop Icon Manager app page. <download.png> 3) In the security warning pop-up, select Allow. <allow.png> 4) In Downloads, open the downloaded DesktopIconManager folder. <open.png> 5) In the folder, open the DIM application file. <open2.png> 6) In the security warning pop-up, select Open. <open3.png> 7) In the DIM window, select Memorize Icon Positions to backup the desktop icons. <memorize.png> 😎 When needed, click Restore Icon Positions. <restore.png>
    1 point
  26. What is it? This is what will soon be the older and bigger of two SUVs from Alfa Romeo, the Stelvio - and it has just had a mid-life facelift. There are tweaks and upgrades for the interior, whose relative shortage of genuinely impressive perceived quality and up-to-date on-board technology came in for criticism when it was launched three years ago. The car’s equipment levels have now been improved across the range, while new active safety and level two semi-autonomous driving technologies have been added to the options list. What is it? This is what will soon be the older and bigger of two SUVs from Alfa Romeo, the Stelvio - and it has just had a mid-life facelift. There are tweaks and upgrades for the interior, whose relative shortage of genuinely impressive perceived quality and up-to-date on-board technology came in for criticism when it was launched three years ago. The car’s equipment levels have now been improved across the range, while new active safety and level two semi-autonomous driving technologies have been added to the options list. UK-based Stelvio buyers can choose a car in Super, Sprint, Lusso Ti or Veloce trim and powered by a 197bhp 2.0-litre turbo petrol or 188bhp 2.1-litre diesel four-cylinder engine across most of the range, with only Veloce models increasing the power outputs of those engines to either 276bhp or 207bhp respectively. And then there's the madcap 503bhp Quadrifoglio performance version, a car that, in just the right circumstances, may even be a faster and more dependable way to make your children return their breakfast than any emetic drug. The Stelvio uses standard coil spring suspension, with lowered and firmed-up springs and ‘frequency-selective’ dampers coming on Veloce versions. A Performance Pack that adds fully adaptive dampers and a mechanical limited-slip differential for the rear axle is optional on all bar the entry-level Super version. All Stelvios get an eight-speed automatic gearbox, and all get Q4 clutch-based four-wheel drive except the rear-driven, entry-level diesel. Prices now start at a whisker under £40,000, which is a hike of between 6% and 10% on 2019-model-year brochure prices - although that comparison doesn’t allow for the new car’s enriched specification. Alfa’s Stelvio engines were made Euro-6D WLTP-compliant in 2018, and no revisions have been made to the car’s suspension or steering systems, or to any of its powertrains. What's it like? We tested the car in mid-range four-wheel-drive 2.1-litre turbo diesel Sprint form, in which it provided a broadly familiar driving environment and experience. If you’re a keener driver, you’re still more likely to be attracted to the Stelvio by the latter than the former, though, in spite of Alfa’s attempts to smarten up the interior. The changes to the cabin certainly take a keen eye to spot. There’s a new grooved aluminium finish to the centre console and some richer trim materials on the gear selector lever and infotainment controls. There’s also a neat little tray just ahead of the armrest cubby to simply drop your smartphone into for wireless charging (where compatible), and - in the wondrous era of keyless car operation - also a new, roughly key-fob-sized storage cubby just next to the gearlever where you can keep your car key while driving. What, exactly, was wrong with an ignition barrel in the first place is a question that still puzzles so many of us. There remain plenty of places where the Stelvio’s interior looks and feels just a little bit cheaper and plainer than an equivalent Audi, Mercedes or BMW, though. The grade of the plastics used on its air vents and column stalks can be all too easily compared with what you might find in a holiday rental, and the look and feel of its steering-wheel-mounted switchgear isn’t a lot classier. Much of the ‘leather’ used around the lower reaches of the fascia quite clearly isn’t what it’s pretending to be, either. On the plus side, the part-leather seats are smooth and tactile enough, and there are other material niceties to discover besides. The oversized, column-mounted aluminium gearshift paddles are easy to find without looking, and they reward you with a cool metallic touch. There’s also an Alfa Romeo logo ‘designed in’ to the two-piece load-bay cover that reflects appealingly in both the rear-view mirror and the rear screen. It’s the sort of thing a designer would come up with to add a sense of richness and occasion to a car in a fairly cost-effective way. The bottom line, however, is that Alfa could certainly have done more to lift the quality look and feel of this interior if it really wanted the Stelvio to finally tempt people out of Q5s and X3s in bigger numbers. What it has done isn’t too convincing, and only narrows very slightly what remains a sizable deficit to those German rivals.
    1 point
