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The brain likes a challenge

10968909064?profile=originalPutting a few obstacles in its way may well boost its creativity. Some people think it's a good idea to challenge our working environment with deliberate invonvenience. Why isn't the idea of "ease of use" such a good thing?

Why would anyone make their work more difficult than it already is? Our brains respond better to difficulty than we imagine.

Desireable difficulties are not such a bad thing at all. Sometimes it's only when difficulty is removed that we realize what it was doing for us. Numerous studies  have now found that when classroom material is made harder to absorb, pupils retain more of it over the long term, and understand it on a deeper level

You might think that any tool which enables a writer to get words on a page would be an advantage. But there may be a cost to such facility.

We might produce a better a better result while meeting a terrible resistance. Think about it. You have to face the first years of your life when you tried to get over your very first writers block.

What was it, when you couldn't write at all? Did you ever think about the tension of the first time compared to when your writing became a little bit more fluent?

Remove the resistance and you're likely to produce a much better result.

Some researchers think that handwriting  does activate more of the brain than beyboard writing, including areas responsible for thinking and memory.

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Cameroon has a bio-potential

10968910065?profile=original

Let us all sing a song about growing opportunities in Africa. There are multiple possibles in the field of forest industry development and energy production.

Cameroon has a lot of opportunities in renewable energies being Africa's greatest hydroelectric potential after the Democratic Republic of Congo and having conditions favoring solar and wind energies.

Cameroon has an abudant potential in solar energy especially in its northern part. According to resent studies, the wind potential of Cameroon is significant and economically exploitablein the western regions of Cameroon.

At the moment, several investors are already in Cameroon to harness to the solar energy potential. The Chinese company Huawey is planting public solar lights from Yaounde to Soa, a university town on the outskirts of the capital.

The wood industry contributes up to 8 per cent to the Cameroonian gross national product (GNP) and generates close to 165 000 direct jobs.

However, more than half of Cameroon's wood is illegally exported.

Legal action has been taken to reduce illegal timber exploitation. Other things are on the move as well:

  1. giant and mini hydropower projects
  2. mini hydro power plants in 25 localities
  3. rural electrification projects
  4. small communities will be electrified
  5. modern electricity services such as lighting, audiovisual and guality health health care

Within the projects, there is also training for locals to maintain the projects and the creation of small businesses related to the hydroelectric energy technology.

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