可可產業考察之旅

記錄 #大年初三 2020.01.27🏮
🍫可可產業考察之旅

感謝縣府 #邱黃秘書長肇崇 暨
#成功大學 傑出校友企業家們
前來作產業考察🧑‍🎓

#王董事長 是國內電腦軟體業先驅,現更成立 #繁榮社會企業股份有限公司,結合多年業界和 #高雄成大校友會 強大社會人脈資源力量,積極回饋社會.
#張董事長 除自身事業有成. 也擔任 #高雄成大校友文教基金會 董事長
一同為社會服務付出與貢獻.
#龍龍 #清華大學 博士生,專研 #AI 機器人. 是目前未來最火紅的應用科技。重點人高帥氣又有禮貌…. (尖叫聲)

一行人前來研討農業與科技如何結合應用.
也期待能與 #成大校友文教基金會 合作,
協助屏東在地可可產業,
共同創造農業奇蹟!

#屏東可可 #台灣巧克力 #林后可可 #國境之南 #屏東縣政府 #國立成功大學 #國立成功大學校友會

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  1. Comet likely last seen when Neanderthals walked Earth could soon dazzle in the night sky
    Apple iPhone 15 Pro Dual SIM 1TB белый титан купить в Минске
    A recently discovered comet, known as C/2023 A3 Tsuchinshan–ATLAS, will make its closest approach of Earth on Saturday. Sky-gazers won’t want to miss the event since it may be the last time the comet will be seen in the night sky for another 80,000 years.

    The comet successfully reached perihelion, its closest point to the sun in its orbital path around the parent star, on September 27, and was visible for those in the Southern Hemisphere in September and early October. Now, the icy body is on its way out of the inner solar system and will be visible to those in the Northern Hemisphere in mid-October through early November, according to NASA.

    On Saturday, the comet will come within about 44 million miles (nearly 71 million kilometers) of Earth. The comet is making its first documented flyby of our planet, according to NASA. With its 80,000-year orbit, the celestial body would have been last seen from Earth at the time of the Neanderthals.
    Those looking to catch a glimpse of the once-in-a-lifetime event will want to look in the western part of the night sky, shortly after sunset, according to EarthSky.

    The comet will look like a bright fireball in the dark sky with a long, extended tail. Bill Cooke, lead of NASA’s Meteoroid Environment Office at the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, recommends a pair of binoculars for enhanced viewing of the comet.

    “It’s not going to zing across the sky like a meteor. It will just appear to hang there, and it will slowly change position from night to night,” Cooke said. “If you can see (the comet) with your unaided eye, (using) the binoculars will knock your socks off.”

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