02-13-2011, 04:05 AM
Miscellaneous Topics
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02-24-2011, 03:26 AM
The American couple took the 'saat fere' (seven rounds) around the holy fire and Saint put sindoor on Julia's forehead.
The two had help from the town's people to make all the arrangements. 'India's culture is very fascinating. We had heard about the Indian marriage system and wanted our marriage to be this way,' a beaming Julia said afterwards. Jageshwar Shukla, the priest who solemnised the marriage, was also happy. 'Ninety percent of marriages conducted under Vedic system do not fail. I think that is why they chose it this way', said the priest. http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/nri/n...546205.cms
02-26-2011, 12:37 PM
Really Its too bad. I have seen it.
05-05-2011, 09:50 PM
yes, European Union is in big problems. Economic growth is stagnating, ageing problem, muslim problem, less children, increase of poverty levels and many other problems. What to do about it? Many People are desperate in Holland.
I want to leave Holland in future and go to India if I have enough money. dewanand holland
05-26-2011, 01:10 AM
The top 5 banks control 70% of deposits! Financial reform is a joke! Big became bigger! No secret but the Banks have more arrogant since they control Congress. America is under Financial Oligarchy which every one is aware but the public keep voting GOP who are shills for Banksters!
We are heading for a crisis worse than 2008, the question remains when and NOT if! I had the same pre monition from 2005 thru 2007 during the housing bubble about the excess leverage and fraud in FIRE Economy.I was prepared for 2008 but what didn't lose in 2008, i lost during 2009 and 2010 due to aggressive interference of the Govt into 'free market' to save the Banksters at a significant cost to rest of Society. Now i am ready for the next one, thanks to options and inverse Etfs! But it will be 'very tricky' b/c Govt is owned by the same criminals who will try and try the 'same' but results will be different, this time. Majority in 401k and other pension funds will lose again. They may even legislate and force every one to invest their pension funds in Treasuries! QE3 will be here, soon! Just like in 2008, most don't know how to react to BEAR market especially it is the kind in 70s- death by 1000 cuts!
06-21-2011, 05:36 PM
Most of the list of participants consists of bankers. With a few politicians. What could they possibly want to talk about Pakistan? Notice the last 2 years also had Pakistan in its agenda. Is it to make it an economic hub? is it to provide it with more finance ? What is it?
06-21-2011, 05:38 PM
I would second Shamu's suggestion with the caveat that it is OK if there are no prior conditions. If that is so and you need treatment for things like minor injuries, minor infections etc it should work fine. But preexisting conditions or their secondary effects would be a problem. E.g. if some one had diabetes and consequently had a vascular or neural condition that manifested then it might not be covered as it will be called consequence of preexisting condition. It might be a good idea to get a good health checkup in India before leaving for the desh just to clear any potential issues.
06-24-2011, 02:26 PM
[quote name='BlessedAgni' date='17 June 2010 - 03:08 PM' timestamp='1276767002' post='107026']
Most of the list of [url="http://www.bilderbergmeetings.org/meeting_2010_2.html"]participants[/url] consists of bankers. With a few politicians. What could they possibly want to talk about Pakistan? Notice the [url="http://www.bilderbergmeetings.org/conferences.html"]last 2[/url] years also had Pakistan in its agenda. Is it to make it an economic hub? is it to provide it with more finance ? What is it? [/quote] Well, the "geopolitical" status of pakistan has certainly changed since then, what with being labeled as a haven for terrorists, the drone attacks, and the taking out of bin Laden (as reported). Pakistan is being progressively pushed into a corner and being provoked. To serve as a nucleus for a world war 3, maybe? China has already stated its support for Pakistan. Under the guise of humanitarian operations, the (ig)nobel peace prize winner is taking "kinetic action" (mind you, not war!) against Libya for the "greater peace", and planning for the same in Syriya etc. The latest Bilderberg conference was held around 10th June in Switzerland. These are the global power brokers who are the secret movers and shakers of the world.
06-29-2011, 07:06 AM
(This post was last modified: 06-29-2011, 07:07 AM by HareKrishna.)