  27. Meghan Markle is not new to excessive criticism and scrutiny, but this is the first time she has openly talked about how she felt when she learnt that she was the ‘most trolled person in the world’, in 2019. In a new podcast that was recorded on the occasion of World Mental Health Day, the Duchess of Sussex — who was joined by her husband Prince Harry, the Duke of Sussex — spoke about mental health, about dealing with unfamiliar territories, the importance of breathing, the COVID-19 pandemic, among other things. The couple was joined by three Californian high school students on an episode of their podcast ‘Teenager Therapy‘. On the issue of mental health of the younger lot of the population, who are having to stay at home because the schools are closed, Markle said: “If you’re not in school, you’re finding yourselves on your devices or online more, right? And there’s a lot of vulnerability there that I think so many people are experiencing. And yes, it’s a great way to connect but also it kind of ends up being a place where there’s a lot of disconnection.” She went to say that she was told she was the most trolled person in the entire world in 2019 — male or female. “Eight months of that, I was not even visible — I was on maternity leave, or with a baby. But what was able to just be manufactured and churned out. It’s almost unsurvivable. That’s so big you can’t even think about what that feels like. Because I don’t care if you’re 15 or 25, if people are saying things about you that aren’t true what that does to your mental and emotional health is so damaging,” she shared on the podcast. She went on to discuss how her own experiences have shaped the work that she and her husband do to tackle the stigma attached to mental health issues. “And so, I think from my standpoint, and part of the work that we do from our own personal experience, being able to talk to people and understand that even though our experience is unique to us — and obviously can seem very different to what people experience on the day-to-day — it’s still a human experience and that’s universal. We all know what it feels like to have our feelings hurt, we all know what it feels like to be isolated… We are all figuring it out,” she said. ALSO READ | The royal exit: Here are privileges Harry and Meghan are set to lose When asked how they focus on their well-being, especially since they are always under the spotlight, Harry said, “I am sure it is different for everybody, but it is a lot… There are good days and there are bad days. But I think putting your self-care as a priority is hugely important because vulnerability is not a weakness. Showing vulnerability in today’s world especially is a strength.” The couple had left the UK earlier this year, citing financial independence as their reason of leaving behind the royal life. But over the course of the last few months, the tabloid culture in UK, excessive invasion of privacy, and scrutiny have come to be identified as some of the factors behind their decision.
    1 point
  28. Rabat – Morocco’s Ministry of Health confirmed 2,563 new cases of COVID-19 on Sunday. Since March 2, the country has confirmed a total of 152,404 cases. There are currently 22,392 active cases of COVID-19 in Morocco, an incidence rate of 61.7 per 100,000 people. Of Morocco’s active cases, 461 are in critical condition. The health ministry also reported 33 new deaths and 2,553 recoveries. Total deaths stand at 2,605, while recoveries have reached 127,407. Morocco’s COVID-19 fatality rate is 1.71% while the recovery rate is 83.6%. In the past 24 hours, Moroccan laboratories produced 21,155 negative tests for COVID-19. In total, more than 2.7 million people in Morocco have tested negative for the virus. Morocco’s COVID-19 case distribution The overwhelming majority of Morocco’s new COVID-19 cases on Sunday emerged in the Casablanca-Settat region. The region confirmed 1,173 cases, of which 857 appeared in Casablanca. The city also registered all 13 of the region’s deaths. In Rabat-Sale-Kenitra, laboratories detected 259 new cases, spread primarily throughout Sale (77), Rabat (53), Khemisset (49), Shkirat-Temara (38), and Kenitra (32). The remaining cases are in Sidi Kacem (6) and Sidi Slimane (4). The region confirmed two deaths, one in Kenitra and one in Sidi Slimane. The Souss-Massa region confirmed 217 new cases and three deaths. The majority of cases are in Agadir-Ida Ou Tanane (127) and Inezgane-Ait Melloul (75). Two deaths occurred in Taroudant. The remaining death was in Agadir-Ida Ou Tanane. The Oriental region recorded 199 new cases and one death. The majority of the cases are in Oujda-Angad (110), while the death occurred in Nador. Beni Mellal-Khenifra reported 182 new cases and two deaths, in Azilal and Beni Mellal. The Draa-Tafilalet region registered 121 cases and three deaths. Errachidia recorded 73 of the cases and two deaths. The remaining death is in Zagora. Marrakech-Safi appears to be getting its COVID-19 outbreak under control in time for the arrival of foreign tourists. The region recorded 116 new cases — 79 in Marrakech — and two deaths, one in Marrakech and one in El Kella des Sraghna. The COVID-19 outreak in Tangier-Tetouan-Al Hoceima also appears to be slowing down. Once the second-hardest hit in Morocco, the region reported 107 new COVID-19 cases in 24 hours—but three deaths. Fez-Meknes, another former hotspot, reported only 59 cases on Sunday, but four deaths. Southern Morocco continues to report the fewest COVID-19 cases in the country. The Dakhla-Oued Ed Dahab region registered 50 cases, followed by Laayoune-Sakia El Hamra (49), and Guelmim-Oued Noun (31). None of the three southern regions recorded any new deaths on Sunday.
    1 point