[media]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3u-mihtgTm0&feature=player_embedded[/media]Swedish Racemixing State Propaganda
[url="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3u-mihtgTm0&feature=player_embedded"]My link[/url] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3u-mihtgT...r_embedded
07-18-2011, 10:07 AM
Chiku Banvasi went to have a bath on the banks of river Narmada with his uncle at about 10 a.m. Saturday. When flash floods suddenly consumed the river, Chiku was left behind. Relatives and villagers jumped into the vicious floods, swimming down river to miraculously rescue the young boy from the treacherous waters. The Telegraph reports that Chiku lost consciousness after swallowing water in the river, but received medical treatment and is now in stable condition at a local hospital.
[media]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nKL1s6-goXA&feature=player_embedded[/media]
08-12-2011, 12:04 PM
Problem is only with home page or also with internal pages.
08-25-2011, 10:40 PM
I wonder what is the typical number of posts in the board in a day. I would imagine 10 at most, so what keeps people from writing about their opinions? There must be scores of topics to write about including Jan Lok Pal that has been hogging the limelight. So what stops the people from voicing their opinions, I wonder?
08-30-2011, 02:16 AM
(This post was last modified: 09-08-2011, 08:56 PM by HareKrishna.)
09-24-2011, 09:53 AM
Its hard that Europe to burn because it is the most developed continent since past...
10-13-2011, 03:27 PM
I am so happy today that I want to share my success with you all, especially to the aspiring Indian PMPs, you can do it too
As soon as I came out of the test center with 'Congratulation - you passed' form; I called my Wife, my biggest supporter. Then I am here wanting to share my study tactics which can prove to be helpful to someone. I've prepared for the PMP exam for almost 4 months. All my training and studies were all done online, no formal class sessions on centers. I passed at the first attempt! Here is how I passed it: Studied PMPBok - 3 times After completing three rounds reading of the PMPBOK guide, started reading Rita Mulcahyââ¬â¢s PMP Exam Prep. I find Rita's book not reader-friendly and requires ââ¬Åexcessiveââ¬Â time and effort... Started solving chapter wise exercises on Rita and Andy Crowe. I understand memorizing ITTO would not help. Crowe was highly recommended and as I discovered, rightfully so. It has a companion website that was useful. PMChamp.com - I went through pmchamp's intensive online pmp training...it's an effective learning process for me, all the knowledge areas were well explained...I can thoroughly recommend this coaching program by Vinai...the tricks gave me the "confidence" to go for the real test because the mock sheets are updated for the 2011 new exam format Studied HeadFirst Book - 3 Times...head first lab test will help you understand the process sequence as applied in project scenarios...watch out for those choices that really sound right/practical If a chapter/topic is very new to you, use HeadFirst, then follow it up with Rita. HeadFirst makes it easy, while Rita is very detailed to the point. PMChamp training is like Headfirst meets Rita. Pmzilla Final PMP Exam (200 tough questions) - finally day before the exam I attempted mock exam of pmzilla's 200 questions ... indeed very helpful! and tougher than the actual exam...hehe Took the PMP Exam (sat there for 4 hours without break). In the exam itself, I marked any questions i was unsure of or any involving formula calculations. As others have said, don't forget to review the code of ethics and conduct from the PMI website and know your formulas. About exam: Not easy; Not too tough; Not wordy. The real exam are totally different than any of the questions that you see from other sources. At least they are not identical. However, the ideas are the same. I would suggest you to understand the rationale of the questions in preparation for question variances. I did not memorise the ITTOs, but I think I could have got two more questions right because of that. It's a great joy to share the news of gaining my PMP certification I thank my wife and my kids for supporting and adjusting with me for the past few months. Best Wishes for all PMP aspirants.
Learn [url="http://www.sportsinfotrack.com/"]golf basics[/url] and share basic tips.