  29. Today, the pandemic has exponentially increased the need to raise awareness of how lack of sleep can affect your mental and physical well-being. Sleep plays an active role when it comes to recovering from an illness, thereby making you feel more energetic, productive, and confident. On the other hand, lack of sleep caused by various sleeping disorders can be one of the underlying causes of several health conditions such as diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, blood pressure issues, and of course, mental health issues. While sleeping disorders such as insomnia and narcolepsy are recognised, there are some lesser-known disorders like sleep apnea. ALSO READ | Common sleep disorders you should not ignore What is sleep apnea? Dr Sibasish Dey, Head of ResMed tells indianexpress.com that “sleep apnea is a sleep-related breathing disorder characterised by repeated upper airway disturbances during sleep, which causes breathing to stop for some seconds, throughout the night”. He explains that this is caused because of over-relaxation of muscles in the throat, which obstructs the airflow through the upper airway. In fact, sleep apnea may occur multiple times at night, resulting in lack of adequate oxygen supply to the tissues. It can make you suddenly wake up because of blockage in breathing, thereby disrupting your sleep. Symptoms range from morning headaches to fatigues, mood swings, and even depression. ALSO READ | Early rising for a healthy, wealthy life: Myth or reality? How is your sleep apnea affecting mental health? “The direct consequence of sleep apnea is disturbed sleep. Over time, successive nights of disrupted sleep cause you to wake up tired and sleepy even after enjoying excellent eight-hour sleep,” the doctor explains. ALSO READ | Insufficient sleep can lead to negative emotional bias, says study This results in chronic inflammations in the body that cause oxidative stress thus resulting in an imbalance of neurotransmitters in the brain. “According to a recent study conducted at the Medical College Georgia at Augusta University, obstructive sleep apnea can be a potential cause of depression,” says Dr Dey. He also points out that the study showed that OSA was more common in patients with low-income family support, who lived alone and had a lack of social support. To this, he adds: “There have been several other studies conducted across the world that have demonstrated a link between sleep apnea and depression.” Like one done by Boston’s Brigham and Women’s Hospital, which found that productivity on highly-cognitive tasks deteriorates with increasing lack of sleep, with the effects progressively worsening with time. “Sleep deprivation caused by OSA can lead to mood swings, irritable behaviour with colleagues at workplaces and a decrease in innovative thinking and performance, leading to loss of productivity,” warns the doctor. ALSO READ | Are you sleeping at the right time? How can one treat sleep apnea? The first thing is to reach out to your family physician or a sleep doctor. “Post your physical examination, your doctor may put you through a sleep test. Now, a sleep test might sound complicated and cumbersome, but it is easy and can be done over one night,” says Dr Dey. In a home sleep test, a simple device is attached to you before sleeping, which monitors your oxygen level, records snoring and monitors pauses in breathing. In severe cases, however, Dr Dey suggests one to opt for CPAP Therapy (Continuous Positive Airway Pressure). “It is a standard therapy for managing sleep apnea. A CPAP machine helps you inhale just the right amount of air to keep your lungs and upper airway passages open, preventing breathing pauses, resulting in healthy sleep,” he says.
    1 point
  30. my vote is for DH1, good lyrics and nice song
    1 point
  31. I'll vote for DH1. good sound and rhythm
    1 point
  32. 1 point
  33. Video title : Gotta Keep the FAIL From FLYING AWAY! 😂 | Funnies and Fails | AFV 2020 Content creator ( Youtuber ) : AVM Official YT video :
    1 point
  34. President Donald Trump on Wednesday refused to clearly guarantee a peaceful transfer of power should he lose the upcoming US election in November to Joe Biden. "Well, we're going to have to see what happens," Trump responded when asked at a White House press conference whether he is committed to the most basic tenet of democratic rule in the United States. Trump, who is currently behind in the polls against Democratic challenger Joe Biden, then resumed his near daily complaint about the way the election is being organised. Apparently referring to the increased use of mail-in ballots -- due to the coronavirus pandemic -- he said: "You know that I've been complaining very strongly about the ballots and the ballots are a disaster." Trump frequently claims that mail-in ballots are vulnerable to mass fraud and are being encouraged by Democrats to rig the election. However, there is no evidence that ballots sent through the postal service have ever led to significant fraud in US elections. At the press conference, Trump seemed to suggest annulling what are expected to be the huge numbers of mailed-in ballots, saying that in such a scenario, he would remain in power. "Get rid of the ballots and you'll have a very peaceful -- there won't be a transfer, frankly. There'll be a continuation," he said. Trump's latest insistence that there cannot be a fair presidential election on November 3 came as pressure mounts over his plan to put a new, right-leaning justice on the Supreme Court. Trump is set to nominate a replacement on Saturday for the late liberal-leaning justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. His Republican Party, which has a majority in the Senate, is then expected to quickly confirm the nominee. If they succeed, the nine-justice court would then likely have a strongly pro-conservative bent for years to come. Democrats are crying foul, saying that the process should wait until the results of the election are known, allowing the winner to shape the Supreme Court. With Trump and the Republicans mounting a series of court challenges against the use of mail-in ballots, the chances of a contested election result are considered high. On Wednesday, Trump said he thinks the election "will end up in the Supreme Court."
    1 point

WHO WE ARE?

CsBlackDevil Community [www.csblackdevil.com], a virtual world from May 1, 2012, which continues to grow in the gaming world. CSBD has over 70k members in continuous expansion, coming from different parts of the world.

 

 

Important Links