If you're about to eat something, then don't read this. It's not all... let's say "hygienic" (:great save
I recall some rich Indian woman whining some years back (not on IF, but in real life), about how she was "Soooooo Embarrassed" about the commonwealth games - which was then held in India - going downhill (as if it personally reflected on her). Turns out that it's been going down the *drain* in the UK Olympics this year. And to think that a gutter inspector is actually needed on this case. (Obviously I don't really care about this topic. It's only for settling the score.) 1. theaustralian.com.au/sport/london-games/sewage-forces-sailors-out-of-olympic-games-village/story-fne3b3ke-1226434563224 Quote:Sewage forces sailors out of Olympic Games village Also at Sewage flows from Games athletes' showers 2. And if the athletes have had it bad, it's been even worse for the Olympic staff: "it looks like a prison camp" said a Spaniard on taking in the exterior. Another speaks with experience of the interiors: "It's like a slum inside". Anyway, the grimy details - so we won't here lame Indians whine about "oh-my-gawd, what about: dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2174034/London-2012-Olympics-10-room-1-shower-75-people-Inside-slum-camp-Olympic-cleaners.html Quote:Ten to a room and one shower for 75 people: Inside the 'slum' camp for Olympic cleaners 3. The above also contains the following news clipping: 4. And so we get round to how it's more than just the plumbing and staff housing that's been falling apart: afp.com/en/news/topstories/british-security-firm-quizzed-over-olympic-shambles Quote:British security firm quizzed over Olympic 'shambles' 5. And to round it all off: couriermail.com.au/sport/london-olympics/olympic-briefs-poll-finds-british-public-unhappy-with-preparations-for-london-games/story-fn9di2lk-1226428630622 Quote:Olympic briefs: Poll finds British public unhappy with preparations for London Games What was that about slumdogs and millionaires again? (By the way: remember the mass number of slums still around in Britain in... was it the 1920s or 1930s? Post WWI, pre WWII, in any case. The British govt didn't know what to do with them. And the slums multiplied further under the massive unemployment at the time. Pity they didn't make a movie about that. But it's been recorded in history books at any rate, and even been briefly referred to in some novels and movies.) Security at this year's Olimpings *is* a bit of a worry. The UK police already caught some 7 or so pakis bringing in weaponry to blow people up for allah, scheduled to take place around this time. But I don't think - more importantly the British govt doesn't seem to think - it's caught all the jihadis intent on mischief at the games yet. And then there's this whole mess with the hired security firm. Not very reassuring...
space.com/19845-dark-matter-found-nasa-experiment.html
Quote:Has Dark Matter Finally Been Found? Big News Coming Soon IIRC the news is scheduled for in about a week's time. [color="#0000FF"]ADDED:[/color] Sorry, ^that^ news was a year old (uh, obviously). While I actually managed to work that out shortly after, forgot I'd put a link on IF. Ironically, had read the follow-up the year before, but didn't immediately connect this last back to the above news item because I was mixed-up about the chronology.
04-04-2014, 04:27 PM
Couldn't find Sumishi's thread on Big Brother type stuff - at least, not under a thread title of 'Big Brother'. So posting these here.
2 items via runningblind.com (belongs to "Josh Goebel, the creator of Pastie, Invoicie, and Snag the Flag ..." which are sites offering web services) 1. runningblind.com/post/79561068470/critical-crypto-bug-leaves-linux-hundreds-of-apps-open Quote:14 Mar 2014 2. runningblind.com/post/79068516804/yahoo-webcam-images-from-millions-of-users-intercepted Quote:9 Mar 2014
About the blue bit in the following:
[quote name='Husky' date='26 February 2014 - 10:19 PM' timestamp='1393432887' post='117076'] 10. This one just mentions Doniger in a comparison on how christoism gets away scott-free: rajeev2004.blogspot.co.uk/2014/02/the-economist-lexington-faith-and-reason.html Uh, some western scientists ARE scientists (not alleged) and they're hardcore atheists. Sagan :love:, Attenborough :love:, etc. are atheists (not "religious" atheists, whatever that means) without being militant atheists. Dawkins is a missionary atheist, but in his position I'd totally do the same: I mean, some one has to pull the plug on the creationism madness, and if it means actively speaking and writing about the idiocy of moronisms, then there's really no choice. Poor man, he could be getting on with exciting research, but the matter is so serious, he's sacrificing years of his life in the battle with idiot religion (aka the mono-moronisms), talking on the mind-numbing topic of invisible non-existent entities. Evolution is not a "theory". It's a fact. 4004 BCE my foot. Our planet itself is IIRC about 5 billion years old. Our universe is some 13.7 billion years old, also demonstrable. And our universe is apparently just one of the multi universes in the metaverse that contains them. [color="#0000FF"][* Bacteria type life forms can exist on many planets and are thought to possibly exist on the icy moon of Jupiter - the one that's ice on the surface but thought to be water underneath. The red/pink streaks are thought to be large bacterial colonies. Anyway, a planet with improved conditions for carbon-based life forms can result in complex life then. And then all you need really is time. Our planet has had so much time already, it's witnessed 5 mass extinctions of huge numbers of dominant species. "Intelligent" life of our kind also just requires time and good odds once complex life has formed.][/color] Today, christianism is making it hard to teach evolutionary biology in schools. And it won't end there. Tomorrow they won't let cosmology as revealed by physics be taught either. Christoislam is such a disease. Ban Ban Ban. [/quote] First off, the above should say moon of Saturn not Jupiter. Since there are SO many moons, and since I've never been to either Saturn OR Jupiter, I got them confused. (And also because Enceladus isn't the only moon subject to Orbital Resonance.) And now the important news: Cassini has apparently confirmed that Enceladus* does indeed contain an ocean of liquid water under its icy surface. (*Saturn's moon. The Cassini mission was sent to investigate Saturn and its moons including Titan. Caroline Porko (sp?) - who from interviews reminds me of the blueprint/the inspiration for the awesome Capt Kathryn Janeway; there's certainly some facial resemblance IMO - was on the team that did the preparations/planning for the Cassini mission, I believe. Still waiting to find out the results on her team's hypothesis of whether under Titan's atmosphere there's indeed oceans and glaciers and the like of methane etc. Titan - another moon of Saturn - is special because from what I seem to remember it has atmosphere: apparently Titan is large enough that it has sufficient gravity to retain its atmosphere, at least thus far. C.f. how Mars lost 2/3's of its atmosphere due to its lower mass and hence gravity than Earth, and so the relentless Solar Wind has just blown 2/3s away over time. IIRC, it's thought Titan may have been a planet at one stage, but that it fell into Saturn's gravity field and thus started orbiting Saturn.) Anyway, back to Enceladus. From what I remember: The reason for Enceladus having a body of liquid water (albeit under a surface of ice) - despite this moon of Saturn being so far away from the Sun, compared to Earth - is because of "Orbital Resonance" I think it's called: while Enceladus orbits Saturn, Saturn (perhaps in tandem with an aligned Titan and/or any larger floating debris of Saturn's myriad discs?*) exerts a sudden but regular increased gravitational tug on Enceladus during its orbit circle. *Or else owing to Enceladus' coming closer to Saturn at certain points of its orbit, or something. These gravitational tugs/stresses on Enceladus' body naturally cause heavy internal friction inside the moon, as it literally bends out of shape, which friction creates such heat as is sufficient to melt the ice and keep it liquid under the surface even at such a distance as Enceladus is from the Sun. (IIRC, Orbital Resonance is also what seems to go on in the case of Io or was it Europa - forgot the specific moon of Jupiter that has constant volcanic eruptions - for said moon to indeed have active and in fact constant vulcanism.) Further, Cox had already covered how, since (preferrably liquid) water is the primary necessity for Life (based on our understanding of the only life we're familiar with: that on our planet which is carbon-based life), Enceladus having been confirmed as containing liquid water proves that it is indeed the other place in our solar system that's most likely to have life, as was also hypothesised. Cox had summarised the existing theory popular among scientists that the streaks of pinkish colour on the icy surface of Enceladus may well point to bacteria. So: woohoo. Life. Beyond Earth. If they can confirm bacteria, no doubt they will next monitor for evolution taking place among the Enceladan (sp?) bacteria. It will give us an example of how evolution in a planet other than Earth proceeds (so far we've only had Earth as the sole example for the evolution of life, as pointed out by Cox and Sagan and Attenborough and others: from simple prokaryotic to eukaryotic to the complex life form explosion during the Cambrian era**. :or something. Bij Donar, this is so exciting. I can't even think straight. And NASA's apparently released pictures. ** My biology and physics - and indeed every subject - is rather shady, to say the least. Please look up your high school textbooks. |
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